
Tunnel underneath a hospital in southern Gaza reveals death site of Hamas commander
Just over a metre wide and less than two metres tall, the tunnel led deep beneath a big hospital in southern
Gaza Strip
.
The underground air bore the stench of what smelled like human remains. After walking about 40 metres along the tunnel, the likely cause became clear.
In a tiny room to which the tunnel led, the floor was stained with blood. It was here, according to the
Israel Defense Forces
, that Mohammed Sinwar – one of
Hamas'
top militant commanders –
was killed last month after a nearby barrage of Israeli strikes.
What was in that dark and narrow tunnel is one of
the war's
biggest Rorschach tests, the embodiment of a broader narrative battle between Israelis and Palestinians over how the conflict should be portrayed.
READ MORE
The military escorted a reporter from the New York Times to the tunnel on Sunday afternoon, as part of a brief and controlled visit for international journalists that the Israelis hoped would prove that Hamas uses civilian infrastructure as a shield for militant activity.
To Palestinians, Israel's attack on, and subsequent capture of, the hospital compound highlighted its own disregard for civilian activity.
The room in which Muhammad Sinwar and four other militants is said to have died inside a tunnel in southern Gaza. To Israelis, the location of an underground passageway highlights Hamas's abuse of civilians but to Palestinians, Israel's decision to target it highlights Israel's own disregard for civilian life. Photograph: Patrick Kingsley/The New York Times
Last month, the military
ordered the hospital's staff and patients to leave the compound, a
long with the residents of the surrounding neighbourhoods.
Then, officials said, they bored a huge hole, about 10 metres deep, in a courtyard within the hospital grounds. Soldiers used that hole to gain access to the tunnel and retrieve Sinwar's body, and they later escorted journalists there so they could see what the military called his final hiding place.
There are no known entrances to the tunnel within the hospital itself, so the journalists lowered themselves into the Israeli-made cavity using a rope. To join the controlled tour, the Times agreed not to photograph most soldiers' faces or publish geographic details that would put them in immediate danger.
To the Israelis who brought us there, this hiding place – directly underneath the emergency department of the European Gaza Hospital – is emblematic of how Hamas has consistently endangered civilians, and broken international law, by directing its military operations from the cover of hospitals and schools. Hamas has also dug tunnels underneath Shifa Hospital in Gaza City and a United Nations complex elsewhere in that city.
'We were dragged by Hamas to this point,' Brig Gen Effie Defrin, the chief Israeli military spokesman, said at the hospital. 'If they weren't building their infrastructure under the hospitals, we wouldn't be here. We wouldn't attack this hospital.'
Defrin said Israel had tried to minimise damage to the hospital by striking the area around its buildings, without a direct hit on the medical facilities themselves. 'The aim was not to damage the hospital and, as much as we could, to avoid collateral damage,' he said.
Israeli soldiers stand in a hole used to gain access to a tunnel in southern Gaza where the Israeli military says a top Hamas militant commander was killed in the Gaza Strip. Photograph: Patrick Kingsley/The New York Times
To the Palestinians who were forced from here, the Israeli attack on Sinwar embodied Israel's willingness to prioritise the destruction of Hamas over the protection of civilian life and infrastructure, particularly the health system.
According to the World Health Organisation, Israel has conducted at least 686 attacks on health facilities in Gaza since the start of the Israel-Hamas war, damaging at least 33 of Gaza's 36 hospitals. Many, like the European Gaza Hospital, are now out of service, fuelling accusations from rights groups and foreign governments – strongly denied by the Israelis – that Israel is engaged in genocide, in part by wrecking the Palestinian health system.
'It's morally and legally unacceptable, but Israel thinks it is above the law,' Dr Salah al-Hams, the hospital spokesman, said in a phone interview from another part of southern Gaza.
Although Israel targeted the periphery of the hospital site, leaving the hospital buildings standing, al-Hams said the strikes had wounded 10 people within the compound, damaged its water and sewage systems and dislodged part of its roof. The attack killed 23 people in buildings beyond its perimeter, he said, 17 more than were reported on the day.
The tremors caused by the strikes were like an 'earthquake,' al-Hams said.
Al-Hams said he had been unaware of any tunnels beneath the hospital.
Even if they were there, he said, it does not justify the attack. 'Israel should have found other ways to eliminate any wanted commander. There were a thousand other ways to do it.'
The journey to the hospital revealed much about the current dynamics of the war in Gaza.
In a roughly 20-minute ride from the Israeli border, we saw no Palestinians – the result of Israel's decision to order the residents of southern Gaza to abandon their homes and head west to the sea. Many buildings were simply piles of rubble, destroyed either by Israeli strikes and demolitions or Hamas' booby traps. Here and there, some buildings survived, more or less intact; on one balcony, someone had left a tidy line of potted cactuses.
