Foreign

Israeli forces have launched an overnight raid on al-Shifa hospital in Gaza, with reports of tanks and heavy gunfire at the facility.

An Israel Defense Forces spokesperson said the IDF was carrying out a “high precision operation in limited areas” of the hospital.

The IDF said “senior Hamas terrorists have regrouped” inside the hospital and are using it to launch attacks, Eyewitnesses described a state of panic inside the complex in Gaza City.

Heavy gunfire could be heard around the hospital in unverified footage posted on social media.

In another voice message sent to journalists from inside the hospital Muhammad Al-Sayyid said: “The soldiers here inside the complex. There are dead and wounded, and the soldiers arrested some young men. The situation here is catastrophic.”

In a video message posted in the early hours, IDF chief spokesperson Rear Adm Daniel Hagari said the Israeli military was responding to “concrete intelligence which demanded immediate action”.

He said the hospital would be able to continue functioning during the raid and told patients and staff they did not have to evacuate.

Displaced people sheltering at the complex will be able to leave the hospital via an evacuation route, he said, before calling on Hamas to “surrender immediately”.

A statement from the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry called the operation a “flagrant violation of international humanitarian law”.

Hundreds of displaced Palestinians are sheltering at the hospital, which was raided by Israeli forces earlier in the conflict. Al-Shifa hospital was Gaza’s main medical facility prior to the conflict, but its operations have been severely disrupted after months of fighting.

Hospitals have protected status during times of war under international humanitarian law – but they can lose that protection in limited circumstances if they are being used to commit an “act harmful to the enemy”.

Israel has long accused Hamas of using medical facilities as cover for its operations, which the Iranian-backed armed group denies.

Israeli troops also carried out a major military operation on the grounds of Nasser Hospital – Gaza’s second biggest medical facility – in February.

The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza after Hamas gunmen killed about 1,200 people in southern Israel on 7 October and took 253 other people hostage. Gaza’s health ministry says more than 31,300 people have been killed in the Palestinian territory since then.

BBC/Adebukola Aluko

Foreign

Israeli President Isaac Herzog has denied that Israel is striking Gaza’s largest hospital.

Reports from staff at Al-Shifa suggest the facility, sheltering thousands of Palestinians, has run out of electricity.

But Mr Herzog said “everything is operating” at the hospital.

Speaking to the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg he also said a copy of Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf was found on the body of a Hamas fighter in northern Gaza.

Mr Herzog said a copy translated into Arabic was found “just a few days ago” in a children’s room that had been “turned into a military operation base of Hamas”.

The Nazi leader’s antisemitic manifesto was first printed in 1925.

Finding a copy of it in northern Gaza, Mr Herzog said, showed that some in Hamas “learned again and again Adolf Hitler’s ideology of hating the Jews”.

Earlier, the World Health Organization (WHO) said it had lost communication with its contacts at Al-Shifa, with staff and patients trapped by fighting outside.

WHO chief Dr Tedros Ghebreyesus later said that contact has been restored but warned of “dire” conditions inside. He repeated calls for a ceasefire and said the hospital has been without electricity and water for three days.

Doctors and the Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza have said a lack of fuel there means patients cannot be operated on and incubators for premature babies cannot run. But the president disputed this.

“We deny this at all, there is a lot of spin by Hamas… but there’s electricity in Shifa, everything is operating,” Mr Herzog said.

Israel has said that Hamas has a base underneath the hospital building – a claim denied by Hamas.

Asked whether Israel has gone too far in its response to Hamas’s 7 October attack, Mr Herzog said: “We work exactly according to the rules of international humanitarian law. We alert each and every civilian, because their homes have become terror bases”.

He added: “Unfortunately, there are tragedies. We don’t shy away from them. But truly many of the tragedies are done by Hamas, like they bombed [Al-]Shifa hospital yesterday, not Israel.”

Israeli military spokesman Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said Israel would help evacuate babies from Al-Shifa following a request from the hospital administration. A doctors group said on Saturday that two premature babies had already died.

BBC/Adebukola Aluko

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