Monterey Herald

Israeli troops withdraw from hospital

- By Wafaa Shurafa, Samy Magdy and Tia Goldenberg

DEIR AL-BALAH, GAZA STRIP >> The Israeli military withdrew from Gaza's largest hospital early Monday after a two-week raid that engulfed the facility and surroundin­g districts in fighting. Footage showed widespread devastatio­n, with the facility's main buildings reduced to burned-out husks.

The military has described the raid on Shifa Hospital as a major battlefiel­d victory in the nearly six-month war and said its troops killed 200 militants in the operation, though the claim they were all militants could not be confirmed.

But the raid came at a time of mounting frustratio­n in Israel, with tens of thousands protesting Sunday against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and demanding that he do more to bring home dozens of hostages held in Gaza. It was the largest anti-government demonstrat­ion since the start of the war.

Elsewhere, Syrian officials and state media said an Israeli airstrike destroyed the consular section of Iran's embass y in Syria, killing a senior Iranian military adviser and several others.

The strike appears to signify an escalation of Israel's targeting of Iranian military officials and their allies in Syria. The targeting has intensifie­d since Hamas militants — who are supported by Iran — attacked Israel on Oct. 7.

Israel, which rarely acknowledg­es such strikes, said it had no comment.

The Iranian Arabic-language state television Al-Alam and pan-Arab television station AlMayadeen, which has reporters in Syria, said the strike killed Iranian military adviser Gen. Ali Reza Zahdi, who led the elite Quds Force in

Lebanon and Syria until

2016.

In other developmen­ts, Netanyahu said he would shut down satellite broadcaste­r Al Jazeera immediatel­y. Netanyahu vowed to close the “terror channel” after parliament passed a law Monday clearing the way for the country to halt the Qatari-owned channel from broadcasti­ng from Israel.

Netanyahu accused Al Jazeera of harming Israeli security, participat­ing in the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks and inciting violence against Israel.

Meanwhile, a second shipment of food aid arrived by sea in the latest test of a new maritime route from the Mediterran­ean island nation of Cyprus. One of the three boats could be seen off the coast, and Cyprus' foreign minister said they had received permission to unload. The precise mechanism of delivery was not yet clear.

The fighting around Shifa showed that Hamas can still put up resistance even in one of the hardesthit areas. Israel said it had largely dismantled Hamas in northern Gaza and withdrew thousands of troops late last year.

The raid also gutted a hospital that had once been the heart of Gaza's health system but which doctors and staff had struggled to get even partially operating again after a previous Israeli assault in November.

Israel said it launched the latest raid on Shifa because senior Hamas operatives had regrouped there and were planning attacks. It identified six officials from Hamas' military wing it said were killed inside the hospital during the raid. It also said it seized weapons and valuable intelligen­ce.

The military said it killed 200 militants inside and outside Shifa, though it provided no evidence all were militants.

The raid triggered days of heavy fighting for blocks around Shifa, with witnesses reporting airstrikes, the shelling of homes and troops going house to house to force residents to leave.

After the troops withdrew, hundreds of Palestinia­ns returned to search for lost loved ones or examine the damage.

Among the dead were Ahmed Maqadma and his mother — both doctors at Shifa — and his cousin, said Dr. Ghassan Abu Sitta, a Palestinia­n-British doctor who volunteere­d at Shifa and other hospitals during the first months of the war before returning to Britain.

The fate of the three had been unknown since they talked by phone with family as they tried to leave Shifa nearly a week ago and the line suddenly went dead. On Monday, relatives found their bodies with gunshot wounds about a block from the hospital, said Abu Sitta, who is in touch with the family.

Bassel al-Hilou said the bodies of seven of his relatives were found in the wreckage of a house near Shifa where they had been sheltering when it was demolished by a strike.

“There was a massacre in my uncle's house,” he told The Associated Press. “The situation was indescriba­ble.”

Mohammed Mahdi, who was among those who returned to the area, described a scene of “total destructio­n.” He said several buildings had been burned down and that he counted six bodies in the area, including two in the hospital courtyard, though it was not clear when they died.

Video footage circulatin­g online showed the main buildings of Shifa charred and heavily damaged. Several witnesses said army bulldozers had plowed up a mass grave that had been dug in November in Shifa's courtyard, leaving many bodies exposed.

At least 21 patients died during the raid, World Health Organizati­on Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s posted late Sunday on X, formerly Twitter.

He said over a hundred patients were still inside the compound during the operation, including four children, 28 critical patients and many who suffered from infected wounds and dehydratio­n.

The military denied that its forces harmed any civilians inside the compound. Israel has accused Hamas of using hospitals for military purposes and has raided many hospitals across the territory.

Critics accuse the army of recklessly endangerin­g civilians and of decimating a health sector already overwhelme­d with wounded.

Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, the top military spokesman, said Hamas and the smaller Islamic Jihad group establishe­d their main northern headquarte­rs inside the hospital. He described days of close-quarters fighting and blamed Hamas for the destructio­n, saying some fighters barricaded themselves inside hospital wards while others launched mortar rounds at the compound.

Hagari said the troops arrested some 900 suspected militants during the raid, including more than 500 Hamas and Islamic Jihad fighters, and seized over $3 million in different currencies, as well as weapons.

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