Israel-Hamas war: IDF orders people out of UN shelter after deadly strike
The United Nations claimed the Israeli military ordered people to flee a shelter that has been hit by a deadly strike during intense fighting in Khan Younis.
A spokeswoman for UNRWA, the agency for Palestinian refugees, said the Israeli Defence Force gave those huddled inside until the following afternoon to leave the UN shelter.
It comes after at least 12 were killed, and 75 injured, in a strike on the shelter that the IDF “ruled out” was the result of an aerial or artillery strike carried out by Israeli forces.
Amal Lubbad, a Gazan at the UN facility, said they were notified to “vacate the premises” by 5pm Friday afternoon, local time.
“We don’t know where we’ll go,” Lubbad said.
An IDF spokesperson, however, said “no specific evacuation request was communicated to UNRWA or those staying in (the shelter’s) vicinity”.
The death toll at the shelter rose to 12, with another 15 in a critical condition, after what UNRWA agency director Thomas White claimed were two tank shells striking the building.
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IDF INVESTIGATES DEADLY STRIKE
The Israeli Defence Forces says it is investigating a deadly strike on a United Nations shelter in Khan Younis, in southern Gaza.
A building at a training centre in the city run by the UN’s agency for Palestinian refugees, where about 800 people had sought shelter, was hit by tank shelling.
At least nine people were killed and 75 injured, with medical teams unable to access the building.
The UN accused Israeli tanks of striking the shelter after footage emerged from the site, but the IDF clam they’re “conducting an in-depth examination”.
However, the incident drew criticism from the US State Department spokesman Vedant Patel who said: “We deplore today’s attack on the UN’s Khan Younis training centre.
“Civilians must be protected, and the protected nature of UN facilities must be respected, and humanitarian workers must be protected so that they can continue providing civilians with the lifesaving humanitarian assistance that they need.”
CURFEW IMPOSED ON KHAN YOUNIS
The Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) says Israeli forces are besieging its headquarters and Al-Amal Hospital in Khan Younis and imposing a curfew in the area.
“The intense shelling around the hospital, gunfire, and the military vehicles approaching from all directions are ongoing violations of international laws and the Geneva Conventions,” the PRCS said on X.
“The occupation prohibits the movement of humanitarian teams, including ambulances, in blatant disregard for established norms.”
It comes as the International Court of Justice (ICJ) is set to deliver on Friday its highly anticipated verdict on South Africa’s request for an interim ruling in its genocide case against Israel.
The ruling, if granted, would most likely take the form of an order to Israel to announce a ceasefire in Gaza and allow more UN humanitarian aid into the country.
MAN SHOT DEAD WHILE INTERVIEWED ON UK TV
The “shocking video” of a man waving a white flag being shot dead in Gaza, released by ITV News, has sparked accusations of a “war crime”.
Leading charities including Amnesty International and the Norwegian Refugee Council condemned the incident, while UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and US officials were questioned on their reaction.
On Tuesday, footage filmed by Mohammed Abu Safia, a cameraman working for ITV News, showed a group of men in Gaza, holding a white flag who wanted to rescue their family after being forced to evacuate their homes.
Minutes later, one of the men – Ramzi Abu Sahloul – was fatally shot in the chest.
ISRAELI PROTESTERS BLOCK HIGHWAY
A crowd has blocked a highway in Tel Aviv, calling for the government to make a deal securing the release of the remaining captives held in Gaza, according to Israeli media.
Israeli reporter Oren Ziv shared a video from the protests showing a group of women marching with a banner that reads “Stop the bloodshed”.
ISRAEL-HAMAS TALK TRUCE
Israel and Hamas are said to be getting closer to an agreement to release Israeli hostages in return for a month-long ceasefire, the release of Palestinian prisoners and additional aid for Gaza, according to reports.
According to the New York Post, the deal is being held up by the two sides’ inability to agree on how to end the nearly four-month-old war.
The release of the over 130 hostages still held in Gaza would be done in stages, prioritising Israeli civilians and ending with soldiers.
The agreement follows what one source called “intensive” mediation talks led by Qatar, Washington and Egypt.
Hamas first proposed a break of several months, one source claimed, though Israel disagreed and the time frame was lowered to about 30 days.
The sparring groups also cannot agree on how much they want to negotiate at a time, with Hamas refusing to move forward until the future conditions of a permanent ceasefire are determined, while Israel just wants to negotiate one stage at a time, several sources told the outlet.
Hamas hopes to get “a package deal” agreement to a permanent ceasefire before it agrees to release any of the hostages, a Palestinian official involved in mediation efforts said. Israel and Hamas are in contact solely through mediators.
US OPPOSES TERRITORIAL CHANGE IN GAZA
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has renewed opposition to territorial changes in the Gaza Strip as Israel pounds the territory, killing at least 25,490 Palestinians.
During a visit to Nigeria, Mr Blinken was responding to repeated suggestions that Israel would create a buffer zone inside the Gaza Strip, a prospect that has stirred anger.
“It is totally appropriate, something that we support, that those people be able to return to their homes and that the necessary security arrangements be in place to give them the confidence to do that,” Mr Blinken told reporters.
