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Agencies

Gaza

Israel’s military has launched artillery and air strikes on eastern Khan Younis shortly after demanding residents leave what it had previously designated a humanitarian zone.

The barrage of attacks early on Monday came less than an hour after the evacuation order. At least 70 people have been killed and 200 injured, according to health officials in Gaza.

The enclave’s population, most of which has been displaced and is in desperate need of shelter and food, has found it increasingly difficult to find security as they have been pushed into shrinking “safe zones” by Israel’s bombardment.

The military on Monday had ordered people to leave areas including the eastern part of the al-Mawasi humanitarian zone in the southern Gaza Strip, saying an operation was planned following the launch of a rocket attack towards Israel.

“People did not even have the opportunity to evacuate,” reported Al Jazeera’s Hind Khoudary from the central city of Deir el-Balah.

“The Israeli forces started their air attacks and artillery shelling in eastern Khan Younis shortly after throwing their evacuation order leaflets.”

She noted that casualties were pouring into Khan Younis’s only functional hospital – Nasser Medical Complex – and doctors were pleading for blood donations. Israel’s military said its renewed attacks on the area, which it has repeatedly invaded during the war, were a response to Hamas operations.

In a post on X, Israel’s military accused Hamas of using civilians in eastern Khan Younis neighbourhoods as “human shields”, turning the area into a danger zone.

It called on residents, many already displaced multiple times, to “immediately” flee further west in the al-Mawasi evacuation zone. The order affects more than 400,000 people, according to the Palestinian Civil Defence.

Al-Mawasi has not been immune from attacks either. Earlier this month, a massive aerial attack hit the area, killing over 90 civilians, according to Gaza’s Ministry of Health.

“People feel like the Israelis are playing a chess game with them, moving them from one place to another, and no place is safe,” said Khoudary. Israel’s wave of attacks in eastern Khan Younis comes as Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu heads to Washington to address the US Congress, which has approved billions in military aid to Israel during the war.

It also comes as Israeli negotiators prepare to restart stalled captive-prisoner exchange talks on Thursday, according to Netanyahu.

Since the war broke out, Israeli attacks in Gaza have killed 38,983 people and injured nearly 90,000, the vast majority civilians, while reducing much of the enclave to rubble.

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) has ruled that Israel must take steps to prevent civilian casualties and ensure the entry of humanitarian aid into Gaza, but Israel has rejected the court’s ruling.

Meanwhile, Israel on Monday confirmed the deaths of two hostages seized by Hamas during the October 7 attacks, including a prominent Polish-Israeli historian.

The families of Alex Dancyg, 76, and 35-year-old Yagev Buchshtab have been informed of their deaths in captivity, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said in a statement.

Their bodies are still being held by Hamas, the IDF said.

The decision to publicly confirm the two men’s deaths is based on intelligence information and was “approved by an expert committee.” The circumstances of their deaths while in Hamas custody are being investigated, the military said.

The Hostages and Missing Persons Families Forum, a body established by the relatives of those abducted on October 7, led tributes to the two men.

Dancyg, a Polish historian, had worked at the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem and dedicated himself to fostering closer relations between Israel and Poland, including organizing school trips.

Hostages who were freed in negotiations between Israel and Hamas said that Dancyg had given history lessons during their captivity in Gaza.

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23/07/2024
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