

Israel said Sunday, August 31 its forces had killed the spokesperson of Hamas's armed wing in a strike on Gaza a day earlier, the latest fatality in the group's senior ranks in the nearly two-year war. "Hamas terror spokesperson Abu Obeida was eliminated in Gaza," Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said in a post on X, after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier said he had been targeted in a strike.
The chief of staff of the Israeli army, Eyal Zamir, vowed to target Hamas leaders abroad after the military killed Obeida. "In the Gaza Strip, yesterday we struck one of Hamas's senior leaders, Abu Obeida. This is not the end, most of Hamas's leadership is abroad, and we will reach them as well," Zamir said during a situational assessment at the army's Northern Command center, according to a statement released by the military.
Israel has decimated Hamas's leadership during 23 months of devastating fighting in the Gaza Strip, saying it seeks to eradicate the armed group and return hostages seized by Palestinian militants in their October 7, 2023 attack that sparked the war.
On the ground, as the sun rose on Sunday, smoke drifted into the sky above Gaza City and residents came to inspect the damage at a tent, crumpled in a strike, with bloodstained blankets strewn in the rubble. Ashraf Abu Amsha, a displaced Palestinian sheltering in the area, said that "horror, fear, destruction, and fire erupted in all the tents."
Israeli forces have been preparing for an offensive to seize Gaza City, the largest urban center in the Palestinian territory, intensifying bombardments in the area in recent days and warning of imminent evacuation.
Hamas, meanwhile, has not commented on the killing of Obeida, whose real name according to the Israeli military is Hudaifa al-Kahlut. Since the war began, he had issued dozens of televised speeches, always appearing in military fatigues and a red keffiyeh scarf to obscure his face, and published audio messages, press releases and social media posts.
Iman Rajab, who lives in the displacement camp near Gaza City that residents said was hit by Israel overnight, told AFP that "we are now afraid of the night and of sleeping in our tents." "We pray to God for the war to end because we are very tired from the displacement, the fear and the hunger," said Rajab.
The vast majority of the Gaza Strip's more than two million residents have been displaced at least once during the war. The United Nations estimates that nearly a million people currently live in Gaza City and its surroundings, where famine has been declared.
Gaza's civil defense agency said Israeli strikes and gunfire across the territory on Sunday killed at least 24 people, 15 of whom were near aid distribution sites. Asked for comment by AFP, the Israeli military requested coordinates to look into the agency's reports. Media restrictions in Gaza and difficulties in accessing many areas mean AFP is unable to independently verify the tolls and details provided by the civil defense agency or the Israeli military.
Israel's killing of Obeida is the latest in a string of attacks targeting senior Hamas figures, including leader Yahya Sinwar who was accused by Israel of masterminding the 2023 attack. Israeli operations have also killed Hamas's political chief Ismail Haniyeh, the head of its armed wing Mohammed Deif, and other commanders and political figures, considerably weakening the Islamist movement.
Earlier on Sunday, Hamas confirmed the death of Mohammed Sinwar, the group's presumed leader in Gaza, more than three months after Israel said it had killed him in an air strike.