newsinsightplus.com 20th70m April 3, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityWorldAfricaAsiaAustraliaEuropeLatin AmericaMiddle EastUS & CanadaBowen: The Israel-Gaza war is at a crossroadsPublished1 hour agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingRelated TopicsIsrael-Gaza warImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, A Palestinian boy in Maghazi in central GazaBy Jeremy BowenInternational editor, Northern IsraelAll except the shortest wars have times when killing is an unchanging, grim routine. There are also moments, like the last few days in the Middle East, when events leave belligerents and their allies at a crossroads with big decisions to make. Choices are confronting leaders in the governments and armed forces in Israel and Tehran, at Hezbollah’s HQ in the southern suburbs of Beirut and further afield in the Gulf, Europe and America. The killing of foreign aid workers in Gaza might finally exhaust the considerable patience of Israel’s allies, led by the United States. Israel and Egypt have banned foreign journalists from entering Gaza, except on occasional, highly controlled and brief visits with the Israeli military. Belligerents need to win the media battle in an age of asymmetric warfare where victory or defeat can rely on perceptions as much as the realities of battle. Journalists are also denied access to a war when the parties fighting it have something to hide. But even without foreign reporters on the scene, evidence is piling up that Israel is not, as it claims, respecting its obligations under the laws of war to respect civilian lives, or allowing the free movement of aid in a famine created by Israel’s own actions. After the World Kitchen team was killed in Gaza, President Biden used his strongest language yet in public statements to condemn Israel’s actions. The president and his aides have now to decide whether words are enough. So far, they have resisted calls to put conditions on the use of American weapons in Gaza, or even to turn off the supply line. While the weapons still arrive, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who depends on hardline Jewish ultranationalists to stay in office, might feel he can still afford to defy President Biden. A major test will be the offensive Israel wants to attack Hamas in Rafah, plans the US believes would compound the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza. American interests and Joe Biden’s political prospects in an election year have already been damaged by what is seen in many countries as complicity with Israel. In another change this week, Mr Netanyahu has come back to work after two days off for hernia surgery to huge demonstrations demanding his resignation and early elections for a new parliament. Deep cultural and political fissures between Israelis that were put to one side after 7 October are wide open again and being shouted about in the streets. The prime minister is in political trouble, blamed by his opponents for letting down Israel’s guard so badly that Hamas detected a chance to attack. Image source, EPAImage caption, Protesters want Mr Netanyahu to resignMillions of Israelis who believe they are fighting a just war against Hamas have no confidence in Mr Netanyahu. Their charge sheet includes prolonging the war to put off the moment when he is held accountable for his mistakes, failing to bring Israel’s hostages home safely, and alienating vital allies starting with President Biden. Add to that the fact that after a huge onslaught over six months Hamas is still fighting, and its senior leader in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar is still alive somewhere in the Strip. Another new set of calculations about the next stages of the crisis in the Middle East arise from the assassination of a senior Iranian general in Damascus, widely assumed in Israel to be the work of its air force. It was a coup for intelligence services that missed or ignored the Hamas attacks six months ago. It was also an escalation in the wider war in the region that will have consequences. Some of them may happen close to where I’m writing this, looking across the Sea of Galilee towards the Golan Heights, the large swathe of southern Syria that Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war and later annexed. As the crow flies, Damascus is less than 50 miles from here. The border with Lebanon is close by. At night, especially, there is constant Israeli air activity, with the roar of jets on patrol, or heading off to bomb Lebanon or Syria. A shadow war has been fought here in parallel with the war in Gaza since last October. It started with Hezbollah, the powerful Lebanese militia and political movement attacking Israel, in