Indonesia denies Israel claim over Gaza hospital
Published: 05:11 PM,Nov 07,2023 | EDITED : 09:11 PM,Nov 07,2023
JAKARTA: Indonesia denied on Tuesday an Israeli claim that a hospital built in Gaza using Indonesian funding sits atop a network of tunnels and is located near a launchpad for rocket attacks.
The hospital, situated in the north of the Gaza Strip near the fortified border with Israel, was built using Indonesian charity funds.
'The Indonesian Hospital in Gaza is a facility built by the Indonesian people entirely for humanitarian purposes and to serve the medical needs of the Palestinian people in Gaza,' Indonesia's foreign ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.
The statement came a day after Israeli military spokesman Daniel Hagari said the Indonesian Hospital had been built at a site that sat on top of a network of tunnels.
He also said it was in a nearby area as a base to launch rockets into Israel.
'I will show you the reason why they built the hospital there. Unsurprisingly, the hospital was built on top of their attack infrastructures,' Hagari said in a video statement posted by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) on YouTube.
'Here, the IDF identified a launch pad, meaning they launch rockets from here,' he added, pointing to what he said was photographic evidence of his claim.
Iqbal refuted the claims about the hospital, which, like other medical centres in war-ravaged Gaza, is currently treating patients far beyond its capacity.
The Indonesian charity that operates the hospital, MER-C, also denied the facility was used to launch rockets.
'What Israel accused us of can be a precondition for them to launch an attack at the Indonesian hospital in Gaza,' MER-C chief Sarbini Abdul Murad said in Jakarta on Monday.
The 'IDF's accusation is a precondition to justify attacks against us, therefore we need to debunk it', Murad added.
Palestinians have repeatedly denied Israeli accusations that hospitals and other civilian infrastructure are being used by its operatives.
Israel has for a month relentlessly pounded the besieged Gaza Strip in its war since October 7.
According to the Palestinian health ministry, its campaign has killed more than 10,300 people — 4,000 of them children. — AFP
The hospital, situated in the north of the Gaza Strip near the fortified border with Israel, was built using Indonesian charity funds.
'The Indonesian Hospital in Gaza is a facility built by the Indonesian people entirely for humanitarian purposes and to serve the medical needs of the Palestinian people in Gaza,' Indonesia's foreign ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.
The statement came a day after Israeli military spokesman Daniel Hagari said the Indonesian Hospital had been built at a site that sat on top of a network of tunnels.
He also said it was in a nearby area as a base to launch rockets into Israel.
'I will show you the reason why they built the hospital there. Unsurprisingly, the hospital was built on top of their attack infrastructures,' Hagari said in a video statement posted by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) on YouTube.
'Here, the IDF identified a launch pad, meaning they launch rockets from here,' he added, pointing to what he said was photographic evidence of his claim.
Iqbal refuted the claims about the hospital, which, like other medical centres in war-ravaged Gaza, is currently treating patients far beyond its capacity.
The Indonesian charity that operates the hospital, MER-C, also denied the facility was used to launch rockets.
'What Israel accused us of can be a precondition for them to launch an attack at the Indonesian hospital in Gaza,' MER-C chief Sarbini Abdul Murad said in Jakarta on Monday.
The 'IDF's accusation is a precondition to justify attacks against us, therefore we need to debunk it', Murad added.
Palestinians have repeatedly denied Israeli accusations that hospitals and other civilian infrastructure are being used by its operatives.
Israel has for a month relentlessly pounded the besieged Gaza Strip in its war since October 7.
According to the Palestinian health ministry, its campaign has killed more than 10,300 people — 4,000 of them children. — AFP