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Israel withdraws one of four military divisions from Gaza

Israeli Army

The division will return to Israel for rest and training before any decision is made as to whether it will be redeployed. The other three divisions will remain in Gaza.

Israel has announced it is wrapping up its intense phase of the fighting in the blockaded territory and will shift to a lower intensity phase in the war.

The 36th division had been deployed to northern Gaza, the area hit hardest by Israel’s military campaign in the first few months of the conflict.

Israel has launched a deadly onslaught on the Gaza Strip since Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack, killing at least 24,100 people and injuring 60,800 others, while nearly 1,200 Israelis are believed to have been killed.

The offensive has left 85% of Gaza’s population internally displaced amid acute shortages of food, clean water and medicine, while 60% of the enclave’s infrastructure was damaged or destroyed, according to the UN.

Hamas popularity boosted in Gaza and West Bank: Poll

Hamas Group

“Support for Hamas in the West Bank increased considerably by more than three times to 44 percent but increased slightly in the Gaza Strip to 42 percent. Support for Fatah [a secular political party that dominates the government of the Palestinian Authority] dropped considerably to 17 percent only (16 in the West Bank and 18 in the Gaza Strip),” according to the findings.

It also added the war has also led to a significant decline in support for the Palestinian Authority.

The poll also found that the war has also led to a significant rise in support for armed struggle in the occupied West Bank.

In mid-December, a wartime opinion poll among Palestinians showed a rise in support for Hamas, which appears to have ticked up even in the Israeli-bombarded Gaza Strip.

The survey also shows an overwhelming rejection of Western-backed President Mahmoud Abbas, with nearly 90% saying he must resign.

Israel has launched relentless air and ground attacks on the Gaza Strip since a cross-border attack by Hamas which Tel Aviv says killed 1,200 people.

At least 24,100 Palestinians have since been killed, mostly women and children, and 60,800 injured, according to Palestinian health authorities.

According to the UN, 85% of the population of Gaza is already internally displaced amid acute shortages of food, clean water, and medicine, while 60% of the enclave’s infrastructure is damaged or destroyed.

UK to “wait and see” on possible further strikes against Yemen’s Houthis: Defense secretary

Yemen Houthis

“Our intention is not to go into Yemen or anything like that, but simply to send a very clear, I hope, unambiguous message to the Iranian-backed Houthis, that their behavior in the Red Sea is completely unacceptable,” Grant Shapps said when asked by Sky News if the UK would support further strikes on Houthi targets.

“We will now watch and monitor the situation very carefully,” he added.

“Let’s wait and see what happens, because it’s not that we want to be involved in action in the Red Sea. But ultimately freedom of navigation is an international right.”

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak also gave the assessment to parliament, days after the UK participated in air strikes with the US on Houthi targets in Yemen.

“Our military strike against the Houthis was limited and proportionate and came in response to a direct threat to our ships and, therefore, to the UK itself,” Sunak said, adding that the UK had conducted 13 raids on the Houthis with no civilian casualties.

He also stated Houthi attacks on shipping in the Red Sea were “nothing to do with Israel and Gaza and target maritime navigation”.

The British government announced there was no time to have a session in parliament to debate the strikes before they were conducted and, therefore, Sunak’s comments on Monday are his first to parliament explaining why the UK participated.

In solidarity with the Palestinians in besieged territory, the Yemeni armed forces have targeted ships in the Red Sea with owners linked to Israel or those going to and from ports in the occupied territories.

In response, the US has formed a military coalition against Yemeni forces in the Red Sea and endangered maritime navigation in the strategic waterway.

The US and the UK, backed by Bahrain, Australia, Canada and the Netherlands, struck more than 60 targets at almost 30 locations in Yemen on Friday, killing five people and injuring six others.

On Saturday, the US Central Command (CENTCOM) announced that a “follow-on action” was conducted against a Yemeni radar facility in Sana’a by the Navy destroyer USS Carney using Tomahawk land attack missiles.

The assaults prompted Yemen’s Supreme Political Council to issue a statement, saying “all American-British interests have become legitimate targets”.

Netanyahu ‘unfit’ to run Gaza war: Opposition leader

Benjamin Netanyahu

“The State of Israel needs change now, and there is no possibility of waiting any longer,” Lapid wrote on X.

“This government does not know how to manage a war, and it is pushing us into a deep economic crisis that hurts every citizen’s pocket, and has landed us in The Hague,” he added.

