Israel-Gaza updates: IDF says it exposed Hamas tunnel under Shifa Hospital

World Health Organization officials visited the hospital in Gaza on Saturday.

Thousands of people have died and thousands more have been injured since the militant group Hamas launched an unprecedented surprise attack on Israel on Oct. 7 and Israel retaliated with a bombing campaign and total siege of the neighboring Gaza Strip, leaving the region on the verge of all-out war.

Click here for updates from previous days.


What we know about the conflict

The latest outbreak of war between Israel and Hamas, the Palestinian militant group that governs the Gaza Strip, has passed the four-month mark.

In the Gaza Strip, at least 30,228 people have been killed and 71,377 others have been wounded by Israeli forces since Oct. 7, according to Gaza's Hamas-controlled Ministry of Health.

In Israel, at least 1,200 people have been killed and 6,900 others have been injured by Hamas and other Palestinian militants since Oct. 7, according to the Israel Defense Forces.

There has also been a surge in violence in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Israeli forces have killed at least 395 people in the territory since Oct. 7, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.

The ongoing war began after Hamas-led militants launched an unprecedented incursion into southern Israel from neighboring Gaza via land, sea and air. Scores of people were killed while more than 200 others were taken hostage, according to Israeli authorities. The Israeli military subsequently launched retaliatory airstrikes followed by a ground invasion of Gaza, a 140-square-mile territory where more than 2 million Palestinians have lived under a blockade imposed by Israel and supported by Egypt since Hamas came to power in 2007. Gaza, unlike Israel, has no air raid sirens or bomb shelters.


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559 foreign passport holders and Egyptians exited Gaza Monday

The Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt opened again on Monday, permitting 559 foreign passport holders as well as Egyptians to cross through to Egypt, a Rafah border crossing official said.

Four injured or sick Palestinians and five of their family members also crossed into Egypt, the official said.


'All of them will die,' doctor warns of premature babies at Gaza hospital

Doctors in the war-torn Gaza Strip are appealing for help from the international community as hospitals run out of life-saving supplies amid Israel's bombardment.

Dr. Hatem Daher, who runs the neo-natal department at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis in south Gaza, told ABC News that the situation there "is bad."

"There is the difficulty in getting drinking water and washing water, especially in our natal ICU because of the difficulty of getting the fuel for our generator," Daher said.

Daher noted that the situation at the strip's largest medical complex, Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, is even worse. Several doctors from Shifa are now working in Daher's hospital, he said.

"Our colleagues in Shifa Hospital describe a disaster there," Daher told ABC News. "No electricity, no oxygen, no drugs."

Daher warned that dozens of premature babies at Shifa are on the brink of death.

"Because they need incubator, they need electricity, they need oxygen, they will die. All of them," he said. "All of them will die. So, we call this emergency -- emergency call for all world, for all organizations -- WHO, UNICEF, Red Cross, anybody [who] can help these children."

-ABC News' Sami Zayara


Heavy bombardment forces hospital evacuation convoy to turn around in Gaza, aid group says

The Palestinian Red Crescent Society said Monday that heavy bombardment and explosions around Al-Quds Hospital, the second-largest hospital in the Gaza Strip, is hindering the evacuation of patients and medical staff trapped inside.

A convoy of vehicles accompanied by the International Committee for Red Cross that had set off from southern Gaza toward central Gaza to secure the evacuation of Al-Quds Hospital was forced to turn around on Monday, according to the Palestinian Red Crescent Society.

"The convoy was forced to return due to the dangerous conditions in the Tal al-Hawa area, where the hospital is located, in light of the continuing shelling and shooting, and the medical staff, patients and their companions are still trapped inside the hospital without food, water or electricity," the Palestinian Red Crescent Society wrote in a post on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.

-ABC News' Ayat Al-Tawy and Morgan Winsor


IDF says it's continuing raids on outskirts of Gaza refugee camp

The Israel Defense Forces said Monday morning that its "troops are continuing to conduct raids" on the outskirts of the Al-Shati refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, "targeting terrorist infrastructure located in central governmental institutions in the heart of the civilian population, including schools, universities, mosques, and residences of terrorists."

The IDF alleged that "terror infrastructure" belonging to Gaza's militant rulers, Hamas, was "deliberately located inside civilian structures" within the area, including inside the Al-Quds University and the Abu Bakr mosque.

"The troops uncovered a section of the mosque which housed a large number of explosive devices and flammable materials," the IDF said in a statement. "During the activity, the troops seized dozens of weapons, military equipment, and operational plans belonging to the Hamas terrorist organization."

The IDF also alleged that its ground troops discovered "a large number of weapons" inside a children's bedroom within the home of a senior official of Palestinian Islamic Jihad, another militant group based in Gaza.

Since Oct. 7, in response to Hamas' deadly attack on Israel, the IDF said its aircraft and ground forces have conducted 4,300 strikes on Gaza, hitting "hundreds of anti-tank missile launch posts, approximately 300 tunnel shafts, approximately 3,000 terrorist infrastructure sites, including over 100 structures rigged with explosives, and hundreds of Hamas command and control centers."

-ABC News' Morgan Winsor


Al-Shifa doctors describe hospital evacuation

Patients and doctors evacuated the Al-Shifa hospital on Saturday, after the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry claimed Israel forced them to leave. The IDF released a statement denying it ordered the evacuation, but in a Friday briefing another spokesperson said the IDF was urging anyone left in Al-Shifa hospital to leave and that it hoped it would take place in the "next few hours."

Doctors described their exodus from the hospital to ABC News, with Dr. Ahmed Mokhallalati -- who is still in the hospital -- saying "all critical ICU patients have died. The situation is terrifying."

"Today early in morning people were forcefully evacuated from the hospital, with absolutely no plan of evacuation of the patients and the medical staff. Most of the civilians together with most of the staff left the hospital," Mokhallalati said.

Mokhallalati said there are around 300 patients, who cannot move, and less than 50 medical staff still in the hospital.

"There are still 33 premature babies in the hospital -- one baby died yesterday, and two babies were taken by their parents to evacuate with them. There is only one neonatologist and one nurse with them," he added. The Israelis have provided only three transport incubators for 33 babies. So, if they tell us 'you have to evacuate now,' I have no idea how to evacuate them."

Dr. Adnan Al-Barash, head of the orthopedic department at Al-Shifa Hospital, told ABC News that the "Israeli army forced us to leave the hospital at gunpoint."

"The path for us to walk was set out among the tanks, we had elderly, wounded… The scene was very tragic and sad," Al-Barash said.

"We went out between the tanks, and we could not get the wounded out on the broken roads and we could not move wheelchairs for the wounded," he added.

-ABC News' Dragana Jovanovic and Zoe Magee