Israeli military enters Gaza’s al-Shifa hospital

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Israeli forces entered al-Shifa hospital in Gaza on Wednesday to conduct what the military described as a “precise and targeted operation” against Hamas.

The move by Israeli troops comes days after they surrounded the besieged strip’s largest medical complex, where tens of thousands of people were sheltering from Israel’s bombardment of the coastal enclave.

Israel claims al-Shifa is a significant site for Hamas’s operations because it sits on top of the armed group’s underground infrastructure, which the Israeli military intends to destroy.

The Israel Defense Forces said in a statement on social media platform X that its operation in a “specified area” of the hospital was “based on intelligence information and an operational necessity”.

Doctors at the hospital in Gaza City have repeatedly denied that it is being used for Hamas military operations.

John Kirby, a spokesperson for the National Security Council, told reporters that members of Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, another smaller militant faction based in Gaza, “stored weapons” in al-Shifa and were “prepared to respond to an Israeli military operation against that facility”.

Annotated satellite photo of al-Shifa hospital in Gaza showing main buildings and people sheltering

Al-Shifa, and all but one of the other hospitals in northern Gaza, have stopped functioning, according to the UN, as Israel’s military has laid siege to the strip as part of its more than five-week war against Hamas.

The desperate situation in Gaza’s hospitals has been a source of tension between Israel and its allies, with the US, France and other western nations increasingly pushing Israel to exercise restraint in operations near medical facilities.

US President Joe Biden warned this week that hospitals “must be protected,” saying: “My hope and expectation is that there will be less intrusive action relative to hospitals.”

Kirby added that Hamas was using hospitals including al-Shifa and the tunnels underneath them to hold hostages. But he said Washington did not support striking a hospital from the air and did not want “a firefight in a hospital where innocent people, helpless people, sick people are simply trying to get the medical care they deserve”.

Gaza, home to 2.3mn people, has been enduring a deepening humanitarian crisis since Israel launched a retaliatory offensive against Hamas after the Islamist militant group launched a devastating attack on October 7.

Hamas’s assault on southern Israel killed about 1,200 people, and about 240 hostages were taken, according to Israeli officials.

More than 11,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza by Israel’s bombardment of the strip, according to Palestinian health officials.

Israel’s forces last month launched a land offensive in the coastal enclave and surrounded Gaza City, Hamas’s main political and military base in the strip.

More than 1.5mn people in Gaza have been forced from their homes, and thousands of people have sought sanctuary at hospitals, while the health system has been pushed into a state of collapse.

The UN’s humanitarian arm said 32 patients — including three premature babies — had died at al-Shifa since Saturday as a result of power loss and “dire conditions” at the hospital.

Mohamed Abu Silmeyeh, its director, warned on Saturday that medics were having to wrap babies in cellophane to keep them alive after incubators stopped working due to the lack of electricity.

The Palestinian health ministry in Gaza said on Tuesday that 170 people had been buried in a mass grave in the courtyard of al-Shifa as a result of the “difficulty of burying them” elsewhere “because of the siege imposed on it from all sides”.

The ministry on Monday said more than 100 bodies at al-Shifa were beginning to decompose and that “the smell of corpses” was everywhere. It added that 8,000 displaced people were sheltering at the hospital, but there was no food or fresh water.

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