Tag: Israel-Gaza Conflict

  • Israel has plans to flood Gaza tunnels with seawater – Report

    Israel has plans to flood Gaza tunnels with seawater – Report

    Israel has assembled a system of large pumps with which it could flood the extensive tunnel network of the Islamist movement Hamas under the Gaza Strip with seawater, according to media reports.

    The U.S. newspaper Wall Street Journal reported on Monday, citing U.S. government officials, that it is not known whether the Israeli government intends to use this tactic.

    Israel has neither made a final decision nor ruled out such a plan, the officials were quoted as saying.

    Israeli forces completed the installation of large seawater pumps north of the Al-Shati refugee camp in mid-November, they said.

    At least five pumps were installed, which can draw water from the Mediterranean Sea and direct thousands of cubic metres of water per hour into the tunnels, flooding them within a few weeks, the newspaper reported.

    With such a tactic, Israel would be able to destroy the tunnels and drive the terrorists out of their underground hideout, it said.

    On the other hand, this would threaten the Gaza Strip’s water supply, U.S. officials were quoted as saying.

    Israel first informed the U.S. of this option in early November, prompting a discussion in which the feasibility and environmental impact were weighed against the military value of taking out the tunnels, the report said.

    The Israeli army said it has found more than 800 tunnel shafts since the beginning of the Gaza war.

    They said on Sunday that about 500 of them have already been destroyed.

    Some of the tunnel shafts had connected strategic Hamas facilities underground, it said in a statement.

    Many kilometres of underground tunnel routes had been destroyed.

    The information could not initially be independently verified.

  • Greece sends humanitarian aid supplies to Egypt for Gaza

    Greece sends humanitarian aid supplies to Egypt for Gaza

    Greece has sent a cargo plane loaded with aid supplies for the civilian population of the Gaza Strip to Egypt.

    The plane took off on Monday morning, according to Greek broadcaster ERT.

    A Greek Foreign Ministry statement said the delivery includes pharmaceutical and medical supplies.

    Aid organisations say the humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip is catastrophic, and that the aid supplies that have so far reached the Gaza Strip by lorry via the Rafah crossing from Egypt are nowhere near enough.

    Israel is demanding that all aid supplies be checked. The Israeli army says this is to prevent weapons from being smuggled to the Islamist Hamas movement, which rules Gaza and carried out an unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7.

    Greek Foreign Minister Giorgos Gerapetritis in an interview said every act of terrorism, every act of violence and every inhumane act is strongly condemned by the government, referring to the Hamas attack on Israel.

    “But we also say that civilians must be protected and humanitarian corridors should be created.

    “For us, the dead have no nationality,’’ Gerapetritis said.

     

  • Israel allows entry of emergency aid coordinator in spite row with UN

    Israel allows entry of emergency aid coordinator in spite row with UN

    Israel said that it is allowing UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Martin Griffiths to enter the country more than three weeks after the start of the Gaza war.

    The spokesman for the Foreign Ministry confirmed on Monday.

    His entry had been authorised “at the request of other states to expedite the departure of foreign nationals from the Gaza Strip.’”

    Israel had announced last week that it would deny entry to representatives of the UN as it had done in the past.

    It is according to critical statements of Israel by UN Secretary General António Guterres.

    Guterres had criticised Israeli counter-attacks in the Gaza Strip and spoke of clear violations of international humanitarian law.

    He condemned the Hamas terrorist attack on Oct. 7, but said it had not taken place in a vacuum, referring to the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories.

    Terrorists carried out massacres of civilians in Israel on Oct. 7 on behalf of the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip.

    More than 1,400 people died in the massacre and in the days that followed.

    Militants also abducted at least 239 people to the densely populated coastal area. Since then, Israel’s military has attacked targets there.

    According to the Hamas-controlled Ministry of Health in Gaza, 8,306 Palestinians had been killed by Monday.

  • 2,360 children killed by Israel in Gaza Strip – UNICEF

    2,360 children killed by Israel in Gaza Strip – UNICEF

    UNICEF has said that 2,360 children have died in Israel’s counter attacks in the Gaza Strip in response to Hamas’ October 7 attacks on southern Israel.

    The aid group, which spoke of the “relentless attacks” said 5,364 children have been injured.

    Since the surprise Hamas attacks on October 7, Israel’s army have been bombing targets in the Gaza Strip and preparing a ground offensive in the sealed-off coastal area.

