Beit Lahia

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"Vi hörde kvinnor och barn skrika"

"Vi hörde kvinnor och barn skrika"

Sökinsatsen efter saknade människor i ruinerna fortsätter efter att Israel flygbombade staden Beit Lahia under lördagen. Hittills har minst 87 människor dödats, rapporterar palestinska myndigheter. Dödstalet är ”överdrivet”, hävdar Israel. Samtidigt kommer larmrapporter från flera sjukhus som är fulla av döda och skadade, en del av dem uppges vara barn. – Det var ett massivt bombanfall på ett bostadsområde fullt av civila och flyktingar. Dödsoffren var barn och kvinnor, säger ögonvittnet Ahmed Al Hajeen till TV4 nyheterna. ”Våra grannar är bombade” Ett 40-tal människor är skadade och ytterligare tiotals tros sitta fast i rasmassor. Myndigheterna i Hamaskontrollerade Gaza beskriver attacken mot flera bostadshus som en massaker. – Det rasade bråte över oss. Vi rusade ut när vi hörde kvinnor och barn skrika och såg att grannarna blivit bombade, säger Ahmed Al Hajeen. Personal i fara Under söndagen försökte WHO leverera bränsle, blod, livsmedel och medicinsk utrustning till Kamal Adwan, ett av drabbade sjukhusen, uppger generalsekreteraren Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. – Sjukhusets vattentank och elnät har skadats och patienter och personal är i fara, uppger han i ett pressutskick på söndagen enligt flera medier.

