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Food shortages affecting every single person in Gaza: WFP

Gaza War

“Before 7 October, 33% of the population were food insecure,” Kyung-nan Park, the director of emergencies for the UN agency, told Reuters.

“We can safely say that 100% are food insecure at this moment.”

She cited the lack of fuel and supplies to explain why only one of the 23 bakeries contracted by the agency is still functioning.

“Right now we are entering 40 to 50 trucks,” Kyung-nanstated.

“For just WFP food assistance, we would need 100 trucks a day to be able to provide any meaningful humanitarian food to the people in Gaza.”

She continued: “There are stories of people going there, being in line for 10 days and leaving empty handed … It’s quite serious.”

At least 11,000 Palestinians, including more than 4,500 children and over 3,000 women, have been killed since then.

Besides the large number of casualties and massive displacements, basic supplies are running low for Gaza’s 2.3 million residents due to the Israeli siege.

Israel-Palestine conflict LIVE: Health ministry says Gaza’s largest hospital suspended operations

Gaza War
Smoke rises over Gaza, as seen from Southern Israel, on November 10.

Israeli forces shoot at people fleeing Al Shifa hospital: MSF

Doctors Without Borders confirmed reports that people are being shot at as they try to exit the al-Shifa Hospital.

“At the time of writing, our staff are witnessing people being shot at as they attempt to flee the Al-Shifa hospital,” it wrote on X.


Israeli tanks ‘meters away’ from Al Quds hospital: Palestinian Red Crescent

The Palestinian Red Crescent sent out an emergency call out and said Israeli tanks are less than 20 metres away from the Al Quds hospital in Gaza.

Writing on X, formerly known as Twitter, the PRCS announced the Al Quds hospital, which has been attacked by Israeli forces, is hosting 14,000 displace people.

“Direct shooting at the hospital, creating a state of extreme panic and fear among 14,000 displaced people,” added the PRCS.


Qatar’s emir condemns silence on Gaza

Abbas calls on the US to stop ‘Israeli aggression’ against Gaza

The President of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas, used his speech at the extraordinary summit of the Organisation of the Islamic Cooperation and the Arab League, to condemn the situation unfolding in Gaza.

Speaking on Saturday in Riyadh, Abbas said, “We call on the US to stop the Israeli aggression against Gaza” and said Palestinians are facing an “unmatched genocidal war”.

Here is a summary of the Palestinian Authority President’s remarks at the Riyadh summit:

  • The United Nations Security Council must live up to its responsibility and obligation to put an end to this belligerent war on our people without further delay.
  • We call on the US administration to put an end to Israel’s aggression, the occupation, violation and desecration of our holy sites.
  • We need, and we seek, international protection for our unarmed civilians.
  • The West Bank and Jerusalem are coming under daily attacks by occupation forces as well as illegal settlers.
  • No military and security solutions are acceptable as they have all failed.
  • We categorically reject any efforts to displace our people from Gaza or the West Bank.

Saudi Crown Prince condemns ‘crimes committed against Palestinian people’

Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman condemned Israel and held them responsible for what he called “crimes committed against Palestinian people”, calling for an end to the siege of the Gaza Strip.

Speaking during an extraordinary joint Islamic-Arab summit in Riyadh, the crown prince also called for the immediate end of military operations and the release of hostages held by Palestinian groups in Gaza.

“This is a humanitarian catastrophe that has proved the failure of the international community and the United Nations Security Council to put an end to Israel’s gross violations of international humanitarian laws, and prove the dual standards adopted by the world,” he added.

“We are certain the only cause for peace is the end of the Israeli occupation and illegal settlements, and restoration of the established rights of the Palestinian people and the establishment of the state on 1967, with East Jerusalem as its capital,” the Saudi crown prince said.


ICRC ‘shocked and appalled’ by reports of situation at al-Shifa hospital

The director general of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), Robert Mardini, has said the organisation is “shocked and appalled” by the images and reports emerging from al-Shifa hospital in Gaza.

He added the “unbearably desperate situation” must stop now and that patients and staff must be protected.

The regional director for Near and Middle East at the ICRC also stated information coming out of Al-Shifa hospital were “Distressing”.

In a brief post on X, Fabrizio Carboni said the situation “cannot continue like this” as “thousands of wounded, displaced people and medical staff are at risk”.


Israeli army used white phosphorus on al-Shifa: Palestine health minister

Health Minister Mai al-Kaila has accused Israeli forces of shelling Gaza’s largest hospital with white phosphorus.

“This is an internationally banned weapon. We are wondering who is responsible for holding Israel to account for shelling al-Shifa Hospital with white phosphorus,” she told a news conference in Ramallah, adding that Israeli forces were committing a “genocide” in Gaza.

