Current:Home > ContactIsrael military operation destroys a Gaza cemetery. Israel says Hamas used the site to hide a tunnel -ProgressCapital
Israel military operation destroys a Gaza cemetery. Israel says Hamas used the site to hide a tunnel
View
Date:2025-04-13 12:05:06
KHAN YOUNIS, Gaza Strip (AP) — The Islamic cemetery in southern Gaza was demolished, graves excised from the earth. A skull with no teeth rested atop the sandy, churned rubble.
The neighborhood of Bani Suheila in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis, which soldiers showed foreign journalists Saturday, was obliterated, transformed by the military’s search for underground Hamas tunnels. An Associated Press journalist saw a destroyed mosque and — where the cemetery had once been – a 140-meter-(yard)-wide pit that gave way to what the army called a Hamas attack tunnel underneath. The military said Monday that combat engineers had demolished part of the network, releasing a video showing massive explosions in the area.
As Israel moves forward with a ground and air campaign in Gaza that health officials in the besieged enclave say has claimed over 26,000 Palestinian lives, the military’s destruction of holy sites has drawn staunch criticism from Palestinians and rights groups, who say the offensive is also an assault on cultural heritage. Under international law, cemeteries and religious sites receive special protection — and destroying them could be considered a war crime.
Israel says Hamas uses such sites as military cover, removing them of these protections. It says there is no way to accomplish its military goal of defeating Hamas without finding the tunnels, where they say the militants have built command and control centers, transported weapons and hidden some of the 130 hostages it is believed to be holding. They say digging up the tunnels involves unavoidable collateral damage to sacrosanct spaces.
“We’re not naive anymore,” said Israeli Brig. Gen. Dan Goldfus, who led journalists around the site Saturday.
Israel has made similar arguments in operations in and around Gaza hospitals.
Goldfus brought journalists inside a tunnel shaft he said stretched underneath the mosque and the cemetery. The journalists walked down a long concrete tunnel that branched in multiple directions and arrived at a small collection of rooms soldiers alleged were used by Hamas militants as a command and control center.
It included three domed rooms — one with four chairs, one with a desk, and a kitchen with empty cans of beans and a spice rack. A military commander said the tunnel, which contained a power transformer, fans, piping with wires and light switches, stretched 800 meters (yards) and was connected to a larger tunnel network in southern Gaza.
The army says it has found similar warrens of rooms in tunnels all over the Gaza Strip. It alleged the quarters shown to journalists Saturday included the office of a Hamas commander, an operations room, and living quarters for senior members of Hamas. It said the tunnel was used to plan attacks against the military.
The demolished cemetery, according to a satellite analysis, appears to have been the Shuhadaa Bani Suheila graveyard.
Since Israel declared war against Hamas on Oct. 7, it has repeatedly accused the Islamic militant group of using Gaza’s civilian sites as cover for military use. It says that military operations — from raiding hospitals to digging up cemeteries and destroying holy sites — are necessary to dismantle the militants’ command centers and bunkers.
On Oct. 7, Hamas militants poured into southern Israel, killing 1,200 people and dragging some 250 hostages back to Gaza. Over 100 hostages were exchanged for Palestinian prisoners during a weeklong cease-fire in November.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive on Gaza has displaced most of the 2.3 million population. According to a U.N. monitor, the military has damaged 161 mosques in the course of its operations. The agency said it has not tracked the number of cemeteries that were damaged.
On Saturday, Goldfus swept his gloved hand across the moonscape surrounding him. The golden dome of the mosque was cracked and off-kilter, slumping down onto its shattered walls.
Goldfus said that Israeli forces destroyed the mosque after militants fired at them from within its grounds. Footage circulated on Israeli media showed soldiers using explosives to blow out the mosque’s first floor walls, collapsing it.
UNESCO has called on both Hamas and Israel to refrain from attacking culturally important sites.
Under the Rome Statute, the 1998 treaty that established the International Criminal Court, cemeteries and mosques receive special protection as “civilian property.” The destruction of these sites can be considered a war crime, according to the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom.
Israel argues the sites lose their protection when they are used for military purposes, and when the operational gain from targeting them outweighs the loss of civilian life and infrastructure.
Goldfus said that forces had found other traces of Hamas activity in the area, from confiscated AK-47s to a map of the border between Gaza and Israel that he said Hamas might have used for the Oct. 7 attack.
He said destroying the mosque and digging up the cemetery was integral to locating some 60 tunnel shafts in the area. The journalists were shown only one shaft.
Dismantling the tunnel network, Goldfus said, posed a “riddle” to forces. He said it is difficult to operate in the area without harming sacred sites and even human remains.
“We try to move them aside as much as possible,” he said when asked about the excavated bodies. “But remember, when we are fighting in this place, and your enemy is flanking you again and again and again, and using these compounds to hide in, there’s not much you can do.”
veryGood! (53168)
Related
- A steeplechase record at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Then a proposal. (He said yes.)
- Damar Hamlin plays in first regular-season NFL game since cardiac arrest
- Jennifer Lopez Shares How She Felt Insecure About Her Body After Giving Birth to Twins
- You Don't Wanna Wait to Revisit Jodie Turner-Smith and Joshua Jackson's Private Marriage
- Chief beer officer for Yard House: A side gig that comes with a daily swig.
- Why America has grown to love judging the plumpest bears during Fat Bear Week
- Wait, what? John Candy's role as Irv in 'Cool Runnings' could have gone to this star
- Typhoon Koinu strengthens as it moves toward Taiwan
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- LeBron James says Bronny is doing well, working to play for USC this season after cardiac episode
Ranking
- Who's hosting 'Saturday Night Live' tonight? Musical guest, how to watch Dec. 14 episode
- US Rep. Matt Gaetz’s father Don seeks return to Florida Senate chamber he once led as its president
- Black man’s 1845 lynching in downtown Indianapolis recounted with historical marker
- Gavin Newsom picks Laphonza Butler to fill Dianne Feinstein's Senate seat
- Eva Mendes Shares Message of Gratitude to Olympics for Keeping Her and Ryan Gosling's Kids Private
- Kentucky AG announces latest round of funding to groups battling the state’s drug abuse problems
- Burger battles: where In-N-Out and Whataburger are heading next
- The military is turning to microgrids to fight global threats — and global warming
Recommendation
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
Chloe Bridges Is Pregnant, Expecting First Baby With Adam Devine
Why America has grown to love judging the plumpest bears during Fat Bear Week
UK Treasury chief says he’ll hike the minimum wage but rules out tax cuts while inflation stays high
Sam Taylor
When does daylight saving time end 2023? Here's when to set your clocks back an hour
School culture wars push students to form banned book clubs, anti-censorship groups
Jennifer Lopez Shares How She Felt Insecure About Her Body After Giving Birth to Twins