South Africa has filed a lawsuit before the International Court of Justice accusing Israel of perpetrating genocide against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip during its deadly military offensive. It also requested provisional measures from the court to protect the Palestinian people, including by calling upon Israel to immediately halt its military attacks.

“This government is not fit to manage the war, and Netanyahu is not fit to run the country,” Lapid said.

The opposition leader stressed that his party is ready to vote in favor of an alternative government to be led by another prime minister.

Calls have grown for holding fresh elections in Israel amid criticism of Netanyahu over his failure to acknowledge responsibility for a cross-border attack by Hamas on Oct. 7.

Opinion polls conducted by Israeli media in the past few days suggested that if early elections were held now, Netanyahu would be unable to form a government, while former Defense Minister and war cabinet member Benny Gantz is considered the most likely to succeed.

Israel has launched a deadly offensive on the Gaza Strip since Oct. 7, killing at least 24,285 people and injuring 61,154 others, while nearly 1,200 Israelis are believed to have been killed.

The deadly onslaught has left 85% of Gaza’s population internally displaced amid acute shortages of food, clean water and medicine, while 60% of the enclave’s infrastructure was damaged or destroyed, according to the UN.

Authorities say at least 1 dead, 17 injured in twin attacks in central Israel

Israel Palestine

Israeli police announced two Palestinian suspects from the occupied West Bank were arrested in connection with Monday’s attacks in the city of Raanana north of Tel Aviv.

“Both suspects, Hebron residents, who entered Israel illegally, are in police custody,” the police wrote on X.

In an earlier statement, police claimed two suspects stole vehicles and ran over a number of residents in different locations.

“A wounded woman who arrived in a critical condition after having been hit by a vehicle has died of her injuries despite our efforts to save her,” said a statement from Meir Medical Center near the site of the assaults.

At least 17 other people were being treated for injuries, including two seriously, medics from the Magen David Adom emergency service added.

The Palestinian movement Hamas has praised a retaliatory operation near Tel Aviv as a “natural” response to Israel’s ongoing genocidal war against Palestinians in the besieged Gaza Strip.

“We confirm that the ‘Ra’anana’ operation, carried out by the heroes of our steadfast Palestinian people, is a natural response to the massacres of the Nazi occupation and its continuous aggression against our Palestinian people in the West Bank and Gaza,” Hamas announced.

The movement stressed that the retaliatory attacks would continue against the “Nazi” Israeli regime until the occupation was ended.

“The heroes of our people and … fighters from Rafah to Jenin will continue to defend our people, our land, and our holy sites against the criminal Nazi enemy. The blood of children and unarmed civilians shed by the Zionist war machine in the West Bank and Gaza will be a curse upon the occupation and its … settlers, who will find no safety or security on our occupied land,” Hamas said.

“We mobilize our revolutionary youth throughout the West Bank and al-Quds, calling on them to escalate the struggle and revolution until the Nazi occupation is defeated, our land and holy sites are liberated, and our Palestinian state with al-Quds as its capital is established, God willing,” it added.

The Islamic Jihad movement also hailed the “heroic operation” by the Palestinians and called it a natural response to “the crimes of the occupation against our steadfast people”.

“The Zionist enemy’s insistence on pursuing policies of oppression, terrorism, and brutal killing in the cities of the West Bank and Gaza, and targeting all its components in full view of the entire world, is a losing bet that will not undermine the steadfastness of our people, wherever they are,” it announced in a statement.

Pressure has been ramping up in Israel and across the occupied West Bank since October 7, when Hamas fighters launched an unprecedented assault into southern Israel and killed nearly 1,200 people and took about 240 captives.

The attack triggered a brutal response from Israel which vowed to root out the armed group from the Gaza Strip in a military campaign that has killed more than 24,000 people.

Since then, violence has surged across the occupied West Bank where Israeli forces have conducted near-daily raids.

This resulted in the killing of more than 300 people across the occupied Palestinian territories by Israeli forces and settlers, according to UN data.

Houthi ballistic missile strikes US-owned and operated vessel: CENTCOM

Yemen Houthis

The M/V Gibraltar Eagle, a Marshall Islands-flagged bulk carrier owned and operated by US-based Eagle Bulk, sustained minor damage and did not report any injuries, Central Command said. The ship is continuing on its way.

