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Arab world blames Israel for hospital strike as thousands rally

By - Oct 19,2023 - Last updated at Oct 19,2023

Protesters gather for an anti-Israel demonstration outside the French embassy headquarters along the Avenue Habib Bourguiba in the centre of Tunis on Wednesday (AFP photo)

DUBAI — A Gaza hospital strike that killed at least 200 people has unleashed a torrent of condemnation across the Arab world, with even allies blaming Israel for the attack, despite its denials.

The denunciations coincided with angry rallies in Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Yemen, Tunisia, Turkey, Morocco, Iran and the Israeli-occupied West Bank, following calls for a "day of rage" across the region.

Jordan said Israel "bears responsibility for this grave incident" while Qatar, which has close ties to Hamas, slammed the "brutal massacre".

The Organisation of the Islamic Conference, also blaming Israel, called it "a war crime, a crime against humanity, and organised state terrorism".

The United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, which both established ties with Israel in the Abraham Accords of 2020, condemned the "Israeli" attack which came as Israel lays siege to Gaza.

"The United Arab Emirates strongly condemns the Israeli attack... resulting in the death and injury of hundreds of people," the UAE's official WAM news agency said early on Wednesday.

Bahrain's foreign ministry "expressed the Kingdom of Bahrain's condemnation and strong denunciation of the Israeli bombing", the Bahrain News Agency said.

Morocco, another country that recognised Israel in 2020, also blamed it for the strike, as did Egypt, which became the first Arab country to normalise relations in 1979.

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi condemned in the strongest terms "the Israeli bombing" of the Ahli Arab hospital, which led to "the deaths of hundreds of innocent victims" among the Palestinian citizens in Gaza.

He called the “deliberate bombing” a “clear violation of international law”.

 

‘War crime’ 

 

During a press conference in Beirut on Wednesday, Palestinian resistance group Hamas called for attacks against Israeli forces in the West Bank and other territories in response to the hospital strike.

“We call on our people in the West Bank and our people in Palestine...to rise up against the Zionist enemy and clash with its forces in all cities, villages and camps,” Hamas official Osama Hamdan told reporters.

Hamdan called for region-wide protests on Friday and Saturday, demanding the “expulsion of the ambassadors of the Zionist entity in all Arab and Islamic capitals”.

Gulf Cooperation Council Secretary-General Jasem Mohamed Albudaiwi said it was “glaring evidence of the serious violations by the Israeli occupation forces”.

Arab League chief Ahmed Aboul Gheit called on Tuesday for leaders to “stop this tragedy immediately”.

“What diabolical mind intentionally bombards a hospital and its defenceless inhabitants?” he wrote on X, previously Twitter.

The strike came during a wave of deadly Israeli air strikes on Gaza.

Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hizbollah movement called for a “day of rage” against Israel following the attack as hundreds rallied at the US and French embassies overnight, where they scuffled with security forces.

In Tunisia, thousands gathered outside the French embassy demanding the expulsion of the French and US ambassadors in protest at their governments’ support for Israel.

Iraq, which also blamed Israeli authorities, demanded an “immediate and urgent resolution” from the UN Security Council to stop Israel’s Gaza onslaught, as hundreds protested in the capital Baghdad, brandishing Palestinian flags.

Algeria condemned the strike as a “barbaric act” carried out by “occupation forces”.

Biden backs Israel in blaming Hamas for Gaza hospital strike

By - Oct 19,2023 - Last updated at Oct 19,2023

Smoke plumes billow after an explosion during Israeli bombardment in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on Wednesday (AFP photo)

TEL AVIV, occupied Palestine — US President Joe Biden on a visit to Israel on Wednesday backed his ally’s stance blaming Islamist Palestinian fighters for a rocket strike on a hospital that killed hundreds in war-torn Gaza and has inflamed anger across the Middle East.

Arab countries have blamed Israel, which has rained bombs on Gaza since the bloody October 7 attack by Hamas, but Biden voiced support for Israel’s position that a misfired Islamic Jihad rocket had hit the Ahli Arab Hospital.

