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Thursday, December 12, 2024

As strikes devastate Gaza, Israel says it’s preparing for possible ground assault

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Jerusalem, Oct 12: Palestinians in Gaza lined up outside bakeries on Thursday after spending the
night in pitch darkness surrounded by the ruins of pulverised neighbourhoods, as Israel launched
new airstrikes and said it was preparing for a possible ground invasion.
International aid groups warned that deaths in Gaza could accelerate as Israel prevents delivery of
supplies. The war, which was ignited by a bloody and wide-ranging Hamas attack into Israel, has
already claimed at least 2,400 lives on both sides.
Lt. Col. Richard Hecht, an Israeli military spokesman, told reporters Thursday that forces “are
preparing for a ground maneuver if decided," but that the political leadership has not yet ordered
one. A ground offensive in Gaza, the first since the 2014 war, would likely bring even higher
casualties on both sides in brutal house-to-house fighting.
In Gaza, Palestinians fleeing airstrikes can be seen running through the streets, carrying their
belongings and looking for a safe place. Hundreds of thousands have crowded into UN-run schools
while others are staying with relatives or even strangers who let them in.
Lines form outside bakeries and grocery stores during the few hours they dare to open, and the
bakeries could soon shut down for lack of fuel or power.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to “crush and destroy” Hamas with the support of
a new war cabinet formed Wednesday that includes a longtime opposition critic. “Every Hamas
member is a dead man,” Netanyahu said in a televised address.
The US has pledged unwavering support for Israel’s response, and Secretary of State Antony Blinken
arrived in Tel Aviv on Thursday to meet with Netanyahu and other Israeli leaders.
The Israeli military said overnight strikes targeted Hamas’ elite Nukhba forces, including command
centers used by the fighters who attacked Israel on Saturday, and the home of a senior Hamas naval
operative that it said was used to store unspecified weapons.
Another airstrike killed a commander with the Islamic Jihad armed group in his family home in the
northern town of Beit Lahia, according to media linked to the group’s armed wing.
“Right now we are focused on taking out their senior leadership,” Hecht, the military spokesman,
said. "Not only the military leadership, but also the governmental leadership, all the way up to (top
Hamas leader Yehiyeh) Sinwar. They were directly connected."
The Hamas-run Interior Ministry said Israeli strikes demolished two multi-story houses on top of
residents without warning, killing and wounding “a large number” of people, mainly civilians. Hamas
has threatened to kill Israeli hostages if Israel strikes Palestinian civilians without warning.
Israel has halted the entry of food, water, fuel and medicine into the territory. On Tuesday, Gaza's
only power station ran out of fuel and shut down, leaving only lights powered by scattered private
generators. Those will shut off as well if fuel is not allowed in.
A senior official with the the International Committee of the Red Cross warned that lack of electricity
could cripple hospitals, as he called for Hamas to release hostages.
“As Gaza loses power, hospitals lose power, putting newborns in incubators and elderly patients on
oxygen at risk. Kidney dialysis stops, and X-rays can’t be taken, said Fabrizio Carboni, ICRC’s regional
director. “Without electricity, hospitals risk turning into morgues.”
In Israel, opposition leader Benny Gantz, a former defense minister and political opponent of
Netanyahu, joined a new wartime cabinet. Israel has mobilized 360,000 reservists, massed additional
forces near Gaza and evacuated tens of thousands of residents from nearby communities.
The Israeli government is under intense public pressure to topple Hamas after its militants stormed
through a border fence Saturday and massacred hundreds of Israelis in their homes, on the streets
and at an outdoor music festival.
Netanyahu alleged that the attackers engaged in atrocities, including binding boys and girls and
shooting them in the head, burning people alive, raping women and beheading soldiers.