    “The situation in the Gaza Strip is a growing stain on our collective conscience. The rate of death and injuries of children simply staggering,” said Adele Khodr, UNICEF regional director for the Middle East and North Africa.

    He said the Gaza Strip is suffering from acute water shortages, with severe consequences for children, who make up about 50 per cent of the population.

    UNICEF urged all parties to agree to a ceasefire, provide humanitarian access and release all hostages.

  • WHO reiterates warnings of dire water shortage in Gaza

    WHO reiterates warnings of dire water shortage in Gaza

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) on Tuesday repeated its warnings of the dire situation in the Gaza Strip, pointing to a particularly precarious water shortage.

    WHO regional director Rick Brennan said the WHO estimates that there were only three litres of water per person per day left, whereas the minimum requirement per person is 15 litres, for drinking, cooking and personal hygiene.

    He said hardly anyone has taken a proper shower or bath there in recent weeks.

    Brenan added that with about one million displaced people, toilets were a huge problem.

    He said, “Diarrhoea diseases, skin and respiratory infections are only a matter of time.

    “Some 200 women give birth every day, but they cannot find safe spaces to deliver their babies or reach hospitals in case of complications.

    “In the densely populated coastal strip, the humanitarian situation remains catastrophic for the people living in the besieged Palestinian territory more than two weeks since the war began.’’

  • UPDATE: Oldest orthodox shrine in Gaza damaged by ‘Israeli Strike’

    UPDATE: Oldest orthodox shrine in Gaza damaged by ‘Israeli Strike’

    The St. Porphyrios Greek Orthodox church in Gaza was damaged in an Israeli airstrike on Thursday evening, according to the Patriarchate of Jerusalem.

    Unconfirmed reports from the site said at least two people were killed and more were buried under the rubble of the adjacent meeting hall, RT reports.

    In a statement on Friday, the Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem expressed the “strongest condemnation of the Israeli airstrike [on] its church compound in the city of Gaza,” and called the targeting of churches and the shelters they operate “a war crime that cannot be ignored.”

    The Palestinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs blamed “occupation warplanes” for the explosion, saying Israeli aircraft bombed the church, which is located in the Zaytoun neighborhood of Gaza City.

    A woman and a girl died and “dozens of people” were injured, the ministry said in a post on X (formerly Twitter).

    An unknown number of people are still under the rubble of the meeting hall, the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Jordan said on Facebook, citing one of the parishioners.

    “No sufficiently accurate information is clearly available yet, but expectations are there will be a large number of martyrs,” the Archdiocese added.

    “Archbishop Alexios appears to have been located and is alive, but we don’t know if he is injured,” the Orthodox Order of St. George said in a statement, adding that they have “no word on the condition of any other of the more than 500 people being housed at the church and monastery.”

    According to the Order, “bombs hit the two church halls where the refugees, including children and babies, were sleeping. Presently, survivors are searching the rubble for other casualties.”

    The Wall Street Journal reported that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) were looking into the incident. The IDF has not commented on the matter, but has previously accused Hamas of using religious shrines as cover for its operatives.

    St. Porphyrios is the oldest active church in Gaza. Originally built in the 5th century to honor the eponymous saint, the present structure was erected in the mid-1100s, during the Crusades, and renovated in the 1800s. It is located in the southern portion of Gaza City.

    Conflicting reports from Gaza spoke of up to 800 Palestinians sheltering inside the church compound before the explosion. The premises are just 250 meters away from the Al-Ahli Hospital, where the Palestinians claimed hundreds had been killed and wounded in an explosion on Tuesday evening. Israel insisted that the hospital compound was hit by a rocket launched by the militant group Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

    When Israel launched airstrikes against Gaza in response to the deadly October 7 incursion by Hamas, there was a report that St. Porphyrios had been bombed. The church quickly released a statement calling the story fake news and reassuring everyone who inquired that everything was fine.

  • How underground tunnels in Gaza may affect IDF’s ground onslaught

    How underground tunnels in Gaza may affect IDF’s ground onslaught

    How underground tunnels in Gaza may affect IDF’s ground onslaught

    As Israel warns of an imminent ground assault in Gaza, one challenge that awaits a potential ground invasion involves a widespread underground tunnel system designed to conceal and cover Hamas militants and execute surprise attacks, experts say.