We drove in open-top 4x4s, a sign that across this part of southeastern Gaza, the Israeli military no longer fears being ambushed by Hamas fighters. Until at least the Salah al-Din highway, the territory's main north-south artery, the Israeli military seemed to be in complete command after the expansion of its ground campaign in March.
The European Gaza Hospital and the tunnel beneath it are among the places that now appear to be exclusively under Israeli control.
Under the laws of war, a medical facility is considered a protected site that can be attacked only in very rare cases. If one side uses the site for military purposes, that may make it a legitimate target, but only if the risk to civilians is proportional to the military advantage created by the attack.
The Israeli military said it had tried to limit harm to civilians by striking only around the edges of the hospital compound. But international legal experts said that any assessment of the strike's legality needed also to take into account its effect on the wider health system in southern Gaza.
In a territory where many hospitals are already not operational, experts said, it is harder to find legal justification for strikes that put the remaining hospitals out of service, even if militants hide beneath them.
When we entered the tunnel Sunday, we found it almost entirely intact. The crammed room where Sinwar and four fellow militants were said to have died was stained with blood, but its walls appeared undamaged.
The mattresses, clothes and bedsheets did not appear to have been dislodged by the explosions, and an Israeli rifle – stolen earlier in the war, the soldiers said – dangled from a hook in the corner.
It was not immediately clear how Sinwar was killed, and Defrin said he could not provide a definitive answer. He suggested that Sinwar and his allies may have suffocated in the aftermath of the strikes or been knocked over by a shock wave unleashed by explosions.
If Sinwar was intentionally poisoned by gases released by such explosions, it would raise legal questions, experts on international law said.
'It would be an unlawful use of a conventional bomb – a generally lawful weapon – if the intent is to kill with the asphyxiating gases released by that bomb,' said Sarah Harrison, a former lawyer at the US Defence Department and an analyst at the International Crisis Group.
Defrin denied any such intent. 'This is something that I have to emphasise here, as a Jew first and then as a human being: We don't use gas as weapons,' he said.
In other tunnels discovered by the Israeli military, soldiers have used Palestinians as human shields, sending them on ahead to scour for traps.
Defrin denied the practice. The tunnel was excavated by Israelis, he said.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times
.
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Irish Times
4 hours ago
- Irish Times
Tunnel underneath a hospital in southern Gaza reveals death site of Hamas commander
Just over a metre wide and less than two metres tall, the tunnel led deep beneath a big hospital in southern Gaza Strip . The underground air bore the stench of what smelled like human remains. After walking about 40 metres along the tunnel, the likely cause became clear. In a tiny room to which the tunnel led, the floor was stained with blood. It was here, according to the Israel Defense Forces , that Mohammed Sinwar – one of Hamas' top militant commanders – was killed last month after a nearby barrage of Israeli strikes. What was in that dark and narrow tunnel is one of the war's biggest Rorschach tests, the embodiment of a broader narrative battle between Israelis and Palestinians over how the conflict should be portrayed. READ MORE The military escorted a reporter from the New York Times to the tunnel on Sunday afternoon, as part of a brief and controlled visit for international journalists that the Israelis hoped would prove that Hamas uses civilian infrastructure as a shield for militant activity. To Palestinians, Israel's attack on, and subsequent capture of, the hospital compound highlighted its own disregard for civilian activity. The room in which Muhammad Sinwar and four other militants is said to have died inside a tunnel in southern Gaza. To Israelis, the location of an underground passageway highlights Hamas's abuse of civilians but to Palestinians, Israel's decision to target it highlights Israel's own disregard for civilian life. Photograph: Patrick Kingsley/The New York Times Last month, the military ordered the hospital's staff and patients to leave the compound, a long with the residents of the surrounding neighbourhoods. Then, officials said, they bored a huge hole, about 10 metres deep, in a courtyard within the hospital grounds. Soldiers used that hole to gain access to the tunnel and retrieve Sinwar's body, and they later escorted journalists there so they could see what the military called his final hiding place. There are no known entrances to the tunnel within the hospital itself, so the journalists lowered themselves into the Israeli-made cavity using a rope. To join the controlled tour, the Times agreed not to photograph most soldiers' faces or publish geographic details that would put them in immediate danger. To the Israelis who brought us there, this hiding place – directly underneath the emergency department of the European Gaza Hospital – is emblematic of how Hamas has consistently endangered civilians, and broken international law, by directing its military operations from the cover of hospitals and schools. Hamas has also dug tunnels underneath Shifa Hospital in Gaza City and a United Nations complex elsewhere in that city. 