“I was deeply saddened and outraged by the explosion at the hospital in Gaza yesterday,” Biden said at a meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on the morning after the blast that killed 200 to 300 people according to Gaza authorities.

“And, based on what I’ve seen, it appears as though it was done by the other team, not you,” said the US president, referring to the armed movements Hamas and Islamic Jihad.

“But there’s a lot of people out there not sure, so we have to overcome a lot of things,” Biden added after the first protests erupted against Israel and the United States, with more expected across the Arab and Muslim worlds.

Biden has expressed “iron-clad” US support for top regional ally Israel and its military campaign.

Israel’s military campaign had already left at least 3,000 dead inside Gaza before the hospital was destroyed.

 

This is a massacre: Gaza takes stock after deadly hospital strike

‘ We felt there was fire and things were falling on us’

By - Oct 19,2023 - Last updated at Oct 19,2023

A woman reacts as people gather at the site of the Ahli Arab hospital in central Gaza on Wednesday in the aftermath of an overnight strike there (AFP photo)

GAZA CITY, occupied Palestine — Gazans combed through the debris of the devastated hospital, collecting the bodies of the dead in the battered enclave on on Wednesday, hours after a strike killed hundreds sheltering at the facility.

Alongside rows of charred vehicles, volunteers recovered corpses and human limbs that were placed in body bags, while the remains of others were covered in white shrouds and blankets.

“This is a massacre,” Ahmed Tafesh, who assisted in the recovery effort, told AFP, saying he had collected the eyes, arms, legs and heads of the deceased. “I have never seen anything like this in my life.”

Health authorities in Hamas-ruled Gaza said the explosion killed between 200 and 300 people at the the Ahli Arab Hospital.

At the nearby Shifa hospital in Gaza City, residents gathered to identify the dead at the hospital’s mortuary and take other bodies for burial.

Yahya Karim, 70, was among those searching for clues about the fate of their relatives.

“I don’t know how many of them died and how many are still alive,” said Karim, admitting that he had planned to shelter in the hospital before the strike.

Outside the Ahli hospital, others who survived the attack who spoke to AFP recounted the terrifying moment when the strike occurred.

“We felt there was fire and things were falling on us. We started looking for each other. The electricity cut suddenly, and we couldn’t see,” said Fatima Saed through tears.

“I don’t know how we came out of it.”

Gaza resident Adnan Al Naqa told AFP that around 2,000 people were taking refuge at the hospital on Tuesday night at the time of the strike.

“As I entered the hospital, I heard the explosion, I saw a massive fire,” said Naqa.

“The entire square was on fire, there were bodies everywhere, children, women and elderly people.”

With water and food supplies running low, the United Nations estimates that around one million of Gaza’s 2.4 million residents are currently displaced, with thousands sheltering in hospitals dotted throughout the densely populated enclave.

As residents surveyed the damage, Israel and Palestinian fighters traded blame for the strike.

 

WHO urges against healthcare centre attacks after Gaza hospital strike

By - Oct 19,2023 - Last updated at Oct 19,2023

COPENHAGEN — The World Health Organisation (WHO) on Wednesday urged against any attacks on healthcare centres, a day after a Gaza hospital strike that killed at least 200 people.

"We call... at a minimum to stop any attacks on healthcare facilities," the head of the WHO's European branch, Hans Kluge, told AFP in an interview, listing it as a top priority.

"Number two [is] to protect civilians and children, and number three [is] to get humanitarian access from Rafah inside Gaza, because all our supplies are based there already but there is no border opening yet," he said.

Kluge said the WHO was "very, very worried" about the situation.

At least 200 people were killed Tuesday in a strike on the Al Ahli Arab Hospital in central Gaza, the health ministry in the Hamas-run Palestinian territory said.

Israel and Palestinian fighters have traded blame for the strike.

Some 3,000 people have been killed in Gaza and more than 1,400 in Israel since October 7.

Kluge said "the only solution is to stop the fighting".