    Hamas has previously claimed to have built 500 kilometers — more than 300 miles — of tunnels under Gaza. The tunnel system is so extensive and well-known it’s referred to by some — including the Israel Defense Forces — as the “metro.”

    Israel has become adept at detecting so-called terror tunnels that have crossed its border — though the extensive tunnel system in Gaza “will present serious challenges for the Israel Defense Forces,” Bradley Bowman, the senior director of the Center on Military and Political Power at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told ABC News.

    “The tunnels permit some Hamas fighters to survive bombardment, move around Gaza under cover and concealment, resupply its forces, hide hostages and conduct surprise attacks,” Bowman said.

    “Imagine going into an environment and then you’re progressing across the field or into the outskirts of the city, then all of a sudden, some enemy forces pop up behind you and there were none there before,” he said. “That’s kind of a nightmare for an assaulting force.”

    Most of the tunnels are reinforced with concrete and some are quite deep, allowing them to protect Hamas militants against airstrikes, Bowman said. In 2020, Israel found one tunnel that went as deep as 230 feet below the surface, according to the Modern War Institute at West Point.

    The tunnel system is wired for electricity and communication and the pathways are wide enough to fit two people side-by-side, as well as move equipment, ammunition and forces through, Bowman said. The average tunnel is about 6.5-feet high and a little more than a foot wide, according to a 2016 article in the journal Geopolitics.

    The tunnels will be a key part of Hamas’ “guerrilla warfare strategy,” according to John Spencer, the chair of urban warfare studies at the Modern War Institute at West Point.

    “Its fighters will form small hunter-killer teams that move underground, pop up, strike, and pop quickly back into a tunnel,” Spencer wrote in a piece published Tuesday.

    Hamas also uses the tunnels to hide and move rockets and rig “tunnel bombs under main roads and buildings that the IDF might be lured into,” Spencer wrote.

    The IDF has acknowledged the challenges posed by the tunnel system.

    “It is not an easy endeavor because Hamas has embedded FORUM
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    As Israel warns of an imminent ground assault in Gaza, one challenge that awaits a potential ground invasion involves a widespread underground tunnel system designed to conceal and cover Hamas militants and execute surprise attacks, experts say.

    Hamas has previously claimed to have built 500 kilometers — more than 300 miles — of tunnels under Gaza. The tunnel system is so extensive and well-known it’s referred to by some — including the Israel Defense Forces — as the “metro.”

    Israel has become adept at detecting so-called terror tunnels that have crossed its border — though the extensive tunnel system in Gaza “will present serious challenges for the Israel Defense Forces,” Bradley Bowman, the senior director of the Center on Military and Political Power at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told ABC News.

    “The tunnels permit some Hamas fighters to survive bombardment, move around Gaza under cover and concealment, resupply its forces, hide hostages and conduct surprise attacks,” Bowman said.

    “Imagine going into an environment and then you’re progressing across the field or into the outskirts of the city, then all of a sudden, some enemy forces pop up behind you and there were none there before,” he said. “That’s kind of a nightmare for an assaulting force.”

    Most of the tunnels are reinforced with concrete and some are quite deep, allowing them to protect Hamas militants against airstrikes, Bowman said. In 2020, Israel found one tunnel that went as deep as 230 feet below the surface, according to the Modern War Institute at West Point.

    The tunnel system is wired for electricity and communication and the pathways are wide enough to fit two people side-by-side, as well as move equipment, ammunition and forces through, Bowman said. The average tunnel is about 6.5-feet high and a little more than a foot wide, according to a 2016 article in the journal Geopolitics.

    The tunnels will be a key part of Hamas’ “guerrilla warfare strategy,” according to John Spencer, the chair of urban warfare studies at the Modern War Institute at West Point.

    “Its fighters will form small hunter-killer teams that move underground, pop up, strike, and pop quickly back into a tunnel,” Spencer wrote in a piece published Tuesday.

    Hamas also uses the tunnels to hide and move rockets and rig “tunnel bombs under main roads and buildings that the IDF might be lured into,” Spencer wrote.

    The IDF has acknowledged the challenges posed by the tunnel system.

    “It is not an easy endeavor because Hamas has embedded itself inside and underneath the Gaza Strip,” Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus told ABC News in the wake of Hamas’ attack.

