Situation staff finds dozens of our bodies in Gaza Town district in the next Israeli attack

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DEIR AL-BALA, Gaza Strip (AP) — Civil defense workers pulled bodies out of collapsed constructions Friday and pulled them through debris-covered streets as they fought an Israeli assault on a Gaza district that killed dozens of Palestinians. Was. City.

The bodies were discovered after Israeli troops reportedly cleared parts of Tal al-Hawa and Sinnah neighborhoods after several days of bombardment and fighting. The Israeli military had announced incursions into the districts ahead of the show, which it said were Hamas militants who had regrouped.

Horrific scenes of lifeless people underlined the horrific nine months of the Gaza war.

Attacking every city department around the small area since October, Israeli forces have been repeatedly re-invading some parts as Hamas makes changes and maintains its positions. Palestinians are repeatedly forced to flee to escape proselytizing attacks – or face living and dying in the park. Rok-tok talks proceed, come closer but somehow no resolution is achieved.

Videos circulating on social media showed civil defense workers wrapping bodies, including several women, in blankets on the debris-filled streets of Tal al-Hawa and Sina. Where workers excavated the collapsed structure, an arm emerged from the broken concrete. Alternative video confirmed burnt structures.

Mahmoud Bassal, director of civil defense in Gaza, said about 60 bodies had been found so far, including entire families who were killed by artillery fire and airstrikes while trying to flee. He said some bodies had been partially killed by dogs, some were burnt inside houses and some were lying in the debris, where they could not be reached.

Inside view Fadel Naeem, director of the al-Ahli health center, said at least 40 bodies found in the districts have been brought to the center, though he did not have an exact number.

The Israeli military said it would not comment on the discovery of the bodies.

Israel’s attack on the district began after it issued an evacuation layout for the department on Monday. In a statement on Friday, the army said its troops focused on the isolated headquarters of the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees, known as UNRWA, where it said Hamas had set up operations.

UNRWA left the compound in October, at the beginning of the fighting. The army said Friday that troops had battled Hamas and Islamic Jihad fighters inside the compound and found materials for construction drones and a stockpile of guns. It released footage of one of the key subject matter, even though the claims have not been independently verified.

On Friday, troops from most of the department had withdrawn, but snipers and drones continued to fire potentially, said Salem Elreyes, a resident who fled to the south months ago but was told locally there were still participants. Was.

He said that during the offensive, soldiers set fire to several houses – including the home of one of his uncles – and carried out wide-scale arrests, taking people to the UNRWA compound for questioning. He said at least 11 of his relatives have been detained.

Two were rescued after being seriously overwhelmed, while the remains are still missing. His people searched for substitute relatives, yet they remained unaccounted for – “Some may have been detained, and some may have lost communication. Others may have been killed,” Alreyas said.

Earlier in the day, civil defense workers said they had found dozens of bodies in Shijaiya, another district of Gaza City, where Israeli troops recently withdrew after a two-week offensive.

In this symbol taken from video, Palestinians return to scenes of disintegration in the Shijaiya cluster of Gaza Town on Thursday, July 11, 2024, the day after Israeli troops withdrew after a two-week offensive. (AP photo)

Most of the people of Gaza City and the people of the settlement in the north fled the war. However the United Nations estimates that about 300,000 people live in the north. With every new attack, people constantly flee to other parts of the north, as Israel has so far not allowed those fleeing the south to return to the north.

UK-based aid team Al-Khair Understructure said an airstrike early Friday crashed an aid attic in Muwasi, part of an Israeli-declared “humanitarian safe zone” covering parts of south and central Gaza. . Imam Qasim Rasheed Ahmed, the director of the mob in London, said one of his employees, an engineer, and three employees of various humanitarian groups in the attic were killed in the collision.

The Israeli military said that a member of the al-Khair understructure, Hussam Mansour, who was actually a senior Hamas terrorist, was killed. Israel said it had given up its position with the humanitarian task force to raise money for Hamas.

Israel announced its operation in Gaza following Hamas’ October 7 attack, in which militants struck into southern Israel, killing about 1,200 people – mostly civilians – and abducting about 250.

Later, according to the territory’s health ministry, Israeli garden offensives and bombings in Gaza killed more than 38,300 people and injured more than 88,000. The ministry no longer differentiates between fighters and civilians in its area. More than 80% of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million were driven from their homes, and most are now crowded into filthy tent camps, and facing widespread hunger.

Meanwhile, in Cairo, US, Egyptian and Qatari mediators pushed for a proposed three-phase ceasefire in Gaza and a hostage-taking plan meant to create less of a gap between Israel and Hamas.

The US-backed proposal calls for an initial ceasefire along with the dropping of a restricted hostage regime and the withdrawal of Israeli troops from populated areas in Gaza. Both sides will negotiate the terms of the second phase at the same time. Section two is intended to allow full hostage-taking to return to a permanent ceasefire and complete Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.

Israeli soldiers sit on their vehicles near the Israel-Gaza border in southern Israel on Friday, July 12, 2024.  (AP Photo/Tsafir Abayov)
Israeli infantrymen sit in their car near the Israel-Gaza border in southern Israel on Friday, July 12, 2024. (AP Photograph/Tsafrir Abayov)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said Israel will not agree to any resolution that would rule out resuming its military campaign until Hamas is eliminated. On Thursday, he indicated that Israel intends to capture the Rafah border crossing with Egypt, which could negate a complete withdrawal from Gaza.

Hamas dropped its call for Israel to surrender prematurely in order to succeed in a permanent ceasefire. However a Hamas political confidant told The Associated Press that the mob still wanted written promises from mediators that talks would continue until a permanent ceasefire.

Put another way, “Netanyahu can stop negotiations at any age and thus resume aggression,” said Ahmed Abdul-Hadi, head of Hamas’s political administrative center in Lebanon.

Abdul-Hadi also said that Hamas is not hoping to resume its role as the sole ruling party in Gaza after the war, but rather wants to see a Palestinian government of technocrats.

“We do not want to rule Gaza alone again in the next phase,” he said. Israeli officials have suggested they will call for the dismantling of Hamas in the second round of talks.

An Israeli soldier disembarks from his tank near the Israel-Gaza border in southern Israel on Friday, July 12, 2024.  (AP Photo/Tsafir Abayov)
An Israeli soldier disembarks from his tank near the Israel-Gaza border in southern Israel on Friday, July 12, 2024. (AP Photograph/Tsafrir Abayov)

Netanyahu is under growing influence both locally and around the world. Families of hostages are marching towards Jerusalem to demand a resolution and the release of their family members as Israeli politicians, together with Protection Minister Yoav Galant, launch a major executive crackdown on the habits of Israeli leaders. Demanding investigation.

There remains a chance for regional growth. Israel’s military said Friday that one of its infantrymen was killed in northern Israel, where the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah and Israel continue firing on the border.

Associated Press writers Abby Sewell and Sarah El Deeb in Beirut, Sam Metz in Rabat, Morocco, and Jack Jeffery in Ramallah, West Warehouse, contributed to this document.


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