Israel and Hamas at war, day 71 | Hostages killed by Israeli soldiers waved white flag

(Tel Aviv and ) The Israeli army said on Saturday that the hostages killed by its soldiers in Gaza waved a white flag and spoke in Hebrew, in an area where troops are being ambushed, according to initial reports. ‘investigation.




The three hostages, aged 25 to 28, appeared “a few dozen meters from one of our positions” in the Choujaiya neighborhood of Gaza City, a military official told journalists.

The victims are Yotam Haïm, 28, Samer al-Talalqa, 25, and Alon Lulu Shamriz, 26.

PHOTOS PROVIDED BY FAMILIES VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS

From left to right: Alon Lulu Shamriz, Samer al-Talalqa and Yotam Haïm

“One of the soldiers saw them when they appeared. They don’t wear t-shirts and they have a stick with a white cloth on it. The soldier felt threatened and shoots, he declares that they are terrorists. Two [otages] are killed,” added this source.

“Immediately, another was injured and rushed into the building,” added this source, specifying that the soldiers then “heard a call for help in Hebrew”.

“The battalion commander orders the shooting to stop, but again bursts are fired in the direction of the third person and he dies,” continued the military official, adding that the incident went “against our rules of conduct.” ‘commitment “.

The army reported a “tragic event” which occurred in an area of ​​the Gaza Strip where soldiers are facing “great pressure”, “intense fighting” and “numerous ambushes”.

According to the official, a building with “SOS” written on it is “a few hundred meters” from the scene of the incident and the army is investigating to find out “if there is a link with the hostages” .

Some 250 people were taken hostage during the unprecedented attack launched on October 7 by Hamas on Israeli soil, which left around 1,140 dead, mostly civilians, according to the authorities. To date, 129 hostages are still being held in Gaza.

In retaliation, Israel has promised to “destroy” Hamas and is relentlessly bombing the Gaza Strip. Since October 27, the army has been leading a ground offensive against the Palestinian Islamist movement, which has now extended to the entire territory, including in the south where hundreds of thousands of civilians displaced by the war have gathered.

According to a latest report from the Hamas Ministry of Health, in power in Gaza, 18,800 people, 70% of them women, children and adolescents, were killed by Israeli bombings.

Second truce?

Shortly after the announcement of the deaths of the three hostages on Friday evening, families and supporters demonstrated to demand an immediate agreement for the release of the hostages, in Tel Aviv, where they also planned to meet on Saturday .

PHOTO VIOLETA SANTOS MOURA, REUTERS

Demonstration demanding the release of hostages kidnapped by Hamas on December 15 in Tel Aviv

“Every day a hostage dies,” read one poster, while an Israeli flag placed in the street was sprayed with red paint suggesting blood.

“The only way to free the living hostages is through negotiation,” said Motti Direktor, a 66-year-old protester on the spot. “We’re here after a heartbreaking evening, and I’m scared to death. We demand an agreement now,” said Merav Svirsky, whose brother Itay is hostage in Gaza.

Hostage families and supporters plan to meet again on the streets of Tel Aviv on Saturday.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, upon the army’s announcement, regretted “an unbearable tragedy” which plunged “the entire State of Israel into mourning”, while in Washington the White House spoke of a “tragic mistake”.

In the meantime, “immediate lessons were learned from this event, which were transmitted to all troops on the ground,” the army said in a statement published Friday evening, explaining that it had launched an investigation.

A one-week truce, which ended on the 1er December, allowed a pause in the fighting as well as the release of around a hundred hostages held by Hamas and 240 Palestinian prisoners imprisoned in Israel, as well as the delivery of emergency humanitarian aid.

PHOTO AHMAD GHARABLI, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

People look at portraits of Israeli hostages held in Gaza since the October 7 attack displayed on a wall in Tel Aviv on December 15.

After the announcement of the death of the three hostages, the Axios site indicated that David Barnea, the head of Mossad, the Israeli foreign secret service, is to meet the Qatari Prime Minister, Mohammed ben Abdelrahmane Al-Thani, over the weekend.

The meeting is planned in Europe and must concern a second phase of truce, in order to allow the release of hostages, continues Axios without specifying the location of this meeting or the number of hostages who could thus be freed.

“Temporary” entry of aid

After more than two months of war and a total siege imposed by Israel since October 9, living conditions in the small, overpopulated territory are described as nightmarish by the UN and NGOs for Palestinian civilians forced into ever-smaller areas. .

Some 1.9 million residents, or 85% of its population, were displaced, according to the UN, many of whom had to flee several times in the face of widespread bombing and fighting.

Early Saturday, Hamas reported “fierce fighting” in the Jabaliya sector (north), air strikes and intense artillery fire in Khan Younes, the new epicenter of the fighting in the south of the territory.

PHOTO SAID KHATIB, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Smoke rises into the sky over Khan Yunis after an Israeli bombardment on December 16.

In the occupied West Bank, where violence intensified after the outbreak of the war in Gaza, eight Palestinians were arrested in Nablus where the Israeli army launched an operation, according to the Palestinian news agency Wafa.

Warning sirens sounded in Zar’it, in northern Israel, where “an unspecified flying machine” coming “from Lebanon” was intercepted by the army, she said.

Faced with international pressure, notably from its American ally, Israel authorized on Friday the “temporary” opening of a new entry point for humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip via the Kerem Shalom crossing.

This decision aims to decongest Rafah, the only entry point for food and medicine, while Israel tightens inspection of trucks transporting aid. It is currently the only entry point for trucks carrying food and medicine into the narrow strip of land, and at a rate much lower than before the war.


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