Monday, December 29, 2025
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Iran says not involved in seizure of Israeli ship off Yemen coast

Nasser Kanaani

Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Nasser Kanaani on Monday rejected the Israeli prime minister accusation that Iran assisted the Yemeni resistance movement as “invalid”.

“We have said several times that resistance groups in the region act independently and spontaneously based on their own interests and for their people’s benefit,” he said.

The spokesman added the Israeli regime levels such accusations against Iran because it “cannot accept that it suffered a major defeat in Palestine and wants to find a justification for the defeat it suffered.”

Addressing the United States as the main supporter of the Israeli regime in its continued carnage in Gaza, Kanaani said the response by the resistance factions in the region will stop only in case the Israeli massacre of the Palestinians in Gaza stops and aid supplies are delivered to the blockaded territories.

The spokesman said the humanitarian aid delivered to the coastal strip has so far been meager, which has failed to meet the dire need of the 2.3 million people locked up in the enclave.

He noted that Iran’s humanitarian supplies have so far been not given the clearance to be delivered to the region.

Heavy rains flood several provinces in Iran

Iran Flood

The Iranian Meteorological Organization issued a red level alert of rainfall for seven provinces in the south and west of the country.

It also reported extensive flooding, rivers bursting their banks, blocking of rural roads and destruction of facilities due to heavy downpour.

In southwestern Khuzestan Province, schools in the morning shift held online classes as the streets were hit by severe flooding, disrupting normal life.

In the western province of Ilam, bordering Iraq, the flights at the airports were cancelled on Monday because of poor visibility. Many vehicles in the provincial capital, Ilam, were flooded.

Due to the arid nature of the land in Iran, precipitations are prone to leading floods in the country.

Time running short for US military aid to Ukraine: Report

Russia Ukraine War

Last week, US lawmakers in both chambers approved a bipartisan stopgap spending bill to allow the government to operate through early 2024. The legislation deliberately avoided any political hot-button issues in order to secure votes from both Democrats and the GOP. Nevertheless, the more conservative wing of the House Republicans opposed it for not including budget cuts.

The upcoming debate will be over a proposal to bundle together aid for Ukraine, Israel, America’s Asia-Pacific allies, humanitarian aid for Palestinian civilians, as well as funding for securing the US southern border. Originating as a $105 billion package floated by the White House last month, the idea is to get Republicans behind sending more money to Kiev by offering them a concession on immigration control.

The Republican-controlled House has already passed a bill for Israel aid as a standalone initiative, but the legislation is widely considered dead on arrival in the Democrat-held Senate, because it includes provisions which cut Internal Revenue Service (IRS) funding, a no-go for the party.

The short window between Thanksgiving and Christmas will be crucial for negotiating a supplementary spending bill, four Senate sources directly involved in the process told NBC News. If the House goes against it and stalls until after the New Year, the chance that it will make it over the finish line “reduces dramatically”, the outlet added.

Mike Johnson, the new House speaker, indicated earlier this month that he supported tying Ukraine to border security, but not to Israel. His ally, Republican Sen. Rick Scott, has suggested that the politician preempt the Senate with his own bill, in which benchmarks would be attached to Ukraine spending. That would make it “awfully difficult for senators to vote against it”, he said.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries told reporters last week that “nothing that will happen in the House of Representatives in a partisan fashion … has any shot of becoming law”.

Johnson’s predecessor, Kevin McCarthy, was ousted by his own party in September, after opponents of continued Ukraine assistance accused him of striking a secret deal with the White House to ensure that the flow of funds would ultimately not be interrupted.

Critics say aid to Kiev lacks transparency and should not be a priority for the American people. Ukraine, a nation which Transparency International ranks alongside Zambia and Angola in terms of corruption, has been rocked by several scandals recently. They include the Defense Ministry’s purchase of overpriced supplies for the troops.

