Israel-Hamas LIVE: US says ‘far too many’ Palestinians have died and more needs to be done to save lives as death toll ‘rises above 11,000’ amid Israeli strikes on Gaza
Israeli air strikes hit three Gazan hospitals and a school yesterday, killing at least 22 people, according to Palestinian officials.
Tanks ringed the hospitals as the battle against Hamas moved to the heart of its stronghold in Gaza City.
Officials in the Hamas-run government said missiles were fired into the courtyard of Gaza’s biggest hospital, the Al-Shifa, in the early hours, with further attacks later.
Al-Shifa hospital director Mohammad Abu Selmeyah said that ‘Israeli tanks fired on Al-Shifa hospital’, while the Israeli military did not offer an immediate comment.
Israel must stop bombing Gaza and killing civilians, French President Emmanuel Macron told the BBC in an interview published late on Friday.
Macron said there was ‘no justification’ for the bombing and saying a ceasefire would benefit Israel.
He said that France “clearly condemns” the ‘terrorist’ actions of Hamas, but that while recognising Israel’s right to protect itself, ‘we do urge them to stop this bombing’ in Gaza.
Thousands of Palestinians flee south after reported strikes around Gaza city’s main hospital
Thousands of Palestinians sheltering from the Israel-Hamas war at Gaza City’s main hospital fled south today after several reported strikes in and around the compound overnight.
They joined a growing exodus of people escaping intense urban fighting in the north – including near other hospitals – as Gaza officials said the territory’s death toll surpassed 11,000.
The search for safety across the besieged Gaza Strip has grown desperate as Israel intensified its assault on the territory’s largest city.
The Israel army says Hamas’ military infrastructure is based amid Gaza City’s hospitals and neighborhoods, and that it has set up its main command center in and under the largest hospital, Shifa – claims the militant group and Shifa staff deny.
America has issued its strongest condemnation of Israel’s war in Gaza yet as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken declared that ‘far too many Palestinians have been killed’.
Palestinians said deadly salvos today hit hospitals and a school where desperate civilians in Gaza City have sought refuge from intense combat that has sent many thousands fleeing.
Blinken welcomed the four-hour humanitarian Israeli pauses the White House announced on Thursday but said further action was required to protect Gaza’s civilians.
A convicted Palestinian terrorist, jailed for a car bomb attack on the Israeli Embassy in London , has found love with one of Britain’s top economics professors.
Jawad Botmeh, 55, was sentenced to 20 years in jail in 1996 after he was found guilty of conspiracy to cause explosions in the UK.
He was released in 2008 and is in a relationship with an academic who campaigned for his freedom and visited him in prison, MailOnline can reveal.
Gaza health system has reached ‘point of no return’: Red Cross
The Red Cross warned Friday that the healthcare system in war-ravaged Gaza, which has faced repeated attack and dwindling supplies, has ‘reached a point of no return’.
‘Overstretched, running on thin supplies and increasingly unsafe, the healthcare system in Gaza has reached a point of no return risking the lives of thousands of wounded, sick and displaced people,’ the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said in a statement.
Seven Hezbollah fighters killed in cross-border clashes, terror group says
Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah has said that Israeli fire killed seven of its fighters today, without specifying where or when they died.
It comes as tensions across Israel’s northern border persist.
The group named the seven fighters in a statement stating they were ‘martyred on the road to Jerusalem’, the phrase Hezbollah uses to mourn members – now numbering 68 – killed since border clashes with Israel began last month.
The border area between the two countries has seen daily exchanges of fire, in particular between Hezbollah and Israel, since the start of the war.
Three women plead not guilty to displaying images indicating support for Hamas during a pro-Palestinian march in London
Three women have pleaded not guilty to displaying images indicating support for Hamas at a pro-Palestinian march in central London, PA reports.
Heba Alhayek, 29, Pauline Ankunda, 26, and Noimutu Olayinka Taiwo, 27, were all charged under the Terrorism Act as part of the same investigation.
