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Israeli army admits that for every Hamas fighter two civilians died in Gaza

About two civilians died for every combatant in Hamas in the lane Linksenior Israeli military officials admitted this Monday on condition of anonymity.

I’m not saying it’s good to have a two-to-one ratio.“, declared one of those responsible at a press conference. The use of human shields is part of the “basic strategy”of the Palestinian Islamic movement Hamashe added.

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We hope [la proporción] be much smaller”In the next phase of the war, they added, he continued.

He Gaza Strip Ministry of Healthgoverned by Hamas since 2007, said this Monday that since October 7th15,899 people were killed by Israeli bombings in Palestinian territory.

Israel bombs the enclave in response to the attack carried out by Islamic militias against its territory, in which they killed almost 1,200 people, most of them civilians, and kidnapped around 240, according to authorities.

The growing number of deaths and the humanitarian crisis that is raging Link caused a wave of indignation in the world.

Asked about reports that 5,000 Hamas fighters had been killed, one of those responsible responded that the numbers were “more or less correct”.

U.SIsrael’s main ally, asked it to multiply efforts to avoid further civilian losses.

Israeli ground operations are now moving south, where many Gazans have taken refuge fleeing the north.

The military is implementing a high-tech mapping program to reduce civilian casualties, military officials said.

MORE INFORMATION: How Israeli tanks enter southern Gaza leave Palestinians with almost no place to go

The system integrates mobile phone signals, aerial surveillance and artificial intelligence to create a map that shows population concentrations across the territory.

Each of the map’s 623 squares is color-coded. Green designates areas where at least 75% of the population has been evacuated.

O United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), however, questioned the usefulness of the tool in an area where access to telecommunications and electricity is sporadic.

Source: Elcomercio

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