The military did not give a specific location for the attack, but the UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) said it received a report of the incident approximately 95 nautical miles southeast of Aden.

“Vessels are advised to transit with caution and report any suspicious activity to UKMTO,” it added.

Earlier in the day, the Houthis attempted to launch an anti-ship ballistic missile that failed in flight and crashed in Yemen, Central Command claimed.

UK-based maritime security group Ambrey has also said that a total of three missiles were launched toward the Red Sea on Monday. The group added two of the three missiles did not reach the sea and the third one impacted a US-owned and operated vessel.

“The vessel arrived in the Gulf of Aden after the industry and military advice to avoid the southern Red Sea and Bab el-Mandeb Strait,” Ambrey noted.

A statement from Eagle Bulk Shipping on Monday confirmed that the Gibraltar Eagle, which is carrying a cargo of steel products, was hit “by an unidentified projectile” roughly 100 miles offshore in the Gulf of Aden.

The Houthi movement in Yemen has announced that it will be expanding its targets to include US ships after the US and UK launched a series of air strikes on Yemeni land positions last week.

Nasruldeen Amer, a Houthi spokesperson, told Al Jazeera on Monday that Washington was “on the verge of losing its maritime security”.

Yemen’s Houthi group’s chief negotiator, Mohammed Abdulsalam, hasl also stated on Monday that attacks on Red Sea ships will continue despite US and UK air strikes on Yemen.

“Attacks to stop Israeli ships or those heading to the ports of the occupied Palestine will continue,” Abdulsalam told Reuters news agency.

In solidarity with the Palestinians in besieged territory, the Yemeni armed forces have targeted ships in the Red Sea with owners linked to Israel or those going to and from ports in the occupied territories.

In response, the US has formed a military coalition against Yemeni forces in the Red Sea and endangered maritime navigation in the strategic waterway.

The US and the UK, backed by Bahrain, Australia, Canada and the Netherlands, struck more than 60 targets at almost 30 locations in Yemen on Friday, killing five people and injuring six others.

On Saturday, the US Central Command (CENTCOM) announced that a “follow-on action” was conducted against a Yemeni radar facility in Sana’a by the Navy destroyer USS Carney using Tomahawk land attack missiles.

The assaults prompted Yemen’s Supreme Political Council to issue a statement, saying “all American-British interests have become legitimate targets”.

Red Sea tension caused by escalation in Palestine: Russia FM

Yemen Houthis

Lavrov and his Iranian counterpart Hossein Amirabdollahian exchanged views over some issues on the agenda of bilateral ties as well as regional developments including the latest situation in the Red Sea on the phone on Monday.

While calling the Tehran-Moscow ties excellent and friendly, Lavrov said the relations are strategic and Russia unconditionally respects the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Iran, most notably its sovereignty over the three Iranian islands in the Persian Gulf.

The current situation in the Red Sea is the result of the escalation in Palestine that has also caused tension in the wider region and in other countries, the Russian diplomat stressed.

Amirabdollahian, for his part, stressed the determination of both countries to expand and bolster their ties and expressed hope that Tehran and Moscow would pursue the implementation of their previous agreements with seriousness.

The foreign minister referred to the important regional developments, especially the situation in the Gaza Strip, saying the continuation of the Zionist regime’s attacks against the enclave and the US’s meddlesome acts in the Red Sea will worsen the regional instability.

He stated the US seeks to militarize the Red Sea, adding Iran has no doubts that such acts will escalation the insecurity in the region.
The top Iranian diplomat described the attacks on Yemen as a “strategic mistake” on the part of the US.

In solidarity with the Palestinians in besieged territory, the Yemeni armed forces have targeted ships in the Red Sea with owners linked to Israel or those going to and from ports in the occupied territories.

In response, the US has formed a military coalition against Yemeni forces in the Red Sea and endangered maritime navigation in the strategic waterway.

The US and the UK, backed by Bahrain, Australia, Canada and the Netherlands, struck more than 60 targets at almost 30 locations in Yemen on Friday, killing five people and injuring six others.

On Saturday, the US Central Command (CENTCOM) announced that a “follow-on action” was conducted against a Yemeni radar facility in Sana’a by the Navy destroyer USS Carney using Tomahawk land attack missiles.

The assaults prompted Yemen’s Supreme Political Council to issue a statement, saying “all American-British interests have become legitimate targets”.

