The al-Qasam Brigades, the armed wing of the Islamic group Hamas, announced this on Wednesday. Seven hostages were killed yesterday in Israeli bombing of the Jabalia refugee camp in the north of the Gaza Strip.
“Yesterday, seven hostages were killed in the Israeli massacre in the Jabalia refugee camp. three of them have foreign passports,” the group announced in a statement.
Hamas military wing spokesman Abu Obeida reported last week that around 50 hostages have been killed since the war began on October 7 as a result of intense Israeli bombardment of the Palestinian enclave.
Israel confirmed that the identities of 240 hostages in the Gaza Strip kidnapped by Hamas on October 7, the group released four women, an American mother and daughter and two elderly Israeli women, “on humanitarian grounds.”
Moreover, the military assured on Monday that this was the case. The captured Israeli soldier is rescued within range.
The Israeli army also confirmed yesterday that it attacked the Palestinian refugee camp Jabalia. where at least 145 people died, according to Gaza hospital sources, after the aerial firing of several one-ton rockets in one of Israel’s deadliest attacks.
“During yesterday’s (Tuesday) fighting, forces identified several Hamas terrorists who barricaded themselves in a multi-story building. close to a school, a medical center and government offices in the Yabalia region. “The air force has been ordered to attack the terrorists,” a military spokesman said today.
This assured Israel Jabalia is one of the military strongholds of Hamas in the north of the strip, which was used “for training and carrying out terrorist activities” and where there were “firing points, tunnels used by terrorists as a passage to the coast and a large arsenal of weapons.” weapons.”
That’s what the army claimed killed more than 50 “terrorists” in the attack on Yabalia, including Ibrahim Biari, commander of the Jabalia Battalion, who Israel says was one of the Hamas commanders responsible for sending elite fighters to Israel to carry out the attacks. October 7.
The UN confirmed today that the Yabalia attack was caused by “the destruction of an entire neighborhood with 30 residential buildings” and at least 50 deaths.
Source: La Neta Neta

Karen Clayton is a seasoned journalist and author at The Nation Update, with a focus on world news and current events. She has a background in international relations, which gives her a deep understanding of the political, economic and social factors that shape the global landscape. She writes about a wide range of topics, including conflicts, political upheavals, and economic trends, as well as humanitarian crisis and human rights issues.