Heavy Fighting Across Gaza Sunday 12/10 09:25
Heavy fighting raged Sunday across Gaza, including in the devastated north,
as Israel pressed ahead with its offensive after the U.S. blocked the latest
international push for a cease-fire and rushed more munitions to its close ally.
DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) -- Heavy fighting raged Sunday across Gaza,
including in the devastated north, as Israel pressed ahead with its offensive
after the U.S. blocked the latest international push for a cease-fire and
rushed more munitions to its close ally.
Israel has faced rising international outrage and calls for a permanent
cease-fire after the killing of thousands of Palestinian civilians. About 90%
of Gaza's 2.3 million people have been displaced within the besieged territory,
where U.N. agencies say there is no safe place to flee.
The United States has lent vital support to the offensive once again in
recent days, by vetoing United Nations Security Council efforts to end the
fighting that enjoyed wide international support, and by pushing through an
emergency sale of over $100 million worth of tank ammunition to Israel.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu thanked U.S. President Joe Biden
for the "important ammunition for the continuation of the war," and for
supporting Israel at the Security Council.
The U.S. has pledged unwavering support for Israel's goal of crushing Hamas'
military and governing abilities, and returning all the hostages captured in
the Oct. 7 attack that triggered the war. Hamas and other Palestinian militants
stormed into southern Israel that day, killing some 1,200 people and capturing
around 240, over 100 of whom were released during a weeklong cease-fire late
last month.
In response to the attack, Israel launched an air and ground war that has
killed thousands of Palestinians, mostly civilians, and forced some 1.9 million
people to flee their homes. With only a trickle of aid allowed in, and delivery
impossible in much of the territory, Palestinians face severe shortages of
food, water and other basic goods.
"The situation is fast deteriorating into a catastrophe with potentially
irreversible implications for the Palestinians as a whole and for peace and
security in the region," U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told a forum
in Qatar, a key intermediary.
Qatar's prime minister, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, told the forum that
mediation efforts will continue to stop the war and have all hostages released,
but "it always takes two parties to be willing to (undertake) such an
engagement. Unfortunately, we are not seeing the same willingness that we had
seen in the weeks before."
Israel's national security adviser, Tzachi Hanegbi, told Israel's Channel 12
TV that the U.S. has set no deadline for Israel to achieve its goals of
dismantling Hamas and returning all the hostages.
"The evaluation that this can't be measured in weeks is correct, and I'm not
sure it can be measured in months," he said.
FIGHTING AND ARRESTS IN THE NORTH
Israeli forces continue to face heavy resistance, even in northern Gaza,
where entire neighborhoods have been flattened by air strikes and where ground
troops have been operating for over six weeks.
Israel's Channel 13 TV broadcast footage showing dozens of detainees
stripped to their underwear with their hands in the air. Several held assault
rifles above their heads, and one man slowly walked forward and placed a gun on
the ground.
Other videos in recent days have shown groups of unarmed men held in similar
conditions, without clothes, bound and blindfolded. Detainees from a separate
group who were released Saturday told The Associated Press they had been beaten
and denied food and water.
Israel has not commented on the latest video or the allegations of
mistreatment, but government spokesman Eylon Levy said "increasing numbers" of
Hamas fighters were surrendering, calling it a sign of "collapsing" morale.
Residents said there was still heavy fighting underway in the Gaza City
neighborhood of Shijaiyah and the Jabaliya refugee camp, a dense urban area
housing Palestinian families who fled or were driven out of what is now Israel
during the 1948 war surrounding its creation.
"They are attacking anything that moves," said Hamza Abu Fatouh, a Shijaiyah
resident. He said the dead and wounded were left in the streets as ambulances
could no longer reach the area, where Israeli snipers and tanks positioned
themselves among the abandoned buildings.
"The resistance also fights back," he added.
Israel ordered the evacuation of the northern third of the territory,
including Gaza City, early in the war, but tens of thousands of people have
remained there, fearing that the south would be no safer or that they would
never be allowed to return to their homes.
Heavy fighting was also underway in and around the southern city of Khan
Younis.
WAITING FOR FOOD
In central Gaza, hundreds of Palestinians waited for flour outside an U.N.
distribution center. The price of food has soared as much of the territory
faces severe shortages. Abdulsalam al-Majdalawi said he has come every day for
nearly two weeks, hoping to get food for his family of seven.
"Every day, we spend five or six hours here and return home (empty handed),"
he said. "Thank God, today they drew our name."
With the war in its third month, the Palestinian death toll in Gaza has
surpassed 17,700, the majority women and children, according to the Health
Ministry in the Hamas-controlled territory. The ministry does not differentiate
between civilian and combatant deaths.
Israel holds Hamas responsible for civilian casualties, saying the militants
put civilians in danger by fighting in dense, residential neighborhoods. The
military says 97 Israeli soldiers have died in the ground offensive.
Palestinian militants have also continued firing rockets into Israel.
Netanyahu's office said Sunday that Hamas still has 117 hostages, as well as
the remains of 20 people killed in captivity or during the Oct. 7 attack. The
militants hope to exchange them for Palestinians imprisoned by Israel.
Israel says it has provided detailed instructions for civilians to evacuate
to safer areas, even as it continues to strike what it says are militant
targets in all parts of the territory. Thousands have fled to the southern town
of Rafah and other areas along the border with Egypt in recent days -- one of
the last areas where aid agencies are able to deliver food and water.
The war has raised tensions across the region, with Lebanon's Hezbollah
trading fire with Israel along the border and other Iran-backed militant groups
targeting the U.S. in Syria and Iraq.
France said one of its warships in the Red Sea shot down two drones that had
approached it from Yemen, where Iran-backed Houthi rebels have vowed to halt
Israeli shipping through the key waterway.
Israel's national security adviser said Israel would give Western allies
"some time" to organize a response. But he said if the threats persist, "we
will act to remove this blockade."
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