They allegedly wore or displayed images of paragliders during the demonstration in Whitehall on October 14.
Alhayek and Ankunda, both from Crystal Palace, south-east London, were each charged on November 3 with carrying or displaying an article to arouse reasonable suspicion that they are supporters of banned organisation Hamas, and Taiwo, from Croydon, south london, was charged with the same offence on Thursday.
The three appeared at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Friday as co-defendants and were granted unconditional bail ahead of a two-day trial on February 12 next year at the same court.
Hamas terrorists used handgliders as part of their attack on Israel on October 7.
Breaking: Palestinian aid group accuses IDF snipers of killing one person and injuring 28 others in hospital shooting
The Palestinian Red Crescent said on Friday that one person was killed and 28 others were wounded in a shooting by Israeli snipers at Al-Quds hospital in Gaza, the organisation said.
The majority of the injured were children and two are in critical condition as a result of sniper fire targeting the hospital, a Red Crescent statement said.
‘Fierce clashes now and occupation (Israeli) snipers shooting at Al-Quds hospital, casualties among the displaced’ Palestinians sheltering at the facility, the medical organisation said in a statement.
Contacted by AFP news agency, the Israeli military said it ‘cannot discuss potential locations relating to our operations’ because it could ‘compromise the troops’.
Below is a map that shows three hospitals that officials in Hamas-run Gaza say were attacked by the IDF, with Al Quds being the southernmost facility.
Palestinian human rights groups ask ICC to investigate Israel for war crimes
Three Palestinian human rights groups said they have asked the International Criminal Court (ICC) to investigate Israel, accusing it of committing war crimes including genocide by bombing and besieging Gaza.
Reuters said Israel – which is not a member of the Hague-based court and does not recognise its jurisdiction – did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
It has previously said allegations of genocide are deplorable and that its actions target Hamas militants, not civilians.
Al Haq, Al Mezan and the Palestine Human Rights Campaign said they had asked the ICC to focus on Israeli air strikes on densely populated civilian areas in Gaza, the siege of the territory and the displacement of the population.
Thousands have moved from Gaza’s north to the south under Israeli orders, as the IDF continues with its operation to eliminate Hamas.
‘These actions amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity, including genocide and incitement to genocide,’ they said in a joint press statement.
The ICC said on Friday it had received a communication from the three groups and would assess the information, without going into detail on its contents.
IN PICTURES: Israeli tanks move in fields close to Gaza border
Gaza hospital says it received 50 bodies after strikes on school
Around 50 people were killed Friday in strikes that hit a Gaza City school, said the director of Al-Shifa hospital where the casualties had been taken.
‘About 50 martyrs were recovered from inside Al-Buraq school… in the Al-Nasr neighbourhood in Gaza after missile and artillery strikes that targeted the school this morning,’ hospital director Mohammad Abu Salmiya said.
AFP was unable to immediately verify the reported death toll.
IN PICTURES: Palestinians flee north Gaza and move south as Israeli tanks roll deeper into territory
More than two thirds of Gaza population flee homes
More than two-thirds of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million have fled their homes since the war began. On Friday, a steady stream of civilians used both sides of Gaza’s main north-south highway.
Parents walked with small children, some evacuees crammed into covered donkey carts with possessions piled on the roof, and others rode on bicycles.
Since last weekend, the Israeli military has set aside several hours a day to enable civilians to escape northern Gaza, and it announced a six-hour window Friday.
A day earlier, the White House said Israel agreed to implement a brief humanitarian pause each day – in what appeared to be an effort to formalize and expand the process. Israel has also agreed to open a second route for people fleeing, the White House said.
In all, Israel estimated more than 850,000 of the 1.1 people in northern Gaza have left, according to military spokesman Jonathan Conricus, who called the pauses ‘quick humanitarian windows’ that allow southward movement ‘while we are fighting.’
U.N. expert for the Palestinian territories Francesca Albanese called the pauses ‘cynical and cruel,’ saying it was just enough ‘to let people breathe and remember what is the sound of life without bombing, before starting bombing them again’.
