Over 30 killed as Israel’s military operation in Gaza Strip expanding to seize ‘large areas’

Over 30 killed as Israel’s military operation in Gaza Strip expanding to seize ‘large areas’
Palestinians wait for donated food at a distribution center in Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza Strip, Mar. 16, 2025. (AP/File)
Short Url
Updated 02 April 2025

Over 30 killed as Israel’s military operation in Gaza Strip expanding to seize ‘large areas’

Over 30 killed as Israel’s military operation in Gaza Strip expanding to seize ‘large areas’
  • Katz didn’t specify which areas of Gaza would be seized in the expanded operation
  • His statement came after Israel ordered the full evacuation of the southern city of Rafah and nearby areas

JERUSALEM: Israel’s military operation in the Gaza Strip is expanding to seize “large areas,” the defense minister said, while officials at hospitals inside the Palestinian territory said Israeli strikes overnight and into Wednesday had killed more than 30 people, nearly a dozen of them children.
Israel’s offensive in the Palestinian territory was “expanding to crush and clean the area” of militants and “seizing large areas that will be added to the security zones of the State of Israel,” Defense Minister Israel Katz said in a written statement.
The Israeli government has long maintained a buffer zone just inside Gaza along its security fence and has greatly expanded since the war began in 2023. Israel says the buffer zone is needed for its security, while Palestinians view it as a land grab that further shrinks the narrow coastal territory, home to around 2 million people.
Katz didn’t specify which areas of Gaza would be seized in the expanded operation, which he said includes the “extensive evacuation” of the population from fighting areas. His statement came after Israel ordered the full evacuation of the southern city of Rafah and nearby areas.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said Israel aims to maintain an open-ended but unspecified security control of the Gaza Strip once it achieves its aim of crushing Hamas.
The minister called on Gaza residents to “expel Hamas and return all hostages.” The militant group still holds 59 captives, of whom 24 are believed to still be alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefire agreements or other deals.
“This is the only way to end the war,” Katz said.
The Hostage Families Forum, which represents most captives’ families, said that it was “horrified to wake up this morning to the Defense Minister’s announcement about expanding military operations in Gaza.”
The group said the Israeli government “has an obligation to free all 59 hostages from Hamas captivity — to pursue every possible channel to advance a deal for their release.” They stressed that every passing day puts their loved ones’ lives at greater risk.
“Their lives hang in the balance as more and more disturbing details continue to emerge about the horrific conditions they’re being held in — chained, abused, and in desperate need of medical attention,” said the forum, which called on the Trump administration and other mediators to continue pressuring Hamas to release the hostages.
“Our highest priority must be an immediate deal to bring ALL hostages back home — the living for rehabilitation and those killed for proper burial — and end this war,” the group said.
Children killed in strike on UN building
Israel continued to target the Gaza Strip, with airstrikes overnight killing 17 people in the southern city of Khan Younis. Another 15 people were killed in a strike in the north of the strip Wednesday, according to officials at hospitals where the bodies were taken.
Officials at the Nasser Hospital said the bodies of 12 people killed in an overnight airstrike that were brought to the hospital included five women, one of them pregnant, and two children. Officials at the Gaza European Hospital said they received five bodies of people killed in two separate airstrikes.
Later Wednesday, officials at the Indonesian Hospital said an Israeli strike on a building of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, or UNRWA, in the Jabaliya refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip killed 15 people, including nine children and two women.
Juliette Touma, a spokeswoman for UNRWA, confirmed that an UNRWA building had been hit, but did not have any further details on casualties or what the building was being used as.
The Palestinian Civil Defense said the building had been an UNRWA clinic that was now being used to house displaced people. It said the attack hit two rooms in the building, and that it evacuated the bodies of seven of those killed as well as 12 people who were wounded.
The Israeli military said it struck Hamas members in the area, adding that they were hiding inside “a command and control center that was being used for coordinating” armed activity and served as a central meeting point for the Palestinian group.
The war began when Hamas-led militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking 251 hostages.
Israel’s offensive has killed more than 50,000 Palestinians, including hundreds killed in strikes since a ceasefire ended about two weeks ago, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which doesn’t say whether those killed are civilians or combatants. Israel says it has killed around 20,000 militants, without providing evidence.