'We were dragged by Hamas to this point,' Brig Gen Effie Defrin, the chief Israeli military spokesman, said at the hospital. 'If they weren't building their infrastructure under the hospitals, we wouldn't be here. We wouldn't attack this hospital.' Defrin said Israel had tried to minimise damage to the hospital by striking the area around its buildings, without a direct hit on the medical facilities themselves. 'The aim was not to damage the hospital and, as much as we could, to avoid collateral damage,' he said. Israeli soldiers stand in a hole used to gain access to a tunnel in southern Gaza where the Israeli military says a top Hamas militant commander was killed in the Gaza Strip. Photograph: Patrick Kingsley/The New York Times To the Palestinians who were forced from here, the Israeli attack on Sinwar embodied Israel's willingness to prioritise the destruction of Hamas over the protection of civilian life and infrastructure, particularly the health system. According to the World Health Organisation, Israel has conducted at least 686 attacks on health facilities in Gaza since the start of the Israel-Hamas war, damaging at least 33 of Gaza's 36 hospitals. Many, like the European Gaza Hospital, are now out of service, fuelling accusations from rights groups and foreign governments – strongly denied by the Israelis – that Israel is engaged in genocide, in part by wrecking the Palestinian health system. 'It's morally and legally unacceptable, but Israel thinks it is above the law,' Dr Salah al-Hams, the hospital spokesman, said in a phone interview from another part of southern Gaza. Although Israel targeted the periphery of the hospital site, leaving the hospital buildings standing, al-Hams said the strikes had wounded 10 people within the compound, damaged its water and sewage systems and dislodged part of its roof. The attack killed 23 people in buildings beyond its perimeter, he said, 17 more than were reported on the day. The tremors caused by the strikes were like an 'earthquake,' al-Hams said. Al-Hams said he had been unaware of any tunnels beneath the hospital. Even if they were there, he said, it does not justify the attack. 'Israel should have found other ways to eliminate any wanted commander. There were a thousand other ways to do it.' The journey to the hospital revealed much about the current dynamics of the war in Gaza. In a roughly 20-minute ride from the Israeli border, we saw no Palestinians – the result of Israel's decision to order the residents of southern Gaza to abandon their homes and head west to the sea. Many buildings were simply piles of rubble, destroyed either by Israeli strikes and demolitions or Hamas' booby traps. Here and there, some buildings survived, more or less intact; on one balcony, someone had left a tidy line of potted cactuses. We drove in open-top 4x4s, a sign that across this part of southeastern Gaza, the Israeli military no longer fears being ambushed by Hamas fighters. Until at least the Salah al-Din highway, the territory's main north-south artery, the Israeli military seemed to be in complete command after the expansion of its ground campaign in March. The European Gaza Hospital and the tunnel beneath it are among the places that now appear to be exclusively under Israeli control. Under the laws of war, a medical facility is considered a protected site that can be attacked only in very rare cases. If one side uses the site for military purposes, that may make it a legitimate target, but only if the risk to civilians is proportional to the military advantage created by the attack. The Israeli military said it had tried to limit harm to civilians by striking only around the edges of the hospital compound. But international legal experts said that any assessment of the strike's legality needed also to take into account its effect on the wider health system in southern Gaza. In a territory where many hospitals are already not operational, experts said, it is harder to find legal justification for strikes that put the remaining hospitals out of service, even if militants hide beneath them. When we entered the tunnel Sunday, we found it almost entirely intact. The crammed room where Sinwar and four fellow militants were said to have died was stained with blood, but its walls appeared undamaged. The mattresses, clothes and bedsheets did not appear to have been dislodged by the explosions, and an Israeli rifle – stolen earlier in the war, the soldiers said – dangled from a hook in the corner. It was not immediately clear how Sinwar was killed, and Defrin said he could not provide a definitive answer. He suggested that Sinwar and his allies may have suffocated in the aftermath of the strikes or been knocked over by a shock wave unleashed by explosions. If Sinwar was intentionally poisoned by gases released by such explosions, it would raise legal questions, experts on international law said. 'It would be an unlawful use of a conventional bomb – a generally lawful weapon – if the intent is to kill with the asphyxiating gases released by that bomb,' said Sarah Harrison, a former lawyer at the US Defence Department and an analyst at the International Crisis Group. Defrin denied any such intent. 'This is something that I have to emphasise here, as a Jew first and then as a human being: We don't use gas as weapons,' he said. In other tunnels discovered by the Israeli military, soldiers have used Palestinians as human shields, sending them on ahead to scour for traps. Defrin denied the practice. The tunnel was excavated by Israelis, he said. This article originally appeared in The New York Times .