 

Egypt's Sisi rejects Gaza refugee influx, blames Israel for aid block

President says Gaza exodus to Egypt would risk West Bank displacement to Jordan

By - Oct 19,2023 - Last updated at Oct 19,2023

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz meets with Egypt's President Abdel Fattah El Sisi in Cario on Wednesday (AFP photo)

CAIRO — Egypt's president said on Wednesday he would not allow any mass influx of refugees from Gaza, saying it would set a precedent for "the displacement of Palestinians from the West Bank into Jordan".

After talks with visiting German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, President Abdel Fattah El Sisi blamed Israel's air strikes on the Rafah crossing between Gaza and Egypt for the failure to get aid to the territory's 2.4 million people.

"The displacement of Palestinians from Gaza to Egypt means the same displacement will take place for Palestinians from the West Bank into Jordan," Sisi warned.

"Subsequently, the Palestinian state that we are talking about and that the world is talking about will become impossible to implement, because the land is there, but the people are not. Therefore, I warn of the danger of this matter."

Sisi's meeting with the German chancellor came as Gaza faced a 12th straight day of ferocious Israeli bombardment.

About 3,000 people have been killed in Gaza, which is nearly out of electricity, food, water and fuel.

Pressure has mounted for aid to be allowed in through Egypt's Rafah crossing with Gaza, the only access to the besieged territory not controlled by Israel.

Sisi said Egypt "did not close" the crossing, but that "developments on the ground and the repeated bombings by Israel of the Palestinian side of the crossing have prevented its operation".

Hundreds of lorries carrying aid have been waiting for six days on the Egyptian side of the crossing, which Israeli aircraft has bombed four times.

Scholz told reporters Berlin and Cairo "are working together to get humanitarian access to the Gaza Strip as quickly as possible".

The two men also warned against the threat of regional spillover, with the Egyptian president calling for "immediate international intervention" to put a stop to "dangerous military escalation that may get out of control".

Scholz reiterated that Germany sought to avoid a "conflagration in the Middle East" and warned Hizbollah and Iran "once again not to intervene in this conflict".

 

Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas too has warned that the displacement of Gazans to Egypt would amount to a “second Nakba” — when more than 760,000 Palestinians fled or were expelled from their lands during the war that accompanied Israel’s creation in 1948.

Most of Gaza’s population are refugees from that exodus.

Egypt has repeatedly refused to accept what it calls the transfer of Israel’s responsibility as an occupying power, including to “provide for the safety of civilians” living under its occupation.

Dismissing comments by pundits about Sinai being a sparsely populated desert area, Sisi suggested Israel’s Negev Desert as an alternative refuge for Gazans.

“Palestinians could be moved there until Israel is finished with what it has declared is an operation to eliminate armed groups” from Gaza, the president said.

“And then it could return them if it wished,” he added.

 

Hunger doubles in Sudan conflict — UN

By - Oct 18,2023 - Last updated at Oct 18,2023

Inflation, economic turmoil and the conflict in Ukraine are contributing to worsening food insecurity in Sudan (AFP photo)

GENEVA — The number of Sudanese families going hungry has near-doubled after six months of fighting between rival generals, the United Nations said on Wednesday.

Thousands have been killed and millions displaced or forced to flee Sudan — while more than half of those remaining need humanitarian aid.

“The number of hungry families has almost doubled,” the UN’s health and children’s agencies said in a joint statement.

“700,000 children are suffering from severe acute malnutrition and 100,000 children require life-saving treatment for acute malnutrition with medical complications,” the World Health Organisation (WHO) and UNICEF said.

The agencies warned that further health system disruptions caused by the conflict would result in “unacceptably high” numbers of preventable deaths among children and vulnerable populations.

They cited a projection by Johns Hopkins University which indicated that “at least 10,000 children under five years of age may die by the end of 2023 due to the increase in food insecurity, and disruptions to essential services” since the conflict broke out on April 15.

The US university’s Lives Saved Tool modelling is funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

The Sudanese army, led by Abdel Fattah Al Burhan, has been battling the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces commanded by his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, after the two fell out in a power struggle.

More than 9,000 people have been killed in the conflict so far, according to a conservative estimate by the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data project.

More than a million people have fled Sudan to seek refuge abroad.

A further 4.5 million are considered internally displaced persons, having fled their homes but stayed within the country.

