Published claim files
The World against Israel Case
Evidence archive and research command center for claim files, source chains, public source links, and debunk packs.
Gaza hospitals: counter‑record on military use, warnings, and evacuations
WHO, OHCHR, MSF and others documented sieges, raids and prolonged encirclement of major Gaza hospitals (e.g., Al‑Shifa) alongside patient deaths and acute risks to staff and civilians, which many outlets and advocates cite as proof that Israel’s actions lacked military necessity and violated IHL.
Al‑Quds Hospital warnings/time allowed (Oct 14 & Oct 29, 2023)
PRCS reported a first evacuation deadline of 06:00 on Oct 14 and an ‘immediate evacuation’ threat on Oct 29. WHO repeatedly warned hospital evacuations then were impossible without endangering lives; OCHA noted renewed immediate calls and strikes near the hospital. The question is whether timing and conditions made evacuation practicable for leadership responsible for ICU/neonates and thousands of IDPs.
Kamal Adwan: infeasible four-hour evacuation?
A Palestinian health official reported a four-hour IDF evacuation demand, while UN/WHO reporting described raids, detentions, hospital shutdown and extreme constraints around Kamal Adwan. The claim is that a nominal four-hour warning was not practically effective for medical evacuation.
Indonesian Hospital: no feasible evacuation?
Gaza MoH, WHO and OCHA reported siege/surrounding, attacks on or around the hospital, bombardment, delayed evacuation, and patients/staff awaiting evacuation. The anti-Israel claim is that evacuation was not safely feasible during the critical period of surrounding fire.
Al-Amal: ineffective evacuation conditions?
PRCS and UN/OCHA reporting described repeated siege conditions, attacks around the facility, blocked or delayed coordinated convoys, and eventual forced evacuation. The claim is that evacuation happened only intermittently under severe risk, not through consistently safe and effective Israeli warning procedures.
Nasser: warnings not fully feasible?
OCHA, WHO and PRCS documented IDF evacuation calls, later patient transfers, active hostilities, convoy delays and limited feasibility for critical patients. The claim is that evacuation instructions were not fully effective for medical authorities under the conditions at Nasser.
Al-Shifa: unsafe evacuation corridors?
UN, WHO and humanitarian reporting described Al-Shifa as collapsing under power loss, active hostilities, lack of ambulances and fuel, and high-risk patient evacuation needs. The claim argues that announced corridors and warnings were not enough to make hospital evacuation practically feasible.
Al-Quds: ineffective evacuation warning?
PRCS, WHO, OCHA and AP reported immediate evacuation demands, nearby bombardment, thousands sheltering, critical patients, incubator babies, and warnings that evacuation under those conditions was impossible or life-threatening. The anti-Israel claim is that Israel's warnings were not operationally effective for responsible hospital authorities.
Indonesian Hospital strikes/siege (North Gaza, Nov 2023)
WHO and UN reported a deadly strike at the Indonesian Hospital on Nov 20, 2023 and subsequent evacuations. Israel has alleged Hamas tunnel infrastructure and exploitation of hospitals, including the Indonesian Hospital. The claim asserts no valid military objective justified the attack.
PRCS Al‑Quds Hospital (Gaza City, Nov 2023)
PRCS and media reported sniper fire and strikes near Al‑Quds, fuel depletion, and eventual evacuation after the hospital ceased operations. Israel said armed cells fired from the hospital entrance/adjacent buildings and claimed to have engaged them. The claim asserts the Israeli actions lacked military necessity.
Kamal Adwan Hospital raids (Beit Lahiya, Dec 2023)
Rights groups and UN/WHO statements described a multi‑day siege and raid that rendered Kamal Adwan non‑functional, with detentions of staff and reported patient deaths. The claim frames the operation as unlawful and not justified by any valid military objective.
Nasser Hospital raid (Khan Younis, Feb 2024)
Multiple statements and reports alleged Israeli forces besieged and raided Nasser Hospital, forcing it out of service and endangering patients and staff. The claim often travels via Gaza health authorities and humanitarian groups, amplified by media and social platforms, as proof that hospitals were attacked unlawfully and without any valid military objective.
No Hamas/PIJ use of Al-Shifa?
The anti-Israel narrative argues that Israeli claims about Al-Shifa were fabricated or unsupported and that the hospital was treated as a military target without evidence of hostile use.
