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Israel Says Killed Hamas Military Wing’s New Head In Gaza City Strikes

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ISRAEL said it killed the commander of Hamas’s military wing, Mohammed Odeh, in a strike in Gaza on Tuesday, May 26, days after his predecessor died in a similar attack.
At least three Palestinians were killed and dozens more were injured in Tuesday’s major attack, which hit a residential building in one of Gaza City’s busiest market areas, local medics and witnesses said.
Israel’s military and Shin Bet security service said buildings that served as a hideout for Odeh were targeted after his movements were tracked for several months.
There has been no immediate comment from Hamas.
It is the latest deadly Israeli strike on Gaza, despite a ceasefire with Hamas that began in October.
The strike hit the upper three floors of the al-Kayali building in the centre of Gaza City, where streets were busy with shoppers ahead of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha.
A statement from the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and Shin Bet said: “As part of the joint operation by the IDF and Shin Bet to eliminate the terrorist Mohammed Odeh, several buildings in the heart of Gaza City that served as a hideout for him were attacked, after months of intelligence surveillance in order to track his movements and the movements of his assistants in the organisation.”
They added that they had also struck “a nearby apartment belonging to a Hamas terrorist, part of Odeh’s circle of assistants, who participated in the October 7, 2024 attack on southern Israel that triggered the war in Gaza.
Rescue teams rushed to the scene of the strikes, but struggled to reach the upper floors because of the scale of the damage and congestion in the area.
Witnesses said at least five missiles struck the building almost simultaneously from different directions.
One resident said he heard the sound of a helicopter hovering overhead before the attack.
Footage from the scene showed ambulances and civil defence crews searching through the damaged building as crowds gathered nearby.
Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said on Tuesday that Odeh was “one of the architects of the October 7 massacre and was responsible for the murder, abduction and wounding of many Israeli citizens and IDF soldiers.”
His predecessor as commander of the group’s armed wing, Izz ad-Din al-Haddad, was killed in another Israeli air strike earlier in May.
That attack also targeted a residential building and killed at least three people, according to eyewitnesses and a local source.
Israel has conducted regular strikes across Gaza since a ceasefire began on October 10. Hamas has repeatedly accused Israel of breaching the terms of the ceasefire and attacking civilians.
The Palestinian territory’s Hamas-run health ministry has reported the killing of over 900 people in Israeli strikes during the ceasefire.
The Israeli government maintained it has licence to target Hamas members and has in turn accused Hamas of breaching the ceasefire agreement by failing to disarm.
The latter phases of a United States-led (US) peace plan for Gaza have yet to come into force, with progress stalling since the US and Israel started a war with Iran in February.
The US announced the start of the second phase of the plan in January, with governance of Gaza assumed by a transitional, technocratic administration alongside the demilitarisation and reconstruction of the territory.
However, talks on disarmament remain deadlocked, while Hamas has since reactivated its Police force and appears to be reasserting its authority.
In his statement, Netanyahu said Israel would “continue to pursue anyone who took part in the October 7 massacre,” adding: “Sooner or later, Israel will reach them all.”
About 1,200 people were killed in the Hamas-led attack and 251 others were taken hostage.
Israel responded by launching a massive military campaign in Gaza, which reduced much of the Palestinian territory to ruins and left many of its 2.1 million residents displaced.
Over 72,800 people in Gaza have died in Israeli attacks, according to its health ministry, whose figures the United Nations (UN) considers reliable.
The latest Israeli attack on Gaza comes after 31 people were killed by Israeli strikes in Lebanon, where Netanyahu has vowed to step up military action against the armed group Hezbollah.
Israel’s military said its attacks targeted Hezbollah infrastructure and fighters.

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