IN PICTURES: Hundreds demonstrate against Israeli bombardment of Gaza in Yemen
Hamas-run health ministry claims more than 11,000 killed in Gaza
The Hamas-run Health Ministry says the number of Palestinians killed in Gaza has to 11,078, including 4,506 children and 3,027 women.
The vast majority have been killed in Israeli airstrikes that have pounded the enclave following Hamas’ assault on the enclave.
The ministry said in an online statement Friday that another 27,490 Palestinians in Gaza have been wounded.
Breaking: UN’s Palestinian refugee agency says over 100 staff killed in Gaza war
The head of the United Nations agency supporting Palestinian refugees (UNWRA) said on Friday that more than 100 of its staff had been killed in the war in Gaza.
‘Devastated. Over 100 UNRWA colleagues confirmed killed in one month. Parents, teachers, nurses, doctors, support staff,’ UNWRA head Philippe Lazzarini said on X, formerly Twitter.
WATCH: Israeli soldiers inside the Gaza Strip
Hamas fires rockets deep into Israel, setting off sirens in Tel Aviv
Sirens were sounded in Tel Aviv and surrounding areas on Friday as Hamas said it fired rockets deep into Israel in what the Palestinian militant group described as a response to mounting civilian deaths in the Gaza war.
Medics reported two women in Tel Aviv suffered shrapnel wounds from the salvo, which followed a relative lull in rocket fire as Israeli forces press a ground offensive in Gaza in the fifth week of the war.
The military said some 9,500 missiles, rockets and drones were fired at Israel from Gaza and other fronts since Oct. 7, and 2,000 of them had been shot down by air defences designed to ignore projectiles on a course to land harmlessly in open areas.
Some 12% of Gaza rockets, which are mostly locally made, had fallen short within Palestinian territory, the military said.
‘With the entry of (Israeli) forces on the ground, there has been a significant drop-off in the number of launches,’ it said.
Palestinians build new cemetery in Gaza after the death toll in the Strip since Israel-Hamas war began ‘rose above 10,000’
The screams of devastated relatives holding their loved ones, the zip of the body bag closing and then the thud of the body hitting the grave have become part of daily life for those in the Gaza Strip.
The scale and pace at which Palestinians are being killed in Israeli strikes, said to be above 10,800 according to Hamas, has meant bodies are piling up outside hospitals and on roads.
Graveyards are now so full across the Gaza Strip that Palestinians are building new cemeteries in the sand where the bloodied bags are piled on top of each other in individual graves.
In the southern city Rafah, where thousands have fled to try to avoid the Israeli airstrikes, groups of men have been digging long lines of graves, separating them with concrete blocks.
Once one line is complete, they begin lugging the bodies wrapped in white cloth from the pickup truck one by one and placing them on top of each other in the graves.
Read the full report by clicking the link below.
IN PICTURES: Palestinians dig new cemetery in Gaza
Qatar’s emir holds talks in Egypt on ending Gaza violence
The leaders of Qatar and Egypt met in Cairo on Friday, both hoping to mediate a de-escalation of violence in the Gaza Strip, the provision of humanitarian aid and the release of Israeli hostages.
The talks between Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani discussed intensified efforts to achieve a ceasefire in Gaza and the delivery of sufficient quantities of aid for its 2.3 million besieged residents, a statement from Sisi’s office said.
Qatar said ‘joint efforts to stop the aggression against Gaza, reduce escalation and bring in urgent humanitarian aid’ were discussed.
The Qatari emir’s visit comes a day after Qatar’s prime minister met the chiefs of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Israeli spy agency Mossad in Doha to discuss the parameters of a deal for a hostage release and a pause in fighting between Israel and Hamas.
UN: ‘The carnage simply must stop’
The UN has called for an end to the carnage afflicting war-torn Gaza during Israel’s military campaign, according to a top UN aid official’s comments released today.
‘The present course chosen by the Israeli authorities will not bring the peace and stability that both Israelis and Palestinians want and deserve,’ Philippe Lazzarini, head of the United Nations’ agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA), wrote in a media opinion piece.
