GAZA, Palestine
Israeli fighter jets struck 450 Hamas targets in Gaza and troops seized a militant compound in the past 24 hours, Israel's military said on Monday, in attacks the enclave's health authorities said killed dozens of people.
A Reuters journalist in the
Gaza Strip described the overnight bombardment from the air, ground and sea as
one of the most intense since Israel launched its offensive in response to a
surprise attack by Hamas on southern Israel a month ago.
Health officials in
Hamas-controlled Gaza said more than 9,770 Palestinians have been killed in the
war since Hamas killed 1,400 people and seized more than 240 hostages on
October 7.
Israel, which says its forces
have encircled Gaza city, faces mounting pressure to avoid civilian casualties
after refusing to countenance a cease-fire until the hostages are released, and
a U.S. diplomatic blitz in the region is intended to reduce risks of the
conflict escalating.
The health ministry in Gaza
said dozens of people were killed by the Israeli air strikes in Gaza City and
further south in Gaza neighborhoods such as Zawaida and Deir Al-Balah.
Hamas-affiliated Al-Aqsa TV
quoted medical sources as saying at least 75 Palestinians were killed and 106
hurt in the attacks.
The Israeli army said its
strikes hit "tunnels, terrorists, military compounds, observation posts,
and anti-tank missile
launch posts.
Ground troops killed several Hamas fighters while taking a militant compound containing observation posts, training areas and underground tunnels, the Israeli military said.
Reuters could not
independently verify these accounts.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony
Blinken was due to meet Turkey's foreign minister in Ankara, hours after
hundreds of people at a pro-Palestinian protest tried to storm an air base that
houses U.S. troops in southern Turkey.
Blinken made an unannounced
visit to the West Bank on Sunday to meet Palestinian Authority President
Mahmoud Abbas, who joined international calls for an immediate cease-fire.
The U.S. secretary reiterated
Washington's concerns that a cease-fire could aid Hamas, but Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ruled one out for now.
U.S. CIA Director William
Burns was also set to visit Israel on Monday to discuss the war and
intelligence with senior officials, the New York Times reported.
Burns also will make stops in
other Middle East countries to discuss the Gaza situation, it quoted an unnamed
U.S. official as saying.
The CIA did not respond to
Reuters' request for comment.
Israel said 31 soldiers had
been killed since it began expanded ground operations in Gaza on Oct. 27,
fighting thousands of Hamas fighters who believe they can hold off the Middle
Eastern nation's advance in the warren of tunnels under the enclave.
Israel has called on civilians
in north Gaza - the heart of Hamas' forces - to evacuate to the south for their
own safety and gave a specific time window on Nov. 5 to do so.
However, U.N. monitoring
showed that less than 2,000 did so, citing fear, heavy damage to roads and lack
of information due to limited communications, a U.N. humanitarian briefing
said.
Lieutenant-Colonel Jonathan Conricus, an Israeli military spokesperson, showed reporters what he said was aerial footage of Hamas tunnels and rocket sites at two hospitals in northern Gaza, saying this showed Israel was not responsible for "what's happening now in northern Gaza."
A Hamas statement called on
U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres to form a committee to visit Gaza
hospitals to verify Israel's "false narrative" that Hamas uses
hospitals as sites.
U.N. Palestinian refugee
agency shelters in the south are overcrowded and unable to take new arrivals,
and many displaced people are sleeping in the streets, near the shelters, the
U.N. humanitarian office, OCHA said.
Jordan's air force air-dropped
urgent medical aid to the Jordanian field hospital in Gaza early on Monday,
according to a post on X from Jordan's king and reports in state media.
Telecoms provider Paltel said
services were resuming gradually after they were disconnected from the Israeli
side on Sunday.
U.S. Central Command, which
covers the Middle East, said on X that an Ohio-class nuclear missile submarine
had arrived in the region - an unusual announcement of a nuclear submarine's
position that was seen by some analysts as a message to Iran, an Israeli foe.
People searched for victims or
survivors at the Maghazi refugee camp in Gaza, where the health ministry said
Israeli forces had killed at least 47 people in strikes early on Sunday.
"All night I and the
other men were trying to pick the dead from the rubble. We got children,
dismembered, torn-apart flesh," said Saeed al-Nejma, 53.
Asked for comment, the Israeli
military said it was gathering details.
In a separate attack, 21
Palestinians from one family were killed in strikes, the health ministry said.
Israel's military declined to comment.
Reuters could not
independently verify these accounts. "We demand that you stop them from
committing these crimes immediately," Abbas told Blinken, urging an
"immediate cease-fire" from Israel.
Palestinians were facing a war
of "genocide and destruction," news agency WAFA quoted Abbas as
saying.
The war has inflamed
Israeli-Palestinian violence elsewhere. In East Jerusalem, Israeli police said
a 16-year-old Palestinian stabbed and wounded two officers before being shot
dead.
In the occupied West Bank,
another territory where Palestinians seek statehood, medics said a Palestinian
was killed and three others wounded by Israeli army fire.
A military spokesperson has no
immediate comment on that incident.
Tensions increased with
Lebanon after an Israeli strike on a car in the south of the country killed
three children and their grandmother, Lebanese authorities said.
Israel said it hit
"terrorist targets of Hezbollah in southern Lebanon" in response to a
missile attack against tanks that killed an Israeli citizen. Hezbollah said it
responded by firing rockets at Kiryat Shmona town in northern Israel.
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