The Associated Press revealed Sunday that “Israel has provided little evidence of the presence of Hamas fighters in targeted hospitals in the Gaza Strip in many cases.”
This came in a months-long investigation conducted by the US agency during which testimonies were collected about the Israeli raids that targeted Al-Awda, Indonesian and Kamal Adwan hospitals in the Gaza Strip, including interviews with more than 30 patients, witnesses, medical and humanitarian workers, as well as Israeli officials.
The investigation concluded that “Israel provided little evidence of the presence of Hamas fighters in these cases.”
The Associated Press reported that the Israeli military spokesman’s office declined to comment on a list of incidents linked to Israeli attacks on hospitals in the Gaza Strip.
Since the start of the war on the Gaza Strip on October 7, the Israeli army has deliberately targeted Gaza’s hospitals and health system and put them out of service, endangering the lives of the sick and wounded, according to Palestinian and UN data.
In the past month, the Israeli army has bombed several times the hospitals of Kamal Adwan, Al-Awda, Indonesian and Happy Yemen in the northern Gaza Strip, as part of a 30-day genocidal campaign carried out in the area.
Israel continues its massacres, ignoring the UN Security Council’s resolution to end them immediately and the orders of the International Court of Justice to take measures to prevent genocide and improve the catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza.