Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Israeli strikes kill 100 in Rafah amid rescue ops of 2 hostages

Israel announced that two captives had been rescued in a joint military, intel and police operation that used the massive airstrikes as cover

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100 Palestinia­ns were killed overnight in southern Gaza’s Rafah city yesterday, according to the enclave’s Health Ministry, as Israel carried out a series of airstrikes during an operation to rescue two captives.

Officials at the al-Najjar hospital confirmed receiving at least 50 bodies, while an Associated Press journalist also counted the bodies brought to the hospital.

Dr. Marwan al-Hams, director of the Abu Youssef al-Najjar hospital, said the dead included women and children.

The Israeli military, in the meanwhile, announced early yesterday morning that two captives had been rescued in a joint military, Shin Bet and police operation in Rafah after nearly 130 days in captivity.

In a statement, the army identified the two as Fernando Simon Marman and Louis Har, saying they were kidnapped by Hamas on Oct. 7 from Kibbutz Nir Yitzhak. Both were in good medical condition, it added.

“The military and the Shin Bet have been working on this operation for a long time... and they waited until the conditions were right to carry it out,” army spokespers­on Daniel Hagari said in a briefing.

A firefight broke out as the hostages were being taken out of the building they were held in, he added, with airstrikes targeting nearby buildings where shots were fired.

“Many... were killed this evening during this operation and one of our fighters was slightly injured,” he said.

During the Oct. 7 incursion, Palestinia­n resistance members seized about 250 hostages, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures. Israel says around 130 are still in Gaza, though 29 are thought to be dead.

The Hamas incursion on southern Israel resulted in the deaths of about 1,160 people, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.

Israel has responded with a relentless offensive in Gaza that the territory’s Health Ministry says has killed at least 28,176 people as of Sunday, mostly women and children.

Dozens of hostages were freed by Hamas during a one-week truce in November that also saw the release of more than 200 Palestinia­n prisoners held in Israeli jails.

Since then, Netanyahu has faced mounting protests and even calls for early elections, with relatives of the hostages frustrated over the pace of the rescues.

Renewed talks for a pause in the fighting have been held in Cairo, with Hamas open to a fresh cease-fire including more prisoner-hostage exchanges.

But a Hamas leader told AFP on condition of anonymity that an Israeli push into Rafah “would torpedo the exchange negotiatio­ns.”

The group on Sunday said two hostages had been killed and eight others seriously wounded in Israeli bombardmen­t in recent days, a claim AFP was unable to independen­tly verify.

Despite mounting calls for him to strike a deal with Hamas to secure the remaining captives’ release, Netanyahu has insisted that only military pressure can bring them home.

Last week, he said he had ordered troops to prepare for operations in Rafah, the last major city they have yet to enter.

“Around 100” people were killed in heavy airstrikes in the overcrowde­d city before dawn yesterday, according to a statement from the territory’s Health Ministry.

AFP journalist­s and witnesses heard an intense series of strikes and saw smoke billowing above the city, which now hosts more than half of Gaza’s total population after they fled bombardmen­t elsewhere in the Strip.

The strikes hit 14 houses and three mosques in different parts of Rafah, according to the local authoritie­s.

 ?? ?? Wounded Palestinia­n girl Somay al-Najar (L) comforts her brother Yamen following Israeli attacks on Rafah, Gaza, Palestine, Feb. 12, 2024.
Wounded Palestinia­n girl Somay al-Najar (L) comforts her brother Yamen following Israeli attacks on Rafah, Gaza, Palestine, Feb. 12, 2024.

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