BSS
  18 Nov 2023, 23:52

Hamas says more than 80 dead in Israeli strikes on Gaza camp

GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories, Nov  18, 2023 (BSS/AFP) - A Hamas
health official said more than 80 people were killed Saturday in twin strikes
on a northern Gaza refugee camp, including a UN school used as a shelter for
people displaced by the Israel-Hamas war.

Social media videos -- verified by AFP -- showed bodies covered in blood
and dust on the floor of a building, where mattresses had been wedged under
school tables in Jabalia, the Palestinian territory's biggest refugee camp.

Israel has vowed to destroy Hamas in response to the October 7 attacks
which Israeli officials say killed about 1,200 people, most of them civilians
in southern Israel, and saw about 240 people taken hostage.

The army's relentless air and ground campaign has since killed 12,300
people, more than 5,000 of them children, according to the Hamas government
which has ruled Gaza since 2007.

"At least 50 people" were killed in a dawn strike on the UN-run Al-Fakhura
school in the camp, which has been converted into a shelter for displaced
Palestinians, a health ministry official in Hamas-controlled Gaza told AFP.

According to UN figures, some 1.6 million people have been displaced inside
the Gaza Strip by six weeks of fighting.

UN humanitarian chief Martin Griffiths denounced the "tragic news of the
children, women and men killed".

"Shelters are a place for safety," he posted on X, formerly Twitter.
"Schools are a place for learning.

"Civilians cannot and should not have to bear this any longer."
A separate strike Saturday on another building in Jabalia camp killed 32
people from the same family, 19 of them children, the Hamas official said.

The Israeli army did not specifically comment on the strikes but said its
troops were expanding operations in Gaza, including in parts of Jabalia, to
"target terrorists and strike Hamas infrastructure".

Israel has told Palestinians to move from north Gaza for their safety, but
deadly air strikes continued to hit central and southern areas of the narrow
coastal territory.

On Saturday, hundreds of people fled on foot after the director of Gaza's
main hospital said the Israeli army ordered the evacuation of the facility
where some 2,000 people were trapped.

Columns of sick and injured -- some of them amputees -- were seen making
their way out of Al-Shifa hospital towards the seafront without ambulances
along with displaced people, doctors and nurses, as loud explosions were heard
around the complex.

On the way, an AFP journalist saw at least 15 bodies, some in advanced
stages of decomposition, along a road lined by heavily damaged shops and
overturned vehicles.

The health ministry said 120 wounded, along with an unspecified number of
premature babies, were still at Al-Shifa hospital.

Israel has been pressing military operations inside the hospital, searching
for the Hamas operations centre it says lies under the sprawling complex -- a
charge Hamas denies.

- 'Patients cannot leave' -

In Gaza City, Israeli troops had called over loudspeakers to evacuate
Al-Shifa "in the next hour", an AFP journalist at the hospital reported.

They also called the hospital's director, Mohammed Abu Salmiya, telling him
to ensure "the evacuation of patients, wounded, the displaced and medical
staff, and that they should move on foot towards the seafront", he said.

But Israel's army denied ordering the evacuation, saying instead it had
"acceded to the request of the director" to allow more civilians to leave.

According to Ahmed El Mokhallalati, a doctor at the hospital, "most of the
medical staff and patients had left" but he was staying at Al-Shifa along with
five other doctors.

Despite the evacuation order, "many patients cannot leave the hospital as
they are in the ICU beds or the baby incubators," Mokhallalati said on X.
Israel has imposed a siege on Gaza, allowing just a trickle of aid in from
Egypt but barring most shipments of fuel over concerns Hamas could divert
supplies for military purposes.

A first consignment of fuel entered Gaza after Israel's war cabinet bowed
to pressure from its ally the United States and agreed to let in two tankers of
diesel a day.

- Fuel 'when hostages are released' -


A two-day blackout caused by fuel shortages ended after a first delivery
arrived from Egypt late Friday, but UN officials continued to plead for a
ceasefire, warning no part of Gaza is safe.

A strike on a residential building in southern Gaza killed 26 people, the
director of the Nasser hospital in Khan Yunis said.

"I was asleep and we were surprised by the strike. At least 20 bombs were
dropped," Imed al-Mubasher, 45, told AFP.

The UN said Israel had agreed to allow in 60,000 litres (16,000 gallons) of
fuel daily from Egypt starting Saturday, but warned it was little more than a
third of what is needed to keep hospitals, water and sanitation facilities
running.

US President Joe Biden's chief adviser for the Middle East said more fuel
deliveries and a potential "significant pause" in the fighting both depend of
the release of hostages.

"The surge in humanitarian relief, the surge in fuel, the pause... will
come when hostages are released," Brett McGurk told a security conference in
Bahrain.

- March on Jerusalem -

Israel has come under scrutiny for targeting hospitals in north Gaza, but
says the facilities conceal underground command hubs used by Hamas -- a claim
rejected by the militants and medical staff.

More than half of Gaza's hospitals are no longer functional due to combat,
damage or shortages, and people are waiting four to six hours for half the
normal ration of bread.

The military says it has found rifles, ammunition, explosives and the
entrance to a tunnel shaft at the Al-Shifa hospital complex, claims that cannot
be independently verified.

Israel has not recovered hostages at the hospital but said it found not far
away the bodies of two kidnapped women including a soldier.

Those held hostage range from infants to octogenarians, and there has been
little information on their fate despite ongoing negotiations mediated by Qatar
and Egypt to secure releases.

Waving Israeli flags and placards depicting the hostages, thousands of
people reached Jerusalem Saturday on the fifth and final day of a march calling
for their release.