support of Hamas in Gaza. It was not the onslaught that the Hamas leadership was hoping for – neither Hezbollah or its patrons in Tehran wanted an all-out war with Israel and, indirectly, its American backers. The Americans did not want that either and restrained Israel’s instinct to respond in full force. But Hezbollah still tied down thousands of Israeli troops and forced the evacuation of something like 80,000 civilians from the border areas. Israel’s response, limited compared to earlier border wars, forced the displacement of at least as many civilians on the Lebanese side. Since the start of this year it has been different. Israel has been setting the pace, bombing its enemies deeper inside Lebanon and Syria. The biggest leap up the ladder of escalation came on Monday with the assassination by air strike on the Iranian diplomatic compound in the Syrian capital. Image source, ReutersImage caption, Iran accuses Israel of carrying out the deadly air strike on its consular building in DamascusIn interviews here in northern Israel local officials and residents have expressed strong support not just for the assassination but for an invasion of south Lebanon to destroy Hezbollah and force them back from the border. They were not put off by Israel’s experience in the last two decades of the 20th Century, when it occupied a broad strip of South Lebanon to try to protect northern Israel. It even created its own Lebanese militia to help with the fighting. The Israelis pulled out in 2000, under constant military harassment from Hezbollah, after prime minister Ehud Barak, a former head of the army, decided that occupying south Lebanon (Israel called it the “security zone”) did not make Israelis any safer and wasted the lives of its troops. I walked through the ruins of the Avivim winery, which is right on the border wire. It was destroyed in a Hezbollah strike last week. Its owner Shlomi Biton showed me through the wreck of his business. He is 47 and was born in Avivim, which like the rest of northern Israel has become a ghost town after the evacuations. Shlomi fought in Lebanon during his military service, and now believes that the only way to restore a decent and safe life is for Israel to return to Lebanon for a decisive battle with Hezbollah. “There’s no other choice,” he told me next his burnt-out business. “Otherwise, the community won’t return to live here, maybe just a few crazy guys like me – the children won’t come back.” In Kiryat Shmona, a border town where 25,000 Israelis lived, no more than 3,000 people, mostly soldiers and essential workers, are left. The Mayor, Avichai Stern, showed me deserted districts and wrecked buildings. He believes that Israel can remove Hezbollah’s threat to the north with a decisive and destructive invasion on the lines of the Gaza war. Image caption, The Mayor of Kyriat Shmona, Avichai Stern shows fragment of shrapnel from a Hezbollah strike on residential buildings in the townMayor Stern said last year 10,000 Hezbollah fighters practised taking over northern Israel. “It can happen here” he told me, “just like Gaza. They weren’t training to direct traffic in Beirut. The only way to stop it is to go into Lebanon eliminate this threat as soon as possible.”Exactly six months ago, in deadly secrecy, Hamas was putting the finishing touches to the battle plan it called al-Aqsa flood. The killing on 7 October and everything that has followed destroyed lazy, wishful thinking that it was possible to manage the century-long conflict between Arabs and Jews for control of the land between the river Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea. Hamas thrust the conflict back to the top of the world’s agenda when it killed around 1,200 people, mostly Israeli civilians, and took more than 250 Israelis and foreign citizens into Gaza as hostages. Many of the 134 Israelis still there are thought to be dead. It was Israel’s worst single day since it won its independence war in 1948. The “mighty vengeance” that Mr Netanyahu promised has so far killed more than 32,000 Palestinians, a majority of whom were civilians. Israel’s American-supplied firepower has flattened most of Gaza. The war has spread across the Middle East. It might now be entering a new phase. What we know about Israeli strike on aid convoyWho were the seven aid workers killed in Gaza? The borderlands between Israel and Lebanon are deceptively beautiful in the first few weeks of spring. Wild flowers and pinecones, not shrapnel, were underfoot as I walked along a stretch of the border with Israeli military officers. Any sense of peace was, of course, an illusion on one of the most dangerous borders in the Middle East. Iran and Hezbollah are making decisions about how to