Canadian citizen killed after threatening Israeli security forces with a knife near Gaza border, police say - Action News
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Canadian citizen killed after threatening Israeli security forces with a knife near Gaza border, police say

Israeli police said a Canadian citizen was killed after threatening Israeli security forces with a knife near the Gaza border.

Israeli security forces say the unidentified person was armed with a knife

Two vehicles, a person in a police-type uniform and police tape are shown at a gated area.
Israeli officials work at the scene of an attempted stabbing attack that Israeli police say was carried out by a Canadian citizen, at Netiv HaAsara, Israel, on Monday. (Amir Cohen/Reuters)

Israeli police said a Canadian citizen was killed after threatening Israeli security forces with a knife near the Gaza border.

The Israeli military said the man drove to the entrance of an Israeli town close to the Gaza border, left his vehicle and began threatening security forces with a knife. The forces opened fire and killed the man.

There were no other injuries.

The attack took place at the entrance of the Israeli town of Netiv HaAsara, which is just 300 metres north of the Gaza border. Israel has experienced a wave of stabbing attacks across the country during the nine-month war in Gaza.

Global Affairs told CBC News it was aware of an incident involving a Canadian citizen, but couldn't provide more information for privacy reasons.

Dozens killed in Khan Younis

The Israeli military on Monday ordered the evacuation of part of an area in the Gaza Strip it has designated a humanitarian zone. The military said it is planning to begin an operation against Hamas militants who have embedded themselves in the area and used it to launch rockets toward Israel.

The evacuation area includes the eastern part of the Muwasi humanitarian zone, which is located in the southern Gaza Strip.

Dozens of people are shown in the photograph walking toward camera on a dirt road, with vehicles and large pieces of metal debris shown.
Palestinian civilians leave to safer areas away from the eastern districts of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip following warnings by the Israeli army on Monday. (Bashar Taleb/AFP/Getty Images)

Thousands of Palestinians, many carrying backpacks and accompanied by children, walked down dusty roads under the scorching sun, navigating dilapidated cars with belongings tied on top. Many Palestinians have been uprooted multiple times in search of safety during Israeli's air and ground campaign.

"We do not know where we are walking," said Kholoud Al Dadas, as she clutched her children. "This is our seventh or eighth time we have been displaced. While we were sleeping in our homes, they started shooting at us, bombing from everywhere."

The Israeli military said it was continuing to operate in central and southern Gaza. At least 38 people were killed in the southern city of Khan Younis, according to hospital officials and a count of the bodies by an Associated Press journalist. One person was killed and three injured in a strike outside Al-Aqsa Hospital in the central town of Deir-Al-Balah, where many people have sheltered outside the facility.

Precarious humanitarian conditions inside besieged Gaza have worsened with the discovery of the polio virus as water and sanitation services have deteriorated for the territory's 2.3 million people, most of them displaced. Traces of the virus were found in sewage samples in Gaza.

Large clouds of smoke and orange fire are captured in a video still appearing over the skyline of high-rise buildings.
Smoke rises during an Israeli strike on a residential building, amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas conflict, in Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip, in this still image taken from a video on Monday. (Reuters TV)

2 more hostages believed dead

The war in Gaza has killed more than 38,900 people, according to Gaza's Health Ministry, which doesn't distinguish between combatants and civilians in its count. The war began with an assault led by Hamas militants on southern Israel on Oct. 7 that killed 1,200 people according to Israel, most of them civilians, including several Canadian citizens.

More than 100 hostages taken on Oct. 7 were freed in a pause in fighting late last year, while several others were rescued in Israeli military operations.

It is believed by the Israeli government that about 116 hostages have yet to be repatriated, though about one-third have so far been pronounced dead in absentia.

The Israeli military announced the deaths on Monday of two additional Israeli hostages, saying they believe Yagev Buchshtab, 35, and Alex Dancyg, 76, who were kidnapped from homes in kibbutzim on Oct. 7, were no longer alive, based on intelligence.

head shots of two men, one older man with beard and younger man with beard.
The Israeli military announced the deaths on Monday of two additional Israeli hostages, saying they believe Yagev Buchshtab, 35, and Alex Dancyg, 76, who were kidnapped from homes in kibbutzim on Oct. 7, were no longer alive, based on intelligence. (The Hostages Families Forum/Reuters, Bring Them Home Now/Reuters)

Clarifications

  • After publication, the headline of this article was updated to more precisely describe the account offered by Israeli security forces. A comment from Global Affairs was also added.
    Sep 26, 2024 11:59 AM ET