‘Razing entire neighbourhoods to the ground is not an answer for the egregious crimes committed by Hamas.
‘To the contrary, it is creating a new generation of aggrieved Palestinians who are likely to continue the cycle of violence. The carnage simply must stop.’
German foreign minister: Israel must not lose ‘historic opportunity’ for peace with Arab states
Israel must not lose a ‘historic opportunity’ for peace with Arab states due to its war, Germany’s foreign minister has said as she embarked on a trip to the region.
Annalena Baerbock is making her third visit to the Middle East since Palestinian militant group Hamas launched its October 7 attack from the Gaza Strip, which sparked a conflict with Israel.
One of her stops will be the United Arab Emirates, which was among countries that normalised relations with Israel in 2020.
She will also visit Saudi Arabia, which had been in talks over a potential normalisation with Israel, until they were paused when the current war broke out.
In addition, Baerbock will visit Israel.
‘In this almost unresolvable turmoil, it is crucial not to lose sight of the big picture,’ she said. ‘Israel’s historic opportunity for peace with its Arab neighbours must not be lost – because that is precisely the goal of the terrorists.’
Iran warns expansion of Israel-Hamas war is ‘inevitable’
Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said Friday that expansion of the Israel-Hamas war has become “inevitable”, amid widespread concern in the region and beyond that the conflict could spread.
“Due to the increasing intensity of the war against the civilian residents of Gaza, the expansion of the scope of the war has now become inevitable”, Amir-Abdollahian said to his Qatari counterpart, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani in a phone call.
His comments were cited on the ministry’s website.
The Islamic republic, which supports Hamas financially and militarily, has hailed the militant group’s attack on Israel as a “success” but denied any involvement.
The Israeli military has surrounded Gaza ‘s biggest hospital where it claims Hamas is hiding its underground headquarters, and is closing in around it.
IDF troops are said to be about 270 yards away from the Al-Shifa hospital, where an estimated 60,000 people have taken refuge, many in a makeshift camp.
Heavy fighting has been reported in recent days around the medical facility as Israeli troops battle through the narrow streets in their operation to destroy Hamas.
Overnight, Hamas-run local authorities accused the IDF of shelling areas around hospitals in the north of the coastal strip, including Al-Shifa, as well as the Rantisi children’s hospital and the Indonesian hospital.
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Blinken says ‘far too many’ Palestinians have died and more needs to be done to save lives
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken says ‘far too many’ Palestinians have died and more needs to be done to save lives and get aid where it’s most needed.
Speaking in New Dheli Friday, Bliken said the U.S. ‘appreciates’ Israel’s steps to minimize civilian casualties but that’s not enough.
He said the U.S. has proposed additional ideas to the Israelis about how to accomplish that including longer ‘humanitarian pauses’ and expanding the amount of assistance getting into Gaza.
Blinken’s remarks come as the Israeli military pushed deeper into dense urban neighborhoods in its battle with Hamas militants.
Turkey discusses increasing daily number of aid trucks to 500 for Gaza
Turkey discussed increasing the daily number of aid trucks to at least 500 for Gaza with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken during his visit to Ankara, President Tayyip Erdogan said on Friday.
The top U.S. diplomat took a positive approach on the issue during talks with Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, Erdogan said.
Ankara will take steps to provide ambulances, food, water and medication to Gaza in cooperation with other countries, Erdogan also said as he spoke to reporters during his return flight from Uzbekistan.
Breaking: Palestinian Authority says it is ready to assume responsibilities in Gaza as part of political solution
The Palestinian Authority is ready to assume responsibilities in the Gaza Strip as part of a comprehensive political solution for the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas (seen below on Nov. 5) has said.
Blinken welcomes pauses but says more needs to be done to protect civilians
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Friday he welcomed Israel’s agreed pauses in its offensive in Gaza, but that more needed to be done.
‘I think some progress has been made,’ Blinken said, speaking in New Delhi.