The Irish Sun
7 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Shocking drone vid reveals slain Hamas chief Sinwar's sinister terror tunnel lair DIRECTLY under Gaza hospital
WATCH the sinister footage revealing the underground lair of assassinated Hamas leader Mohammed Sinwar, directly beneath a hospital in Gaza. The IDF released the clip as it confirmed it had recovered Sinwar's body from a tunnel - three weeks after Advertisement 8 The underground lair where Hamas leader Mohammed Sinwar lived Credit: X/@IDF 8 Drone footage seems to show that the terrorist warren was directly beneath the European Hospital in Gaza Credit: X/@IDF 8 Mohammad Sinwar was Hamas's leader after his brother Yahya Sinwar was killed in October Sinwar was the brother of Yahya Sinwar, the terrorist mastermind behind the October 7 attack, and became Hamas's de facto leader after he was killed in October. The elusive new chief was eliminated in a massive airstrike on the European Hospital in southern Gaza on May 13. Footage posted to the IDF's X account shows the journey down into the tunnels where he died. It begins outside a building with a large "Emergency" sign, identified by the IDF as the European Hospital in Khan Yunis. Advertisement read more in world news The drone then flies down a narrow gully and into a fortified underground passage. It is supported by concrete walls, which are lined with electricity cables and illuminated by bulbs. The drone enters various larger chambers crammed with supplies and signs of living quarters, such as sleeping bags and kitchen ware. The IDF said: "Mohammad Sinwar was responsible for the deaths of countless civilians. He was eliminated in an IDF & ISA strike on May 13. Advertisement Most read in The US Sun "His body was found beneath the European hospital in Khan Yunis - more proof of how Sinwar, and Hamas, hide behind their civilians and purposely embed themselves in civilian areas, such as hospitals. "He died the way he lived—underground." Death of Hamas chief Mohammad Sinwar could cause DECIMATED terror group to implode A separate clip shows four armed IDF soldiers in an underground bunker, which spokesperson BG Effie Defrin claims is "right beneath the European Hospital". He said they found "cash", "weapons" and "ammunition" that were stashed for "cynical use". Advertisement Sinwar took command of Hamas' military wing after Mohammad Deif was killed last July and later took over the entire terror group after his brother was killed. He was believed to have been behind the kidnapping of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in 2006 - which eventually led to the release of his brother in a prisoner swap. 8 The IDF dug a large trench around the entrance to the tunnel Credit: Getty 8 The narrow passages were supported with concrete walls Credit: X/@IDF Advertisement 8 Brigadier General Effie Defrin speaks inside Sinwar's bunker Credit: X/@IDF Sinwar was also named by experts as Hamas's most senior commander in Gaza alongside Izz al-Din Haddad. Israel announced his death last month, but now say they have confirmed his identity with DNA tests. The IDF said at the time it was a targeted hit on "Hamas terrorists in a command-and-control centre" beneath the medical centre. Advertisement Netanyahu's forces are believed to have used bunker-busting bombs to target the underground complex. The operation also killed Mohammad Shabana, who commanded the Rafah Brigade cell of Hamas, according to Defrin. He was one of Hamas's most senior commanders and was instrumental in constructing the tunnels beneath Rafah used to launch the cross border raids of October 7. 8 A still from a video released by the IDF in December showing Sinwar driving through a large tunnel beneath Gaza Credit: IDF Advertisement 8 Sleeping equipment and a large gun can be seen in this area of the tunnel Credit: X/@IDF Defrin said: "We will dismantle Hamas because we cannot live with this terror organisation right in our backyard, right across our border." Hamas has not commented on reports of the death of either Sinwar or Shabana. Announcing Sinwar's death to the Israeli parliament, Netanyahu said: "We eliminated tens of thousands of terrorists, Mohammad Deif, Hassan Nasrallah, Yahya Sinwar, Mohammad Sinwar, and seized the Rafah and Morag crossings. Advertisement "In the last two days, we've been executing a dramatic plan toward the complete defeat of Hamas. "We're taking control of their food distribution and money machine. This is what destroys their governing capabilities. "That's what we promised." Who was Mohammad Sinwar? Mohammad Sinwar was the leader of the Hamas terror group in Gaza that continues to hold Israeli hostages. He was believed to be around 50 years old and has been operating largely behind the scenes, earning him the nickname "The Shadow". Like his older brother, he joined Hamas at an early age and was considered close to the head of the group's armed wing, Mohammed Deif . Mohammad was also believed to have been behind the kidnapping of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in 2006 which eventually led to the release of his brother in a prisoner swap. He was named by political analysts as Hamas's most senior commander in Gaza alongside Izz al-Din Haddad - and according to Israeli officials they have the final say in the ongoing hostage negotiations.


Irish Times
7 hours ago
- Irish Times
Israeli authorities intercept Gaza-bound flotilla
The Taoiseach has said that UN agencies should be "enabled and allowed" to distribute food aid in Gaza amid ongoing deaths at aid centres. Video: Bryan O'Brien