How Sudan’s volunteer medics are helping war survivors cope with mental trauma

How Sudan’s volunteer medics are helping war survivors cope with mental trauma
Updated 5 sec ago

How Sudan’s volunteer medics are helping war survivors cope with mental trauma

How Sudan’s volunteer medics are helping war survivors cope with mental trauma
  • Millions displaced by Sudan’s war face acute psychological distress, often without access to professional mental health support
  • Fighting has devastated hospitals and clinics, leaving only volunteer networks and community initiatives to fill critical healthcare gaps

DUBAI: After being displaced from the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, several times before finally reaching safety in Kassala to the east, Dr. Tayseer Ibrahim understood better than most the lasting scars Sudan’s war would leave on generations to come.

Before she could complete her final semester in medical school, the 27-year-old was forced to pack her belongings and leave when the sound of shelling drew closer and war raged through the streets of Khartoum, a city since recaptured by the army but still in ruins.

Boarding the first bus packed with displaced people bound for Wad Madani, capital of Al-Jazira state to the southeast of Khartoum, Ibrahim’s journey was perilous, marked by sudden clashes at checkpoints and sleepless nights spent under trees in search of safe passage.

After settling temporarily in a camp in the village of Al-Shakaba, she was forced to leave once again when the situation deteriorated. The journey to Kassala took more than a week, mostly on foot, before she finally arrived at the Omar Al-Haj Musa School camp.

“As a survivor, I understood better than anyone what my people truly needed,” Ibrahim told Arab News.

Driven by the pain and loss she endured and the suffering she witnessed, Ibrahim joined a group of displaced female doctors to establish the Youth Voluntary Mental Health Organization in Kassala.

Founded in partnership with the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, the center seeks to meet the growing need for psychological relief and protection, amid the collapse of Sudan’s healthcare system, for a young generation displaced by war and now facing lasting trauma.

Now in its third year, the war between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces has triggered one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises, displacing nearly 12 million people and making Sudan home to the world’s largest internally displaced population.

The war also fueled what the UN describes as the world’s most extensive hunger crisis, with famine already declared in at least five locations.

The situation has been exacerbated by a new wave of displacement, with nearly 90,000 people fleeing El-Fasher in the past two weeks, according to the UN, following the RSF’s capture of the North Darfuri capital on Oct. 26 after an 18-month siege.

With the economy on its knees and public services almost nonexistent, aid groups say the war is leaving an entire generation traumatized, out of school, and malnourished.

Exposure to violence, hunger, disease, and mass displacement, compounded by the collapse of healthcare infrastructure, has led to a surge in cases of depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder, particularly among children and adolescents.

“Most of the displaced in the camps suffer from trauma and depression; some to the point of suicide,” Ibrahim told Arab News.

“Conditions for those diagnosed before the war worsened alongside the new cases brought on by violence and displacement.”

A 2024 survey by the UN children’s fund, UNICEF, found that 67 percent of Sudanese children in displacement camps showed signs of severe emotional distress, yet only five percent had access to any form of psychological support.

Experts said Sudan’s mental health system, weakened by years of economic turmoil and a 22-year civil war, was already limited and severely underfunded.

The latest conflict has further eroded access to medical care as most psychiatrists and mental health workers have fled or been displaced, while medical supplies remain scarce.

Local psychiatrists also report that social stigma toward mental health disorders remains widespread in Sudanese society.

“Many people are not aware of the importance of psychological treatment and support,” said Ibrahim.

She described the “inhumane conditions” facing displaced families in Kassala, many of whom live in schools turned into emergency shelters or in overcrowded tents with no privacy and limited access to clean water or sanitation — conditions ripe for disease, exacerbated by natural disasters such as floods and droughts.

