GAZA STRIP, Palestine
Israeli shelling near a
southern Gaza hospital has killed 41 people over the past two days, the
Palestinian Red Crescent said, after Israel stepped up its attacks in the
centre and south of the besieged territory.
The UN humanitarian office
said Thursday that an estimated 100,000 more displaced people had arrived in
the already-teeming southern border city of Rafah in recent days following the
intensification of fighting around Deir al-Balah and Khan Yunis.
The extra displacements came
as Egyptian officials prepared to receive a high-level Hamas delegation in
Cairo on Friday for talks on a new proposal aimed at putting an end to nearly
three months of war that has devastated Gaza.
The Palestinian Red Crescent
on Thursday condemned what it said was Israeli shelling near the Al-Amal
hospital in Khan Yunis that "led to the martyrdom of ten people and the
injury of at least 21 others", adding the attack followed one in front of
the hospital the day before that killed 31.
"Among the casualties are
individuals present in front of the hospital and displaced persons seeking
shelter at the PRCS (Red Crescent) premises," the group said in a
statement.
Later in the day, Gaza's
Hamas-run health ministry said Israeli shelling had killed 20 people, most of
them women and children, at the Shaboura camp in Rafah, on the southern border
with Egypt.
AFP footage from the city
showed bloodied people being rushed through the streets to the nearby Kuwaiti
hospital, where medical staff raced to treat a flood of wounded patients,
including children. AFP could not immediately confirm whether they were victims
of the same strike.
The war in Gaza, which started
with Hamas's October 7 attack on Israel, has left much of the territory's north
in ruins, while the battlefront has shifted ever further to the south.
Israel has vowed to destroy
Hamas in retaliation for the attack, which left about 1,140 people dead, mostly
civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.
Around 250 hostages were also
taken during the attack, more than half of whom remain captive -- a source of
intense anxiety for their families, who protested in Jerusalem on Thursday with
the demand to "bring them home".
Israel's relentless aerial
bombardment and ground invasion in Gaza have killed at least 21,320 people,
mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.
The Israeli army says 167 of
its soldiers have been killed inside Gaza in its fight against Hamas, which
Israel, the United States and the European Union consider a
"terrorist" group.
The Israeli army recently said
it had deployed an additional brigade to Khan Yunis, hometown of Hamas's Gaza
leader Yahya Sinwar, where AFP correspondents reported sustained air and
artillery strikes.
"The missions that our
forces are carrying out in Khan Yunis are unprecedented -- our forces reach
areas that we have never been before, taking over control rooms and eliminating
terrorists," Israeli Minister of Defense Yoav Gallant told soldiers on
Thursday.
Israel has repeatedly said
that one of the chief goals of the war is the return of the hostages.
On Thursday a kibbutz
announced that a 70-year-old US-Israeli national thought to be the oldest woman
held captive had died in the October 7 attacks.
US President Joe Biden said he
was "devastated" by the news that Judith Weinstein Haggai was dead,
and pledged that Washington would "not stop working" with its ally
Israel to bring the remaining hostages home.
More than 80 percent of Gaza's
2.4 million people have been driven from their homes, the UN says, and many now
live in cramped shelters or makeshift tents in the far south around Rafah.
Residents there combed through
rubble for survivors on Thursday after an air strike that one witness said left
"several casualties".
"We were sitting [at
home] peacefully and all of a sudden we heard a loud explosion and debris
started falling on us. The apartment was completely destroyed and my daughters
were screaming," said Tayseer Abu Al-Eish.
An Israeli siege imposed after
October 7, following years of crippling blockade, has deprived Gazans of food,
water, fuel and medicine.
The severe shortages have been
only sporadically eased by humanitarian aid convoys entering primarily via
Egypt.
Israel said Thursday it had
given preliminary approval to the Mediterranean island nation of Cyprus for a
"maritime lifeline" to ship aid to Gaza.
A Hamas delegation was due in
Cairo on Friday to give its "observations" about an Egyptian plan for
a ceasefire recently put to officials from Hamas and Islamic Jihad, which is
also battling Israeli forces in Gaza.
Sources close to Hamas say
Cairo's three-stage plan provides for renewable ceasefires, a staggered release
of hostages held by Hamas in exchange for Palestinian prisoners in Israel, and
ultimately a ceasefire to end the war.
It also provides for a
Palestinian government of technocrats after talks involving "all
Palestinian factions", which would be responsible for governing and
rebuilding in post-war Gaza.
Homes flattened in northern
Gaza's Beit Lahia after air strikes
A Hamas official, speaking on
condition of anonymity, told AFP on Thursday that the delegation would
"give the response of the Palestinian factions, including several
observations" regarding details of the exchanges and "guarantees for
a complete Israeli military withdrawal".
Diaa Rashwan, who heads
Egypt's State Information Services, said the plan was "intended to bring
together the views of all parties concerned, with the aim of ending the
shedding of Palestinian blood".