Sources say negotiators nearing a deal for initial release of dozens of Hamas-held hostages

An agreement has yet to be struck, and the text of a deal has been traded back and forth for weeks. But negotiators hailing from various countries, including senior officials in US President Joe Biden’s administration, are expressing rare optimism about the progress.

While the talks could still break down and sticking points remain, an agreement may now be days away, sources say.

In a sign of how tenuous the talks have been, two sources told CNN Hamas has at least once abruptly put the negotiations on hold recently over various objections, one of which is Israel’s raid of Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza. But the discussions eventually picked back up.

There are still details to be worked out over aid, with Israel expressing concern that aid could go to help Hamas, rather than civilians. Hamas initially requested 500 trucks of aid per day, one of the sources stated. One source added that, while discussions are ongoing, a deal involving more than 200 trucks would be logistically challenging.

There are also questions about how to inspect the trucks and which points of entry to use. The aid would include fuel and cooking oil for bakeries, and continue to flow in after the initial pauses for hostages.

The most recent discussions involve plans for staggered releases of the hostages, with pauses potentially increasing after an initial release of a significant number of civilians, according to the sources.

Israel has presented a list of about 100 names of civilian hostages that it wants included in the agreement, one source told CNN. Israel has publicly demanded that all hostages be released.

Hamas has indicated it would be willing to release 50 hostages over a multi-day pause. More hostages, around 20 to 25, could be released after that, as the pauses are extended.

Hamas has announced it needs pauses in fighting to gather the hostages who are being held in different places and by different Hamas-allied groups in Gaza.

Al Mayadeen reported Sunday citing its source, the Israeli authorities delay the implementation of the ceasefire agreement with the Hamas movement.

“There have been no changes to the final version [of the ceasefire agreement], but it is the Israelis that delay its implementation,” the source stated.

According to the source, the negotiations between the sides of the conflict “have been stalling for over a week already”.

Iran FM to Lavrov: US intensifying Israel’s war on Gaza

In a phone conversation on Sunday, Amirabdollahian and Lavrov discussed the latest developments in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.

“The US claims it seeks to stop [Israel’s] war but it is adding to the intensity and scope of the American-Zionist war in practice,” the top Iranian diplomat said.

The Iranian minister added the massacre of thousands of civilians, including women and children, and the killing of dozens of prisoners in Gaza were the result of Israel’s “blind” bombings and the continuation of the regime’s attacks.

Amirabdollahian stressed the importance of preventing ethnic cleansing and the forced displacement of people in Gaza and the West Bank.

He called on Russia to play a more active role in improving peace and security in the region.

The Iranian foreign minister emphasized that the resistance front will undoubtedly determine the final outcome.

The Russian foreign minister, for his part, expressed regret over Israel’s opposition to stop its atrocities in Gaza. Lavrov urged the continuation of consultations to put an end to the war and release prisoners.

Since October 7, Israel has killed over 13,000 Palestinians, including more than 5,500 children and 3,500 women. 30,000 Palestinians have also been injured.

The regime was caught off-guard on that October day by the surprise Operation Al-Aqsa Storm launched by the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas against the occupying entity.Gaza

Hamas: Gaza death toll surges past 13,000

Gaza War

Over 13,000 residents of the Gaza Strip have been killed as a result of hostilities since October 7 when the Palestinian-Israeli conflict escalated, the enclave’s government said in a statement posted on its Facebook account.

“The number of those killed has exceeded 13,000, of whom 5,500 are children and 3,500 are women,” it added.

“The number of victims among medical personnel – doctors, nurses, and paramedics – has reached 201, among civil defense representatives – 22, and among journalists – 60.”

Apart from that, more than 30,000 people have been wounded. Women and children account for 75% More than 6,000 are reported missing.

The United Nations humanitarian office (OCHA) released a brief report on Sunday, stating the current humanitarian situation on the ground in Gaza.

OCHA said that at least 45 percent of all housing units in Gaza have been destroyed or damaged. The same can be said for 300 educational facilities, and at least 135 medical facilities have been attacked.

