A hospital taken by storm. Concern is only growing for the dozens of patients and employees trapped at Nasser Hospital. One hundred people were arrested in the establishment located in the south of the Gaza Strip, the Israeli army announced on Saturday February 17.

At least 120 patients and five medical teams are without water, food and electricity, according to the Hamas health ministry. During the night, new bombings by the Israeli army on Palestinian territory left around a hundred dead, he added.

Israel has for weeks concentrated its military operations in Khan Younes, the hometown of Hamas leader in Gaza, Yahia Sinouar. He is the alleged mastermind of the unprecedented attack on October 7 by the Palestinian Islamist movement on Israeli soil.

Risk of death for newborns

Six patients, including a child, have died at Nasser hospital since Friday due to power cuts which caused the cessation of oxygen distribution, according to a new report on Saturday from the Hamas Ministry of Health. in power in Gaza. “Newborns are at risk of dying in the coming hours,” he added.

The Israeli army said its troops entered the hospital on Thursday based on "credible intelligence" that people taken hostage during the October 7 attack were being held there and that the bodies of some of them were perhaps still there.

One hundred people arrested in the hospital are suspected of "terrorist activities", the army said on Saturday. She said she discovered mortar shells, grenades and other weapons belonging to Hamas.

On October 7, Hamas commandos infiltrated from Gaza killed more than 1,160 people in Israel, the majority civilians, according to an AFP count based on official Israeli data.

In retaliation, Israel vowed to annihilate Hamas, which it considers a terrorist organization along with the United States and the European Union. The Israeli offensive in Gaza left 28,858 dead, the vast majority of them civilians, the Hamas Ministry of Health announced on Saturday in its latest report.

According to Israel, 130 hostages are still held in Gaza, 30 of whom are believed to have died, out of around 250 people kidnapped on its territory on October 7.

Untenable situation

Doctors from the Nasser hospital described an untenable situation in this establishment located in a city transformed into a field of ruins, prey to fighting and where thousands of displaced people had taken refuge.

Israeli armored vehicles near the border with the Gaza Strip, February 16, 2024 © Jack Guez, AFP

Doctors Without Borders announced that its employees had “had to flee, leaving the sick behind.”

“The situation was chaotic, catastrophic,” Christopher Lockyear, MSF secretary general, told AFP.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the Nasser hospital, one of eleven that remain open out of the 36 in the Gaza Strip before the war, is now "barely functional".

“More damage to hospitals means more lives lost,” declared WHO spokesperson Tarik Jasarevic during a press briefing on Friday in Geneva, demanding urgent access to WHO at the hospital complex.

Displaced Palestinians walk near the border fence between the Gaza Strip and Egypt, February 16, 2024 in Rafah © Mohammed Abed, AFP

Giant camp in Egypt

Meanwhile, the international community is increasing its calls to dissuade Israel from launching an offensive in the overcrowded city of Rafah, where nearly a million and a half civilians are trapped against the closed border with Egypt.

The European Union said on Friday it was "very concerned" by this prospect, and urged Israel "not to undertake military action in Rafah which would aggravate an already catastrophic humanitarian situation".

Witnesses reported explosions in central and eastern Rafah on Saturday, where at least two houses were targeted by airstrikes.

The day after the American president's call for a "temporary ceasefire" in the Gaza Strip, the leader of Palestinian Hamas, Ismaïl Haniyeh, repeated on Saturday that his movement demanded a ceasefire. , the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza and the release of Palestinian prisoners held in Israel.

According to the Wall Street Journal, citing Egyptian officials, Egypt is building a secure zone surrounded by a wall in the Sinai Peninsula to accommodate Palestinians from Gaza.

Palestinians crowd in front of a bakery to buy bread on February 15, 2024 in Rafah, in the Gaza Strip © Mohammed Abed, AFP

This camp is part of the "emergency plans" for the reception of these refugees in the event of an Israeli assault on Rafah and could shelter "more than 100,000 people", according to the American daily.

Palestinian leaders, the UN and many countries have expressed alarm at the catastrophic consequences for the population of such an offensive and denounce the creation of a new generation of refugees with no prospect of return.

On Saturday, the head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA), Philippe Lazzarini, accused Israel of leading a "concerted campaign" aimed at "destroying" this institution. Israel recently asked the latter to resign after claiming that one of the tunnels used by Hamas had been discovered under the agency's headquarters in Gaza.

With AFP

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