Key points
- Operation would seize large areas: Israel Katz
- Seized areas will be incorporated into “Israeli security zones”
- UN condemns Israeli army attack on an emergency convoy
- Demands an investigation into the attack that killed 15
- Hostages’ families “horrified” by Katz’s announcement
ISLAMABAD: Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz announced Wednesday a major expansion of the military invasion of Gaza, saying the army would seize “large areas” of the Palestinian territory.
Katz said Israel would bolster its presence in the Gaza Strip to “destroy and clear the area of terrorists and terrorist infrastructure”.
The operation would “seize large areas that will be incorporated into Israeli security zones”, he said in a statement, without specifying how much territory.

A group representing families of hostages held in Gaza said they were “horrified” by Katz’s announcement, fearing the goal of freeing the captives had been “pushed to the bottom of the priority list”.
“Has it been decided to sacrifice the hostages for the sake of ‘territorial gains?'” the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said in a statement.
“Instead of freeing the hostages through a deal and putting an end to the war, the Israeli government is sending more soldiers to Gaza, to fight in the same areas where they have fought again and again.”
Expulsion of Palestinians
Katz last week warned the military would soon “operate with full force” in more parts of Gaza.
In February, he announced plans for an agency to oversee the expulsion of Palestinians from Gaza.
That followed Israel’s backing of a proposal from US President Donald Trump for the United States to take over the territory after displacing its 2.4 million Palestinian inhabitants.
Israel resumed intense bombing of Gaza on March 18 before launching a new ground offensive, ending a nearly two-month ceasefire.
21 killed in newly reported strikes
According to Al Jazeera, Israeli air strikes killed at least 21 people, including children, in Khan Yunis and the Nuseirat refugee camp since dawn Wednesday.
The health ministry in Gaza said on Tuesday that 1,042 people had been killed in the territory since Israel resumed military operations, bringing the overall toll since the war began on October 7, 2023 to at least 50,399 people, the majority of them civilians.
Hunger loomed in Gaza City as bakeries were shut due to severe shortages of flour and sugar.
“I’ve been going from bakery to bakery all morning, but none of them are operating, they’re all closed,” Amina al-Sayed told AFP.
Mahmud Sheikh Khalil said he couldn’t find bread for his children.
“The situation is very difficult in Gaza, there is no flour, no bread, no food or water,” he said.
On March 2, Israel blocked all aid from entering Gaza and later cut power to one of its main desalination plants.
The idea of forcing Gazans to leave for neighbouring countries including Egypt and Jordan, first floated by Trump, has been backed by right-wing Israeli politicians, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
UN condemns Israeli attack
On Sunday, Netanyahu offered to let Hamas leaders leave Gaza but demanded the group abandon its arms.
The Israeli leader has rejected domestic criticism that his government — one of the most right-wing in Israel’s history — was not doing enough to secure the hostages’ release.
“We are negotiating under fire… We can see cracks beginning to appear” in Hamas’s positions during ceasefire talks, he told his cabinet.
In the “final stage”, Netanyahu said, “Hamas will lay down its weapons. Its leaders will be allowed to leave”.
Hamas has signalled willingness to step down from ruling Gaza but calls disarmament a “red line”.
Egypt, Qatar and the United States are attempting to again broker a ceasefire and secure the release of Israeli hostages still held in Gaza.
A senior Hamas official said Saturday the group had approved a new ceasefire proposal and urged Israel to back it.
Netanyahu’s office confirmed receiving the proposal and said Israel had submitted a counteroffer. The details remain undisclosed.
The United Nations on Tuesday condemned an Israeli army attack on an emergency convoy that killed 15 aid workers and medical personnel and demanded an investigation.
“I condemn the attack by the Israeli army on a medical and emergency convoy on 23 March resulting in the killing of 15 medical personnel and humanitarian workers in Gaza,” UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk said.
Home demolitions
Israeli forces demolished a house in the town of Anata, East Jerusalem, under the pretext of building without a permit.
Local sources told Al Jazeera the demolition in the al-Fuhaidat neighbourhood was one of 13 homes scheduled to be knocked down by Israel’s army. It has also been said that the houses were close to military sites and, therefore, needed to be destroyed.
In the wake of Israel’s devastating war on Gaza, the Jerusalem municipality has stepped up home demolitions on the east side of the city, which Israel annexed from the occupied West Bank in 1967 and where most of Jerusalem’s 362,000 Palestinians live.