OCHA added that it could not independently verify the data, and that it was relying on the Palestinian Ministry of Health and Israel’s government.

Almost half of Israel’s spy balloons inoperable during Hamas attack: Report

The inoperable spy balloons made Israel’s defense line along the Gaza border vulnerable. The failure to operate the aerostats may be attributed to insufficient funding.

The aerostats, equipped with a payload of cameras, sensors and spyware, have long been a key part of Israel’s early warning system, and had they functioned properly, the outcome of the Hamas attack might have been different, the newspaper reported.

On October 7, Palestinian group Hamas launched a surprise large-scale missile attack against Israel from the Gaza Strip and breached the border, killing and abducting people in neighboring Israeli communities. Israel launched retaliatory strikes and ordered a complete blockade of the Gaza Strip, cutting off supplies of water, food, and fuel.

On October 27, Israel launched a large-scale ground incursion into the Gaza Strip with the declared goal of eliminating Hamas fighters and rescuing the hostages.

The conflict has resulted in the deaths of around 1,200 people in Israel and over 12,300 in the Gaza Strip.

US to clamp down on Israeli settler violence: Report

Israeli settler

A Cabinet memo was read out to the outlet by a senior US official. It had been sent to top Biden administration officials, including Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, directing their departments “to develop policy options for expeditious action against those responsible for the conduct of violence in the West Bank”. A list of possible restrictions is said to include visa bans.

The US may impose restrictions specifically on persons who “have directly or indirectly engaged in actions or policies that threaten the security or stability of the West Bank”, and who have taken part in intimidating or displacing civilians there, the document reportedly says. Other grounds for sanctions could allegedly include human-rights violations and actions that “significantly obstruct, disrupt or prevent efforts to achieve a two-state solution”.

The alleged order comes as an op-ed written by Biden for the Washington Post saw the president reaffirm his commitment to the two-state solution, which lays the groundwork for a peaceful coexistence of the two entities.

While refraining from calling for a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, Biden wrote that he was opposed to any forcible displacement of Palestinians from the enclave, and to its reoccupation or blockading by Israeli forces. He also noted that he’d told West Jerusalem that “extremist violence against Palestinians in the West Bank must stop”.

To punish those engaged in those activities, Washington is ready “to take [its] own steps, including issuing visa bans against extremists attacking civilians in the West Bank”, he added.

Israel started establishing settlements in the Palestinian territories after the 1967 Six-Day War, when it seized parts of the West Bank, Gaza, East Jerusalem, and the Golan Heights. The settlements are considered illegal by much of the international community, with some outposts even considered unlawful by Israel itself. According to UN data, as of March 2023, there were some 700,000 settlers living in 279 settlements across the West Bank and East Jerusalem, with the number soaring in previous years.

Tensions between settlers and Palestinians have led to recurring violence. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has recorded an average of seven settler-related incidents a day since the October 7 Hamas attack.

Israel-Palestine conflict LIVE: Israeli tanks besiege Gaza’s Indonesian Hospital

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Presidents of China, France discuss situation in Gaza

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12 killed in Israeli air raid on UNRWA school in Bureij refugee camp

Israeli air strikes have killed at least 12 Palestinians sheltering in a UNRWA school in the Bureij refugee camp.

Hisham Zaqout, a journalist for Al Jazeera Arabic, stated that many more people have been wounded.

Many of the families were looking for food or resting when the air strike hit.


Israel bombs al-Kuwait school in north Gaza

Israeli forces have bombed the al-Kuwait school in north Gaza where hundreds of Palestinians were sheltering, according to the general manager of the Ministry of Health and local media.

The school is located in close proximity to the Indonesian Hospital which is currently surrounded by Israeli tanks.

Photos and videos shared online showed the school engulfed in flames.

There are no reports on the death toll or number of wounded people yet.