That means there are now 7.1 million IDPs in Sudan — the largest number in the world, the UN agencies said.

“Health facilities are occupied, looted or destroyed. About 70 per cent of hospitals in conflict-affected states are not functional,” it said.

The WHO and UNICEF said they were deeply concerned about cholera, measles, malaria and dengue spreading.

“Health workers have not been paid in months. Supplies are depleted. Critical infrastructure is still under attack. The fighting needs to stop now,” said Mandeep O’Brien, UNICEF’s representative in Sudan.

 

Desperation grows for Gazans seeking respite from Israeli storm

'Death might be more merciful'

By - Oct 18,2023 - Last updated at Oct 18,2023

A Palestinian woman covered in dust, reacts following an Israeli air strike on buildings in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip on Tuesday, amid the ongoing Israeli bombardment of the coastal enclave. (AFP photo)

GAZA STRIP, occupied Palestine — Hundreds of families flocked to Gaza's overwhelmed hospitals on Tuesday seeking refuge from the seemingly endless Israeli army shelling as it builds up for a ground offensive.

Gaza residents, who have been warned to get out of the north of the Palestinian territory, have packed courtyards and corridors in the hospitals that have been relatively unscathed from the Israeli assault that followed the October 7 attacks by Hamas.

Amira, 44, and her children have moved to the courtyard of the Nasser hospital in the southern district of Khan Yunis.

"Our bodies itch all over. It has been a week since we could take a shower," she told AFP as she prepared sandwiches for her children with some loaves she had been given.

"Death might be more merciful," she added.

About one million people from northern Gaza have moved to Khan Yunis and other southern districts to avoid the looming Israeli ground offensive.

More than 2,750 people have died in Israeli bombardments.

About 100,000 people are left in the northern district around Gaza City that Israel says is a Hamas stronghold and has warned will be the target of its assault.

Conditions across the tiny territory are worsening every day for the 2.4 million population, according to aid agencies.

UNICEF, the UN children's agency, has said that unless water and fuel are sent "immediately", Gaza inhabitants are in "imminent danger" of epidemics and death.

The only crossing to the rest of the world at Rafah is closed.

Egypt has refused to open Rafah even though trucks loaded with aid are waiting on the Egyptian side of the border.

Some shells have fallen on the Gaza side and Egypt, Israel and the United States have failed to agree a mechanism to allow the border gates to open to let aid in and some foreign nationals out.

Israel has also cut power and water supplies to Gaza as part of its action.

Israel has partially eased the water ban, but only a tiny fraction of the amount needed for hospitals and shops has passed through.

Gaza’s hospitals say they will struggle to keep operating and the human toll grows every hour.

Hundreds of children are already among the dead and there are 10,000 injured, many packed into the six remaining hospitals.

Shortages of medicines have added to the crisis caused by the lack of water and fuel to keep medical establishments running.

Strike kills hundreds at Gaza hospital on eve of Biden visit

By - Oct 18,2023 - Last updated at Oct 18,2023

People stand over bodies of Palestinians killed in Israeli air strikes on the Ahli Arab hospital in central Gaza after they were transported to Al Shifa hopsital, on Tuesday (AFP photo by Dawood Nemer)

GAZA STRIP, occupied Palestine — Israeli air strikes on a hospital compound in the Gaza Strip killed at least 200 people, officials in the Hamas-run Palestinian territory said on Tuesday, sparking widespread condemnation and fury.

Al Jazeera footage from the scene showed medics and civilians recovering bodies with white bags or blankets. Bloodstains and multiple torched cars were visible in the dark hospital courtyard.

The strike came just hours before US President Joe Biden was due in the Middle East, to balance US backing for Israel with stopping its war against Hamas from spiralling into wider regional conflict.

In an escalation in tensions, the health ministry in Hamas-ruled Gaza said between 200 and 300 people displaced by 10 days of heavy bombardment were killed in “occupation [Israeli] strikes” at the Ahli Arab hospital in central Gaza.

“Hundreds of victims are still under the rubble,” a statement said, calling it a “war crime”, and prompting condemnation from the World Health Organisation.

