IDF completes road across width of Gaza, satellite images show

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has finished building a new road which runs across northern Gaza from east to west, according to satellite images verified by the BBC.
The IDF told the BBC they were attempting to gain an "operational foothold", and facilitate the movement of troops and equipment.
But some experts fear it will used as a barrier, preventing Palestinians from returning to their homes in the north.
Others said it appeared to be part of an Israeli plan to remain in Gaza beyond the end of current hostilities.
In February, Prime Minister Netanyahu unveiled a post-war vision in which Israel would control security in Gaza indefinitely.
International leaders have previously warned Israel against permanently displacing Palestinians or reducing the size of Gaza.
What do we know about the road?
It runs across north Gaza, with central and southern areas lying below it. It starts at Gaza's border fence with Israel near the Nahal Oz kibbutz and finishes near the coast.
It also intersects with the Salah al-Din and al-Rashid roads, the two major arteries running through the territory.
Although there is a network of roads which connect east and west, the new IDF route is the only one which runs uninterrupted across Gaza.
Satellite imagery analysis by the BBC reveals that the IDF has built over 5km of new road sections to join up previously unconnected roads.
The initial section of the road in eastern Gaza near the Israeli border was established between late last October and early November. But most of the new sections were built during February and in early March.
The new route is wider than a typical road in Gaza, excluding Salah al-Din.
Imagery analysis also shows that buildings along the route, which appear to be warehouses, were demolished from the end of December until late January. This includes one building several stories high.
The road spans an area which previously had fewer buildings and was less densely populated than other parts of Gaza.
It also sits below a makeshift and winding route which the IDF had been using to move from east to west.
An Israeli TV channel reported on the route in February, saying it was code named "Highway 749". A reporter from Channel 14 travelled along parts of the route with the Israeli military.
In the video, road construction vehicles and diggers were seen preparing for the construction of new sections of the route.
How 'Highway 749' could be used
Analysts at Janes, a defence intelligence company, said the type of unpaved road surface seen in the Channel 14 footage, was suitable for tracked armoured vehicles.
The IDF did not go into this type of detail in its statement. "As part of the ground operation, the IDF uses an operational route of passage," it said.
Retired Brig Gen Jacob Nagel, former head of Israel's National Security Council and a former security adviser to Israeli Prime Minster Benjamin Netanyahu, told BBC Arabic that the objective of the new route was to provide fast access for security forces when dealing with fresh threats.
"It will help Israel go in and out... because Israel is going to have total defence, security and responsibility for Gaza," he told BBC Arabic.
He described it as "a road that divides the northern part from the southern part".
"We don't want to wait until a threat is emerging," he added.
Maj Gen Yaakov Amidror, formerly of the IDF, had a similar view. The primary purpose of the new road was to "facilitate logistical and military control in the region", he said.
Justin Crump, a former British Army officer who runs Sibylline, a risk intelligence company, said the new route was significant.
"It certainly looks like it's part of a longer-term strategy to have at least some form of security intervention and control in the Gaza Strip," said Mr Crump.
"This area cuts off Gaza City from the south of the strip, making it an effective control line to monitor or limit movement, and has relatively open fields of fire."
Khaled Elgindy, a senior fellow at the US-based Middle East Institute, also thinks the road is a long-term project.
"It appears that the Israeli military will remain in Gaza indefinitely," Mr Elgindy told the BBC.
"By dividing Gaza in half, Israel will control not only what goes in and out of Gaza, but also movement within Gaza," said the analyst.
"This includes quite possibly preventing the 1.5 million displaced Palestinians in the south from returning to their homes in the north."
Israel says dozens of Hamas fighters killed in latest Gaza operations
Palestinians inspect the massive damage caused by an Israeli air strike on Al-Masry Tower, downtown Rafah. Mohammed.
Israeli forces killed dozens of Islamist Hamas fighters in the Gaza Strip over the past 24 hours, military officials said on Saturday.
In the southern city of Khan Younis, troops eliminated 20 Hamas militiamen in close combat and air strikes, according to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).