17 killed in fresh Israeli airstrikes near hospital in Gaza

At least 17 Palestinians were killed and scores injured in Israeli airstrikes near the Yousef El-Najar Hospital in the southern Gaza Strip on Monday, according to witnesses.

Fighter jets struck two houses near the hospital in Rafah city, witnesses said.

Dozens of people were reported to remain under the rubble, they added.

“Israeli warplanes struck the houses before dawn, causing massive destruction in the area,” an eyewitness told Anadolu.

On Monday, at least 12 people were killed in Israeli shelling of the Indonesian Hospital in the northern Gaza Strip, according to the Health Ministry in the enclave.


Diplomats from Muslim majority nations arrive in Beijing for Israel-Hamas conflict talks

China welcomed officials from Arab and Muslim majority countries on Monday for talks on “de-escalating” the Israel-Hamas conflict as Beijing steps-up its efforts to play a role in establishing a ceasefire.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi met counterparts from Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt, the Palestinian National Authority, Indonesia, as well as the head of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation in the capital Monday.

Beijing described the visit as an opportunity for “in-depth communication and coordination” on de-escalating the “current Palestinian-Israeli conflict”, protecting civilians, and “justly resolving” the Palestinian issue.

Beijing and Washington – an Israeli ally and long a major power broker in the region – have been at odds over their approach to the conflict. In particular, Beijing has criticized Israel’s retaliation and failed to condemn Hamas or name the group in its statements, sparking backlash from Israeli officials.


‘Everything is a target in the Indonesian Hospital’

Anas Al-Sharif, a journalist in Gaza’s Indonesian Hospital, told Al Jazeera Arabic on Monday that “everything is a target,” as Israeli forces continue to open fire inside the hospital’s buildings.

He said that the hospital is now fully out of service.

  • People are unable to move inside the hospital, especially between wards or to go to different floors.
  • Anyone who moves is being shot at, “live fire has not stopped since Sunday night,” he said.
  • There are a “large number” of wounded people inside the hospital.
  • There is no electricity in the hospital.
  • Tanks are still surrounding the hospital’s buildings.
  • There are hundreds of wounded patients, staff and displaced Palestinians inside the hospitals, who are unable to leave.

Heavy rainfall is creating “unliveable” conditions in Gaza’s shelters: UN

The UN’s main aid agency in Gaza says heavy rain has been falling in the region on Monday, causing “unliveable” conditions in shelters.

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) posted a video on X showing crowds in Gaza stepping through puddles of rain.

“Heavy rain is falling across the Gaza Strip. The situation in shelters is unliveable. People have no options,” the agency said in the post.

Sewage is also flowing through the streets of Gaza, according to a top UNRWA official.

Director of UNRWA Affairs Thomas White said in a post on X that there is only enough fuel to run sewage pumps at 55% capacity.

UNRWA has persistently highlighted the impact of Israel’s fuel restrictions in Gaza on key services, including sewage systems.

Last week, Israel approved the entry of two fuel tanks into Gaza each day, sparking condemnation from UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini, who described the quantity as “far from enough.”


Situation in Indonesian hospital ‘catastrophic’

Mohammad Zakkout, the general director of hospitals in Gaza, stated that the situation in Gaza’s Indonesian Hospital is “catastrophic” on Monday morning.

“What is happening here is worse than what happened in al-Shifa Hospital, because this is a much smaller hospital. It will be a bigger massacre here. What is happening is a death sentence to everyone in the hospital,” he said.

  • At least 12 people have been killed by Israeli forces
  • There are at least 700 patients and staff inside the hospital, in addition to displaced Palestinians sheltering.
  • Footage showed the destruction from Israeli attacks inside the hospitals, including collapsed ceilings.
  • Anyone trying to leave the hospital is being shot at.
  • There is no electricity in the hospital, and it is being surrounded by Israeli tanks.
  • Some patients inside the hospital are in critical condition, including women who need c-sections and dialysis patients. Children are getting fevers and high temperatures, which is being worsened due to the lack of water.

