ISRAELI forces rescued four hostages held by Hamas since October in a raid in Gaza yesterday while more than 200 Palestinians were killed in air strikes in the same area, according to Hamas officials, in one of the bloodiest Israeli assaults of the war.
It was not immediately clear if the hostage rescue and the Israeli air assault were part of the same operation but both took place in central Gaza’s Al Nuseirat, a densely built-up and often embattled area in the eight month-old war between Israel and Hamas.
An Israeli military spokesperson said the hostage rescue operation unfolded under fire in the heart of a residential neighbourhood, where he said Hamas had been hiding captives among Gaza civilians under guard. Israeli forces returned fire, including with air strikes, added the spokesperson, Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari.
An Israeli special forces commander was killed during the operation, a police statement said. A different picture unfolded back in Gaza, where Palestinian health ministry officials and local medics said that an Israeli military assault in Nuseirat had killed scores of people including women and children. The ministry did not say how many of the fatalities were combatants.
The Hamas-run government media office in Gaza said later the death toll had risen to at least 210 Palestinians with many more wounded, after medics and health officials gave earlier tolls of up to 100 dead.
There was no immediate confirmation of the highest figure from Gaza’s health ministry. Social media footage that Reuters could not immediately verify showed bodies on bloodstained streets. “It was like a horror movie but this was a real massacre. Israeli drones and warplanes fired all night randomly at people’s houses and at people who tried to flee the area,” said Ziad, 45, a paramedic and resident of Nuseirat, who gave only his first name. The bombardment focused on a local marketplace and the Al Awda mosque, he told Reuters via a messaging app.
“To free four people, Israel killed dozens of innocent civilians,” he said. Emergency response teams sought to ferry the dead and wounded to hospital in the nearby city of Deir Al Balah but many bodies were still lying in the streets, including around the market district, Ziad and other residents said. Nuseirat, a historic Palestinian refugee camp, has been subjected to heavy Israeli bombing during the war and there has also been fierce ground fighting in its eastern areas. Israel named the rescued hostages as Noa Argamani, 26, Almog Meir Jan, 22, Andrey Kozlov, 27, and Shlomi Ziv, 41. They were taken to hospital for medical checks and were in good health, the military said. The Gaza war shows no signs of slowing even as Israel’s chief ally the United States presses for a ceasefire and a deal that would free the remaining hostages held by Hamas in exchange for releases of Palestinians imprisoned in Israel.
The war has destabilised the wider Middle East, drawing in Hamas’s main backer Iran and its heavily armed Lebanese ally Hezbollah, which Israeli officials are threatening to go to war with on Israel’s northern border. Iran’s foreign ministry blamed the Israeli attack on the refugee camp on ‘inaction’ by world governments and the UN Security council, Iranian state media reported yesterday. “These horrific and shocking crimes... are the result of the in action of governments and responsible international bodies, including the United Nations Security Council, in the face of eight months of war crimes and violations by the Zionist regime (Israel),” foreign ministry spokesperson Nasser Kanaani said. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has called for an emergency UN Security Council session on ‘the bloody massacre that was carried out by the Israeli forces’ at the Al Nuseirat refugee camp, official news agency WAFA reported.
The US military said that it reestablished the temporary pier built to deliver badly needed humanitarian aid into Gaza amid a monthslong Israeli bombardment of the enclave. Aid is expected to start flowing into Gaza via the US-built pier, which was damaged less than 10 days after it was initially attached to the coastline, US officials said. US Central Command (CENTCOM) Deputy Commander Vice Admiral Brad Cooper said US troops attached the temporary pier earlier in the day on Friday with the help of Israeli forces. “The policy of no US boots on the ground remains in effect,” he said. Ultimately, he said the goal is to get 500,000 pounds of aid to Gaza per day, adding that the US and the international community helping were moving with a ‘sense of urgency’. Airdrops have also been nonexistent since the pier fell apart.