“Inevitable death has become the fate of patients in Gaza hospitals – and we hold Israel, the United Nations and the international community responsible for that.”

Rights groups have accused Israel of using white phosphorus in Gaza and Lebanon over the past month. Israel has denied the allegation.

The director of the health ministry in Gaza, Monir al-Barsh, said “any moving object” around al-Shifa Hospital is a target for the Israeli forces, and that the high number of dead bodies has led to plans to dig a mass grave within the hospital premises.

“We cannot move within or outside the perimeter of the hospital. We are surrounded, we cannot bury our dead.

“We are going to create a mass grave within the hospital compound,” he added.

Ashraf al-Qudra, spokesperson of Gaza’s Health Ministry, says the displaced people, wounded, and medical staff inside al-Shifa Hospital are suffering due to the lack of food and water.

The situation is worsened by the power blackout, with fear also spreading due to the heavy gunfire by the Israeli forces, he added.

“We are besieged inside al-Shifa Medical Complex,” al-Qudra stated.


Operations suspended in al-Shifa hospital: Gaza health ministry

The spokesperson for the Gaza health ministry said that operations in al-Shifa hospital complex, the largest in the enclave, were suspended on Saturday after it ran out of fuel.

“As a result, one newborn baby died inside the incubator, where there are 45 babies,” Ashraf Al-Qidra, the spokesperson for the health ministry told Reuters.

Al-Shifa hospital, hit by missiles on Friday, is the largest in the 360-sq-km Gaza Strip.


Hezbollah, Israel exchange fire ahead of Nasrallah’s second speech

Hezbollah and Israel have exchanged fire across the Lebanese border on Saturday, both sides have confirmed, ahead of a second speech from Hezbollah chief Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah.

“A short time ago, an alert was issued about the fear of hostile aircraft infiltrating the northern area, no aircraft were detected that penetrated the territory of the State of Israel. In addition, a launch was detected towards the Margaliot area that fell in an open area. The IDF attacks with artillery the source of the shooting in Lebanese territory,” the Israeli military announced in a statement.

The Hezbollah chief is set to speak later today and it is widely believed that he will maintain the course of Hezbollah distracting Israeli troops with a second front but not expanding it into full war.


UNRWA chief calls on Arab states to do more to help Gaza

The head of the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) stated the humanitarian situation in Gaza is “catastrophic” and Arab states need to do more to help Palestinians.

In a statement ahead of addressing Saturday’s extraordinary summit meeting of the League of Arab States in Riyadh, Philippe Lazzarini said “the people of the Gaza Strip have always relied on Arab support and solidarity”.

“They need it now, more than ever,” he continued.

Arab states, he added, need to “bring back the hope and revive the political horizon of the Palestinian people before it is too late”.

More than 100 UNRWA staff have been killed since the beginning of Israel’s war on Gaza, the highest number ever of UN workers killed in a conflict.


UN says lives of children in Gaza ‘hanging on by a thread’

The lives of one million children in Gaza are “hanging on by a thread”, UNICEF’s Middle East and North Africa Regional Director Adele Khodr stated.

“Thousands and thousands of children remain in northern Gaza as hostilities intensify. These children have nowhere to go and are at extreme risk,” Khodr said in a statement.

“The protection of hospitals and delivery of lifesaving medical supplies is an obligation under the laws of war, and both are needed now,” the statement added.


Biden official raised option of moving Palestinians in Gaza into Egypt: Report

A report published by HuffPost stated that David Satterfield, who was appointed as a special Middle East humanitarian envoy by US President Joe Biden, raised the idea of moving Gaza civilians into Egypt during a high-level meeting last month.

The report cited an American official that was in the meeting.

HuffPost reported that Satterfield “backed off” the idea since then. Biden has publicly opposed the idea that Palestinians in Gaza be displaced to Egypt.

A State Department spokesperson told the news site in an email: “This reporting is false.”

“Special Envoy Satterfield has vociferously been against this, has not raised this as [a] policy consideration in any meeting, and has reiterated publicly and privately that the US does not support forcible displacement of Palestinians from Gaza. Not now, not after the war.”


MSF reports dramatic intensification of attacks on al-Shifa Hospital

The international charity Doctors Without Borders warned attacks on the al-Shifa Hospital have “dramatically intensified” in the last few hours and staff have reported “a catastrophic situation”.

“We urgently reiterate our calls to stop the attacks against hospitals and for the protection of medical facilities, medical staff, and patients,” the organisation announced.