Israeler vid gränsen vill se vedergällning: Vi har varit för tålmodiga

Israeler vid gränsen vill se vedergällning: Vi har varit för tålmodiga

I den israeliska staden Sderot nära gränsen till Gaza har man vant sig vid att bo i frontlinjen för Hamas. Men den senaste attacken är annorlunda, skriver The Washington Post i ett reportage från gränsen. – Vi har varit för tålmodiga, för försiktiga. Jag tror vår nation nu är enad i att göra det som borde ha gjorts för länge sedan, säger 34-årige Maor Ben Haim som hjälper sin gravida fru och sina barn ombord på en buss. Han och hans familj forslas iväg till evakueringsboenden på hotell vid Döda havet. 85-åriga Rachel Dahan är en av få som valt att stanna. De höga dödssiffrorna från Gaza bekommer henne inte: – Om jag kunde skulle jag åka dit och döda dem allihopa. (Svensk översättning av Omni). Sderot has long been on the front lines but the last Hamas attack was something utterly different, and residents want the situation to change. By Loveday Morris October 17, 2023 SDEROT, Israel - Just a mile away from Gaza, the city of Sderot is no stranger to being on the front lines of Israel's conflict with Hamas. Residents know the routine well - when the rockets fall here, they have 15 seconds to get to safe rooms before a potential hit. Bus stops double as bomb shelters. But this time things are different. Border communities are still reeling from the Hamas-led assault that killed 1,400 Israelis, and now amid the trauma, there is an unwillingness to return to the status quo. "We want to make these terrorist attacks stop," said Maor Ben Haim, 34, as he loaded his six-months-pregnant wife and children onto an evacuation bus over the weekend. "That's it. We were too patient, too gentle. I think the nation is now united to do what should have been done a long time ago." Israel has said it is ready to crush Hamas, and residents here are shipping out as Gaza braces for the force of an all-out assault. Like other communities along the 40-mile fence with Israel, the streets of Sderot now lie largely empty save for security forces, volunteers and the smattering of residents who have decided to stay. Nine out of 10 people in the working-class southern city of 30,000 people have left. Thousands who did not flee in the initial attack have been ferried out like Ben Haim and his family to hotels on the Dead Sea and other parts of Israel. Passing them on the roads are columns of soldiers and armored vehicles, as hundreds of thousands of troops ready themselves for the expected ground invasion. In recent days, much of Sderot and its surroundings has been declared a closed security zone as the military prepares staging grounds on the border. New concrete road blocks have been installed to stop traffic as artillery blasts out shells into Gaza. From an overlook in the city, beyond the supposedly impenetrable border fence that Hamas made light work of in the Oct. 7 assault, the Gazan cities of Beit Hanoun and Beit Lahia stretch out below. Black plumes rise from the sky as shells from Israeli tanks hit their mark, with the sound of explosions occasionally punctuated by the rattle of machine gun fire. On the other side of the fence, 2,750 Palestinians in Gaza have already died in the air and artillery assault since last Saturday, according to health authorities there. But that doesn't bother Rachel Dahan, 85, one of just 4,000 residents who remain in Sderot. "Shut the door, shut the door!" she implored, as a nurse checked in with her on Monday, still paranoid that gunmen were on the loose. An Arabic speaker after having grown up in Morocco before emigrating to Israel, she has fond memories of visiting Gaza to eat fish and attend weddings before the 40-mile-long separation fence was constructed to pen off the Gaza Strip. But now she'd like to see it erased. "If I could, I'd go kill them all," she said, letting out an "oy, oy, oy" at the boom of outgoing artillery at the end of a temporary humanitarian cease-fire. Like many in this town, she was a die-hard supporter of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, but now she curses at his name. She's the first call of the day for Malka Stein, a nurse from Rescuers Without Borders, who had traveled from northern Israel to volunteer. But now she thinks she may be needed more at home, as the Israeli government moved to evacuate 28 communities close to the Lebanese border, amid fears of a broader conflagration with Hezbollah. "It's not good," she said, as she swept Dahan's floor and made her lunch. Israeli authorities have urged everyone to leave Sderot and other communities within a few miles of Gaza - though evacuation orders here aren't compulsory. At a makeshift aid distribution point, Veronica Odarchuk, 19, who fled the war in Ukraine a year-and-a-half ago for Israel, sorted packets of coffee, instant noodles and sugar to be ferried to the last remaining residents of the city. Now she's not sure her family made the right decision. "I think Ukraine might be safer right now," she said, as she prepared to go out on a distribution run. The last of those taking up the offers of the evacuation buses gathered at a school in the rocket-scarred town to head out over the weekend, dragging suitcases and hauling bags. A 15-year-old clung to a pink doll. Volunteers helped the elderly board. As a second group waited for a ride out, a rocket flashed across the sky and people rushed toward the school shelter, reminding some of their reasons for leaving. About 74 rockets have made direct hits on homes here over the past week. But for some, the decision is harder than others. Yossi and Shmurit Edrich's baby was born on Oct. 6, just hours before Hamas's incursion into their town. Premature and weighing just over 4 pounds, the baby has to stay in the hospital for a week. But for some, the decision is harder than others. Yossi and Shmurit Edrich's baby was born on Oct. 6, just hours before Hamas's incursion into their town. Premature and weighing just over 4 pounds, the baby has to stay in the hospital for a week. But the Edrichs were desperate to get their other kids out to safety, leaving their newborn in the hands of the doctors for now. "My heart is breaking," said Shmurit. "But I have four other children; I have to take care of them." The city has emptied out before, but people are expecting a longer haul this time, said Ayelet Shmuel, director of the city's resilience center. "The city knows how to run," she said. "But this time we don't know what's going to happen." At a staging ground not far from the border fence, Israeli troops are gearing up for a bloody battle. Some 286 have already died. "Now we are going for our revenge," said Capt. Nadav Mizrahi, a reserve officer deployed with a tank brigade. "To destroy everything from top to bottom," he said. "I'm sure we can do it. It will take time and cost lives. But it's our country. We will do anything." © 2023 The Washington Post. Sign up for the Today's Worldview newsletter here.

Beit Lahia på YouTube

Death toll from Beit Lahia attack rises to 60

Palestine's Wafa news agency reports that at least 60 people have been killed in an Israeli air strike targeting a residential ...

Al Jazeera English på YouTube

Israel kills 73 Palestinians in northern Gaza’s Beit Lahia

At least 73 Palestinians were killed and dozens injured in Israeli airstrikes that targeted a residential bloc in Beit Lahia town in ...

The Star på YouTube

‘Buildings collapse while people were still inside’ : AJE correspondent

Al Jazeera's Hani Mahmoud joins live from Deir el-Balah, Gaza Strip. He says that the reports we are getting right now are that ...

Al Jazeera English på YouTube

A view of Beit Lahia, Gaza, before and after 7 October

This is Beit Lahia, a city in the North Gaza Governorate, before and after 7 October. Since the Hamas led an attack on that day ...

Middle East Eye på YouTube

Beit Lahiya hospital flooded with victims after shelling

The Kamal Adwan hospital in Beit Lahiya in the Gaza Strip is flooded with patients after Israeli strikes hit the Al Manshia area.

AFP News Agency på YouTube