Israeli forces reached the gates of Gaza City’s main hospital on Monday, the primary target in their battle to seize control of the northern half of the Gaza Strip, where medics said patients including newborn babies were dying for lack of fuel.
Israel says the hospital sits on top of tunnels housing a headquarters for Hamas fighters, who are to blame for its plight for using patients as shields. Hamas denies the claim.
“The tanks are in front of the hospital. We are under full blockade. It’s a totally civilian area. Only hospital facility, hospital patients, doctors and other civilians staying in the hospital. Someone should stop this,” a surgeon at the hospital, Dr Ahmed El Mokhallalati, said by telephone.
“They bombed the [water] tanks, they bombed the water wells, they bombed the oxygen pump as well. They bombed everything in the hospital. So we are hardly surviving. We tell everyone, the hospital is no more a safe place for treating patients. We are harming patients by keeping them here.”
There was also fresh concern that the war could spread beyond Gaza, with an upsurge of clashes on Israel’s northern border with Lebanon, and the United States launching air strikes on Iran-linked militia targets in neighbouring Syria.
Hamas media reported on Monday night that more than 30 people were killed and scores were injured in an Israeli bombardment of Jabalia camp, in northern Gaza. An Israeli military spokesperson said the army was checking the report. Independent verification was not immediately possible.
Israel launched its campaign last month to annihilate Hamas, the militant group which runs the Gaza Strip, after Hamas fighters rampaged through southern Israel killing civilians. Around 1,200 people died and 240 were taken hostage and brought to Gaza according to Israel’s tally, in the deadliest day in its 75-year history.
Since then, thousands of Gazans have been killed and more than half of the population made homeless by a relentless Israeli military campaign. Israel has ordered the total evacuation of the northern half of Gaza. Gaza medical authorities say more than 11,000 people have been confirmed killed, around 40 per cent of them children.
Since Israeli ground forces entered Gaza in late October and quickly surrounded Gaza City, fighting has been concentrated in a tightening circle around al-Shifa, the enclave’s biggest hospital.
A Gaza health ministry spokesperson Qidrasaid an Israel tank was stationed at the hospital gate on Monday. Israeli snipers and drones were firing into the hospital, making it impossible for medics and patients to move around.
“We are besieged and are inside a circle of death,” he said.
Israel has told civilians to leave and medics to send patients elsewhere. It says it has attempted to evacuate babies from the neonatal ward and left 300 litres of fuel to power emergency generators at the hospital entrance, but the offers were blocked by Hamas.
The spokesman said the 300 litres would power the hospital for just half an hour, and al-Shifa needed 8,000-10,000 litres of fuel per day delivered by the Red Cross or an international agency. An Israeli official who requested anonymity said 300 litres could last several hours because only the emergency room was running.
Dr El Mokhallalati, the surgeon, said premature babies that would normally be in individual incubators were being lined up eight to a bed, kept warm with whatever power was left.
After three died there were 36 alive in the neonatal unit, he said. “We are expecting to lose more of them day by day.”
A second major hospital in northern Gaza, al-Quds, has also stopped functioning. The Palestinian Red Crescent said it was surrounded by heavy gunfire, and a convoy of Red Cross vehicles sent to evacuate patients and staff had been unable to reach it.
United Nations agencies observed a minute’s silence on Monday for 101 staff members killed so far, the largest toll of humanitarian workers in any war since the UN was founded in the ashes of second World War. The UN has run a huge operation for generations in Gaza, where most residents are refugees.
The more than month-long conflict has polarised the world, with many countries saying that even the shocking brutality of the Hamas attacks did not justify an Israeli response that has killed so many civilians in a crowded territory under siege.
Israel says it must destroy Hamas, and the blame for harm to civilians falls on fighters who hide among them. It has rejected demands for a ceasefire, which it says would only prolong the suffering by giving Hamas a chance to regroup. Washington backs that position though it says it is nevertheless pressing its ally to protect civilians.
“The United States does not want to see firefights in hospitals where innocent people, patients receiving medical care, are caught in the crossfire and we’ve had active consultations with the Israeli Defence Forces on this,” White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told CBS News.
Hundreds of thousands of civilians are believed to remain in the northern part of Gaza despite Israel’s order to leave. Israel has also regularly bombed the south. Health officials said at least 14 people were killed in two separate strikes in the main southern Gaza city, Khan Younis. At Nasser Hospital, people in private cars brought in casualties including children.
“There are dead bodies under the rubble, we need ambulances,” one of the men cried.
The conflict has raised fears of a broader conflagration. Lebanon-based Hizbullah, which like Hamas is backed by Iran, has traded missile attacks with Israel. Other Iran-backed groups in Iraq and Syria have launched at least 40 drone and rocket attacks on US forces.
The United States carried out two air strikes in Syria against Iran-aligned groups on Sunday, a US defence official said. – Reuters