respond to the assassinations in the Damascus and the way Israel is increasing the military pressure in Lebanon. The two allies will want to calibrate their response to avoid a wider, devastating war that neither want. Israel does not want that war either. But the audacious assassination at the Iranian diplomatic compound in Damascus could be a sign that Israel believes Iran and the network it calls its axis of resistance might blink first. If so, it is a risky strategy. Iran will want to restore its ability to deter Israel, which is clearly not working. It will try to respond in a way that will catch Israel by surprise. The empty overgrown border communities are not likely to be Iran’s first choice for retaliation. They could try an Israeli target in another country, or cyber-attacks rather than missiles. Or intensify their nuclear programme. An American envoy, Amos Hochstein, is trying to find a way to revive the UN Security Council resolution that ended the last big war between Hezbollah and Lebanon in 2006. Neither side has respected it, but it provides a framework for negotiation. At this crossroads, neither Israel, Iran nor Hezbollah wants an all-out war that would have terrible consequence for all of them. But no side seems ready to stop the slide towards it.Related TopicsMiddle EastIsrael-Gaza warIsraelLebanonGazaIranMore on this storyWhat we know about Israeli strike on aid convoyPublished3 hours agoWho were the seven aid workers killed in Gaza?Published24 minutes agoCareer-ending pressure on Israeli PM Netanyahu growsPublished2 days agoTop StoriesLive. Tributes paid to killed aid staff as more charities pause Gaza workBritons killed in Gaza remembered as heroesPublished38 minutes agoDozens trapped and 700 injured in Taiwan earthquakePublished55 minutes agoFeaturesJeremy Bowen: The Israel-Gaza war is at a crossroadsWho were the seven aid workers killed in Gaza?What we know about Israeli strike on aid convoyBonsai and bowing: Japan’s royal family join InstagramChina will have 300 million pensioners. Can it afford them?Asian Network presenter ’empowered’ wearing hijabWill Truth Social solve Trump’s money problems?France’s unique orphanage for police children’I never thought I’d have to bury my dad twice’Elsewhere on the BBCA deadly bombing campaign rocks DundeeMartin Compston and Laura Fraser star in the tense returning drama, TracesAttributioniPlayerThe opera-loving sisters who ‘stumbled’ into heroismHow did Ida and Louise Cook help dozens of Jews escape Nazi Germany?AttributionSoundsFound on every continent, and in every oceanSir David Attenborough reveals how mammals have conquered the EarthAttributioniPlayerWhat does it take to run the world’s largest company?Apple CEO Tim Cook joins Dua Lipa in a rare podcast appearanceAttributionSoundsMost Read1Euphoria star wants to stop playing trans roles2Royal Mail wants to cut days for second-class post3For sale: The mansion seized from £70m scammer4Would you pay £150 for tea and a tour at Balmoral?5White House wants Moon to have its own time zone6Nationwide’s Dominic West advert banned7Rubiales arrested in corruption investigation8Ringleader charged in global monkey torture case9Finnish school shooting motivated by bullying – police10Three accused of TV presenter attack have left UK [ad_1] Will the killing of foreign aid workers exhaust the patience of Israel’s allies? 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newsinsightplus.com 20th70m April 3, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityWorldAfricaAsiaAustraliaEuropeLatin AmericaMiddle EastUS & CanadaBowen: The Israel-Gaza war is at a crossroadsPublished1 hour agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingRelated TopicsIsrael-Gaza warImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, A Palestinian boy in Maghazi in central GazaBy Jeremy BowenInternational editor, Northern IsraelAll except the shortest wars have times when killing is an unchanging, grim routine. There are also moments, like the last few days in the Middle East, when events leave belligerents and their allies at a crossroads with big decisions to make. Choices are confronting leaders in the governments and armed forces in Israel and Tehran, at Hezbollah’s HQ in the southern suburbs of Beirut and further afield in the Gulf, Europe and America. The killing of foreign aid workers in Gaza might finally exhaust the considerable patience of Israel’s allies, led by the United States. Israel and Egypt have banned foreign journalists from entering Gaza, except on occasional, highly controlled and brief visits with the Israeli military. Belligerents need to win the media battle in an age of asymmetric warfare where victory or defeat can rely on perceptions as much