Hamas says 'heavy fighting' in Gaza as Israel steps up ground war
GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories
Hamas said it was engaged in "heavy fighting" with Israeli troops on Sunday inside northern Gaza, where besieged residents were again told to flee.
After weeks of ferocious air strikes, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has declared a new "stage" in what he warned will be a "long and difficult" war.
Israel's military released a series of images late Sunday purporting to show tanks, armoured personnel carriers, artillery and equipment-laden infantrymen operating inside Palestinian territory.
Hamas said its Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades were already "engaged in heavy fighting... with the invading occupation forces."
The Israel Defence Forces claimed to have struck more than "450 terror targets, including operational command centres, observation posts, and anti-tank missile launch posts."
The military also said 31-year-old sergeant Yinon Fleishman, a reservist, was killed in northern Israel when his tank overturned.
With a fierce urban war now feared, Israeli army spokesman Daniel Hagari told Palestinian civilians to go south "to a safer area."
"We are gradually expanding the ground activity and the scope of our forces in the Gaza Strip," he said.
It is now more than three weeks since Hamas gunmen launched a wave of bloody cross-border raids against homes, communities, farms and security posts inside Israel.
An estimated 1,400 people, mostly civilians, were killed and 239 people were taken hostage, according to the latest Israeli tallies.
Grieving and enraged, Israel has vowed to free the hostages, track down those responsible and "eradicate" Hamas, a Palestinian Islamist movement that has governed Gaza since 2007.
But there is growing international concern about the toll of Israel's campaign on Gaza's 2.4 million residents.
The territory is under siege, with people unable to leave and only a trickle of humanitarian aid allowed in.
Meanwhile, Israel has carried out one of the most intense bombing campaigns in recent memory.
Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry says more than 8,000 people, mainly civilians, have been killed, many of them children.
Food, water, medicine
Inside Gaza's maze of streets, rubble and hulled-out buildings, there is a growing sense of panic, fear and desperation.
Ibrahim Shandoughli, a 53-year-old from Jabaliya in northern Gaza, asked why he would head south when that area is also being bombed.
"Where do you want us to evacuate to? All the areas are dangerous," he said.
Etidal al-Masri was among those who did move south.
But even in the border town of Rafah, she still struggles to find even the basics amid shortages of food, water and medicine.
Gazans "must now queue for bread, toilets and even for sleep," she said.
On Sunday, the desperation appeared to boil over.
The United Nations reported that "thousands of people" had ransacked its warehouses looking for tinned food, flour, oil and hygiene supplies.
The U.N. also reported that 33 trucks carrying water, food and medical supplies had entered Gaza from Egypt on Oct. 29.
It is one of the largest deliveries to date, but still far short of the 100 trucks a day that aid groups say is needed.
International Criminal Court lead prosecutor Karim Khan warned Israel on Sunday that preventing access to humanitarian aid could be a "crime".
'Axis of resistance'
In a phone call with Netanyahu on Sunday, US President Joe Biden also underscored the need to "immediately and significantly" increase the flow of aid.
And while the White House has welcomed the gradual return of cell phone and internet services that had been cut for days, it had a sharp warning for Israel's leaders.
The "burden" lies with Israel to distinguish between militants and innocent civilians in Gaza, US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan told CNN.
According to the U.N., all 10 hospitals in northern Gaza have received evacuation orders — despite sheltering thousands of patients and about 117,000 of the displaced.
The Palestinian Red Crescent Society has said evacuation is impossible and reported repeated strikes around Al-Quds hospital in central Gaza.
The head of the World Health Organization said calls to evacuate Al-Quds hospital were "deeply concerning."
"We reiterate — it's impossible to evacuate hospitals full of patients without endangering their lives," Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus wrote on X.
Mohamed al-Talmas, who has taken shelter in Gaza's biggest hospital Al-Shifa, said "the ground shook" there with intense Israeli raids.
Israel describes Al-Shifa hospital as a de facto Hamas "command centre" and headquarters.