Military facilities of the enemy were destroyed in targeted operations and an unspecified number of fighters were captured. At least ten terrorists were killed in central Gaza, the IDF said.
The information could not initially be independently verified.
According to Palestinian sources, Israeli fighter jets early on Saturday bombed a high-rise building in Rafah, the southernmost village in the sealed-off coastal strip. The residents had received warnings in advance and were not in the building in the centre of the city, which was destroyed.
Nevertheless, an unspecified number of civilians were injured in the attack on the Al-Masri Tower, the Palestinian news agency WAFA reported, citing local sources.
A total of 82 Palestinians have died in the past 24 hours as a result of fighting, the Hamas-controlled Health Ministry in Gaza said on Saturday. A further 122 people were injured.
The number of Palestinians killed since the beginning of the Gaza war last autumn has risen to 30,960 and the number of injured to 72,524. These figures could also not be independently verified.
Casualty figures collected in the hospitals do not differentiate between civilians and armed fighters. However, 70% of the victims are said to be women, children and elderly men.
The war was triggered by an unprecedented massacre carried out by Palestinian Hamas and other extremist groups in southern Israel on October 7 that killed 1,200 people. Another 250 people were abducted to the Gaza Strip.
Gaza convoy: IDF says it fired at 'suspects' but not at aid trucks
Gaza's health minister said 104 people were killed and 760 others were injured in the incident
An Israeli military report says troops did not fire at Palestinians around an aid convoy but at "suspects" nearby who they deemed a threat, during a deadly incident in Gaza last month.
The findings follow an investigation into the events in which more than 100 Palestinians were killed, according to Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry.
Palestinians accused Israel of shooting dead people at the convoy.
Israel has said most were killed being trampled or run over by the convoy.
The head of the UN, the EU and several countries have called for an independent investigation into the incident, which happened on 29 February at the Nabulsi roundabout on the south-western edge of Gaza City.
In the early hours of that morning, a convoy of lorries transporting aid was surrounded by crowds of Palestinians just after it had passed an Israel Defense Forces (IDF) checkpoint. During chaotic scenes, shots were fired by soldiers and IDF surveillance footage showed lorries, which had briefly stopped, moving forward, apparently running over Palestinians who had gathered around them in large numbers.
The health ministry said 118 people were killed and 760 others were injured in the incident. UN officials who visited Gaza City's al-Shifa Hospital, one of several hospitals where casualties had been taken, the following day said they had found a large number of people with bullet wounds.
On Friday, the IDF said it had presented the findings of a "command review" into the events to its Chief of Staff, Lieutenant General Herzi Halevi.
It said the review "found that IDF troops did not fire at the humanitarian convoy, but did fire at a number of suspects who approached the nearby forces and posed a threat to them".
According to the review, about 12,000 Palestinians gathered around the lorries and started looting them. It said that while this was taking place, "significant harm" was caused to civilians there from what it called a "stampede" and from people being run over.
It said while that was happening, dozens of people headed towards nearby IDF troops, reaching a distance of several metres from them, "and thereby posed a real threat to the forces".
"At this stage, the forces fired cautionary fire in order to distance the suspects. As the suspects continued to advance toward them, the troops fired precisely toward a number of the suspects to remove the threat," it said.
The incident is still under investigation by a Fact Finding and Assessment Mechanism - "an independent examination body" - the review said.
The events caused outrage around the world, and the UN Security Council held an emergency meeting to discuss it. An Algerian-led statement blaming Israel for the deaths was blocked by the US, according to the Palestinian UN ambassador afterwards.
Lorries have been transporting aid to assist Gazans suffering from widespread hunger since two weeks after the war began on 7 October, but the UN says deliveries meet only a fraction of the needs.
The war was triggered by an unprecedented attack on Israel by Hamas gunmen, who killed about 1,200 people - mainly civilians - according to Israeli tallies, and took 253 others back to Gaza as hostages.
Gaza's health ministry says nearly 31,000 people - mostly women and children - have been killed by Israel's offensive.
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