Israel, Hamas trade threats as new Gaza death toll hits 830

a woman mourns over the body of her relative, a victim of israel’s relentless bombardment, at al-ahli arab hospital in Gaza city on wednesday. (AFP)
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Updated 27 March 2025
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Israel, Hamas trade threats as new Gaza death toll hits 830

  • We’ll seize territory, Netanyahu says
  • Militants warn hostages will return ‘in coffins’

CAIRO/NEW YORK: Israel and Hamas traded theats on Wednesday as the Palestinian death toll from eight days of renewed airstrikes and military action in Gaza rose to 830.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would seize swaths of the enclave if Hamas did not release hostages, while the militant group warned they would return “in coffins” if Israel did not stop the bombing.
Just over a week since the new onslaught began, Israel said two projectiles were fired from Gaza, with one intercepted and the other landing near the border. The rocket fire came a day after hundreds of Palestinians in Gaza staged a rare protest against Hamas, chanting slogans against the group and calling for an end to the war.
Netanyahu told the Knesset: “The more Hamas persists in its refusal to release our hostages, the stronger the pressure we will exert. This includes the seizure of territory.” Hamas said it was trying to keep the hostages alive, but Israel’s military action endangered their lives. “Every time the occupation attempts to retrieve its captives by force, it ends up bringing them back in coffins,” the group said.
Of the 251 hostages seized by Hamas when they attacked Israel in October 2023, 58 are still being held, including 34 the Israeli military says are dead. The Palestinian death toll from Israel's retaliatory war on Gaza is at least 50,183, mostly civilians.

Meanwhile video footage emerged on Wednesday of hundreds of Palestinian protesters marching in Beit Lahiya in northern Gaza to demand an end to war, chanting “Out, out, out, Hamas get out.”

“It was a spontaneous rally against the war because people are tired and they have no place to go,” one witness said. “Many chanted slogans against Hamas, not all people, but many ... people are exhausted and no one should blame them.”

Senior Hamas official Basem Naim said people had the right to protest but denounced what he said were “suspicious political agendas” exploiting the suffering caused by the war.

The displaced
“In just one week, 142,000 people have been displaced,” the spokesman for Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said, pointing out that about 90 percent of Gaza’s population has been displaced at least once between the start of the war on October 7, 2023 and January of this year.
The space available for families is “shrinking,” he said, adding that displacement orders currently cover some 17 percent of Gaza.
With each wave of displacement, thousands of people “lose not just their shelter, but also access to essentials such as food, drinking water and health care,” said the spokesman, Stephane Dujarric.
The “relentless bombardments and daily displacement orders” coupled with blocks on aid “are having a devastating impact on the entire population of more than two million people,” he said.
“Our humanitarian partners are warning that as a result, medical stocks, cooking gas and fuel needed to power bakeries and ambulances are running dangerously low.”

 


US lawmakers press Israel to probe strike on reporters in Lebanon

Updated 11 sec ago
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US lawmakers press Israel to probe strike on reporters in Lebanon

  • “The IDF has made no effort, none, to seriously investigate this incident,” Welch said
  • Collins called for Washington to publicly acknowledge the attack in which an American citizen was injured

WASHINGTON: Several Democratic lawmakers called Thursday for the Israeli and US governments to fully investigate a deadly 2023 attack by the Israeli military on journalists in southern Lebanon.
The October 13, 2023 airstrike killed Reuters videographer Issam Abdallah and wounded six other reporters, including two from AFP — video journalist Dylan Collins and photographer Christina Assi, who lost her leg.
“We expect the Israeli government to conduct an investigation that meets the international standards and to hold accountable those people who did this,” Senator Peter Welch told a news conference, with Collins by his side.
The lawmaker from Collins’s home state of Vermont said he had been pushing for answers for two years, first from the administration of Democratic president Joe Biden and now from the Republican White House of Donald Trump.
The Israeli government has “stonewalled at every single turn,” Welch added.
“With the Israeli government, we have been extremely patient, and we have done everything we reasonably can to obtain answers and accountability,” he said.
“The IDF has made no effort, none, to seriously investigate this incident,” Welch said, referring to the Israeli military, adding that it has told his office its investigation into the incident is closed.
Collins called for Washington to publicly acknowledge the attack in which an American citizen was injured.
“But I’d also like them to put pressure on their greatest ally in the Middle East, the Israeli government, to bring the perpetrators to account,” he said, echoing the lawmakers who called the attack a “war crime.”
“We’re not letting it go,” Vermont congresswoman Becca Balint said. “It doesn’t matter how long they stonewall us.”
AFP conducted an independent investigation which concluded that two Israeli 120mm tank shells were fired from the Jordeikh area in Israel.
The findings were corroborated by other international probes, including investigations conducted by Reuters, the Committee to Protect Journalists, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and Reporters Without Borders.
Unlike Welch’s assertion Thursday that the Israeli probe was over, the IDF told AFP in October that “findings regarding the event have not yet been concluded.”