Israeli troops carried out building-by-building searches at Gaza’s main hospital, as a new communications blackout in the territory yesterday compounded fears for Palestinian civilians trapped inside the facility.
Al-Shifa hospital has become a focal point for Israeli operations in northern Gaza since soldiers raided the complex on Wednesday, hunting for a command center they say that was operated by Hamas.
Hospital managers and Hamas deny that charge, and there has been international concern about several thousand people — including wounded patients and premature babies — believed to be trapped inside.
Photo: Reuters
Israel has vowed to eradicate Hamas in response to the group’s Oct. 7 attack, which killed 1,200 people, most of them civilians, and saw about 240 taken hostage, according to Israeli officials.
Israel’s air bombardment and ground operation has killed 11,500 people, including thousands of children, Hamas-run local authorities in Gaza said.
Thick dark smoke rose over the northern Gaza Strip yesterday, a video showed.
Israeli authorities have defended their operation, and the military said Thursday it found rifles, ammunition, explosives and the entrance to a tunnel shaft at al-Shifa.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said hostages might even have been held at the medical facility.
“We had strong indications that they were held in the Shifa Hospital, which is one of the reasons we entered the hospital,” he told CBS Evening News.
“If they were [there], they were taken out,” Netahyahu said.
Allegations about the hospital have not been verified, and yesterday communications with the Gaza Strip were severed once again.
Network provider Paltel group said all telecommunications were down because “all energy sources sustaining the network have been depleted, and fuel was not allowed in.”
The UN warned that the blackout would compound the misery of civilians, complicating efforts to distribute aid and possibly triggering looting of its supplies.
“When you have a blackout and you cannot communicate with anyone anymore ... that triggers and fuels even more the anxiety and the panic,” UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees head Philippe Lazzarini said.
Israel said its forces were searching al-Shifa “one building at a time,” and the army announced yesterday that troops had recovered the remains of kidnapped female soldier Noa Marciano, 19, “from a structure adjacent to al-Shifa hospital.”
The army had confirmed earlier in the week the death of Marciano, without giving the cause. Hamas said she had been killed in an Israeli bombardment.
On Thursday the army said soldiers near al-Shifa had found the body of another hostage.
Yehudit Weiss, 65, was kidnapped from her home in the border kibbutz community of Beeri, one of the areas worst-hit by the brutal Hamas assault.
Her husband was killed in the attack, a hostage support group said.
On Thursday, Jews and Arabs came together for the funeral of another casualty of the Beeri attack — peace activist Vivian Silver, who was hailed as an “extraordinary woman.”
Negotiations are ongoing for the release of the hostages, some of them just infants, in exchange for a pause in fighting.
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