Business Day

Fierce battles are raging in southern Gaza

• Palestinia­n medics say hospitals are overflowin­g

- Bassam Masoud and Ibraheem Abu Mustafa

Israeli troops fought fierce battles with Hamas in southern Gaza on Wednesday after reaching the heart of the city of Khan Younis, forcing Palestinia­n civilians to seek refuge elsewhere as the number of safe areas decreases.

Israeli warplanes also bombarded targets across the densely populated coastal territory in one of the heaviest phases of fighting in the two months since Israel began its military campaign to eliminate the Palestinia­n militant group.

Palestinia­n medics said hospitals are overflowin­g with dead and wounded, many of them women and children, and supplies are running out. Hundreds of thousands of displaced people driven out of the north are seeking shelter in the dwindling number of places designated as safe areas by Israel.

After largely gaining control of northern Gaza, Israeli troops and tanks pushed further south and encircled Khan Younis in the south after a week-long truce collapsed last week.

Israel said its forces have struck hundreds of targets, including a militant cell near ’a school in the north. Hamas s armed wing, the al-Qassam Brigades, said combat is fierce.

Residents said Israeli bombing intensifie­d overnight, killing and wounding an unspecifie­d number of people, and that tanks are battling Palestinia­n militants north and east of Khan Younis.

Tanks are stationed on the edge of the Khan Younis refugee camp, not far from the house of the Hamas leader in Gaza, Yehya al-Sinwar, they said.

It is unclear whether anyone is there. Some Palestinia­ns described lucky escapes after their homes were destroyed in an overnight Israeli air strike on al-Amal neighbourh­ood in Khan Younis.

“I swear we don’t even know how we made it out alive,” said Hamdi Tanira, describing an attack on a house where he and about 30 others were sleeping, including 20 children.

“We were peacefully sleeping, not bothering anyone,” said another survivor, Amal Mehdi. “All of a sudden the bombardmen­t hit us, you wouldn’t know where it came from, it was a miracle that we were pulled from under the rubble.”

In the north, tanks, naval boats and warplanes continued to pound areas of the Jabalia refugee camp as well as roads and houses, according to residents and Hamas media.

The Washington-based Institute for the Study of War said Hamas fighters are using improvised explosive devices and antiperson­nel mines in a shift of tactics as the fighting moved to close ground combat.

GLOBAL CONCERN

Israel unleashed its military campaign in response to an attack on October 7 by Hamas fighters who rampaged through Israeli towns, killing 1,200 people and seizing 240 hostages, according to Israel’s tally.

Hamas’ media office said on Tuesday that at least 16,248 people including 7,112 children and 4,885 women had been killed in Gaza since then. Those figures were not immediatel­y verified by the Hamas-controlled Gaza health ministry.

Israel said 84 of its soldiers were killed since the ground operation began five weeks ago.

The handful of hospitals that remain open across the enclave are barely functionin­g, said the World Health Organisati­on. Fuel and medical supplies reached critically low levels at the al-Aqsa Hospital in central Gaza, and hundreds of patients need emergency care, Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) said.

MSF emergency co-ordinator Marie-Aure Perreaut Revial said the hospital has been receiving on average 150 to 200 wounded patients daily since December 1. “There are 700 patients admitted in the hospital now, with new patients arriving all the time,” she said.

Reflecting global concern over the plight of Palestinia­n civilians, the head of the Norwegian Refugee Council, Jan Egeland, said: “The pulverisin­g of Gaza now ranks amongst the worst assaults on any civilian population in our time and age.”

The Israeli military said it is going to “great lengths ” to avoid harming noncombata­nts. It said Hamas is using civilians as human shields and preventing civilians from moving to safe places, which Hamas denies.

Since the truce collapsed, Israel has been posting an online map to tell Gazans which parts of the enclave to evacuate to avoid attacks.

But Gazans say there is no safe place, with remaining towns and shelters already overwhelme­d, and Israel bombing areas where it tells people to go to. The US, Israel’s closest ally, has urged Israel to do more to allow fuel and other aid into Gaza and reduce harm to civilians.

During the pause in fighting, Hamas returned more than 100 hostages, but 138 captives remain.

A Hamas official, Osama Hamdan, said there will be no more hostages released until Israel’s “aggression” stops.

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