    Conricus said the tunnels strategically run below civilian infrastructure throughout the Gaza Strip.

    “That is how Hamas has been able to stop our weapons and hide countless rockets in all of these clashes that we’ve had,” he said. “That is where they’re hiding now as we’re bombing, that is where their weapons are, and that is what they rely on, that’s the military infrastructure that they rely on in order to keep on fighting.”

    The IDF has several units that specialize in combating the tunnels, including the Yahalom — “one of the largest units in the world that trains, mans, equips, experiments, and develops new ways to deal with underground warfare,” according to Spencer. In the wake of Hamas’ surprise Oct. 7 attack, the IDF has claimed to have struck targets belonging to Hamas, including “a number of underground tunnels.”

    Israel will have technical advantages in a ground incursion, including drones, though that advantage will be reduced to some degree as it enters enemy territory, Bowman said.

    “Once you’re talking about block-to-block, building-to-building, room-to-room, in some cases, hand-to-hand fighting, it really gets pretty brutal pretty fast,” Bowman said.

    Mick Mulroy, a former deputy assistant secretary of defense for the Middle East and an ABC News contributor, said that for Israel to “clear buildings, basements and the extensive network of tunnels, they will have to dismount their infantry and essentially fight soldier-on-soldier and block-by-block.”

    Hamas — which has “home-court advantage” — has also likely prepared for a major Israeli ground incursion “long before Oct. 7,” Bowman said.

    “That’s going to make any Israeli ground incursion more difficult because Hamas is probably prepared for this scenario,” he said.

  • Fresh twist: Israel denies bombing Gaza hospital, says there’s enough evidence to nail militants

    Fresh twist: Israel denies bombing Gaza hospital, says there’s enough evidence to nail militants

    In what could be described as a fresh twist, the Israeli army on Wednesday denied any link with the bombing of Gaza hospital hundreds were killed.

    According to the Israeli army, it has evidence that militants were responsible for the blast.

    Military spokesman, Daniel Hagari, during a press conference in Tel Aviv, said, “The evidence — which we are sharing with you all — confirms that the explosion at the hospital in Gaza was caused by an Islamic Jihad rocket that misfired.”

    The comments came after an explosion at a Gaza hospital compound on Tuesday evening killed at least 200 people.

    This development sparked protests across the Middle East and wide-ranging condemnation.

    Hagari said, “There was no IDF (Israeli army) fire by land, sea or air that hit the hospital.

    “Our radar system tracked missiles fired by terrorists in Gaza at the time of the explosion and the trajectory analysis of the rockets shows the rockets were fired in close proximity to the hospital.”

    Following the blast, the Palestinian militant group Hamas, which runs the territory, pinned the blame on Israel.

    The war of words continued on Wednesday with Hamas firing back at Israel’s latest comments about the strike, saying “Its outrageous lies do not deceive anyone.

    “Israel is directly responsible for this horrific massacre which was carried out… with American weapons only the occupation possesses.”

    For more than a week, Israel has carried out a withering bombardment of Gaza – retaliation for the killing of 1,400 people who were shot, mutilated or burnt to death in shock cross-border attacks launched by Hamas on October 7.

  • Casualties from escalating Israel-Gaza conflict hit 450

    Casualties from escalating Israel-Gaza conflict hit 450

    Amidst escalating violence in Gaza, Israeli and Palestinian officials have reported over 450 casualties.

    On Saturday morning, Palestinian militants, Hamas, launched a broad assault on southern Israel, infiltrating towns, army bases, and firing rockets as far as Jerusalem, prompting a major Israeli defensive effort.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, vowed to retaliate and reduce Hamas strongholds to rubble.

    By Sunday evening, fighting persisted in multiple locations, with abductions of Israelis and heavy casualties reported. Israel responded with significant strikes on Gaza, resulting in heavy casualties.

    Air-Raid Sirens in Israel Warn of Continued Strikes on Sunday

    Israel’s ambassador to the UN, Gilad Erdan, condemned Hamas for war crimes, asserting the need to eradicate its terror infrastructure.

    Erdan accused Hamas of committing “blatant, documented war crimes” and stressed that the “era of reasoning with these savages is over”.

    “Now is the time to obliterate Hamas terror infrastructure, to completely erase it, so that such horrors are never committed again,” he said.

    The US military has pledged support to Israel and is planning to move navy ships and aircraft closer to the country.