Gaza fighting: Residents live near huge piles of rubbish

Gaza fighting: Residents live near huge piles of rubbish
Gaza fighting: Residents live near huge piles of rubbish

Fierce fighting pitted the Israeli army against Hamas fighters on Saturday in the north of the Gaza Strip, where the living conditions of residents are “disastrous” according to the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA).

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The war, triggered by an unprecedented attack by the Islamist movement in Israel on October 7, is continuing unabated across the Palestinian territory, and raises fears of a flare-up in Lebanon.

On May 7, Israeli troops launched a ground offensive in the southern city of Rafah, which Israel then presented as the last major Hamas stronghold. But fighting has since intensified in several other regions, particularly in the north.

Since Thursday, the Israeli army has been carrying out an operation in Shujaiya, an eastern neighborhood of Gaza City, where it says there are “terrorist infrastructures”.

Civil Defense reported on Friday “numerous deaths” and the flight of “tens of thousands of civilians”, after a call from the army to evacuate the neighborhood.

“Terrified”

“In the streets, people were panicking, they were terrified […] Everyone was leaving Choujaiya,” says Samah Hajaj, 42 years old. “We don’t know why they [les soldats israéliens, NDLR] entered Shujaiya, since they had already destroyed the houses there.”

During the night and Saturday morning, AFP journalists heard explosions, airstrikes and gunfire coming from this area.

The Israeli army said it had eliminated “a large number of terrorists” on Friday and located a weapons depot in a school.

Also in Gaza City, the Civil Defense said four bodies and six wounded were recovered from the rubble of a building hit by an Israeli strike in the Al Sedra area.

In the centre of the Palestinian territory, where the army said it had eliminated “numerous” fighters, residents were clearing rubble in the Maghazi refugee camp after an overnight strike on a house that eventually hit a medical centre.

“The pharmacy, ophthalmology department and emergency department were completely destroyed. All that remains is debris,” said Tarek Qandeel, director of the center.

Further south, five bodies were discovered following a bombing on displaced people’s tents in the Al-Mawasi sector, near Rafah, according to doctors.

The army is continuing operations in the latter city, which borders Egypt, saying it has eliminated “numerous terrorists” there.

Witnesses reported deaths and injuries among the displaced in the Shakush camp, west of Rafah, after a new incursion by the Israeli army and shooting. A source at the Nasser Medical Center in Khan Younis said they received four bodies from west of Rafah.

The Hamas attack on October 7 in Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,195 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP count based on official Israeli data.

32 hospitals damaged

During the attack, 251 people were kidnapped, 116 of whom are still being held in Gaza, of whom 42 died, according to the army.

Israel has vowed to destroy Hamas, which has been in power in Gaza since 2007 and which it considers a terrorist organisation, as do the United States and the European Union.

The Israeli offensive in the Gaza Strip has so far killed 37,834 people, mostly civilians, according to data from the Hamas-led Gaza government’s health ministry.

The war has caused a humanitarian catastrophe in the small, besieged Palestinian territory of 2.4 million inhabitants, more than half of whom have been displaced: water and food are lacking and the health system is on its knees.

A total of 32 hospitals out of 36 in the Gaza Strip have been damaged since October 7, and of them 20 are now out of service, according to figures released Friday by the World Health Organization (WHO).

An UNRWA mission officer, Louise Wateridge, described Friday as “disastrous” the living conditions in the Palestinian territory, where humanitarian aid is arriving in dribs and drabs.

Residents are living in ruins of buildings or tents around a gigantic pile of rubbish, she told reporters in Geneva, via video link from the centre of the Gaza Strip.

“No water, no food”

“There is no water, no sanitation, no food,” she added about Khan Younis (south).

Fears of seeing the conflict spread to Lebanon have recently increased with a verbal escalation between Israel and Hezbollah, an ally of Hamas.

Since October 7, the two camps have exchanged fire almost daily in the border area, deadly violence having pushed thousands of residents on both sides of the border to flee.

Hezbollah said Friday it had launched several attacks on Israeli military positions near the border, and announced the death of one of its fighters, killed by Israeli fire.

On Saturday, its ally Tehran warned Israel that the “axis of resistance,” which includes Iran and its regional allies, could mobilize if it launched a “large-scale” offensive in Lebanon.

On Wednesday, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said Israel did not want war with Hezbollah, but warned that his country had “the capacity to take Lebanon back to the Stone Age.”

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