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On 16 October 2024, Hamas militant and leader Yahya Sinwar was killed in a gunfight with the Israeli military in Rafah, southern Gaza Strip. [16] Sinwar, who was one of Israel's most wanted men after the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel, was in a building with two others. The military operation was described as random and not planned in advance.
On 30 November 2023, two Hamas affiliated militants exited a car and traveled to a bus stop by the Ben-Gurion Boulevard in Jerusalem and opened fire, killing three people and wounding others. A responding Israeli civilian; Yuval Castleman drew his personal weapon and killed one of the shooters, before responding IDF troops shot and killed him ...
3]: Objective: Killing of suspected militants encountered while patrolling. (Yahya Sinwar as a named target was not the objective—his identity was discovered only later.): Date: 16 October 2024: Casualties: 3 Hamas militants killed (including Yahya Sinwar); 1 IDF soldier severely injured; Tel al-Sultan. Location within the Gaza Strip. On 16 October 2024, during their operations in the Israel ...
Hamas has taken responsibility for the fatal shooting and stabbing attack in Tel Aviv that unfolded on Tuesday just as Iran was launching a ballistic missile barrage on Israel. Seven people were ...
Rep. Ritchie Torres is sounding the alarm about the “amplification of anti-semitism” since Hamas’ Oct. 7 massacre on the online platform Twitch by the popular politics streamer Hasan Piker ...
Later, Piker implied that Hamas fighters had no responsibility for the mass killings and rapes carried out on Oct. 7. "You agree… Oct. 7, and the responsibility of Oct. 7 and all the actions ...
The IDF said that it carried out a "precise strike on an operational meeting" of 18 Hamas and PIJ militants who were involved in rocket attacks targeting Israeli territory and planning and committing attacks targeting Israeli soldiers and Israel in recent days without offering evidence. Hamas denied the claim. [21] [22] [23]
Hamas also allowed Palestinians to resume protests at the Gaza–Israel barrier. [77] On 29 September, Qatar, the UN, and Egypt mediated an agreement between Israeli and Hamas officials in the Gaza Strip to reopen closed crossing points and deescalate tensions; [80] the total number of Gazans with work permits in Israel stood at 17,000. [81]