By Agency Report
Israel on Monday denied it intended to push Palestinians seeking refuge from its bombardment of Gaza over the border into Egypt as international relief agencies said hunger was spreading among the besieged enclave’s civilian population.
Amid the worsening humanitarian crisis, Hamas fighters and Israeli troops fought across the territory, with the militants trying to block Israeli tanks from advancing through the shattered streets.
The Gaza health ministry said 18,205 people had now been killed and 49,645 wounded in Israeli strikes on Gaza in just over two months of warfare – hundreds of them since the United States vetoed a proposal for a ceasefire at the United Nations Security Council on Friday.
Most of Gaza’s 2.3 million people have been driven from their homes and residents say it is impossible to find refuge or food in the densely populated enclave.
One Palestinian told Reuters he had not eaten for three days and had to beg for bread for his children.
“I pretend to be strong but I am afraid I will collapse in front of them at any moment,” he said by telephone, declining to be named for fear of reprisals.
UNRWA, the U.N. body responsible for Palestinian refugees, said some people were arriving at its health centres and shelters carrying their dead children.
“We are on the verge of collapse,” it said on X.
Aid agencies have also warned of a breakdown in social order as the situation worsens.
On Sunday, U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres said he feared a mass displacement into Egypt. On Saturday, UNRWA commissioner general Philippe Lazzarini said that pushing Gazans closer to the border pointed to attempts to move them into Egypt.
Jordan also accused Israel on Sunday of seeking “to empty Gaza of its people”.
The Israeli government on Monday denied this was its aim. Spokesperson Eylon Levy called the accusation “outrageous and false”.
Levy said his country was defending itself from the “monsters” who had attacked Israel in a cross-border attack on Oct. 7.
In that raid, the deadliest in Israel’s history, Hamas gunmen killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took 240 hostage, according to Israeli tallies. About 100 have since been freed.
The action triggered an Israeli retaliatory assault and brought the bloodiest period of warfare of the decades-long Israel-Palestinian conflict.
The border with Egypt is the only way out of Gaza at present, but Cairo has warned it will not allow Gazans into its territory, fearing they would not be able to return.
U.N. officials say 1.9 million people – 85 percent of Gaza’s population – are displaced and describe the conditions in the southern areas where they have concentrated as hellish.
Gazans said people forced to flee repeatedly were dying of hunger and cold as well as the bombardments, describing desperate attacks on aid trucks and sky high prices. The U.N. World Food Programme has said half of the population are starving.
U.N. Security Council envoys spoke of unimaginable suffering and urged an end to the war on Monday as they visited the Egyptian side of the Rafah border crossing.
China’s representative to the United Nations, Zhang Jun, asked by reporters if he had a message to nations which opposed a ceasefire in Gaza, said simply: “Enough is enough.”
HUMAN SHIELDS
Israel has vowed to annihilate Hamas, which has ruled Gaza since 2007 and is sworn to the Jewish state’s destruction. It says its instructions to people to move areas are among measures to protect the population.
It accuses Hamas of using civilians as human shields and stealing humanitarian aid, which Hamas denies.
After the collapse of a week-long ceasefire on Dec. 1, Israel began a ground offensive in the south and has since pushed from the east into the heart of the city of Khan Younis, with warplanes attacking an area to the west.
On Monday, militants and residents said fighters were preventing Israeli tanks moving further west through the city and clashing with Israeli forces in northern Gaza, where Israel had said its mission was largely complete.
Israel said dozens of Hamas fighters had surrendered and urged others to join them. The armed wing of Hamas said it had fired rockets towards Tel Aviv, where Israelis fled to shelters.
The Israeli military also accused Hamas of hiding weapons in UNRWA facilities in Jabalia and distributed video purporting to show Hamas gunmen beating people and taking aid in the Gaza City district of Shejaia.
Israel has prevented most aid from moving into Gaza, saying it fears it will just fuel Hamas attacks.
Government spokesman Levy said Israel was working to open the Kerem Shalom crossing which processed most aid before the war. He blamed international agencies for holdups at the crossing from Egypt, which is designed for pedestrians.
The Gaza health ministry said 32 Palestinians were killed in Khan Younis overnight. Hamas said its fighters had hit two Israeli tanks with rockets and fired mortars at Israeli forces.
Militants and residents said fighting was also fierce in Shejaia, east of the centre of Gaza City, the northwestern Sheikh Radwan district and Jabalia further north.
In central Gaza, where Israel told people to move on Monday towards shelters in the Deir al-Balah area, health officials said the Shuhada Al-Aqsa hospital had received 40 dead.
Medics also said an Israeli air strike had killed four in a house in Rafah, one of two places near Egypt where Israel says Palestinians should take refuge.
In another flashpoint area, an Israeli shell killed the mayor of the Lebanese village of Taybeh a few kilometres (miles) from the border with Israel on Monday, a relative and Lebanon’s National News Agency said.
Hostilities between Israel and Lebanon’s Hezbollah have been reignited by the war in Gaza, raising international concern that a wider conflict could get out of hand. Reuters
NB: culled from Reuters