Hospital protection under IHL
This legal claim circulates widely in Gaza hospital debates: that hospitals are specially protected objects and cannot lawfully be attacked unless they are misused for hostile acts, a specific warning with reasonable time is given and ignored, and standard targeting rules (distinction, proportionality, precautions) are still applied. It is invoked by NGOs, media, and officials to argue that many strikes were unlawful absent evidence of misuse and proper warning.
Hind Rajab: legal frame for attacks on civilians/medics
UN experts, humanitarian groups and media discussing the Hind Rajab incident argue that if Israeli forces intentionally attacked the child’s car and the Palestinian Red Crescent ambulance/paramedics, those acts would amount to war crimes. The claim travels in UN press releases, rights‑group statements, and reporting that cite the IHL rules protecting civilians and medical services.
Hind Rajab OSINT/ballistics link box
After the 6‑year‑old’s distress calls from a bullet‑riddled car in Tel al‑Hawa, Gaza City, OSINT teams and newsrooms reconstructed the scene using satellite imagery, audio ballistics, damage mapping, and fragment recovery. Their published work argues the family car was engaged at very close range by an Israeli armored platform and that the PRCS ambulance was hit by tank‑fired HEAT‑MP‑T ammunition; Israeli authorities publicly disputed that IDF units were within firing range. The claim travelled via Al Jazeera Fault Lines, Forensic Architecture/Earshot, Sky News, and The Washington Post and is now widely cited by advocates and officials pressing for formal investigations.
Hind Rajab: cover‑up vs official denial
The claim argues that Israel’s repeated public denials of involvement in the Hind Rajab incident, combined with the lack of a transparent, public-facing criminal investigation, constitute an intentional cover‑up. It circulates via advocacy groups, documentary reporting, and opinion pieces that reference independent reconstructions contradicting Israeli statements and note no publicly available criminal accountability outcome.
Hind Rajab: deliberate intent to target known civilians?
The allegation asserts that IDF troops knowingly shot at a fleeing civilian family’s car in Tel al-Hawa, Gaza City, killing five-year-old Hind Rajab and relatives, then later deliberately hit a clearly marked Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) ambulance dispatched to rescue her despite prior coordination. The claim spread via PRCS statements and audio released of the child’s calls, then through global media and investigations (Washington Post, Forensic Architecture/Earshot, Sky News), and is widely cited as a paradigmatic ‘double-tap’ attack and potential war crime.
Hind Rajab: ‘double‑tap’ strike on rescuers near Tel al‑Hawa?
Advocacy groups and several investigations allege that after the family car carrying 6‑year‑old Hind Rajab was hit in Gaza City’s Tel al‑Hawa on January 29, 2024, a clearly marked PRCS ambulance that was dispatched on a coordinated route to rescue her was then struck and the two medics were killed. Avaaz (2026) characterizes this as a deliberate ‘double‑tap’ tactic. PRCS said the ambulance was deliberately targeted. Major media and forensic reconstructions (Washington Post, Sky News, Forensic Architecture) document tanks in the vicinity and damage consistent with tank munitions, but the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said an initial probe indicated no troops were in the area and referred the matter to its Fact‑Finding Assessment (FFA) mechanism. The ‘double‑tap’ label, which implies intent to hit rescuers, is therefore contested.
PRCS ambulance to Hind Rajab struck near car
PRCS stated that an ambulance sent to reach Hind Rajab after distress calls was directly targeted and destroyed only meters from the family’s car. Journalistic and forensic reconstructions (Washington Post visual forensics; Forensic Architecture/Earshot; Sky News OSINT with Janes) found armored Israeli vehicles operating in the vicinity that afternoon/evening and assessed the ambulance’s damage as consistent with a tank‑fired munition; satellite imagery placed the burned ambulance roughly 50 m from the car. The IDF publicly denied forces were present or within firing range and said ambulance coordination was unnecessary. U.S. officials later said Israel told them there were IDF units in the area and requested further information. UN experts said the killings of Hind, relatives, and two paramedics may amount to a war crime.
Hind Rajab: shooter attribution (Tel al‑Hawa, Jan 29, 2024)
The allegation holds that Israeli forces (IDF) were positioned close to the Hamada family’s black Kia in Tel al‑Hawa on Jan 29, 2024, and opened fire, killing most occupants; hours later, a Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) ambulance sent to rescue surviving child Hind Rajab was also struck nearby. The claim has traveled via PRCS statements and audio, Al Jazeera and partner investigations, and major Western media reconstructions, while the IDF publicly denied being within firing range or present at the site at the relevant time.
