Home / Headline / Israel intensifies southern Gaza offensive as U.S. and UN urge civilian protections

Israel intensifies southern Gaza offensive as U.S. and UN urge civilian protections

Israeli forces pressed ahead with their air and ground bombardment of southern Gaza Strip, killing and wounding dozens of Palestinians, even as the United States and the United Nations repeatedly urged them to protect civilians. 

U.S. says it expects Israel not to strike areas it identifies as safe for civilians.

Injured people, including children, lie in the back of a flatbed truck. One woman, in a black hijab, sits upright, crying.

Warning: This story contains distressing images.

Israeli forces pressed ahead with their air and ground bombardment of southern Gaza Strip, killing and wounding dozens of Palestinians, even as the United States and the United Nations repeatedly urged them to protect civilians.

Asked on Monday about the mounting death toll since a truce collapsed between Israel and Hamas on Friday, Israel’s closest ally the United States said it was too soon to say whether Israel was doing enough to protect civilians and that it expected Israel not to strike zones it has identified as safe.

Residents and journalists on the ground said the intense Israeli airstrikes in the south of the densely populated coastal enclave included areas where Israel had told people to seek shelter.

  • What questions do you have about the war between Israel and Hamas? Send an email to ask@cbc.ca.

At the United Nations, Secretary General Antonio Guterres appealed to Israel to avoid further action that would make the already dire humanitarian situation in Hamas-run Gaza worse, and to spare civilians from more suffering.

“The secretary general is extremely alarmed by the resumption of hostilities between Israel and Hamas…. For people ordered to evacuate, there is nowhere safe to go and very little to survive on,” UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said.

Israel intensifies bombing in areas of Gaza previously deemed safe

Some Palestinians fled the city of Khan Younis in southern Gaza as airstrikes pounded the city after the Israeli military gave a warning to evacuate, but others taking refuge there say there is nowhere safe to go.

Israel largely captured the northern half of Gaza in November, and since a week-long truce collapsed on Friday it has swiftly pushed deep into the southern half.

Fierce fighting near southern Gaza city

Hamas ally Islamic Jihad’s armed wing said its fighters engaged in fierce clashes with Israeli soldiers north and east of Khan Younis, Gaza’s main southern city.

Israeli tanks have driven into Gaza across the border and cut off the main north-south route, residents said. The Israeli military said the central road out of Khan Younis to the north “constitutes a battlefield” and was now shut.

Israel on Tuesday said three of its soldiers had died in combat in Gaza on Monday, in what Army Radio described as a day of fierce battles with Hamas fighters. Seventy-eight soldiers have died in Gaza since the start of the military’s ground invasion.

A young boy, wearing brown pants with a bandage wrapped around his chest, lies on a stretcher in a hospital room. Beside him, medical staff treat a young girl who is crying.

Israel launched its assault to wipe out Hamas in retaliation for an Oct. 7 cross-border attack by Hamas gunmen on border towns, kibbutzim and a music festival. The militants killed 1,200 people and seized 240 hostages, according to Israeli tallies — the deadliest single day in Israel’s 75-year history.

In eight weeks of warfare, the Gaza’s Hamas-run Health Ministry said at least 15,899 Palestinians, 70 per cent of them women or under 18s, have been killed.

Philippe Lazzarini, who heads the UN agency for Palestinian refugees in Gaza (UNRWA), said the resumption of Israel’s military operation was repeating “horrors from past weeks” by displacing people who had been previously displaced, overcrowding hospitals and further strangling the humanitarian operation due to limited supplies.

“We have said it repeatedly. We are saying it again. No place is safe in Gaza, whether in the south, or the southwest, whether in Rafah or in any unilaterally so-called ‘safe zone,'” he said.

Calls to protect civilians

The director general of the World Health Organization (WHO), Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, reiterated calls for Israel to protect civilians and civilian infrastructure including hospitals.

“WHO received notification from the Israel Defence Forces that we should remove our supplies from our medical warehouse in southern Gaza within 24 hours, as ground operations will put it beyond use,” he posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, on Monday.

People gather around a coffin adorned with flowers. On the right, a soldier in uniform holds a young boy.

As many as 80 per cent of Gaza’s 2.3 million people have already fled their homes in the eight weeks of war that has wrought devastation across the overcrowded enclave.

On Monday, Israel ordered Palestinians to leave parts of Khan Younis, indicating they should move toward the Mediterranean coast and towards Rafah, a town near the Egyptian border.

Desperate Gazans in Khan Younis packed their belongings and headed towards Rafah. Most were on foot, walking past ruined buildings in a solemn and silent procession.

In Washington, a U.S. State Department spokesperson said it was an “improvement” that Israel was seeking evacuations in targeted areas as opposed to entire cities.

U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said Washington expected Israel to avoid attacking areas identified as “no-strike” zones in Gaza.

Over 100 of the hostages seized by Iran-backed Hamas were freed during a seven-day truce last month. Israeli authorities say seven civilians and an army colonel died in captivity, while 137 hostages remain in Gaza.

Gaza’s Health Ministry says about 900 Palestinians have been killed since the truce ended on Friday.

Israel accuses Hamas of putting civilians in danger by operating from civilian areas, including in tunnels which can only be destroyed by large bombs. Hamas denies it does so.

In the West Bank, Israeli forces killed one Palestinian man and critically wounded another person in different areas on Tuesday, the Ramallah-based Health Ministry said.

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