Israel accuses Hamas of ‘war crimes’ and reveals new evidence terror group uses hospitals as military HQs – as IDF says it has ‘fully encircled Gaza City’
- Israel’s military said ‘there is now a north and south Gaza’ amid ‘severe clashes’
Israel’s Defence Forces say they have ‘fully encircled Gaza City’ and are carrying out ‘widespread strikes on terror infrastructure’ below and above ground after revealing what they say is more evidence of Hamas’s ‘City of Terror’ tunnel network.
Amid reports of ‘severe clashes’ between Israeli forces and Hamas, Gaza’s Hamas government claimed Israel’s forces carried out ‘intense bombing’ around several hospitals in the north of the Gaza Strip, shortly after telecommunications were cut.
Gaza has reportedly come under its third total communications outage since the start of the war, while Israel’s military announced it had surrounded Gaza City and divided the besieged coastal strip into two.
‘Today there is north Gaza and south Gaza,’ IDF spokesman Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said, calling it a ‘significant stage’ in the war against Hamas. Israeli media reported that troops are expected to enter Gaza City within 48 hours.
It came as Israel accused Hamas of war crimes, revealing new evidence that it says proves the terror group uses hospitals in the Gaza Strip as military bases while preventing civilians from escaping.
Smoke and flames rise over Gaza City as fighting intensifies in the main city of the besieged strip
At another civilian facility, the Sheikh Hamad, known as the ‘Qatari’ hospital, Hagari showed photo evidence of tunnel entrances alongside the building discovered by Israeli troops
Footage shows what the IDF says are entrances to Hamas tunnels beneath one hospital
‘Hamas is weak without human shields,’ said Hagari as the previously classified intelligence was published which he said had been shared with partner agencies from the US and UK.
He showed aerial photos of Hamas rocket launchpads near the ‘Indonesian’ hospital in Gaza, and said the terrorists knew that the IDF could not launch an airstrike with collateral damage to the hospital.
Amid crippling shortages of fuel for hospitals and homes, further material shared by the IDF shows ‘there is no shortage of fuel in Gaza. It is in the hands of Hamas. They are stealing it from the hospitals,’ Hagari said.
He added that some of that fuel was stored under the Indonesian hospital, which was only 75 metres from a launch site, and the building was actually constructed over Hamas’ ‘City of Terror’, the spider’s web of tunnels beneath the enclave.
There was also a recording of a Gazan official telling a colleague: ‘They say there is a fuel shortage in Gaza, they are liars, liars,’ in a recorded conversation, which Hagari said the United States had verified.
At another civilian facility, the Sheikh Hamad, known as the ‘Qatari’ hospital, Hagari showed what he said is photo evidence of tunnel entrances alongside the building discovered by Israeli troops.
He also showed video footage of Hamas terrorists firing at the Israelis from inside the hospital.
There were video and audio clips purportedly showing that Hamas was actively preventing the evacuation of civilians from the northern Gaza strip, which the Israelis have encouraged through the dropping of 1.5m pamphlets, 6m pre-recorded phone calls and 4.4m SMS texts.
Israeli army flares illuminate the sky over the northern Gaza Strip
Smoke rises following Israeli air strikes in the northern Gaza Strip
Israeli soldiers and tanks take position inside the heavily-bombarded Gaza Strip
During one, said to be a recorded call to a resident of Jabalia refugee camp, an IDF officer tells them in Arabic: ‘There will not be any safe place.’
READ MORE: British citizens fleeing Gaza face the ‘excruciating’ prospect of leaving their loved ones without UK passports stuck in the war-torn coastal enclave
He said some of that fuel was stored under the Indonesian hospital, which was only 75 metres from a launch site, and the building was actually constructed over Hamas’ ‘City of Terror’, the spider’s web of tunnels beneath the enclave.
Hagari showed photos of Hamas vehicles blocking the exit road from northern Gaza and said its fighters had fired anti-tank weapons at Israeli troops who opened a humanitarian corridor to allow further evacuations.
The new intelligence has come to light as Israel’s military said it has split the besieged coastal enclave in two.
On Sunday evening, dramatic pictures showed huge fireballs rising over Gaza City in the north, which Hamas has blamed on Israeli bombing.
‘For more than an hour, intense bombings have been taking place around hospitals,’ said Salama Marouf, the head of the Hamas government’s media office.
The vicinity of the Palestinian territory’s largest hospital, Al-Shifa, saw particularly heavy strikes, according to Marouf.
The bombing came after the Israeli military once again accused Hamas of using hospitals in their military campaign against Israel.
‘Hamas places forces and weapons inside, under and around schools, mosques, homes and UN facilities,’ Hagari told reporters on Sunday.
Smoke rises following Israeli air strikes in the northern Gaza Strip
A picture taken from Sderot along the border with the Gaza Strip early on November 5, 2023 shows smoke and fire rising over the Palestinian enclave during an Israeli strike
Destroyed buildings in Gaza City on November 5, 2023
‘Among the worst of Hamas war crimes is the use of hospitals to hide their terror infrastructure.’
Hamas has repeatedly rejected the charge.
Asked what action Israel would take against the Hamas facilities he had identified, he said: ‘I can’t say more, but it must come to an end,’ adding, ‘Israel abides by international law.’
Israel has relentlessly pounded the besieged Gaza Strip in its battle to destroy Hamas, levelling entire city blocks and killing more than 9,700 people, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.
The attack on Gaza came after Hamas militants stormed across the border on October 7 and killed 1,400 people, mostly civilians, Israeli authorities say.
Source: Read Full Article