Hospitals and their grounds have been seen as safe havens for Gazans made homeless or displaced by the bombing, as they have been relatively spared from strikes.

Separately, the United Nations agency supporting Palestinian refugees said six people were killed when one of its schools sheltering displaced families was hit, during Israeli air strikes.

Israel has also imposed a crippling siege on the impoverished territory and deployed tens of thousands of troops on the border with Gaza in preparation for a full-scale ground offensive.

 

‘Corpses in the street’ 

 

Biden will also try to quietly steer Israeli’s military response, as international alarm has grown about the devastating impact of the war on Palestinian civilians.

Entire neighbourhoods have been razed and survivors are left with dwindling supplies of food, water and fuel.

The health ministry in Gaza said hospitals were at breaking point, with more than 30,000 people taking shelter at the Al Shifa hospital in Gaza City alone.

It said it was “extremely concerned” about disease outbreaks due to poor water supply and sanitation.

“There are corpses in the streets. Buildings are crashing down on their inhabitants,” said Jamil Abdullah, a Palestinian-Swede, hoping to flee the blockaded enclave.

“The smell of the dead is everywhere.”

UNRWA says more than one million Palestinians — almost half of Gaza’s population of 2.4 million — have fled their homes.

An UNRWA flour storage near Gaza City was hit by an Israeli strike, an AFP photographer said. Even as the smoke was still rising from the rubble, desperate residents collected flour from the ground.

“We are dying of hunger,” said Abu Hussni Al Hujein, 60.

Israel has ordered residents of north Gaza to leave for the south, hoping to clear the area of civilians in preparation for a ground assault that would involve gruelling urban combat.

2,000 US troops put on deployment alert amid Middle East crisis

By - Oct 18,2023 - Last updated at Oct 18,2023

WASHINGTON — The US military on Tuesday ordered 2,000 personnel to prepare for deployment to the Middle East as a show of force amid the escalating conflict between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.

Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin said the deployment would allow the United States "to respond more quickly" to the crisis, while the White House stressed it did not intend to put US combat forces on the ground.

National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said preparing the troops for deployment "is really about sending a signal of deterrence".

"We don't want to see this conflict escalate and widen," Kirby said on CNN. "There are no plans or intentions to put US boots on the ground in combat in Israel."

The move comes as President Joe Biden heads to Israel on Wednesday to underscore Washington's support for its close ally.

But Biden also hopes to prevent the escalating war in Gaza from spilling over into a wider Middle East conflict.

So far, the White House has seen no signs of a deepening engagement by Iran in the conflict, according to Kirby.

“Outside of the rhetoric... no we haven’t,” Kirby said.

The United States has already deployed two aircraft carriers to the region “to deter hostile actions against Israel”, Austin said last week.

US media reported the troops being readied for deployment would cover support roles, such as medical assistance and handling explosives.

Meanwhile, Israeli troops killed four militants attempting to enter its territory from Lebanon on Tuesday, the army said, as tensions run high on the border between the two countries.

Israel has traded fire with Hizbollah and allied Palestinian militants in Lebanon on a near-daily basis since October 8, the day after Hizbollah’s Palestinian ally Hamas launched a massive attack on Israel.

The Israeli army, whose reprisal strikes on Hamas in the Gaza Strip have killed more than 2,700 people, also mostly civilians, said its forces opened fire on militants who had attempted to cross the northern border with Lebanon in the morning.

Later, anti-tank missiles targeted Israeli forces in two locations, with Israeli tanks and artillery retaliating against the “origins of the fire” and Hizbollah military posts, the army said.

Hizbollah said in a statement afterwards that its fighters had targeted “a Zionist tank in the Ramim barracks” at noon.

Since the start of the war triggered by Hamas’s unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7, clashes on the Israel-Lebanon border have left more than 10 people dead on the Lebanese side.

Most of the dead have been combatants, but they also include a Reuters journalist and two civilians.

On the Israeli side, at least three people have been killed.

 

‘Grave mistake’ 

 

Lebanon’s state-owned National News Agency said areas along the western section of the border had come under “continuous” bombardment overnight.