as the realities of battle. Journalists are also denied access to a war when the parties fighting it have something to hide. But even without foreign reporters on the scene, evidence is piling up that Israel is not, as it claims, respecting its obligations under the laws of war to respect civilian lives, or allowing the free movement of aid in a famine created by Israel’s own actions. After the World Kitchen team was killed in Gaza, President Biden used his strongest language yet in public statements to condemn Israel’s actions. The president and his aides have now to decide whether words are enough. So far, they have resisted calls to put conditions on the use of American weapons in Gaza, or even to turn off the supply line. While the weapons still arrive, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who depends on hardline Jewish ultranationalists to stay in office, might feel he can still afford to defy President Biden. A major test will be the offensive Israel wants to attack Hamas in Rafah, plans the US believes would compound the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza. American interests and Joe Biden’s political prospects in an election year have already been damaged by what is seen in many countries as complicity with Israel. In another change this week, Mr Netanyahu has come back to work after two days off for hernia surgery to huge demonstrations demanding his resignation and early elections for a new parliament. Deep cultural and political fissures between Israelis that were put to one side after 7 October are wide open again and being shouted about in the streets. The prime minister is in political trouble, blamed by his opponents for letting down Israel’s guard so badly that Hamas detected a chance to attack. Image source, EPAImage caption, Protesters want Mr Netanyahu to resignMillions of Israelis who believe they are fighting a just war against Hamas have no confidence in Mr Netanyahu. Their charge sheet includes prolonging the war to put off the moment when he is held accountable for his mistakes, failing to bring Israel’s hostages home safely, and alienating vital allies starting with President Biden. Add to that the fact that after a huge onslaught over six months Hamas is still fighting, and its senior leader in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar is still alive somewhere in the Strip. Another new set of calculations about the next stages of the crisis in the Middle East arise from the assassination of a senior Iranian general in Damascus, widely assumed in Israel to be the work of its air force. It was a coup for intelligence services that missed or ignored the Hamas attacks six months ago. It was also an escalation in the wider war in the region that will have consequences. Some of them may happen close to where I’m writing this, looking across the Sea of Galilee towards the Golan Heights, the large swathe of southern Syria that Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war and later annexed. As the crow flies, Damascus is less than 50 miles from here. The border with Lebanon is close by. At night, especially, there is constant Israeli air activity, with the roar of jets on patrol, or heading off to bomb Lebanon or Syria. A shadow war has been fought here in parallel with the war in Gaza since last October. It started with Hezbollah, the powerful Lebanese militia and political movement attacking Israel, in support of Hamas in Gaza. It was not the onslaught that the Hamas leadership was hoping for – neither Hezbollah or its patrons in Tehran wanted an all-out war with Israel and, indirectly, its American backers. The Americans did not want that either and restrained Israel’s instinct to respond in full force. But Hezbollah still tied down thousands of Israeli troops and forced the evacuation of something like 80,000 civilians from the border areas. Israel’s response, limited compared to earlier border wars, forced the displacement of at least as many civilians on the Lebanese side. Since the start of this year it has been different. Israel has been setting the pace, bombing its enemies deeper inside Lebanon and Syria. The biggest leap up the ladder of escalation came on Monday with the assassination by air strike on the Iranian diplomatic compound in the Syrian capital. Image source, ReutersImage caption, Iran accuses Israel of carrying out the deadly air strike on its consular building in DamascusIn interviews here in northern Israel local officials and residents have expressed strong support not just for the assassination but for an invasion of south Lebanon to destroy Hezbollah and force them back from the border. They were not put off by Israel’s experience in the last two decades of the 