Israeli army says 2 more soldiers killed in Gaza fighting

The Israeli army announced Monday two more soldiers were killed in clashes in the northern Gaza Strip.

A military statement said that the two soldiers served in the 890 Paratrooper Battalion.

On Sunday, the army confirmed that five Israeli soldiers were killed in fighting in the blockaded Palestinian territory.

There are conflicting reports about the total number of Israeli soldiers killed in the Gaza Strip.

According to Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper, 65 Israeli soldiers have been killed in Gaza since the army expanded its ground operations in the enclave on Oct. 27.

On Saturday, army spokesman Daniel Hagari put the military death toll since the outbreak of the Gaza conflict on Oct. 7 at 378.


Four more killed in Israeli attacks on Indonesian Hospital

The death toll from Israeli attacks on Indonesian Hospital in Gaza has gone up from eight to 12, according to Health Ministry officials in the enclave.

The update comes as Israeli tanks continue to surround the hospital.


Over 30 bodies arrive at al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in central Gaza Strip

The bodies of more than 30 Palestinians killed by Israeli bombings in the Nuseirat and Bureij refugee camps have arrived at the al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in the central Gaza Strip on Monday morning, according to multiple Palestinian news outlets.

Gaza has been facing intense bombardment in the early hours of Monday, with dozens reported dead across the besieged enclave.


Power outage at Indonesia Hospital as Israeli forces surround medical facility

Palestinian news outlets have reported that the power has gone out at the Indonesian Hospital amid the ongoing Israeli bombardment.

Reports said that Israeli forces are surrounding the hospital, raising fears that the medical facility will face the same fate as al-Shifa Hospital.

Journalists on the ground have also reported that Israeli troops are shooting anyone that tries to leave the hospital.

At least eight people have been killed at Indonesia Hospital, as Israeli soldiers have been bombing on and around the hospital and have also been surrounding the medical facility, reports added.

Aside from the estimated 150 wounded patients being treated at the hospital and about 100 medical workers, thousands of Palestinians are also sheltering at the hospital after being displaced by Israeli bombardments.

Several days ago, Israeli forces launched a military operation on al-Shifa, the largest medical complex in Gaza, forcibly evacuating the hospital while claiming that there were Hamas tunnels underneath the hospital.


‘Misleading and false’: Hamas rejects Israel’s video claims

Hamas has responded after Israel released a CCTV video it claimed to show two captives being brought to al-Shifa Hospital on October 7.

“The statements of the occupation army regarding the use of al-Shifa Hospital to detain Zionist prisoners are misleading and false,” the group said in a statement.

“The occupation’s statements aim to cover up its security and military failures,” it added.

In an earlier briefing, Israeli military spokesman Daniel Hagari stated Hamas attackers brought a Nepalese and a Thai national into the medical facility. They were among the foreign workers seized in the raid. He did not name the two hostages.


Only few trucks of aid can reach families in Gaza amid shortage of fuel: WFP official

A World Food Program (WFP) official said on Sunday that only a limited number of aid trucks are able to deliver aid and food supplies to those in need in the Gaza Strip due to shortage of fuel and extreme weather conditions.

“With the limited fuel now available, a few trucks can deliver essential food to people in Gaza who have been cut off for days,” Samer Abdeljaber, the WFP’s country director for Palestine, wrote on X.

“Our team is on the ground overseeing the move. Today’s horrible weather is making it harder and is expected to worsen as winter approaches.”


‘Pure lie’: Gaza’s top health official refutes Israeli tunnel claim

Mounir el-Boursh, the Gaza health ministry director, dismissed the Israeli statement on a tunnel allegedly found at al-Shifa Hospital as a “pure lie”.

“They have been at the hospital for eight days … and yet they haven’t found anything,” he told Al Jazeera.

At one point a shelter for tens of thousands of Palestinian war refugees, al-Shifa has been evacuating patients and staff since Israeli troops swept in last week on what they called a mission to root out hidden Hamas facilities.