“If there need to be transitional arrangements to enable that to happen, that’s one thing.
“But when it comes to the permanent status of Gaza going forward, we have been very clear, we remain clear about not encroaching on its territory.”
It comes as thousands of displaced Palestinians are fleeing Khan Younis in southern Gaza as the Israeli military said it has surrounded the city amid further operations west of the area.
CNN video shows displaced people sitting on the side of streets and in the vicinity of the seashore. The video shows cars, trucks, and tractors transporting families and their essential belongings, and crowds of people walking. Many of those fleeing described terrifying scenes.
“There are dead people on the ground. We left them behind. There are people killed inside the houses,” displaced Palestinian Hisham Sayegh told CNN. “We were expecting to die at any minute.”
At least 25,490 people have been killed and 63,000 wounded in Israeli attacks on Gaza since October 7.
Doctors Without Borders staff said they are unable to follow Israel’s evacuation orders for the area around Al-Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, as the sounds of “bombs and heavy gunfire” go off nearby.
“With heavy bombing and fighting moving closer to the areas surrounding Nasser Hospital, injured civilians will not be able to access immediate or urgent care,” the group said. The United Nations said the situation at hospitals in the area has deteriorated as Israeli military operations expand.
Meanwhile, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has called out Israel’s “collective punishment” of Palestinians and branded as “unacceptable” refusals to accept a two-state solution for Palestine.
The UN chief’s comment follows after Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently reiterated his long and staunch opposition to an independent state for Palestinians alongside an Israeli state.
“The refusal to accept the two-state solution for Israelis and Palestinians, and the denial of the right to statehood for the Palestinian people, are unacceptable,” Mr Guterres said.
“The right of the Palestinian people to build their own state must be recognised by all.”
HALF A MILLION SUFFER ‘CATASTROPHIC HUNGER’
More than half a million people in Gaza face “catastrophic hunger,” the United Nations said, as Israel restricts supplies of food, water and fuel to the territory.
The United Nations agency that coordinates aid to Palestinian refugees, known as UNRWA, added that Gaza’s health facilities had been decimated and renewed its appeal for a humanitarian ceasefire to facilitate aid deliveries.
A spokeswoman for the agency, Juliette Touma, visited Gaza and appears in a video that the UN released on Tuesday showing people lying on floors in overcrowded medical facilities and receiving rudimentary treatment for wounds. The video also shows families lining up for food and living in makeshift dwellings.
“These are not conditions meant for human beings,” Ms Touma said, adding that the situation was “absolutely desperate.”
The agency said that its ability to deliver aid had been impeded by intense fighting and blackouts of Gaza’s mobile networks for days at a time, as well as restrictions on its ability to move around the territory and reach hospitals.
“As risk of famine grows,” the United Nations “calls for a critical increase in humanitarian access,” it said in a separate post on X.
FREED HOSTAGES TELL OF HORROR
Two freed Israeli female hostages have given testimony at a parliamentary hearing on sexual violence on the abuse they saw while being held captive by Hamas militants.
Aviva Siegel, 62, was abducted from Kibbutz Kfar Aza with her husband Keith on October 7 and released during a ceasefire in late November. Her husband still remains in captivity.
“I was there 51 days and there wasn’t a moment that we didn’t go through abuse of any kind,” she said.
“They (female hostages) became dolls on a string that they can do with them what they please, whenever they please. I saw it with my own eyes. I didn’t just see, I felt the women as if they were my daughters.”
Politicians have criticised the government’s efforts to assist Israelis who were sexually assaulted on October 7.
Mrs Siegel’s daughter, Shir, said that her mother’s testimony was “only the tip of the iceberg,” and expressed anger that ministers were not present to hear the accounts.
“The hostages are sitting in captivity, they have not done anything wrong! We have no right to just sit here, we need to scream for them,” she said.
“Where is the cabinet, that they may hear these stories? Where are the decision makers? Where are they to listen, to shed a tear – what are they busy with?
Chen Goldstein-Almog, 48, said she had seen fellow female hostages miss periods during their captivity – suggesting they may have become pregnant.
She also said that the biggest fear the captives had was of being abandoned by the Israeli authorities.
Mrs Goldstein-Almog and three of her children, Agam, 17, and two sons, Gal, 11, and Tal, 9 were freed in late November, while her husband and eldest daughter were killed on October 7.
In an interview with the New York Times in December, Mrs Goldstein-Almog said the strangest part of her seven-week ordeal was the “long and intimate conversations” she had with her captors.
She said one of the gunmen holding her even apologised for the killing of her husband and one of her daughters by other Hamas gunmen.
Both Mrs Goldstein-Almog and Mrs Siegel were freed during a seven-day humanitarian pause in late November that led to the release of 80 Israeli hostages in exchange for aid deliveries into Gaza and the freeing of hundreds of Palestinian prisoners, many of whom were underage.
– with AFP
Article link: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/world/doomsday-clock-near-catastrophe-amid-israel-ukraine-wars/news-story/08dbc8295fd15a3187d154aee9e52d90Article source: 26 January 2024, Herald Sun, by Justin Vallejo, Adella Beaini and Tiffany Bakker
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