The prime minister’s allegations could not be independently confirmed, and authorities did not
immediately offer further details. Rescue workers and witnesses have described horrifying scenes,
including the slaughter of elderly people and finding bloody rooms crowded with massacred
civilians.
Militants in Gaza are holding an estimated 150 people taken hostage from Israel — soldiers, men,
women, children and older adults — and they have fired thousands of rockets into Israel over the
past five days.
Israel’s increasingly destructive airstrikes in Gaza have flattened entire city blocks and left unknown
numbers of bodies beneath debris. A ground offensive in Gaza, whose 2.3 million residents are
densely packed into a strip of land only 40 kilometres long, would likely result in a surge of casualties
on both sides.
The UN said late Wednesday the number of people displaced by the airstrikes had soared 30 percent
within 24 hours, to 339,000, two-thirds of them crowding into U.N. schools. Others sought shelter in
the shrinking number of safe neighbourhoods.
The Egyptian government rejected an American proposal to allow Palestinians fleeing Israel's
bombardment to leave Gaza, a senior Egyptian official said early Thursday, speaking on condition of
anonymity because he was not authorised to talk to the press. Egypt believes that Palestinians
leaving Gaza would harm the Palestinian cause, and its state-run media reported that the Israeli
offensive is part of a scheme to empty the enclave.
Convoys stood loaded with fuel and food Wednesday on the Egyptian side of the Rafah crossing, but
were unable to enter Gaza, the official said. The only crossing point between Egypt and Gaza was
shut down Tuesday following nearby Israeli airstrikes.
The official said Egypt was talking with Israel and the US on establishing safe corridors inside Gaza
and delivering humanitarian aid to the besieged Palestinians, and with Israel and other foreign
governments to evacuate foreigners through the Rafah crossing point.
The risk of the war spreading was evident Wednesday after the Iranian-backed Lebanese militant
group Hezbollah fired anti-tank missiles at an Israeli military position and claimed to have killed and
wounded troops.
The Israeli military confirmed the attack but did not comment on possible casualties. The Israeli
army shelled the area in southern Lebanon where the attack was launched.
The death toll in Gaza rose to 1,200 early Thursday, the Palestinian health ministry said.
The Gaza Strip’s biggest hospital, Al-Shifa, has only enough fuel to keep power on for three days, said
Matthias Kannes, a Gaza-based official for Doctors Without Borders. The group said the two
hospitals it runs in Gaza were running out of surgical equipment, antibiotics, fuel and other supplies.
Ghassan Abu Sitta, a reconstructive surgeon at al-Shifa, said he had 50 patients waiting to go to the
operating room.
“We’re already beyond the capacity of the system to cope,” he said. The health system “has the rest
of the week before it collapses, not just because of the diesel. All supplies are running short.”
The Palestinian Red Crescent said other hospitals’ generators will run out in five days. Residential
buildings, unable to store as much diesel, likely will go dark sooner.
Shock, grief and demands for vengeance against Hamas are running high in Israel.
In the West Bank, Israeli settlers attacked a village south of Nablus, opening fire on Palestinians and
killing three, the territory’s health ministry said. More than two dozen Palestinians have died in
fighting in the West Bank since the weekend.
In a new tactic, Israel is warning civilians to evacuate whole Gaza neighbourhoods, rather than just
individual buildings, then levelling large swaths in waves of airstrikes.
Israel’s tone has changed as well. In past conflicts, its military insisted on the precision of strikes in
Gaza, trying to ward off criticism over civilian deaths. This time, military briefings emphasize the
destruction being wreaked.
Even with the evacuation warnings, Palestinians say some are unable to escape or have nowhere to
go, and that entire families have been crushed under rubble.

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Other times, strikes come with no notice, survivors say.
“There was no warning or anything,” said Hashem Abu Manea, 58, who lost his 15-year-old
daughter, Joanna, when a strike late Tuesday levelled his home in Gaza City.
The Israeli military said more than 1,200 people, including 189 soldiers, have been killed in Israel, a
staggering toll unseen since the 1973 war with Egypt and Syria that lasted weeks.
Israel says roughly 1,500 Hamas militants were killed inside Israel, and that hundreds of the dead
inside Gaza are Hamas members.
Gaza City, Gaza Strip. Associated Press writers Amy Teibel and Isabel DeBre in Jerusalem; Sam
McNeil in Beeri, Israel; Jack Jeffrey and Samy Magdy in Cairo; and Kareem Chehayeb in Beirut
contributed to this report. (AP)

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