‘But I was also very clear that much more needs to be done in terms of protecting civilians and getting humanitarian assistance to them.’
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UN report paints dire picture of Palestinian economy, with GDP shrinking 4 percent
A new UN report has painted a stark picture of the devastation of the collapse of the Palestinian economy after a month of war and Israel’s siege of Gaza.
The gross domestic product shrank 4 percent in the West Bank and Gaza in the war’s first month, sending over 400,000 people into poverty.
Such an economic impact has been unseen in the conflicts Syria and Ukraine, or any previous Israel-Hamas war, the UN said.
The rapid assessment of economic consequences of the Gaza war released Thursday by the UN Development Program and the UN Economic and Social Commission for West Asia was the first UN report showing the devastating impact of the conflict especially on the Palestinians.
If the war continues for a second month, the UN projects that the Palestinian GDP, which was $20.4 billion before the war began, will drop by 8.4% – a loss of $1.7 billion. And if the conflict lasts a third month, Palestinian GDP will drop by 12%, with losses of $2.5 billion and more than 660,000 people pushed into poverty, it projects.
Netanyahu casts doubt on daily pauses in fighting
The White House said on Thursday that Israel agreed to pause military operations in parts of north Gaza for four hours a day, but there was no sign of a let-up in the fighting.
The pauses, which would allow people to flee along two humanitarian corridors and could be used for the release of hostages, were significant first steps, White House national security spokesperson John Kirby said.
But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu suggested any pauses would be scattered, and there was no official confirmation of a plan for recurring breaks.
Asked if there would be a ‘stoppage’ in fighting, Netanyahu said on the Fox News Channel: ‘No. The fighting continues against the Hamas enemy, the Hamas terrorists, but in specific locations for a given period of a few hours here or a few hours there, we want to facilitate the safe passage of civilians away from the zone of fight and we’re doing that.’
UN slams four-hour daily pauses in fighting as ‘very cynical and cruel’
Francesca Albanese, the U.N. special rapporteur on the Palestinian territories, described Israel’s decision to allow a four-hour humanitarian pause each day in combat operations in northern Gaza to allow civilians to flee to the south as ‘very cynical and cruel.’
‘There has been continuous bombings, 6,000 bombs every week on the Gaza Strip, on this tiny piece of land where people are trapped and the destruction is massive. There won’t be any way back after what Israel is doing to the Gaza Strip,’ Albanese told reporters in Adelaide, Australia, on Friday.
‘So four hours cease-fire, yes, to let people breathe and to remember what is the sound of life without bombing before starting bombing them again. It’s very cynical and cruel.’
Netanyahu says he is not seeking ‘to govern Gaza’
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the war in Gaza will continue until Hamas is defeated but asserted that the country has no intention to conquer or govern the blockaded territory after the fighting ends.
Netanyahu said Israel does not ‘seek to govern Gaza’, adding ‘We don’t seek to occupy it, but we seek to give it and us a better future.’
In an interview with Fox News that aired Thursday evening, Netanyahu made clear that though Israel had no intention of occupying Gaza, it did envision a radically reshaped territory free of Hamas.
‘What we have to see is Gaza demilitarised, deradicalized and rebuilt,’ he said.
Key Updates
More than two thirds of Gaza population flee homes
Hamas-run health ministry claims more than 11,000 killed in Gaza
Hamas fires rockets deep into Israel, setting off sirens in Tel Aviv
Palestinians build new cemetery in Gaza after the death toll in the Strip since Israel-Hamas war began ‘rose above 10,000’
UN: ‘The carnage simply must stop’
Iran warns expansion of Israel-Hamas war is ‘inevitable’
Blinken says ‘far too many’ Palestinians have died and more needs to be done to save lives
UN slams four-hour daily pauses in fighting as ‘very cynical and cruel’
Netanyahu says he is not seeking ‘to govern Gaza’
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Israel-Hamas LIVE: US says ‘far too many’ Palestinians have died and more needs to be done to save lives as death toll ‘rises above 11,000’ amid Israeli strikes on Gaza