Iranian FM: Yemenis will keep hitting Israeli ships unless war on Gaza stops 

Hossein Amirabdollahian and Subrahmanyam Jaishankar

Speaking to journalists during a press briefing with his Indian counterpart in Tehran on Monday, Amirabdollahian however said Iran supports security of shipping at open seas and this is what the National Salvation government of Yemen also emphasizes.

He noted that a Yemeni official gave assurances two weeks ago in Tehran that the Yemenis would not threaten naval security.

Referring to the Israeli war on Gaza, Amirabdollahian added that Iran has always underlined the necessity of avoiding spillage of the war.

He also spoke about his meeting with the Indian foreign minister. Amirabdolalhain said the two top diplomats discussed a broad range of issues including bilateral and multilateral cooperation like economic ties, strategic relations, the expansion of Chabahar Port in southern  Iran, and the north-south transit route.

He stressed that the presidents of Iran and India reached some agreements in their latest meeting on the sidelines of the BRICS summit and “they underscored their determination to expand scientific, industrial, economic, tourism and technological relations” between Tehran and New Delhi.

Amirabdollahian also said he and his Indian counterpart also held talks over ways of removing the obstacles to implementation of some of the previous agreements between Iran and India.

Gaza death toll from Israeli attacks tops 24,000

Gaza War

“The Israeli occupation (forces) committed 12 massacres against families in the Gaza Strip, resulting in 132 casualties and 252 injuries over the past 24 hours,” the ministry said in a statement.

According to the United Nations, 85% of the population of Gaza is already internally displaced amid acute shortages of food, clean water and medicine, while 60% of the enclave’s infrastructure is damaged or destroyed.

Three major UN agencies involved in relief works in Gaza on Monday called for faster and safer aid access to the besieged enclave via more supply routes.

In a joint statement, UNICEF, the World Food Program (WFP) and the World Health Organization (WHO) said: “As the risk of famine grows, and more people are exposed to deadly disease outbreaks, a fundamental step change in the flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza is urgently needed.”

The agencies warned that the shortage of food, clean water, and medical assistance is particularly “severe” in the northern areas and noted the UN, international aid agencies and non-governmental organizations have so far managed to deliver limited humanitarian assistance.

“People in Gaza risk dying of hunger just miles from trucks filled with food,” said WFP Executive Director Cindy McCain.

“Every hour lost puts countless lives at risk. We can keep famine at bay but only if we can deliver sufficient supplies and have safe access to everyone in need, wherever they are,” McCain added.

The UN agencies also reiterated the call for a humanitarian cease-fire “to enable this vitally important roll-out of a massive, multi-agency humanitarian operation.”

Israeli soccer player briefly detained in Turkey after supporting Israel war on Gaza

Sagiv Jehezkel

Sagiv Jehezkel, who plays for Turkish club Antalyaspor, was detained for “instigating the public to hatred and hostility”, TRT Haber reported. He is being held by police in Antalya.

He was suspended by Antalyaspor after showing his bandaged wrist that had a message supporting Israeli hostages, the Turkish football club announced on Sunday.

Jehezel’s bandaged wrist read “100 days, 7/10″, referring to the time since Hamas took more than 200 Israelis hostages.

A hostage release deal agreed between Israel and Hamas in late November ended after six days, with more than 100 freed.

The Turkish justice minister announced on X that the Antalya chief prosecutor’s office launched an investigation against the 28-year-old player. The prosecutor’s office will ultimately decide if he is formally arrested, or if he will be released.

According to CNN Turk, Jehezel stated, “I did not act to provoke anybody. I want the war to end. This is why I showed that sign”, according to a leaked Turkish police report widely reported across Turkish media.

Hours later, Turkish state media agency Anadolu reported that the Israeli player has been released from police detention after being questioned by the local prosecutor’s office.

The prosecutor’s office said its procedures have been completed, but there’s no indication that the investigation into the player has been dropped.

Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz stated the player’s release came after Israeli political and consular activity with Turkish officials.

“Turkey has become a dark dictatorship, working against humane values and sports values. Whoever arrests a football player for an act of identification with 136 abductees who have been in the hands of terrorists of a murderous terrorist organization for over 100 days, represents a culture of murder and hatred,” Katz said in a statement, calling on international sports bodies to “act against” Turkey.

“Today it’s Sagiv Jehezkel, tomorrow it’s another athlete,” Katz added.