Israeli Army: 50 Gunmen Killed in Fighting at Shifa Hospital

Smoke rises during an Israeli raid at Al Shifa hospital and the area around it, in Gaza City, March 20, 2024. REUTERS/Dawoud Abu Alkas
Smoke rises during an Israeli raid at Al Shifa hospital and the area around it, in Gaza City, March 20, 2024. REUTERS/Dawoud Abu Alkas
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Israeli Army: 50 Gunmen Killed in Fighting at Shifa Hospital

Smoke rises during an Israeli raid at Al Shifa hospital and the area around it, in Gaza City, March 20, 2024. REUTERS/Dawoud Abu Alkas
Smoke rises during an Israeli raid at Al Shifa hospital and the area around it, in Gaza City, March 20, 2024. REUTERS/Dawoud Abu Alkas

The Israeli military said on Thursday that it killed more than 50 Palestinian gunmen over the past day in fighting around the Gaza Strip's Shifa hospital.
The military said it was continuing with its "precise operational activity in the Shifa hospital” in Gaza city.

Since the start of the operation, over 140 gunmen have been “eliminated in the area of the hospital," it said.

Gaza officials said thousands of Palestinian patients, medical staff and others were trapped inside the sprawling complex, although the military said it allowed passage for those who wanted to leave.

The Israeli military said Wednesday it has arrested 350 Palestinians in its raid on the hospital.

The Shifa medical complex had only partially resumed operations after a destructive Israeli raid in November.



Macron to Visit Morocco in October

French President Emmanuel Macron and King Mohammed VI in Rabat in November 2018. Reuters
French President Emmanuel Macron and King Mohammed VI in Rabat in November 2018. Reuters
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Macron to Visit Morocco in October

French President Emmanuel Macron and King Mohammed VI in Rabat in November 2018. Reuters
French President Emmanuel Macron and King Mohammed VI in Rabat in November 2018. Reuters

French President Emmanuel Macron will visit Morocco “at the end of October,” a report by AFP quoted the Elysee Palace as announcing Friday.

According to the news agency, the visit seeks to deepen the revival of bilateral ties between the two countries after a long period of tension.

The visit comes as a result of a request from King Mohammed VI, the Elysee statement noted, adding that the Moroccan monarch sent Macron a letter in which he expressed his satisfaction with the “promising horizons that are emerging for our two countries.”

In July, King Mohammed VI invited Macron for an official visit after Paris announced a position in support of Morocco's sovereignty.