Homes in the village of Dhayra were hit, resulting in casualties, NNA reported, without elaborating on how many villagers had been wounded or whether any had been killed.

“The enemy [Israel] used phosphorus bombs and targeted civilians,” the news agency said.

The Israeli army denied it had been using the incendiary weapon white phosphorus in either Gaza or south Lebanon, after Human Rights Watch accused it of doing so last week.

It did not immediately comment on Tuesday’s NNA report.

The international community fears the opening of a second front in the conflict, with Hizbollah joining Hamas in the fight against Israel.

Israel has begun evacuating thousands of residents from 28 locations in the north.

Relief convoys in Egypt head towards Gaza border crossing

By - Oct 18,2023 - Last updated at Oct 18,2023

An Emirates cargo plane is loaded with aid for the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip at the airport in Dubai before flying to the Egypt-Gaza border city of Al Arish, in Egypt's north Sinai Peninsula on Tuesday (AFP photo)

RAFAH, Egypt — Relief convoys which have been waiting for days in Egypt were on Tuesday headed towards the Rafah border crossing with the besieged Palestinian enclave of Gaza, aid officials said.

The blockaded territory has been under sustained Israeli bombardment since Gaza's ruling militant group Hamas launched its bloody onslaught against Israel on October 7.

So far Egypt has kept the Rafah crossing closed, to aid going in or foreign nationals trying to flee, as Israel has repeatedly struck the Palestinian side of the crossing.

"We have arrived at the terminal and are now waiting for the next step," said Heba Rashed, who runs the aid group Mersal.

Hundreds more lorries were headed along the coast road for the 40 kilometre journey from the Egyptian city of Al Arish to Rafah, other aid officials said.

A Red Crescent official confirmed that aid convoys were being assembled on the Egyptian side of the divided border city of Rafah.

"We've not been told what time we're going to cross but we were asked to head for Rafah," the Egyptian Red Crescent official said, asking not to be identified.

“You could say we’re nearing a deal on the entry of aid and the exit of foreigners,” said the official, who was himself headed to Rafah.

The Israeli military launched its devastating bombardment after Hamas militants broke through the heavily fortified border.

The reprisals have killed at least 2,750 people in Gaza, according to health officials in the territory. The casualties on both sides have mostly been civilians.

Aid deliveries from multiple agencies and donor governments have been piling up in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula for the past few days amid mounting appeals to Israel to establish a safe corridor into the Gaza Strip.

The European Union has called for an aid bridge to be established for the 2.4 million people in Gaza, many of whom have been driven from their homes.

During 10 days of artillery bombardments and air strikes, the Israeli military has hit the Rafah crossing four times, prompting authorities to keep it largely closed.

Israel’s top ally the United States has been pressing Egypt to reopen the border to allow Palestinian Americans in Gaza to leave.

UN humanitarian affairs chief Martin Griffiths was due in Cairo on Tuesday to help the efforts for an agreement.

The UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) said the food situation in the besieged and blockaded Gaza Strip was worsening, with only four or five days of stocks left in the shops.

WFP said stocks were getting low in warehouses inside the Palestinian enclave, but at the shop level, the situation was even more acute.

“The situation in Gaza is getting worse by the minute: The humanitarian situation but also of course the food security situation,” WFP’s Middle East spokeswoman Abeer Etefa, told reporters at the UN in Geneva via video-link from Cairo.

“The current stocks of essential food commodities are sufficient for only two weeks, and that’s at the wholesalers’ level,” she said, with the warehouses located in Gaza City in the north of the territory and shops having difficulties replenishing supplies.

“Inside the shops, the stocks are getting close to less than a few days, maybe four or five days of food stocks left.”

Etefa said that out of five flour mills in the Gaza Strip, only one was operating due to security concerns and the unavailability of fuel.

“So the bread supply is running low and people are lining up for hours to get bread,” she said.

Only five bakeries out of 23 in Gaza contracted by WFP were still in operation, she added.

“Our food supplies within Gaza are running really short,” said Etefa.

The spokeswoman said there has been no looting of WFP warehouses, and “anyway, whatever we have left in the warehouses is so little”.

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