Israel’s repeated attacks on medical facilities, health personnel and ambulances in Gaza should be “investigated as war crimes”, international NGO Human Rights Watch has announced.


White House warns Israel to account for displaced civilians before conducting operations in southern Gaza

The White House has warned Israel against carrying out offensive operations in southern Gaza until it has adjusted to account for the hundreds of thousands of civilians who have fled south amid fierce fighting in the north.

Israel’s military, which has said Hamas leadership also fled south, is likely to move into the southern enclave, according to White House deputy national security adviser Jon Finer, who added that the country has the “right” to do so, despite the serious concerns over civilian casualties.

“We think that their operations should not go forward until those people, those additional civilians, have been accounted for,” he said, adding, “We will be conveying that directly to them.”

Finer told CBS’ “Face the Nation” that Israel should learn from its operations in the north and focus on “greater and enhanced protections for civilian life”.

Finer suggested “narrowing the area of active combat” and “clarifying where civilians can seek refuge from the fighting” to help that happen.

Finer said the Palestinian Authority, which has partial administrative control of the West Bank, will “have to be part” of any future governing solution in both the West Bank and Gaza following the current hostilities — a prospect that Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has explicitly opposed.

“Our view is the Palestinian Authority is the only official institutional representative of the Palestinian people in the West Bank, that it will have to be part of any way forward when it comes to governance both in Gaza and the West Bank,” Finer added.

But, Finer acknowledged, the PA faces legitimacy challenges as they work toward any future solution. He said the US government would help the PA enhance “their legitimacy” and “capacity to be able to play this important role”.


‘Nowhere to go’: UN human rights expert decries attacks on shelters

Francesca Albanese, the United Nations special rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territories, has said that attacks on UN shelters in Gaza are “painful to see”.

She stated the attacks were “especially” concerning “as they shelter mostly women and children who are left with nowhere to go”.

The UN independent human rights expert added that governments “must call for ceasefire now and ensure its respect”.

Many people were killed in Israeli attacks on two UN-run schools where thousands of people were sheltering on Saturday.


2 more Israeli soldiers killed in Gaza battles

The Israeli army announced on Sunday that two more of its soldiers were killed and another four injured with serious wounds during ground battles in the Gaza Strip.

The two personnel were aged 23 and 21, serving in the elite Givati Brigade.

With the announcement, the number of Israeli troops killed in Gaza on Sunday reached five.

Earlier, Al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of Palestinian group Hamas, said it killed a “large number” of Israeli soldiers in the southeast of Gaza City.


Israel accelerating Palestinian displacement: Hamas

Osama Hamdan, the Beirut-based Hamas representative, accused Israel of carrying out “atrocities with the aim of accelerating Palestinian displacement”.

In a news conference in the Lebanese capital, Hamdan stated President Joe Biden and his administration should withdraw their support for Israel’s war on Gaza.

He reiterated the group’s call for the opening of the Rafah crossing for desperately needed aid and humanitarian corridors, and said the UN should try Israeli “war criminals”.


UNRWA official says ‘started receiving half of fuel needed in Gaza’

The United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees UNRWA has announced it has begun receiving half of the fuel it needs to run its daily operations in the Gaza Strip, which will allow it to operate at a minimum level.

Spokesperson Adnan Abu Hasna said in a statement that Gaza continues to face a humanitarian crisis due to Israeli attacks on the territory since Oct. 7.

“Finally, the agency has been allowed to obtain 60,000 liters of fuel daily. This quantity represents half of our needs to meet the minimum requirements of our operations,” he stated.

“These quantities will be distributed to water desalination stations, to generate power for hospitals, bakeries, and to handle sewage water, as well as the collection of solid waste,” the spokesperson continued.

He added “many streets in the Gaza Strip are flooded with sewage water due to insufficient fuel to pump the water, and residents will only receive two-thirds of their drinking water needs.”

