In a attack on Tuesday that, according to Hamas, killed a columnist being treated after an Israeli assault last month, Israel’s government said it struck a Gaza medical housing militants. A short pause in fighting was allowed during the attack, which Hamas claimed occurred at dawn, which led to the release of a US-Israeli hostage. The military claimed in a Telegram article that” major Hamas terrorists” were “operating from within a command and control center” at Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis, the main city in southern Gaza. The terrorists planned and carried out terrorist attacks on Israeli civilians and IDF (army ) troops, according to the statement. The Hamas-run Gaza health department reported that the strike left two people dead and several others hurt, while the Hamas-run media reported that journalist Hassan Aslih had been “assissassinated.” Hassan Aslih, a journalist’s death, was killed when the Israeli military bombed the operation creating at Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis at sunrise on Tuesday, according to Mahmud Bassal, a spokeswoman for the Gaza legal defense agency. According to Ismail al-Thawabtah, director standard of the Hamas media company, Aslih, the head of the Alam24 media outlet, had been visiting the hospital for treatment after suffering a broken leg on April 7. According to the report at the time, Ahmed Mansur and Hilmi al-Faqaawi, two other journalists were killed in the attack that hit a media camp. Aslih was targeted by the Jewish military, according to the Israeli military, who claimed he worked for Hamas” under the pretense of a journalist.” The assault was condemned by the Committee to Protect Journalists. During the AFP images from Nasser Hospital after Tuesday’s attack, AFP footage showed fumes rising from the hospital as firefighters searched through the dust for torches. According to a hospital employee who identified himself as Abu Ghali, the Jewish assault “does not distinguish between civilians and military target.” He told AFP that” this is a civil clinic that treats injured patients 24/7.” Edan Alexander, a 21-year-old US-Israeli man who had been held captive since October 2023, was allowed to leave military activities in Gaza after Israel had halted military operations there. Alexander, who is regarded as the final prisoner to have US citizenship, was released on Monday ahead of US President Donald Trump’s Middle East visit. Following a two-month peace in its battle against Hamas, which was sparked by the Arab team’s October 7 attack, Israel resumed its military unpleasant in Gaza on March 18. 1, 218 people, mostly civilians, died as a result of the harm in southern Israel, according to an AFP official’s score based on official figures. Since Israel resumed its campaign, according to the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry, at least 2, 749 people have died nevertheless, or 862, according to the ministry’s statistics from Hamas-run Gaza.
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