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Israel begins 'extensive' ground operation in Gaza after devastating air strikes

Middle East

Israel launched “extensive” new ground operations in the Gaza Strip on Sunday after Israeli air strikes across the enclave killed at least 103 people overnight. Hamas claimed responsibility for two projectiles identified near Kissufim, Israel, that launched shortly after the ground offensive began. Indirect talks between Israel and Hamas continued in Doha.

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Palestinians photographed amid the wreckage in the Al-Mawassi camp for displaced persons, targeted by Israeli strikes in the south of the Gaza Strip, May 18, 2025.
Palestinians photographed amid the wreckage of the Al-Mawassi camp targeted by Israeli strikes in the south of the Gaza Strip, May 18, 2025. © AFP pool

The Israeli army announced "extensive ground operations" Sunday as part of its newly expanded campaign in the Gaza Strip, where rescuers reported dozens killed in a wave of Israeli strikes.

The announcement came just hours after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu signalled Israel was open to a deal with Hamas that involved "ending the fighting" in the besieged Palestinian territory.

And since March 2, Israel has blocked the entry of humanitarian aid, vital to the 2.4 million Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

Netanyahu's office nevertheless indicated Sunday evening that Israel would allow the entry of "a basic quantity of food intended for the population, in order to prevent the spread of famine in the Gaza Strip." 

Such a crisis would jeopardise the army's new operation, it said, adding Israel would "act to prevent Hamas from seizing this humanitarian aid".

French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot called on Israel following the latest announcement, to allow the "immediate, massive and unhampered" resumption of aid. 

Israel says its ramped-up campaign aims to free hostages and defeat Hamas, but as the early operation's stages got underway Saturday, Israel and the group were entering indirect talks in Qatar aimed at hammering out a deal.

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© France 24

In a statement, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said that "the negotiation team in Doha is working to exhaust every possibility for a deal – whether according to the Witkoff framework or as part of ending the fighting", referring to US Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff, who has been involved in previous discussions.

Such a deal, according to Netanyahu's statement, "would include the release of all the hostages, the exile of Hamas terrorists, and the disarmament of the Gaza Strip".

Ever since a two-month ceasefire fell apart in March as Israel resumed its offensive, negotiations mediated by Qatar, Egypt and the United States have failed to reach a breakthrough.

Netanyahu has opposed ending the war without Hamas's total defeat, while Hamas has baulked at the prospect of handing over its weapons.

Senior Hamas official Taher al-Nunu said on Saturday that the talks in Doha had kicked off "without any preconditions from either side".

A Hamas source familiar with the negotiations said that "Egyptian and Qatari mediators, along with the American side, are making efforts to bridge the gaps on the disputed issues". 

'No one left'

On the ground, civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP that at least 50 people had been killed Sunday "as a result of ongoing Israeli air strikes since the early hours".

He said 22 people were killed and at least 100 others wounded in a predawn attack on tents sheltering displaced Palestinians in Al-Mawasi, in the southern Gaza Strip.

AFPTV footage showed people sifting through what was left of ruined shelters and rescuers treating the wounded.

"All my family members are gone. There is no one left," said a distraught Warda al-Shaer standing amid the wreckage.

"The children were killed as well as their parents. My mother died too, and my niece lost her eye."

There was no immediate comment on the strikes from the Israeli military.

Israel's intensified assault comes as international concern has mounted over worsening humanitarian conditions in Gaza due to a blockade on aid imposed on March 2.

Read moreNetanyahu slams Macron over criticism of Gaza aid blockade

UN chief Antonio Guterres, addressing an Arab League summit in Baghdad on Saturday, said he was "alarmed" at the escalation and called for "a permanent ceasefire, now".

Hospitals 'out of service'

Israel has faced increasing pressure to lift its aid blockade, as UN agencies warn of critical shortages of food, clean water, fuel and medicine.

Marwan al-Hams, director of field hospitals at Gaza's health ministry, told AFP that since the blockade began, "57 children have died in Gaza as a result of famine, but in the coming days, this number will increase due to the depletion of available food supplies".

AFP was not able to independently verify the figure.

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© France 24

The UN had warned of the risk of famine in Gaza long before the aid blockade was imposed, and doctors at Kamal Adwan hospital told a WHO team last year that at least 10 children had starved to death.

The ministry also accused Israel on Sunday of laying siege to the Indonesian Hospital in Beit Lahia, cutting off the arrival of patients and staff, and "effectively forcing the hospital out of service".

With "the shutdown of the Indonesian Hospital, all public hospitals in the North Gaza Governorate are now out of service", it said.

Hamas's October 2023 attack that triggered the war resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people on the Israeli side, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.

Hamas also took 251 hostages during the attack, 57 of whom remain in Gaza, including 34 the military says are dead.

The Gaza health ministry said that at least 3,193 people have been killed since Israel resumed strikes on March 18, taking the war's overall toll to 53,339.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)