About 70% of solid waste in the enclave will not be collected “due to the lack of the necessary fuel to carry out our tasks,” he said.


59 Palestinian journalists killed in Israel’s war on Gaza so far: Advocacy group

As many as 59 Palestinian journalists have been killed and dozens injured during the Israeli regime’s ongoing war on the Gaza Strip, an independent human rights advocacy group has confirmed.

Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor provided the information in a press statement released through Palestinian media on Sunday.

According to the statement, the fatalities equaled “the highest-ever number of journalists killed in wars and conflicts in modern history”.

The group attributed Israel’s brutality towards journalists to its efforts to impose “a real and comprehensive media blackout” during the war.

The killing spree targeting journalists, Euro-Med Monitor added, came amid unfounded allegations by some Israeli officials that Palestinian press crews had prior knowledge of the October 7 operation.

According to the group, “Israel purposefully [has] left no safe haven for journalists in the Gaza Strip. Journalists were targeted even when they were wearing press jackets in the field, in press tents erected for media coverage next to hospitals, or even in their family homes.”

According to Euro-Med Monitor, the Israeli war has led to complete or partial destruction of at least 117 press offices.

The regime has also restricted satellite channels operating in the Palestinian territories during the war, including Lebanon’s al-Mayadeen television network, and has threatened to restrict Qatar’s Al Jazeera network.

The advocacy body added that it has “received identical testimonies from [Palestinian] journalists expressing their fear that the media equipment they received from international organizations via Israel may include location-tracking and eavesdropping devices, which may have facilitated their targeting during the war.”

Euro-Med Monitor asserted that targeting journalists is considered a war crime under international humanitarian law.


Macron to Netanyahu: ‘Too many civilian losses’

French President Emmanuel Macron told Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu there were “too many civilian losses” in Israel’s war in Gaza.

Macron reminded Netanyahu of the “absolute necessity to distinguish terrorists from the population”, according to the French presidency.

He also condemned violence against Palestinian civilians in the occupied West Bank in a conversation with Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas.


UN chief says number of casualties in Gaza is ‘staggering and unacceptable’

United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres has described the number of civilian casualties in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict as “staggering and unacceptable”.

“This war is having a staggering and unacceptable number of civilian casualties, including women and children, every day. This must stop,” he said in a statement posted on the UN website on Sunday.

“I reiterate my call for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire.”

“I am deeply shocked that two UNRWA (United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East) schools were struck in less than 24 hours in Gaza. Dozens of people – many women and children – were killed and injured as they were seeking safety in United Nations premises,” he stressed.

He also expressed “deep appreciation for all the mediation efforts led by the government of Qatar.”


“How many more civilians will be killed? This must stop”: UN’s top human rights official

The killing of civilians in Gaza schools and large evacuations from Al-Shifa Hospital are actions that fly in the face of basic protections civilians are afforded under international law, the United Nation’s top human rights official stated Sunday.

“Rules of international humanitarian law, including the principles of distinction, proportionality and precautions in carrying out the attacks must be strictly adhered to,” UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk said.

“Failure to adhere to these rules may constitute war crimes,” he said.

Türk called the events of the past two days horrendous, stating they beggar belief.

He added hundreds of people have fled Al-Shifa Hospital and were seen heading south, but warned, “Nowhere is safe in Gaza.”

He also said that in Khan Younis in southern Gaza — where hundreds of thousands of Gazans have fled — the IDF has been dropping leaflets, telling residents to go to unspecified shelters, but he stressed, “Irrespective of warnings, Israel is obliged to protect civilians wherever they are.”

Türk again called for an immediate ceasefire on humanitarian and human rights grounds.

“The pain, dread, and fear etched on the faces of children, women and men is too much to bear,” he continued, adding, “How much more violence, bloodshed and misery will it take before people come to their senses? How many more civilians will be killed? This must stop.”


