Desk Report
Publish: 25 Jan 2024, 11:21 am
An estimated 1.7 million people - nearly three-quarters of the population - have also been displaced by the past 12 weeks of fighting and many of them are sheltering inside UN facilities or near them || Photo: Collected
At least nine people were killed and 75 injured when a UN facility sheltering civilians was struck in Khan Younis in southern Gaza, the UN's Palestinian refugee agency says.
UNRWA said two tank shells hit its Khan Younis Training Centre during fighting in the city's western outskirts.
Its commissioner condemned the "blatant disregard of basic rules of war".
Israel's military said it had ruled out that the incident was the result of an air or artillery strike by its forces.
It added that it was reviewing Israeli operations nearby and examining the possibility that it was "Hamas fire".
Israeli troops have been battling Hamas fighters as they advance into western Khan Younis, a day after the military said it had completely encircled the city.
Clashes and bombardment around the city's two main hospitals have also left thousands of patients, staff and others unable to leave.
The conflict was triggered by an unprecedented cross-border attack by Hamas gunmen on southern Israel on 7 October, in which about 1,300 people were killed and about 250 others taken hostage.
More than 25,700 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.
An estimated 1.7 million people - nearly three-quarters of the population - have also been displaced by the past 12 weeks of fighting and many of them are sheltering inside UN facilities or near them.
The Khan Younis Training Centre is one of the largest UNRWA shelters, with between 30,000 and 40,000 people said to be living inside its grounds.
UNRWA says the compound is clearly marked, that its co-ordinates have been shared with Israeli authorities, and that it and the civilians inside must be protected under international law.
However, at least six displaced people were killed and many more injured when the training centre was struck on Monday during intense fighting in the surrounding area, according to the agency.
UNRWA's Gaza director, Thomas White, told the BBC from the nearby town of Rafah that on Wednesday afternoon a building housing 800 people who had fled northern Gaza was hit by two tank rounds.
"We've got a team on the ground there now with the shelter management team. At this stage, it looks like there are nine fatalities and over 75 people injured," he said.
"Of course, the challenge now is to try to get medical care for those people in a situation where effectively the major hospitals in Gaza are operating at very limited capacity."
Mr White said UNRWA officials had been in constant contact with Israeli officers and that they had been given assurances that such facilities were safe.
"So, despite all of that co-ordination, the reality is that the Israeli army has not been meeting its obligations to protect civilians, to show due precaution when operating in areas where there are civilians."
In response to UNRWA's reports, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said: "After an examination of our operational systems, the IDF has currently ruled out that this incident is a result of an aerial or artillery strike by the IDF."
"A thorough review of the operations of the forces in the vicinity is under way," it added. "The IDF is also examining the possibility that the strike was a result of Hamas fire."
Vedant Patel of the US state department repeated Washington's calls for the protection of civilians in Gaza.
"We deplore today's attack on the UN's Khan Younis training centre," she said, and called it "incredibly concerning".
Earlier, the IDF said its troops had "launched a divisional manoeuvre on West Khan Younis" that was targeting Hamas "outposts, infrastructure, and command and control centres".
"Dismantling Hamas' military framework in western Khan Yunis is the heart of the logic behind the operation," it added.
The IDF also said that Hamas "exploits the civilian population, exploits shelters and hospitals" - something the group has denied.
Gaza's health ministry meanwhile accused the IDF of "isolating hospitals in Khan Younis and carrying out massacres in the western area of the city".
The Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) said the al-Amal Hospital, which it runs, and its local headquarters were under "siege" by Israeli forces, trapping patients, wounded people and an estimated 13,000 displaced people._BBC
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