20th Century, when it occupied a broad strip of South Lebanon to try to protect northern Israel. It even created its own Lebanese militia to help with the fighting. The Israelis pulled out in 2000, under constant military harassment from Hezbollah, after prime minister Ehud Barak, a former head of the army, decided that occupying south Lebanon (Israel called it the “security zone”) did not make Israelis any safer and wasted the lives of its troops. I walked through the ruins of the Avivim winery, which is right on the border wire. It was destroyed in a Hezbollah strike last week. Its owner Shlomi Biton showed me through the wreck of his business. He is 47 and was born in Avivim, which like the rest of northern Israel has become a ghost town after the evacuations. Shlomi fought in Lebanon during his military service, and now believes that the only way to restore a decent and safe life is for Israel to return to Lebanon for a decisive battle with Hezbollah. “There’s no other choice,” he told me next his burnt-out business. “Otherwise, the community won’t return to live here, maybe just a few crazy guys like me – the children won’t come back.” In Kiryat Shmona, a border town where 25,000 Israelis lived, no more than 3,000 people, mostly soldiers and essential workers, are left. The Mayor, Avichai Stern, showed me deserted districts and wrecked buildings. He believes that Israel can remove Hezbollah’s threat to the north with a decisive and destructive invasion on the lines of the Gaza war. Image caption, The Mayor of Kyriat Shmona, Avichai Stern shows fragment of shrapnel from a Hezbollah strike on residential buildings in the townMayor Stern said last year 10,000 Hezbollah fighters practised taking over northern Israel. “It can happen here” he told me, “just like Gaza. They weren’t training to direct traffic in Beirut. The only way to stop it is to go into Lebanon eliminate this threat as soon as possible.”Exactly six months ago, in deadly secrecy, Hamas was putting the finishing touches to the battle plan it called al-Aqsa flood. The killing on 7 October and everything that has followed destroyed lazy, wishful thinking that it was possible to manage the century-long conflict between Arabs and Jews for control of the land between the river Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea. Hamas thrust the conflict back to the top of the world’s agenda when it killed around 1,200 people, mostly Israeli civilians, and took more than 250 Israelis and foreign citizens into Gaza as hostages. Many of the 134 Israelis still there are thought to be dead. It was Israel’s worst single day since it won its independence war in 1948. The “mighty vengeance” that Mr Netanyahu promised has so far killed more than 32,000 Palestinians, a majority of whom were civilians. Israel’s American-supplied firepower has flattened most of Gaza. The war has spread across the Middle East. It might now be entering a new phase. What we know about Israeli strike on aid convoyWho were the seven aid workers killed in Gaza? The borderlands between Israel and Lebanon are deceptively beautiful in the first few weeks of spring. Wild flowers and pinecones, not shrapnel, were underfoot as I walked along a stretch of the border with Israeli military officers. Any sense of peace was, of course, an illusion on one of the most dangerous borders in the Middle East. Iran and Hezbollah are making decisions about how to respond to the assassinations in the Damascus and the way Israel is increasing the military pressure in Lebanon. The two allies will want to calibrate their response to avoid a wider, devastating war that neither want. Israel does not want that war either. But the audacious assassination at the Iranian diplomatic compound in Damascus could be a sign that Israel believes Iran and the network it calls its axis of resistance might blink first. If so, it is a risky strategy. Iran will want to restore its ability to deter Israel, which is clearly not working. It will try to respond in a way that will catch Israel by surprise. The empty overgrown border communities are not likely to be Iran’s first choice for retaliation. They could try an Israeli target in another country, or cyber-attacks rather than missiles. Or intensify their nuclear programme. An American envoy, Amos Hochstein, is trying to find a way to revive the UN Security Council resolution that ended the last big war between Hezbollah and Lebanon in 2006. Neither side has respected it, but it provides a framework for negotiation. At this crossroads, neither Israel, Iran nor Hezbollah wants an all-out war that would have terrible consequence for all of them. But no side seems ready to stop the slide towards it.Related TopicsMiddle EastIsrael-Gaza