Gaza health ministry says Israel bombarding last hospital in north

Gaza health ministry says Israel bombarding last hospital in north

World

The Israeli military is engaged in intense military operations in north of the Palestinian territory

Follow on
Follow us on Google News
 

GAZA STRIP (Palestinian Territories) (AFP) – The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said Monday Israeli forces are bombarding the last partially functioning hospital in north Gaza, an area of intense military operations for the past month.

"At this moment, occupation forces are continuing to violently bombard and destroy Kamal Adwan Hospital, targeting all parts of the hospital," the ministry said of the facility in the northern city of Beit Lahia.

Hospital director Hossam Abu Safieh said in a statement that the situation was "catastrophic", and that "the army did not contact the hospital before directly targeting it".

"Several of our staff have been injured, and we are unable to leave the hospital," he said.

"We do not understand the purpose behind this bombing that is targeting the hospital."

When contacted, Israel's military said it was checking the report.

But in a separate statement Monday it said troops "are continuing to operate against terrorist infrastructure and operatives in the northern and central Gaza Strip".

Late last month, Israeli forces stormed Kamal Adwan hospital in a raid in which two children had died, Gaza's health ministry said at the time.

It said Israeli forces detained hundreds of patients, medical staff and some displaced individuals from neighbouring areas during the operation.

The Israeli military is engaged in intense military operations in the north of the Palestinian territory where it says Hamas militants have regrouped.

Its campaign began on October 6 when the army announced it had surrounded the northern Gaza city of Jabalia and its adjacent refugee camp.

The head of Gaza's civil defence agency, Mahmud Bassal, said Monday that more than 1,300 people have been killed so far in the Israeli operation.

"There is a severe blockade on medicine, water, and food" in the north of the territory, he told AFP.

"Medical teams, civil defence crews and hospitals in the northern region have been out of service for the 13th day in a row."

AFP was unable to independently verify the toll and Israel has also not provided casualty figures, only saying that "dozens of terrorists" have been killed in the operation.

Zheng arrived in Riyadh on the back of an impressive second half of the season that saw her win titles in Palermo and Tokyo, and an Olympic gold medal in singles in Paris. No woman has won more matches than her within that span.

The first Chinese player to qualify for the WTA Finals since Li Na in 2013, Zheng amassed a 12-2 win-loss record during the Asian swing last month and is the tour leader in most aces struck and percentage of first-serve points won.

Zheng made the first move, breaking Rybakina en route to a 4-1 advantage but her lead was erased as Rybakina attacked her second set to draw level.

The set fittingly went to a tiebreak which Zheng sealed on a long forehand from Rybakina on the 58-minute mark.

In a pattern similar to the opening set, Zheng carved out a lead in the second frame, only for Rybakina to strike back and even the score. This time though, the 2023 Wimbledon champion took four games in a row, to claim the second set and force a decider.

Zheng shook off early trouble on her serve in the final set before surging ahead 4-1. It was the boost she needed to wrap up the win – the ninth of her career against a top-10 opponent.

The Chinese Olympic champion now owns a tour-leading 20 three-set wins in 2024 – the highest tally by a WTA player in a single season since 2016.