JERUSALEM: Israel’s military on Wednesday said it had discovered and destroyed a tunnel used by senior Hamas leaders and to hold hostages in southern Gaza’s main city of Khan Yunis.
Special forces unearthed what they said was a “strategic underground tunnel” stretching more than one kilometer (just over half a mile) in a “targeted raid.”
The city — home to Hamas’s Gaza leader Yahya Sinwar — has been the focus of intense bombardment in recent weeks, as Israel seeks to hunt down the masterminds of the deadly October 7 attack.
Images circulated by the army showed what it said was a “hostage holding cell,” with tiled walls and steel bars from floor to ceiling.
“This tunnel held approximately 12 hostages at different times; three of them have been returned to Israel, and the rest are still being held in Gaza,” a statement read.
The army did not offer details of which hostages were held there.
The tunnel, built “under the heart of a civilian area,” also included a bathroom, kitchen and a rest area for captors, and was part of an “intricate and interconnected underground labyrinth,” it added.
It was used “to hide high-ranking members of the Hamas terrorist organization and to hold hostages” and was linked to another recently discovered tunnel where other captives were held, it said.
Special forces were seen in an army video entering a small outer entrance in an apparent crater surrounded by debris and mangled concrete and near an apartment complex, it added.
The military also showed off hand grenades and rocket propelled grenades that it said it had found and disabled.
Some 250 hostages were seized in the October 7 attack on southern Israel, which led to the deaths of about 1,160 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.
Israel says 132 hostages remain in Gaza, of whom 29 are believed to have died.
“Trapped in tunnels underground, they face darkness, hunger, fear, loneliness and sexual abuse as their daily reality,” campaign group the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said in a separate statement.
“If we don’t get them out of there immediately they may not survive another day.”
More than one million Palestinians have fled to Gaza’s far south to escape Israel’s bombardment, which has killed more than 27,700 people according to the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza.
The Israeli military claims senior Hamas figures have retreated to the tunnel system, which it dubs the “Gaza Metro,” with entrances deliberately built in and around civilian infrastructure.
Israel claims hostage tunnel found in south Gaza city
https://arab.news/ygg74
Israel claims hostage tunnel found in south Gaza city
- Special forces unearthed what they said was a “strategic underground tunnel” stretching more than one kilometer
Gaza teen’s chances of walking again depend on Rafah reopening
- Rimas Abu Lehia was wounded five months ago when Israeli troops opened fired toward a crowd mobbing an aid truck
- Israel’s campaign in Gaza after the Hamas October 2023 attack has decimated the territory’s health sector
DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip: Rimas Abu Lehia was wounded five months ago when Israeli troops opened fired toward a crowd of hungry people mobbing an aid truck for food in Gaza and a bullet shattered the 15-year-old Palestinian girl’s left knee.
Now her best chance of walking again is surgery abroad. She is on a long list of more than 20,000 Palestinians, including 4,500 children, who have been waiting — some more than a year — for evacuation to get treatment for war wounds or chronic medical conditions, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.
Their hopes hinge on the reopening of the crucial Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt, a key point under the nearly 4-month-old ceasefire between Israel and Hamas. Israel has announced the crossing would open in both directions on Sunday.
The Israeli military body in charge of coordinating aid to Gaza said Friday that “limited movement of people only” would be allowed. Earlier, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had said Israel will allow 50 patients a day to leave; others have spoken of up to 150 a day.
That’s a large jump from about 25 patients a week allowed to leave since the ceasefire began, according to UN figures. But it would still take anywhere from 130 to 400 days of crossings to get everyone in need out.
Abu Lehia said her life depends on the crossing opening.
“I wish I didn’t have to sit in this chair,” she said, crying as she pointed at the wheelchair she relies on to move. “I need help to stand, to dress, to go to the bathroom.”
Evacuations are critical as Gaza hospitals are decimated
Israel’s campaign in Gaza after the Hamas October 2023 attack on southern Israel that triggered the war has decimated the territory’s health sector — the few hospitals still working were overwhelmed by casualties. There are shortages of medical supplies and Israel has restricted aid entry.
