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Experts worried Israel could flood Gaza tunnels

by Gaël BRANCHEREAU
by Gaël BRANCHEREAU
Dec 15, 2023
In a photo taken under Israeli army supervision, a soldier stands in what the Israeli army says is a tunnel dug by Hamas militants inside the Al-Shifa hospital complex
In a photo taken under Israeli army supervision, a soldier stands in what the Israeli army says is a tunnel dug by Hamas militants inside the Al-Shifa hospital complex — Ahikam SERI

Israel has reportedly started to test a plan to flood Hamas's sprawling tunnel network, but experts say it is a dangerous option that poses huge risks to Gaza's besieged civilians.

The military is determined to destroy the tunnels after Hamas's October 7 attack in southern Israel, and army chief Herzi Halevi has suggested pumping water into them is "a good idea".

AFP takes a look at Hamas's tunnel network and Israel's bid to destroy it.

- 'Gaza metro' -

Dubbed "the Gaza metro" by the Israeli military, there were 1,300 tunnels over 500 kilometres (310 miles) in Gaza at the start of the war in October, according to a study from US military academy West Point.

The maze of tunnels was initially used to bypass Israel's devastating blockade on the Gaza Strip after Hamas came to power in 2007, allowing the smuggling of people, goods and weaponry in and out of Egypt.

It extended the network after the 2014 Israel-Hamas war and uses them to emerge across Gaza to launch rocket attacks on Israel.

- Since October 7 -

Since entering Gaza in October, the Israeli military has found that the tunnel network is "even more extensive and deeper than they expected," Raphael Cohen, military expert for the US-based Rand Corporation, told AFP.

The Israeli army has found more than 800 tunnel shafts, 500 of which have been destroyed, it said in December.

This screen grab taken from a handout footage released by the Israeli army on November 3 shows a soldier checking what it says is the entrance to a Hamas tunnel in Gaza

It claimed the shafts were in civilian areas of the densely-populated territory, including schools, mosques and playgrounds.

In November the Israeli army sparked outcry when it stormed the Al-Shifa hospital, claiming to have found a 55-metre tunnel in its basement.

Israel shared footage which it said proved hostages had been held there, which Hamas denied.

- Hostages -

Israel estimates that 250 people were taken as hostages into Gaza in the October 7 attack, which Israeli officials say killed about 1,200 people, mostly civilians.

Its retaliatory offensive has left much of Gaza in ruins and killed more than 18,700 people, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.

Several of the 105 hostages freed during a week-long truce that ended on December 1 described being held captive in the tunnels.

Army spokesman Daniel Hagari said on Tuesday that the bodies of two hostages were found in the "underground infrastructure" in Gaza.

- Destroying the tunnels -

The Israeli army has not said exactly how it plans to destroy or block the tunnels in the small coastal territory.

But Israeli media reports that the army is leaning towards flooding the tunnels with seawater pumped from the Mediterranean.

There have been successful tests, public broadcaster Channel 11 reported Thursday.

But Rand's Cohen told AFP there are always "second-order consequences" with such tactics.

"There's no good way of destroying a tunnel without affecting the infrastructure above ground," he said.

Israeli bombardment hits the Gaza City seaport on October 11, 2023 on the fifth day of ferocious fighting between the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas and Israel

Hamas doubts Israel's ability to destroy the tunnels.

"Those tunnels were built by well-trained and educated engineers, and they have considered any kind of attacks that may happen including bombing and water," senior Lebanon-based Hamas official Osama Hamdan told a press conference on Thursday.

- Eco-hazard -

The narrow Gaza Strip is only between six and 12 kilometres (about 3.7 to 7.5 miles) wide and the territory's water tables were already facing a huge problem from becoming too salty, worsened by rising sea levels.

That adds to a chronically faulty wastewater system and the "uncontrolled used of pesticides and herbicides in intensive agricultural zones," said Eilon Adar, from the Zuckerberg Institute for Water Research at Israel's Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.

Combined, these factors have "had very serious consequences on Gaza's water quality," Adar told AFP.