Israeli forces are still in the northern Gaza Strip,
hours after the country launched an intense night of attacks against Hamas militants
which included both air and artillery strikes.
Hamas said they are trying to locate eight
Russian-Israeli dual citizens that were taken hostages in order to free them on
Moscow’s request. Russia has good relations with Hamas, which it does not
consider to be a terror group, and has begun a diplomatic effort to try to free
hostages held in Gaza.
Israel has been building up to a ground invasion since
Hamas operatives crossed the border on October 7 and killed 1,400 people, and
took more than 220 hostages.
The Israeli military believes the Hamas leadership and
its main infrastructure are concentrated in the north, which is where the
country has now launched relentless strikes, days after it asked civilians to
leave north Gaza and move to the South.
Gaza witnessed intense raids last night with the
Israeli army claiming a top Hamas commander and many operatives being killed in
air attacks.
Israel said they had hit 150 “underground targets” of
the Hamas. Israel Defence spokesperson Daniel Hagari said that the troops were “still
in the field” and claimed that they were fighting a weaker enemy.
He also said that aid trucks, carrying food and water,
will be allowed into Gaza today. Not only has the region been hit by the
Israeli strikes, they are also facing severe shortages of food, fuel, and
medicines.
Internet and phone services were also cut off amid the
overnight strikes on Friday. Human Rights Watch, an NGO, has expressed concern
that a communication blackout risks providing cover for mass atrocities.
A thick haze of smoke covered Gaza and southern Israel
after the night of heavy bombardment, according to journalists covering the
war.
A BBC journalist described “total chaos” during the
night of strikes and in its aftermath. “There was a huge bombardment in the
north of Gaza Strip on a scale we’ve never seen before. At the hospital here,
ambulance drivers told me they couldn’t communicate with anyone, so they were
just driving in the direction of the explosions,” wrote Rushdi Abualouf.
Hamas has said that its operatives are ready to
confront Israeli attacks with “full force” in Gaza. The Palestinian militant
group that rules Gaza had said its operatives were clashing with Israeli troops
in areas near the border with Israel.
Israel has accused the Hamas group of using Gaza’s
biggest hospital as its headquarters and abusing other hospitals for military
purposes, a charge that the group has denied.
Agencies