“The majority of the displaced are women and children who live without income or a family provider,” said Ibrahim. “Many displaced families include members suffering from chronic, infectious, or mental illnesses, yet they have little or no access to medical services.”

Such conditions put women at risk of gender-based violence, experts warn.

Ibrahim recalled the case of a 17-year-old girl who attempted suicide in the camp, driven to desperation by a lack of privacy, an uncertain future, and domestic abuse by her mentally unstable father.

“Fortunately, intervention came in time. She survived and is now receiving treatment,” said Ibrahim.

With only a handful of psychiatrists and medical professionals left in Sudan, community-based initiatives like Ibrahim’s have become a lifeline.

Despite these efforts, she said the most urgent needs, including food, medicine, shelter, and psychological support, far exceed the humanitarian aid currently available.

Her organization, funded by UNHCR, focuses on mental health and psychosocial support, gender-based violence, child protection, and primary healthcare.

Ibrahim works alongside a small team comprising a psychologist, a neurologist, and social workers to offer free diagnostic and therapeutic services to displaced persons, along with regular follow-ups for chronic and mental health conditions.

Women and girls affected by gender-based violence receive counseling sessions, supported by a referral network to ensure their protection and safety.

The team provides counseling across several displacement sites, including Sittat Arab Camp in Halfa, Omar Al-Haj Musa School, Al-Saadiya School, Tajoug School, and a camp west of the city’s airport. 

Ibrahim said the organization focuses on children and youth in the hope of contributing to Sudan’s long-term recovery.

She was among more than 80 medical students who received UNHCR funding to complete their final semester after the war disrupted their studies.

Without that support, she said, she could not have afforded the fees or earned her degree, which later enabled her to establish the organization as a way to pay it forward and help her community rebuild.

Not many students, particularly children, were so fortunate. The conflict has devastated the education system, leaving more than 10,400 schools closed and forcing 19 million children out of formal education, including 4 million who are displaced, according to UNICEF.

The UN agency says Sudan is now facing the world’s largest child displacement crisis.

Aid groups and humanitarian organizations have warned that school closures and economic instability are deepening long-term psychological distress among Sudanese youth, creating a lost generation that could deprive the country of a skilled workforce and prolong its economic instability for years to come.

Malnutrition is another deep and lasting scar of the war. A March 2024 UNICEF report found that nearly 3.8 million children in Sudan are acutely malnourished, including 730,000 suffering from severe acute malnutrition, as health experts warn of the long-term impact of hunger on children’s cognitive development, memory, and ability to learn during their formative years.

To encourage emotional expression and a sense of security, Ibrahim said her organization has established child-friendly spaces as safe environments equipped with educational games and creative activities.

Besides providing one-on-one counseling, the center organizes recreational events for children and mothers, and sports activities targeting young people and adolescents to promote their mental and physical well-being.

The center aims to expand its outreach by training volunteers and community members to provide immediate support to those suffering from trauma.

It also holds seminars on mental health and developmental workshops designed to build the capacities of women and youth, empowering them to create lasting change in their communities.

Healthcare professionals want to see mental health treated as a core component of global humanitarian efforts, emphasizing that psychological support is as vital as food, shelter, and medical care in helping conflict-affected communities recover and rebuild.

Calls for a ceasefire and global action have surged amid mounting evidence from UN human rights bodies and independent experts of war crimes in El-Fasher.

Both the army and the RSF have been accused of crimes against humanity. The RSF has also been implicated in atrocities in Darfur that the UN said may amount to genocide.

RSF leader Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, also known as Hemedti, has promised to investigate the El-Fasher allegations, but both sides categorically reject accusations of war crimes and genocide.

Mindful of Khartoum’s long road to recovery, Ibrahim said she hopes to return to her hometown and contribute to its reconstruction now that she has established a lifeline for displaced communities in Kassala.

“Communities in Khartoum are in dire need of psychological and medical support, and I feel that my experience as a doctor, a displaced person, and a survivor can make a difference.”