Hostage negotiations “closer than we have been perhaps at any point”: White House

Negotiations to secure the release of hostages held by Hamas are close, and disagreements among parties have been narrowed amid intensive talks, deputy national security adviser Jon Finer said on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday.

“We think that we are closer than we have been perhaps at any point since these negotiations began weeks ago — that there are areas of difference and disagreement that have been narrowed, if not closed out entirely,” Finer told CNN’s Jake Tapper, stressing that these are sensitive negotiations and there is no deal currently in place.

Finer declined to dive into the details of the talks, but said officials are working around the clock and that it remains a priority for US President Joe Biden.

Asked about how many hostages the US believes are still alive, Finer responded that they do not have exact numbers.

“One of the challenges associated with this is, we’re not on the ground in Gaza, the United States. We are not in direct contact with Hamas. We do that only through intermediaries. And so, we don’t have perfect fidelity about exact numbers of hostages, including numbers who are still alive,” Finer continued.

“We do believe that there is a significant number of Americans being held, that those Americans are our highest priority, the president’s highest priority. They include, by the way, a 3-year-old girl who is an orphan because her parents were murdered by Hamas on October 7,” he added, referencing the youngest American hostage known to be held in Gaza.

Finer’s comments came soon after Qatar’s prime minister — whose country is involved in the talks — also touted progress.

“The sticking points honestly at this stage are more practical, logistical, not really something that represents the core of the deal,” Sheikh Mohammed Bin Abdulrahman al-Thani said.

Hamas abducted about 240 people during the October 7 attacks, according to Israeli officials, though official accounts have varied as intelligence about the situation in Gaza develops.

Yemen says seized Israeli ship in Red Sea

Al-Mayadeen television news network reported on Sunday that the Yemeni naval forces “succeeded in detaining an Israeli ship in the depths of the Red Sea.”

Fifty-two people who were on board the ship were arrested, the report said.

The news network added the ship’s crew and those on board are currently under investigation and their nationalities are being verified by the relevant Yemeni agencies.

Israeli media confirmed the regime’s ownership of the confiscated ship. The vessel goes by the name of ‘Galaxy Leader’. The media said its entire crew members had been detained by Yemen’s naval forces in the south of the Red Sea.

Yemen’s official Saba Net news agency cited Brigadier General Yahya Saree, the spokesman for the Yemeni Armed Forces, as saying in a video statement that the Yemeni armed forces had carried out a military operation in the Red Sea, the results of which was the seizure of the Galaxy Leader and the detention of its crew members.

Saree stressed that the operation was carried out on the directives of the Ansarullah chief and in response to the demands of the great Yemeni people and based on “religious, humanitarian and moral responsibility towards the oppressed Palestinian people and the unjust siege they are subjected to.”

“With the continuation of the horrific and heinous massacres by the Israeli enemy, the naval forces of the Yemeni armed forces, with the help of God Almighty, carried out a military operation in the Red Sea, the results of which were the seizure of an Israeli ship and taking it to the Yemeni coast,” the statement said.

“The Yemeni armed forces deal with the ship’s crew in accordance with the teachings and values of the Islamic religion.”

Saree renewed the warnings of Yemen’s Armed Forces that, “All ships belonging to the Israeli enemy or dealing with it will become a legitimate target.”

The spokesman for the Yemeni Armed Forces called on all countries, whose nationals work in the Red Sea, to refrain from any work or activity with Israeli ships or ships owned by the occupying regime.

The Yemeni Armed Forces affirmed their “continuation of carrying out military operations against the Israeli enemy until the aggression against the Gaza Strip stops, and the heinous crimes continuing until this moment against our Palestinian brothers in Gaza and the West Bank stop,” the statement read.

It added the Zionist entity is the one threatening the security and stability of the region and international corridors, and that the international community, if it is keen on the security and stability of the region and not expanding the conflict, must stop the Israeli onslaught on Gaza.

The statement also noted the operations of Yemen’s Armed Forces only threaten the ships of the Israeli regime and those owned by Israelis.