Europe
2023.12.10 21:33 GMT+8

7,000 children killed in Gaza as Israel expands ground attack

Updated 2023.12.10 21:33 GMT+8
CGTN

A Palestinian boy, injured in an Israeli raid, reacts as he attends the funeral of family members who were killed in the attack. /Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters

Israel ordered residents out of the centre of Gaza's main southern city Khan Younis and bombarded the length of the enclave overnight, after the U.S. wielded its UN Security Council veto to shield its ally from a demand for a ceasefire, a decision Palestinian leaders said made Washington complicit in Israeli war crimes.

Since a truce with Hamas in the two-month-old war collapsed on December 1, Israel has expanded its ground assault into the southern half of the Gaza Strip, pushing into Khan Younis, where residents reported fierce battles. Both sides reported a surge in fighting in the north.

Israel's National Security Adviser Tzachi Hanegbi said Israeli forces had killed at least 7,000 members of Hamas, without saying how that estimate was reached, and military chief Lieutenant-General Herzi Halevi told soldiers "we need to press harder."

An official toll of deaths in Gaza from the Palestinian health ministry in the Hamas-run enclave exceeded 17,700 on Saturday, with many thousands missing and presumed dead under the rubble. The ministry has said about 40 percent of deaths were of children.

Aid groups have sounded the alarm on the "apocalyptic" humanitarian situation in the narrow Palestinian territory, warning it is on the brink of being overwhelmed by disease and starvation. Meanwhile, the World Health Organization chief said the impact of Israel's assault on Gaza's healthcare sector had been "catastrophic," saying conditions were ideal for the spread of deadly diseases.

A funeral takes place for a family killed in an Israeli airstike at Nasser hospital in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip. /Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters

Israel launched its campaign to against Gaza after Palestianian fighters burst into Israeli towns on October 7, killing 1,200 people and taking 240 hostage, according to Israeli tallies. Some 137 hostages remain in captivity, and thousands of Israelis rallied in Tel Aviv on Saturday to demand their release. The Israeli army said early on Sunday that four soldiers died fighting in southern Gaza.

Most of Gaza's 2.3 million residents have been forced from their homes, often several times. As fighting rages across the territory, residents and UN agencies say there is effectively nowhere safe to go.

Palestinians say the campaign has turned into a scorched-earth war of vengeance against the entire population of an enclave more densely populated than London, while Israeli forces continue to claim they are limiting civilian casualties.

Israel's Arabic-language spokesperson on Saturday posted a map on X highlighting six blocks of Khan Younis to evacuate "urgently." Some residents reported hearing tank shelling and fierce gun battles between Israeli forces and Palestinian fighters, and a series of air strikes as Israeli forces attempted to advance further west.

"We try to put the children to sleep and we stay up fearing the place would be bombed and we'll have to run carrying the children out," said Zainab Khalil, 57, displaced with 30 relatives and friends near Jalal street where evacuations were ordered. "During the day begins another tragedy, and that is: how to feed the children?"

With food and medical supplies scarce, a senior UN World Food Programme official said a new system could bring more aid into Gaza through the Kerem Shalom crossing with Israel, but Israel has not yet agreed to open it.

Smoke rises after Israeli strikes in the southern Gaza Strip. /Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters

In central Gaza, Israeli tank shelling resumed on Bureij and al-Maghazi refugee camps, residents said, while Palestinian health officials reported an Israeli air strike in Bureij killed seven Palestinians. In Khan Younis, the dead and wounded arrived through the night at the overwhelmed Nasser hospital.

A medic ran out of an ambulance with the limp body of a small girl in a pink tracksuit. Inside, wounded children wailed and writhed on the tile floor as nurses raced to comfort them. Outside, bodies were lined up in white shrouds.

 

Thousands presumed dead or missing

Footage inside the Jaffah hospital in Deir al-Balah showed extensive damage from a strike on a mosque next door that shuttered the medical facility. Medical workers in northern Gaza, where some of the heaviest fighting is taking place, accused Israel of targeting hospitals and ambulances.

An ambulance worker in Gaza City's Shejaiya district, asking not to be named for fear of reprisals, said emergency crews often could not respond to calls and faced Israeli fire.

Mohammed Salha, a manager at al-Awda hospital, said Israeli forces had besieged the hospital for days with tanks, shooting people trying to enter or leave. The health ministry said Israeli forces killed two medical staffers inside Kamal Adwan hospital, also in northern Gaza, on Saturday.

An Israeli military spokesperson claimed the army was following international law and takes "feasible precautions to mitigate civilian harm." 

 

U.S. veto makes Washington complicit

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Saturday welcomed Washington's veto at the United Nations Security Council a day earlier to reject a vote backing a humanitarian ceasefire resolution, saying: "Israel will continue our just war to eliminate Hamas."

Washington has said it told Israel to do more to protect civilians but still backs Israel's position that a ceasefire would benefit Hamas. On Saturday, the Biden administration bypassed the U.S. Congress to approve an emergency sale of ammunition to Israel.

People walk near tent camps where displaced Palestinians, who fled their houses due to Israeli strikes, in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip. /Mustafa Thraya/Reuters

Ezzat El-Reshiq, a member of Hamas' political bureau, condemned the U.S. veto as "inhumane." Mahmoud Abbas, president of the Palestinian Authority which lost control of Gaza to Hamas in 2007, said the veto made the United States complicit in Israeli war crimes.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said he regretted the Security Council's failure to offer solutions to the war, two days after a US veto prevented a resolution calling for a ceasefire.

Addressing Qatar's Doha Forum, Guterres said the council was "paralysed by geostrategic divisions" and that the body's "authority and credibility were severely undermined" by its delayed response to the conflict.

"I reiterated my appeal for a humanitarian ceasefire to be declared," he told the forum. "Regrettably, the Security Council failed to do it," he added. "I can promise, I will not give up."

Netanyahu has also rebuffed international calls to end the Gaza war, describing them as inconsistent with supporting the war-aim of eliminating Hamas. Briefing his cabinet, he said he had told the leaders of France, Germany and other countries: "You cannot on the one hand support the elimination of Hamas and on other pressure us to end the war, which would prevent the elimination of Hamas."

Subscribe to Storyboard: A weekly newsletter bringing you the best of CGTN every Friday

Source(s): Reuters
Copyright © 

RELATED STORIES