warIsraelLebanonGazaIranMore on this storyWhat we know about Israeli strike on aid convoyPublished3 hours agoWho were the seven aid workers killed in Gaza?Published24 minutes agoCareer-ending pressure on Israeli PM Netanyahu growsPublished2 days agoTop StoriesLive. Tributes paid to killed aid staff as more charities pause Gaza workBritons killed in Gaza remembered as heroesPublished38 minutes agoDozens trapped and 700 injured in Taiwan earthquakePublished55 minutes agoFeaturesJeremy Bowen: The Israel-Gaza war is at a crossroadsWho were the seven aid workers killed in Gaza?What we know about Israeli strike on aid convoyBonsai and bowing: Japan’s royal family join InstagramChina will have 300 million pensioners. Can it afford them?Asian Network presenter ’empowered’ wearing hijabWill Truth Social solve Trump’s money problems?France’s unique orphanage for police children’I never thought I’d have to bury my dad twice’Elsewhere on the BBCA deadly bombing campaign rocks DundeeMartin Compston and Laura Fraser star in the tense returning drama, TracesAttributioniPlayerThe opera-loving sisters who ‘stumbled’ into heroismHow did Ida and Louise Cook help dozens of Jews escape Nazi Germany?AttributionSoundsFound on every continent, and in every oceanSir David Attenborough reveals how mammals have conquered the EarthAttributioniPlayerWhat does it take to run the world’s largest company?Apple CEO Tim Cook joins Dua Lipa in a rare podcast appearanceAttributionSoundsMost Read1Euphoria star wants to stop playing trans roles2Royal Mail wants to cut days for second-class post3For sale: The mansion seized from £70m scammer4Would you pay £150 for tea and a tour at Balmoral?5White House wants Moon to have its own time zone6Nationwide’s Dominic West advert banned7Rubiales arrested in corruption investigation8Ringleader charged in global monkey torture case9Finnish school shooting motivated by bullying – police10Three accused of TV presenter attack have left UK [ad_1] Will the killing of foreign aid workers exhaust the patience of Israel’s allies? Continue reading
newsinsightplus.com accountNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMoreaccused April 1, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityWorldAfricaAsiaAustraliaEuropeLatin AmericaMiddle EastUS & CanadaIsraeli troops pull out of Gaza’s al-Shifa hospitalPublished19 minutes agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingRelated TopicsIsrael-Gaza warImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, The buildings housing the intensive care, emergency, general surgery and orthopaedics units have been destroyedBy Sean SeddonBBC NewsIsrael’s military says it has pulled out of al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City two weeks after it was raided. According to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), troops “killed terrorists” and found “numerous weapons and intelligence documents” in the area.The raid happened after Israel said it had intelligence indicating Hamas was using the hospital as a base to launch attacks.Hamas denies using medical sites to carry out military operations. Heavy fighting has been reported around the hospital, the largest in Gaza, in recent weeks.In a statement following Monday’s withdrawal, the IDF said troops had “completed precise operational activity in the area of the Shifa Hospital and exited the area”.”The troops killed terrorists in close-quarter encounters, located numerous weapons and intelligence documents throughout the hospital, while preventing harm to civilians, patients and medical teams.”Earlier, Palestinian media reports said dozens of bodies were found in the vicinity of the complex, citing witnesses and the Hamas-run health ministry. The BBC has not verified those reports. But the World Health Organization (WHO) has said 21 patients have died in al-Shifa in the past two weeks, while Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said more than 200 “terrorists” were killed.Image source, ReutersImage caption, Palestinians say numerous bodies were found after the IDF withdrewWhen the raid was first announced, IDF chief spokesman Daniel Hagari said “Hamas terrorists have regrouped inside al-Shifa hospital”.The IDF said then it was launching a “high-precision” operation on the grounds of the hospital and urged displaced civilians sheltering on the grounds to leave immediately. Witnesses reported heavy gunfire and tanks surrounding the facility when the raid began in the early hours of the morning on 18 March.Al-Shifa was raided earlier in the conflict after Israel said it had evidence that hostages captured during the 7 October attack were taken there. Israel has long accused Hamas of using civilian health infrastructure as a cover to launch its operations, which the Palestinian group refutes.Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Much of the area surrounding the hospital has also been destroyedDr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, head of the WHO, has described the situation at al-Shifa hospital as a “siege”.In a post on X – formerly Twitter – made prior to the troops’ withdrawal, he said more than 100 people were still inside al-Shifa struggling with a lack of food, water and medical supplies.But Mr Netanyahu has reiterated that al-Shifa was a “terrorist lair” and praised the efforts of Israeli soldiers for conducting a “precise and surgical” surprise attack.The Israeli PM made his remarks on Sunday night prior to entering surgery to treat a hernia discovered during a routine check-up. Early on Monday his office said the operation was successful and Mr Netanyahu was “in good shape and beginning to recover”.The surgery took place amid demonstrations held in Jerusalem fuelled by mounting anger over his government’s handling of the war in Gaza. Thousands took to the streets demanding more action to free hostages. Around 130 people – at least 34 of whom are presumed dead – are still unaccounted for after Hamas’s 7 October attack on Israel. Mr Netanyahu is under pressure from some in Israeli society who believe there has been insufficient progress in rescuing the remaining hostages inside Gaza. Also on Sunday, seven journalists – including a freelancer working for the BBC – were injured in an Israeli air strike on the grounds of al-Aqsa hospital targeting the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) group.The IDF hit a building in the grounds of the hospital which it said PIJ was using as a command centre.Four members of the PIJ – which is allied with Hamas and participated in the 7 October attack – were killed, the IDF said.Related TopicsMiddle EastIsrael-Gaza warIsraelBenjamin NetanyahuMore on this storyIsraeli forces raid Gaza’s al-Shifa hospitalPublished18 MarchAnti-Netanyahu protesters bring political splits back on showPublished7 hours agoJournalists injured in Gaza hospital air strikePublished11 hours agoTop StoriesAnti-Netanyahu protesters bring political splits back on showPublished7 hours agoTurkish opposition stuns Erdogan with local elections winPublished36 minutes ago’Facebook scammer tricked his way into our home’Published6 hours agoFeaturesThe Papers: ‘King’s strength’ and ‘agonising A&E waits’Scotland’s controversial hate crime law… in 90 seconds. VideoScotland’s controversial hate crime law… in 90 secondsWhy morning light is so crucial to your health. VideoWhy morning light is so crucial to your healthFree childcare hours expands to two-year-olds’Finding out I was autistic saved my life’A baby gorilla’s journey in search of a mum. VideoA baby gorilla’s journey in search of a mumIn pictures: Easter celebrations around the worldParents of Chibok girls heartbroken – againWhere workers are exploited to harvest an everyday ingredientElsewhere on the BBCThe ultimate bromanceEnjoy the genius of Peter Cook and Dudley Moore with a journey through the archivesAttributioniPlayerProfessor Alice Roberts unearths her favourite musicThe scientist and Digging for Britain presenter is Lauren Laverne’s castawayAttributionSoundsWhy did four tragic murders spark an online obsession?The case racked up nearly two billion views on TikTok worldwideAttributioniPlayerCaffeine: Dangers and benefitsFind out what effects this drug can have on dementia and cardiovascular diseaseAttributionSoundsMost Read1’Facebook scammer tricked his way into our home’2X Factor star says Cowell will walk her down aisle3’King’s strength’ and ‘agonising A&E waits’4Anti-Netanyahu protesters bring political splits back on show5Turkish opposition stuns Erdogan with local elections win6Millions get a pay rise as minimum wage increases7Will legalising cannabis unleash chaos in Germany?8Energy bills lowest for two years after £238 fall9Israeli troops pull out of Gaza hospital10Stop stealing from Air Force One, journalists told [ad_1] The Israeli military says it has left al-Shifa after raiding the hospital two weeks ago. 