Israeli military says it found traces of hostages in Gaza tunnel

The tunnel was hot and humid, with walls lined with concrete and electrical wires. Farther inside was a bathroom, where the military said it found evidence that hostages had been there, including their DNA.

Khan Younis has become the focus of Israel’s ground offensive in Gaza. Photo: AP

“Hostages were held here in this tunnel system,” said Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari, the army’s chief spokesman.

Hagari offered no details on what exactly was found in the tunnel, nor did he say when the hostages were there or identify them. He did not say if they were known to be dead or alive.

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In a later statement to the media, he said the captives were held in “difficult conditions”, without elaborating.

Several hostages freed in a ceasefire deal in late November described being held inside tunnels, which Hamas has laid throughout the Gaza Strip and which Israel says have long been used to smuggle weapons and fighters throughout the blockaded territory.

The tunnel was found in a part of the city that appears to have endured heavy fighting. The nearby residence was badly damaged.

In another building, the walls were blasted out of several flats. Large mounds of dirt surrounded the area, apparently from Israeli bulldozers searching for buried explosives.

A tank was parked outside an empty school, where an Israeli flag was hung from the exterior walls. The sound of what appeared to be a drone buzzed overhead, and gunfire could be heard in the distance.

The military says Hamas is operating from inside the tunnels, and military officials have made the destruction of the tunnel system a top goal.

Israeli soldiers and tanks in Khan Younis, Gaza. Photo: AP

Brigadier General Dan Goldfus, commander of the military’s 98th Division, described the tunnels as posing “a 720-degree threat”.

“It’s not 360, but it’s 720, underground and over ground,” Goldfus said.

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The beleaguered city, Gaza’s second-largest, has become the focus of Israel’s war on Hamas in recent weeks.

On Wednesday’s tour for journalists, no residents appeared to be in the area. Israel has ordered residents to evacuate portions of the city as it proceeds with the offensive.

In its fierce October 7 attack, Hamas and other militants killed 1,200 people and took hostage roughly 250, according to Israeli authorities.

The attack sparked the war. More than 23,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children have been killed, according to the Health Ministry in Hamas-ruled Gaza. More than 85 per cent of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million has been displaced, and vast swathes of the territory have been levelled.

About 110 hostages have been released. Some 110 remain with their captors, along with the bodies of about 20 people killed in captivity, according to Israel. Several other bodies of captives were retrieved by Israeli forces, and three hostages were killed mistakenly by the military.

The plight of the hostages has gripped Israelis, who see them as an enduring symbol of the state’s failure to protect its citizens on October 7.

Israel has made freeing the hostages part of its war aims, along with crushing Hamas’ military and governing capabilities.

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