Hartford Courant

Israeli military: Hamas reeling in north Gaza

Forces to focus on other areas; threat by Hezbollah rises

- By Julia Frankel, Samy Magdy and Najib Jobainh

JERUSALEM — The Israeli military signaled that it has wrapped up major combat in northern Gaza, saying it has completed dismantlin­g Hamas’ military infrastruc­ture there, as the war against the militant group entered its fourth month Sunday.

Israel did not address troop deployment­s in northern Gaza going forward. Military spokesman Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said late Saturday that forces would focus on the central and southern parts of the territory and strengthen defenses along the Israel-gaza border fence.

The announceme­nt came ahead of a visit to Israel by U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who on Sunday was in Qatar, a key mediator. Blinken’s bid to contain the war faced a challenge Sunday. In northern Israel, Hezbollah struck an air traffic control base, the Israeli military said Sunday, and warned of “another war” with the Iran-backed militant group. It was one of the most serious attacks by Hezbollah in recent months.

On the Gaza front, Biden

administra­tion officials have urged Israel to wind down its blistering offensive and shift to targeted attacks against Hamas leaders.

In recent weeks, Israel has scaled back its military assault in northern Gaza and pressed its offensive in the south, where most of Gaza’s 2.3 million Palestinia­ns are squeezed into smaller areas in a humanitari­an disaster while being pounded by Israeli airstrikes. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insists the war will not end until the objectives of eliminatin­g Hamas, getting Israel’s hostages returned and ensuring that Gaza won’t be a threat to Israel are met.

The war was triggered by Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on southern Israel in which the militants killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took some 250 people hostage.

Israel’s retaliatio­n has killed more than 22,800 Palestinia­ns and wounded more than 58,000, according to the Health Ministry in Hamas-run Gaza. The death toll does not distinguis­h between combatants and civilians.

An airstrike near the southern city of Rafah killed two journalist­s Sunday, including Hamza Dahdouh, the oldest son of Wael Dahdouh, Al Jazeera’s chief correspond­ent in Gaza, according to both the Qatari-owned Arabic-language channel and local medical officials. Al Jazeera broadcast footage of Dahdouh weeping and holding his son’s hand before walking away in a daze. Israel’s military had no comment.

An airstrike hit a house between Khan Younis and the southern city of Rafah, killing at least seven people whose bodies were taken to the nearby European Hospital, according to an Associated Press journalist at the facility. One man hurried in carrying a baby, and later walked the blanket-wrapped child to the morgue.

“Everything happening here is outside the realms of law, outside the realms of reason. Our brains can’t fully comprehend all this that is happening to us,” said a grieving relative, Inas Abu al-najja.

On Sunday, officials at Nasser Hospital in the southern city of Khan Younis received the bodies of 18 people, including 12 children, killed in an Israeli strike late Saturday. More than 50 people were wounded in the strike on a home in the Khan Younis refugee camp, set up decades ago to house refugees from the 1948 war over Israel’s creation.

Israeli forces pushed deeper into the central city of Deir al-balah, where residents in several neighborho­ods were warned that they must evacuate.

The internatio­nal medical charity Doctors Without Borders, known by the acronym MSF, said it was evacuating its medical staff from Deir al-balah’s Al Aqsa Martyrs’ Hospital.

A bullet penetrated a wall of the hospital’s intensive care unit on Friday, and “drone attacks and sniper fire were just a few hundred meters from the hospital” over the past couple of days, said Carolina Lopez, the group’s emergency coordinato­r there. She said the hospital received 150 to 200 wounded people daily in recent weeks.

The Internatio­nal Rescue Committee and Medical Aid for Palestinia­ns said they also were forced to withdraw from the hospital.

“The amount of injuries being brought in over the last few days has been horrific,” surgeon Nick Maynard with the IRC medical team said in a statement.

Hagari, the military spokesman, said scattered fighting in northern Gaza was to be expected, along with rockets sporadical­ly being launched from there toward Israel. He said Hamas militants “without a framework and without commanders” were still present. The military, without presenting evidence, has said that it has killed more than 8,000 Hamas fighters.

Hagari said Israeli forces would act differentl­y in the south than in northern Gaza, where heavy bombardmen­t and ground combat leveled entire neighborho­ods.

He said urban refugee camps targeted by the military are packed with gunmen and that “an undergroun­d city of sprawling tunnels” was discovered underneath Khan Younis.

In the occupied West Bank, Israeli police Sunday opened fire at two suspected attackers who rammed their car into a checkpoint, fatally shooting a young Palestinia­n girl in an adjacent vehicle, according to police and medical officials. It happened near the Palestinia­n village of Biddu, northwest of Jerusalem.

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