Children Among 13 Killed As Israel Strikes Gaza

Palestinian protesters burn tyres amid clashes with Israeli security forces during a raid in the old city of Nablus, in the occupied West Bank, on May 9, 2023. The Israeli army said it killed three leaders of the Islamic Jihad militant group on May 9 in air strikes on Gaza, which left a dozen dead according to the Palestinian territory’s Hamas-controlled health ministry, adding that women and children were among the dead. (Photo by Jaafar ASHTIYEH / AFP)

 

According to sources in the Hamas-controlled Palestinian region, Israeli air attacks on Gaza early Tuesday killed three Islamic Jihad militant group leaders and killed ten others, including numerous children.

Following the pre-dawn raid in which more than 40 Israeli jets hit targets in the packed coastal enclave for about two hours beginning just after 2:00 a.m. (Monday 2300 GMT), Islamic Jihad threatened to “avenge” the fatalities.

According to the Gaza health ministry, four children were among those murdered, and 20 people were injured, some of whom were in serious or critical condition, as a result of the attacks, which left structures ablaze and others in ruins.

Violence also flared later in the occupied West Bank when Israeli forces launched a raid in Nablus that left at least a dozen people suffering bullet wounds, according to Palestinian medics.

The Israeli army said that in its Gaza air strikes it had targeted three leaders of Islamic Jihad, which it considers a terrorist group, as well as its “weapon manufacturing sites”.

Israel “achieved what we wanted to achieve” in the operation, said army spokesman Richard Hecht. Asked about child casualties, he said: “If there were some tragic deaths, we’ll look into it.”

Islamic Jihad confirmed three of its senior members were killed in Gaza.

Jihad Ghannam, secretary of the Al-Quds Brigades military council, Khalil al-Bahtini, commander of the military wing in northern Gaza, and Tareq Ezzedine, a West Bank military leader who operated from Gaza, were named.

AFP photographers witnessed the body of a man named as Ghannam in Rafah, in the Gaza Strip’s south, as well as the body of a boy in the morgue of Gaza City’s Shifa hospital, where mourners had congregated.

Islamic Jihad has pledged retaliation, with spokesperson Daoud Shehab saying that “the resistance believes that all cities and settlements in the Zionist (Israeli) depths will be under its fire.”

Hecht said the military was “looking where this thing will develop”, while instructing Israeli residents within 40 kilometres (25 miles) of the Gaza border to stay near bomb shelters until Wednesday evening.

‘Avenge the leaders’

Israel last week traded air strikes on Gaza for rocket fire from the enclave, an exchange sparked by the death in Israeli custody of a Palestinian hunger striker with ties to Islamic Jihad, which ended with an Egypt-brokered truce.

Islamic Jihad charged on Tuesday that Israel had “scorned all the initiatives of mediators” and vowed it would “avenge the leaders” killed in the latest air strikes.

The Israeli military described Ghannan as “one of the most senior members” of Islamic Jihad who had coordinated weapons and money transfers with Hamas.

Bahtini was “responsible for the rocket fire toward Israel in the past month”, Israel said.

And Ezzedine had been planning “multiple attacks against Israeli” civilians in the West Bank, it charged.

He was sentenced to 25 years in prison by Israel for his involvement in suicide attacks in the 2000s, before being freed in a 2011 prisoner exchange and transferred to Gaza, according to the army.

An Islamic Jihad source told AFP that Ezzedine was part of a delegation from the group that had been due to travel to Cairo for a meeting Thursday, which had now been cancelled.

‘Treacherous operation’

The army later Tuesday said its troops had entered Nablus in the West Bank, which has been occupied by Israel since the Six-Day War of 1967, with residents telling AFP they heard explosions during the raid.

The Palestinian Red Crescent Society said its medics treated 145 injuries in Nablus, including a dozen people who were shot with live fire and many more who suffered tear gas inhalation.

Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh said in a statement on the Gaza attacks that “assassinating the leadership in a treacherous operation will not bring security to the occupier, but instead greater resistance”.

The militant group’s spokesman, Hazem Qassem, warned that Israel “bears responsibility for the repercussions of this escalation”.

Israel and Gaza militants have fought multiple wars since Hamas took control of the enclave in 2007.

A three-day conflict in Gaza last August left 49 Palestinians and no Israelis dead, with Cairo playing a key role in securing a ceasefire.

Tuesday’s deaths bring to 121 the number of Palestinians killed in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict so far this year.

Nineteen Israelis, one Ukrainian and one Italian have been killed over the same period, according to an AFP count based on official sources from the two sides.

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