Middle East

Israeli forces in women’s clothing: ‘Commandos’ fail to retrieve captives after Gaza op goes awry

Palestinian security sources and eyewitnesses have revealed that an operation conducted by Israeli forces disguised as women has failed to retrieve captives held in Gaza, before fleeing under Israeli aerial cover.

Eyewitnesses said they saw a white bus arrive in the al-Mahatta neighborhood near the center of the southern city of Khan Yunis on Monday, which appeared to be carrying displaced women.

According to the report, nine people dressed as women, some with uncovered faces and others veiled, got off the bus and entered a home belonging to the Sarhan family, previously damaged by Israeli attacks.

Shortly afterwards, gunfire was heard in the area, and the undercover Israeli unit quickly fled under heavy aerial cover.

During the raid, Israeli forces killed Ahmed Kamel Sarhan, a commander in the Nasser Salah al-Din Brigades, and abducted his wife and child, the group said.

After the 20-minute gunfight, investigators found rifle shells, bullet casings, smoke grenades, women’s clothing and belongings, and a disguised empty box made to look like displaced people’s luggage.

Israel’s Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper said the raid was aimed to abduct Sarhan and “interrogate him to extract information from him about the Israeli captives, but it failed.”

The operation took place amid intensified airstrikes on different parts of Gaza, that killed six people and injured dozens others. It also came a day after the Israeli military announced a newly major offensive in areas in northern and southern Gaza.

 

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