Jabalia refugee camp strike (Oct 31, 2023)
After the Oct 31, 2023 airstrike(s) in Jabalia, UN human rights officials and NGOs alleged the attack could amount to an unlawful indiscriminate or disproportionate strike, while Israel said it targeted Hamas commander Ibrahim Biari and an underground tunnel complex beneath civilian buildings. Videos/images of large craters and collapsed apartment blocks fueled claims of indiscriminate effects; IDF briefings framed the action as a targeted strike whose tunnel collapses caused above‑ground destruction. The allegation travels via UN press briefings, NGO investigations, and major media reports.
Gaza power/fuel cuts: hospital and WASH impact data
After 7–11 October 2023, Israel cut electricity to Gaza and restricted fuel entry. UN agencies, WHO, UNICEF, ICRC and OCHA/WASH Cluster repeatedly reported hospital shutdowns, generator failures, and collapse of water, sewage and solid-waste services due to lack of grid power and fuel. The claim travels in humanitarian briefings, press coverage and rights reports as evidence of grave civilian harm and, by some advocates, of unlawful collective punishment or starvation‐related crimes. This box focuses narrowly on the humanitarian impact data, not on legal intent or liability.
IDF ROE/command guidance on journalists, children, hospitals
The claim asserts that what the IDF makes public about its ROE, ethics, and operational-legal guidance contains no orders to target journalists, children, or hospitals, and instead reflects protections for civilians and specially protected facilities. It does not address classified ROE or actual battlefield compliance.
Deconfliction failures and strikes on marked media/medical sites
Multiple incidents in Gaza (and along the Lebanon front) show marked or pre-notified humanitarian, medical, and press people/places were struck despite sharing coordinates or visible markings. UN OCHA and WHO officials publicly criticized Gaza deconfliction/notification as inaccurate or not fit for purpose. The World Central Kitchen (WCK) case (April 1, 2024) is a key example: the convoy coordinated its route with the IDF yet was hit; the IDF’s own fast‑tracked inquiry found misidentification and SOP violations and disciplined officers. NGOs (MSF, ICRC, UNRWA) documented additional strikes on notified or clearly marked sites. Some investigations (e.g., RSF on the October 13, 2023 Lebanon incident) allege intentional targeting of journalists; others (like WCK) indicate severe coordination and procedural failures rather than proven intent. Notification and markings reduce risk but are not legal guarantees of immunity, nor do failures alone establish intent.
Do Gaza child deaths prove the IDF targets children?
The claim argues that the sheer scale of child casualties in Gaza is itself proof that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) intentionally target children. It circulates widely in protests, social posts, interviews, and some media commentary, often citing cumulative death tallies to assert intent without incident‑specific targeting evidence.
Gaza hospitals’ legal status under IHL
The claim asserts that Israeli operations that damaged or affected hospitals in Gaza show intentional targeting of hospitals as hospitals. It circulates via press statements by humanitarian groups and Palestinian institutions, social media posts, and some media framing that describes a pattern of attacks on health care as deliberate policy.
IDF policy to target journalists in Gaza?
The allegation asserts an intentional IDF policy—stated or implicit—to target journalists in Gaza, often citing unprecedented journalist death tolls and specific strikes on media workers and vehicles. It circulates via broadcaster panels, rights-group briefs, UN expert statements, and investigative features, and is contrasted by official Israeli denials and claims that some deceased ‘journalists’ were combatants or directly participating in hostilities.
Gaza MoH: identified-by-name vs total deaths
Since October 2023, Gaza’s Ministry of Health (MoH) has periodically released detailed, named fatality lists alongside higher aggregate death totals. A high-profile early list (Oct. 26, 2023) named thousands and explicitly excluded missing people and those not registered at hospitals. In 2024, amid hospital collapse and disrupted mortuary systems, MoH and UN reporting distinguished between fully identified deaths and a larger total that included deaths reported through alternative channels. UN OCHA updates (May 2024) showed 24,686 fully identified out of 34,622 total as of Apr. 30, 2024, and UN spokespeople clarified that totals remained above 35,000 even as demographic breakdowns were limited to the identified subset. Independent reporting and analyses (AP, NPR, Sky News, AOAV) document that the share of fully identified cases rose over time while methodology and data quality constraints were publicly noted and debated.