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newsinsightplus.com accountNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMoreaccused April 1, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityWorldAfricaAsiaAustraliaEuropeLatin AmericaMiddle EastUS & CanadaIsraeli troops pull out of Gaza’s al-Shifa hospitalPublished19 minutes agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingRelated TopicsIsrael-Gaza warImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, The buildings housing the intensive care, emergency, general surgery and orthopaedics units have been destroyedBy Sean SeddonBBC NewsIsrael’s military says it has pulled out of al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City two weeks after it was raided. According to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), troops “killed terrorists” and found “numerous weapons and intelligence documents” in the area.The raid happened after Israel said it had intelligence indicating Hamas was using the hospital as a base to launch attacks.Hamas denies using medical sites to carry out military operations. Heavy fighting has been reported around the hospital, the largest in Gaza, in recent weeks.In a statement following Monday’s withdrawal, the IDF said troops had “completed precise operational activity in the area of the Shifa Hospital and exited the area”.”The troops killed terrorists in close-quarter encounters, located numerous weapons and intelligence documents throughout the hospital, while preventing harm to civilians, patients and medical teams.”Earlier, Palestinian media reports said dozens of bodies were found in the vicinity of the complex, citing witnesses and the Hamas-run health ministry. The BBC has not verified those reports. But the World Health Organization (WHO) has said 21 patients have died in al-Shifa in the past two weeks, while Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said more than 200 “terrorists” were killed.Image source, ReutersImage caption, Palestinians say numerous bodies were found after the IDF withdrewWhen the raid was first announced, IDF chief spokesman Daniel Hagari said “Hamas terrorists have regrouped inside al-Shifa hospital”.The IDF said then it was launching a “high-precision” operation on the grounds of the hospital and urged displaced civilians sheltering on the grounds to leave immediately. Witnesses reported heavy gunfire and tanks surrounding the facility when the raid began in the early hours of the morning on 18 March.Al-Shifa was raided earlier in the conflict after Israel said it had evidence that hostages captured during the 7 October attack were taken there. Israel has long accused Hamas of using civilian health infrastructure as a cover to launch its operations, which the Palestinian group refutes.Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Much of the area surrounding the hospital has also been destroyedDr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, head of the WHO, has described the situation at al-Shifa hospital as a “siege”.In a post on X – formerly Twitter – made prior to the troops’ withdrawal, he said more than 100 people were still inside al-Shifa struggling with a lack of food, water and medical supplies.But Mr Netanyahu has reiterated that al-Shifa was a “terrorist lair” and praised the efforts of Israeli soldiers for conducting a “precise and surgical” surprise attack.The Israeli PM made his remarks on Sunday night prior to entering surgery to treat a hernia discovered during a routine check-up. Early on Monday his office said the operation was successful and Mr Netanyahu was “in good shape and beginning to recover”.The surgery took place amid demonstrations held in Jerusalem fuelled by mounting anger over his government’s handling of the war in Gaza. Thousands took to the streets demanding more action to free hostages. Around 130 people – at least 34 of whom are presumed dead – are still unaccounted for after Hamas’s 7 October attack on Israel. Mr Netanyahu is under pressure from some in Israeli society who believe there has been insufficient progress in rescuing the remaining hostages inside Gaza. Also on Sunday, seven journalists – including a freelancer working for the BBC – were injured in an Israeli air strike on the grounds of al-Aqsa hospital targeting the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) group.The IDF hit a building in the grounds of the hospital which it said PIJ was using as a command centre.Four members of the PIJ – which is allied with Hamas and participated in the 7 October attack – were killed, the IDF said.Related TopicsMiddle EastIsrael-Gaza warIsraelBenjamin NetanyahuMore on this storyIsraeli forces raid Gaza’s al-Shifa hospitalPublished18 MarchAnti-Netanyahu protesters bring political splits back on showPublished7 hours agoJournalists injured in Gaza hospital air strikePublished11 hours agoTop StoriesAnti-Netanyahu protesters bring political splits back on showPublished7 hours agoTurkish opposition stuns Erdogan with local elections winPublished36 minutes ago’Facebook scammer tricked his way into our home’Published6 hours agoFeaturesThe Papers: ‘King’s strength’ and ‘agonising A&E waits’Scotland’s controversial hate crime law… in 90 seconds. 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