Gazans Recall Chaos of Israeli Hostage Rescue Raid
©(Eyad BABA/AFP)
A day after Israeli special forces rescued four hostages from Gaza, Palestinians recounted their panic during the intense gun battles and explosions that rocked the area and reduced buildings to rubble.

While Israelis have rejoiced at the safe return of the four captives, officials in Gaza decried a "massacre" in which they said 274 people were killed and 698 wounded in the crowded Nuseirat refugee camp.

Soon after the raid started around 11 AM (8 AM GMT) in Nuseirat's busy market area, bombs were raining down and turning the neighborhood into "smoke and flames," said Muhannad Thabet, a 35-year-old resident.

"People were screaming, young and old, women and men," he said by phone. "Everyone wanted to flee the place, but the bombing was intense and anyone who moved was in danger of being killed due to the heavy bombardment and gunfire."

"Houses were destroyed with their occupants inside. There were also many shops and cars on fire due to the bombing."

Israel had sent in a special forces team of troops, police and Shin Bet operatives who simultaneously raided two buildings to extract the hostages – Noa Argamani, 26, Almog Meir Jan, 22, Andrey Kozlov, 27, and Shlomi Ziv, 41.

They met little resistance in one but faced heavy gunfire in the other. The forces withdrew under attack with guns and rocket-propelled grenades to take the hostages to nearby helicopters, said military spokesman Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari.

Another military spokesman, Peter Lerner, told US network ABC that "the forces came under fire from a 360-degree threat – RPGs, AK-47s, explosive devices, mortar rounds. It was... a war zone."
'No one could move'

Eyewitnesses said the Israeli raid and retreat were covered by heavy air strikes along with drone and tank fire.

Several told AFP they had seen bodies in the streets, which AFP could not independently verify.

As the fighting raged, the injured were taken to one of Gaza's hospitals, medics said.

"The hospital was filled with martyrs and injured, and it was impossible to accommodate such a large number within minutes," said doctor Marwan Abu Nasser, an official at the al-Awda health facility near the camp.


"Of course, the hospital was under fire, and no one could move during the operation."

Watching from his roof, another local man, Mohammed Moussa, said he was terrified when he caught a glimpse of an Israeli tank on the street below, with artillery fire crashing down.

"I should be dead," marveled the 29-year-old after the battle was over, leaving much of the area covered in debris and heavy dust that coated the streets with grey.
Troops 'disguised as Hamas'

Several witnesses reported seeing Israeli forces burst out of a refrigerated truck, dressed in the garb of Palestinian militants in an apparent bid to confuse their enemies, although this also could not be independently verified.

Alaa al-Khatib, a displaced woman living in the camp, told AFP she was walking to a market when she saw people climbing out of a refrigerated truck and exiting a small white car.

They then took out a ladder and began climbing into an upper floor of a nearby building, she said.

"Moments later, I heard gunfire and explosions from the houses, neighborhoods and streets of the camp," she said.

"I learned that Israeli special forces had infiltrated the camp with Palestinian aid vehicles, all as a distraction to divert the attention of the people in the camp from the operation they came for, to liberate Israeli hostages."

Several other witnesses reported similar details to AFP, notably the presence of a refrigerated truck.

"They were wearing clothes like Hamas and Islamic Jihad people, and some were masked," said another local man, Mahmoud al-Assar, 27.

Recalling the intensity of the battle that soon erupted and devastated several city blocks, Assar said that "what happened in the camp was like an earthquake."

With AFP
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