Gaza MoH method shifts after Nov 2023
The claim alleges that the Gaza Ministry of Health (MoH) moved away from primarily hospital/morgue‑registered death records once networks failed in mid‑November 2023, supplementing counts with media/other reports and public submissions, and later distinguishing between fully identified deaths and a growing pool of unidentified cases. UN OCHA subsequently clarified it would report the MoH’s identified subset separately from broader totals previously relayed via the Gaza Government Media Office (GMO).
Are IPC/FRC classifications and hospital records enough to prove intent?
Some advocates argue that because the IPC/Famine Review Committee (FRC) has classified parts of Gaza at IPC Phase 5 (Catastrophe) or warned of famine risk, and because hospitals have recorded deaths linked to hunger or malnutrition, this is sufficient to ascribe legal intent (e.g., deliberate starvation or even genocidal intent) to Israel or other parties. The claim often circulates in posts and statements that treat IPC/FRC outputs and hospital death tallies as dispositive proof of intent rather than technical evidence of severity and outcomes.
‘Food system damage can’t be militarily justified’ claim
Advocacy reports and social posts assert that Israel’s operations systematically destroyed Gaza’s food system (mills, bakeries, farms, greenhouses, fisheries, irrigation) in ways that are not credibly tied to legitimate military objectives—framing the pattern as unlawful, deliberate deprivation rather than effects of combat or tunnel clearing.
Do detainee deaths prove a deliberate Israeli medical-neglect policy?
Advocacy groups and official Palestinian bodies frequently assert that the Israel Prison Service (IPS) and Israeli military detention facilities operate a deliberate policy of medical neglect that has caused or contributed to detainee deaths since October 7, 2023. The claim travels via NGO press releases, Palestinian Authority bodies, and media reports that cite testimonies, autopsies, and alleged denials of treatment.
Do Israeli prison conditions amount to deliberate neglect/starvation and collective punishment?
Advocacy groups, UN experts, and media have alleged that since October 7, 2023, Palestinian detainees — including Gazans and West Bank detainees — have been subjected to degrading treatment, insufficient food, medical neglect, and policies designed to punish them collectively. The claim circulates via NGO reports (e.g., PHRI), UN press releases (OHCHR), and press interviews with released detainees.
Does Israel intentionally kill Gaza medics and rescue crews?
The claim alleges that Israeli forces deliberately, as a matter of intent or policy, target doctors, nurses, paramedics, civil defense rescuers and clearly marked ambulances in Gaza. It circulates via statements from Palestinian health providers (e.g., PRCS), UN reporting, human rights NGOs, and viral posts after high-casualty incidents near hospitals or during ambulance missions.
Did Israel create mass graves at Gaza hospitals?
After Israeli withdrawals from Nasser Medical Complex (Khan Younis) and Al‑Shifa (Gaza City) in April 2024, Gaza Civil Defense, WAFA, and others alleged that the IDF created mass graves at the hospital compounds, with some bodies reportedly bound or showing signs of execution. The story spread quickly across social media and was covered by major outlets alongside UN calls for investigation.
Did Israel attack Gaza hospitals without military necessity?
This allegation asserts that Israeli forces intentionally struck or raided Gaza hospitals as hospitals, lacking any legitimate military objective. It circulates in NGO reports, UN statements, and media commentary, often citing repeated raids (e.g., Al‑Shifa, Nasser, Kamal Adwan, Al‑Quds, Indonesian Hospital) and grave civilian harm as proof of illegality.
Deaths of protected workers ≠ proof of targeting
This claim generalizes that whenever members of protected professions (journalists, medical or humanitarian staff, UN workers, academics) are killed in the Israel–Hamas/Israel–Hezbollah conflicts, Israel must have targeted them as such. It circulates widely on social platforms and in commentary that equates effect (death of a protected person) with intent (targeting the profession).
NGO/UN/medical claims = neutral & authoritative
A common framing online says that humanitarian, medical, or UN‑system reporting is intrinsically neutral and should be treated as authoritative by default (e.g., on casualty figures or incident attributions).