Hospitals are unable to perform complicated surgeries for many of the wounded, including thousands of amputees, or treat many chronic conditions. Gaza’s single specialized cancer hospital shut down early in the war, and Israeli troops blew it up in early 2025. Without giving evidence, the military said Hamas militants were using it, though it was located in an area under Israeli control for most of the war.
More than 10,000 patients have left Gaza for treatment abroad since the war began, according to the World Health Organization.
After Israeli troops seized and closed the Rafah crossing in May 2024 and until the ceasefire, only around 17 patients a week were evacuated from Gaza, except for a brief surge of more than 200 patients a week during a two-month ceasefire in early 2025, according to WHO figures.
About 440 of those seeking evacuation have life-threatening injuries or diseases, according to the Health Ministry. More than 1,200 patients have died while waiting for evacuation, the ministry said Tuesday.
A UN official said one reason for the slow pace of evacuations has been that many countries are reluctant to accept the patients because Israel would not guarantee they would be allowed to return to the Gaza Strip. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the issue. The majority of evacuees have gone to Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Turkiye.
He said it wasn’t clear if that would change with Rafah’s opening. Even with “daily or almost daily evacuations,” he said, the number is not very high. Also, Israel has said it will only allow around 50 Palestinians a day to enter Gaza while tens of thousands of Palestinians hope to go back.
Israel has also banned sending patients to hospitals in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem since the war began, the official said — a move that cut off what was previously the main outlet for Palestinians needing treatment unavailable in Gaza.
Five human rights groups have petitioned Israel’s High Court of Justice to remove the ban. The court has not ruled. Still, one cancer patient in Gaza was allowed to travel to the West Bank for treatment on Jan. 11, after the Jerusalem District Court accepted a petition in his case by the Israeli rights group Gisha.
Thousands of cancer patients need evacuation
Gaza has more than 11,000 cancer patients and some 75 percent of the necessary chemotherapy drugs are not available, the Health Ministry said. At least 4,000 cancer patients need urgent treatment abroad, it added.
Ahmed Barham, a 22-year-old university student, has been battling leukemia. He underwent two lymph node removal surgeries in June but the disease is continuing to spread “at an alarming rate,” his father, Mohamed Barham, said.
“There is no treatment available here,” the elder Barham said.
His son, who has lost 35 kilograms (77 pounds), got on the urgent list for referral abroad this past week but still doesn’t have a confirmation of travel.
“My son is dying before my eyes,” the father said.
Desperate for Rafah to open
Mahmoud Abu Ishaq, a 14-year-old, has been waiting for more than a year on the referral list for treatment abroad.
The roof of his family home collapsed when an Israeli strike hit nearby in the southern town of Beni Suhaila. The boy was injured and suffered a retinal detachment.
“Now he is completely blind,” his father, Fawaz Abu Ishaq said. “We are waiting for the crossing to open.”
Abu Lehia was wounded in August, when she went out from her family tent in the southern city of Khan Younis, looking for her younger brother, Muhannad, she said. The boy had gone out earlier that morning, hoping to get some food off entering aid trucks.
At the time, when Gaza was near famine, large crowds regularly waited for trucks and pulled food boxes off them, and Israeli troops often opened fire on the crowds. The Israeli military said its forces were firing warning shots, but hundreds were killed over the course of several months, according to Gaza health officials.
When Abu Lehia arrived at the edge of a military-held zone from which the trucks were passing, dozens of people were fleeing as Israeli troops fired. A bullet hit Abu Lehia in the knee, and she fell to the ground screaming, she said.
At the nearby Nasser Hospital, she underwent multiple surgeries, but they were unable to repair her knee. Doctors told her she needs knee replacement surgery outside Gaza.
Officials told the family last month that she would be evacuated in January. But so far nothing has happened, said her father, Sarhan Abu Lehia.
“Her condition is getting worse day by day,” he said. “She sits alone and cries.”