Hamas denial = Israeli evidence is fabricated
A recurring narrative on social media and some activist outlets asserts that Hamas’ denials about using civilian sites automatically disprove Israeli allegations and prove Israeli evidentiary “staging” (e.g., at Al‑Shifa). The claim often cites video inconsistencies or embedded press constraints to declare IDF evidence fake.
Does not publishing intel make strikes illegitimate?
The claim asserts that absent full public disclosure of targeting intelligence, Israel’s stated military justifications should be treated as false. It spreads after disputed strikes (e.g., media towers or hospitals), often framed as ‘no evidence shown—so it’s a lie.’
Blocks formula/incubators/anesthesia ‘to kill’
Circulating posts and commentary assert that Israel purposefully bans life‑saving items like baby formula, incubators, and anesthesia so that Gaza’s infants and patients die. The allegation mixes (a) real access denials/delays to medical aid, fuel, and items sometimes flagged as dual‑use; (b) reports from WHO/OCHA and NGOs on collapsing hospital capacity; and (c) accusations of homicidal intent. Some outlets and politicians also alleged specific blocks on infant formula shipments.
Did Israel bomb Al-Ahli Hospital on October 17, 2023?
The claim attributes the October 17, 2023 Al-Ahli Arab Hospital blast to an Israeli airstrike. The dossier tracks early Palestinian and media attribution against later technical, intelligence, and open-source evidence.
Israel used chemical weapons in Gaza
Since October 2023, posts, statements, and some NGO materials have alleged that Israel used “chemical weapons” in Gaza—often equating white phosphorus with chemical weapons or asserting toxic gas use in tunnels. The State of Palestine formally told the OPCW Israel used white phosphorus “as a chemical agent,” and other materials have framed strikes on chemical warehouses as “indirect chemical warfare.”
Blocks medevacs “to let patients die”
The claim alleges deliberate Israeli obstruction of medical evacuations (medevacs) from Gaza with the purpose of causing patient deaths. It circulates in features and social posts asserting that Israeli approvals are withheld so that critically ill or wounded Palestinians will die while waiting to leave Gaza, especially after Rafah crossing closures and battlefield operations.
Hind Rajab: deliberate killing and cover-up
The claim asserts that Israeli forces intentionally shot at the Hamada family’s car in Tel al-Hawa, Gaza City, on January 29, 2024, killing six-year-old Hind Rajab and relatives, and later deliberately struck the dispatched Palestine Red Crescent ambulance (a 'double-tap'), then denied involvement to obscure responsibility.
Israel uses disease as a weapon in Gaza
The claim alleges Israel is intentionally spreading disease in Gaza—sometimes framed as 'weaponizing disease' via water, sanitation, blockade or fuel cuts—so that epidemics (hepatitis A, diarrheal disease, polio) debilitate the population. It circulates in op-eds, NGO advocacy, interviews with diplomats, and social posts linking siege policies to outbreaks.
Did Israel plant or fake weapons/tunnel evidence?
Widely shared on social media and by adversarial outlets following IDF raids (notably Al‑Shifa and Al‑Rantisi), pointing to edited IDF videos, discrepant weapons displays, and miscaptioned items (e.g., a wall calendar) as proof that evidence is staged or planted.
Al‑Shifa: ‘No Hamas use; Israel faked it’
The claim categorically denies any Hamas military use of Gaza’s Al‑Shifa Hospital and alleges that Israel staged or fabricated all presented evidence (weapons, tunnels, CCTV of hostages). It spread via partisan outlets, social posts and commentary challenging IDF briefings in Nov–Dec 2023 and after the March 2024 raid.
Israel deliberately destroys Gaza's health system
A bundled intent claim built from WHO, OHCHR, UN commission, NGO, and media language after repeated hospital raids, damage, fuel shortages, evacuations, and medical-system collapse.
Gaza Health Ministry casualty numbers are fully authoritative
A source-quality claim behind many casualty, women/children, journalist, hospital, and genocide arguments.
Hamas use of hospitals is fabricated or exaggerated
A defensive narrative used after Israeli operations at Shifa, Nasser, and other medical sites.
Bodies at Gaza hospitals showed executions or headshots by Israel
A high-risk allegation cluster about mass graves, hospital raids, forensic claims, and alleged executions.
The IDF deliberately targets journalists, children, and hospitals
A high-emotion claim family combining casualty counts, journalist deaths, child deaths, hospital attacks, and accusations of intent.