MSF also repeated an earlier notice that it was unable to contact its staff at the hospital and that it was “extremely concerned” about their safety and that of patients.


Saudi Arabia will host a joint Arab Islamic summit Saturday

Saudi Arabia will host a Joint Arab Islamic Extraordinary Summit on Saturday in response to the “unprecedented circumstances in Gaza,” according to a statement released by the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs early Saturday local time.

Saudi Arabia was initially going to host Arab and Islamic Summits separately on Saturday but has decided to combine the two after consultations with the League of Arab States and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation.


Red Cross: Gaza health system has ‘reached a point of no return’

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) called for the “immediate protection of all civilians, including humanitarian workers and medical personnel” in Gaza, as it warns that the besieged enclave’s health system has collapsed.

“The healthcare system in Gaza has reached a point of no return risking the lives of thousands of wounded, sick and displaced people,” a statement from the ICRC said.

It added that ICRC teams in Gaza “have witnessed horrendous images that have now gotten worse due to sharpened hostilies”.

Children’s hospitals have been heavily damaged by the fighting, the ICRC said, adding, “Any military operation around hospitals must consider the presence of civilians, who are protected under international humanitarian law”.

“The rules of war are clear. Hospitals are specially protected facilities under international humanitarian law.”


ICU patients and babies “will lose their lives” at Gaza City hospital facing shutdown: PRCS

Gaza City’s Al-Quds Hospital could shut down in the coming hours, threatening the lives of patients and babies, the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) warned.

“Al-Quds Hospital is at risk of closure in the upcoming 3 hours due to the depletion of fuel supplies and the non-arrival of aid,” PRCS said in a statement early Saturday local time.

“500 patients and injured will be deprived from medical care. Those who are at the ICU and babies in incubators will lose their lives,” it added.

On Wednesday, PRCS announced it was scaling back most operations amid a fuel shortage to ensure the provision of minimal services.

So far, at least 18 out of Gaza’s 35 functioning hospitals have gone out of service, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Ramallah on Thursday.


Israel preparing for a year of fighting in Gaza: Report

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) is preparing to fight in Gaza for a year, according to a report.

Israel’s military is set to expand its ground operations into areas of the Gaza Strip where the IDF has never operated before, Channel 12 reported.

The report said the IDF is “preparing for a period of a year of fighting … in different areas … different methods, but a year of fighting to get to the fourth stage of this war: the entry of a new government in Gaza that is not Hamas and is not backed by the Iranians.”

There is “no pressure to hurry”, the report added.


‘Acts of war in places of grace must stop’: UN official says amid Israeli attacks on Gaza hospitals

Amid Israeli attacks on hospitals in the Gaza Strip, UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Martin Griffiths on Friday said “acts of war in places of grace must stop.”

“Horrific reports of attacks on Al Shifa hospital coming out of Gaza today,” he wrote in a post on X.

“The lives of thousands of patients, staff and displaced civilians are at risk. Under international humanitarian law, hospitals must be protected,” he added.


Palestinians risking airstrikes to get bread amid extreme scarcity: UN

Palestinians in the besieged Gaza Strip are risking death and injury from Israeli airstrikes in order to receive desperately needed bread, the UN warned Friday amid extreme scarcity in the coastal enclave.

“People are lining up for hours, we’re told, in front of bakeries. That exposes them to the impact of airstrikes,” spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said.

Painting a picture of the dire situation for many in Gaza, Dujarric stated, “essential food items such as rice and vegetable oil are nearly depleted in public markets. Other items including flour, dairy products, eggs and mineral water have disappeared from the shelves in shops across Gaza in the past two days.”


Multiple Israeli raids in West Bank

Several Israeli military raids have been reported in the occupied West Bank in the early hours of Saturday.

Israeli forces have stormed several towns near Jerusalem, and confrontations also are taking place in Ni’lin, west of Ramallah, according to Al Jazeera.

Raids have also been conducted in Silat al-Dhahr, a town located south of Jenin.

While much of the world’s attention has been focused on Israel’s assault on Gaza, Israeli troops have been carrying out nightly raids across the occupied West Bank and arresting hundreds of Palestinians.

According to the rights group Addameer, Israel has detained more than 2,300 Palestinians in the West Bank since 7 October.


Netanyahu says Israeli army to control Gaza after war

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Friday stated Israel will have the overall security responsibility of the Gaza Strip after its current conflict with Hamas ends.

His office in a statement said he met local council leaders of Gaza’s adjacent communities in Tel Aviv, and told them that “after eliminating Hamas, there will be complete Israeli security control over the Gaza Strip, including complete disarmament, to ensure that there is no threat from the Strip to the citizens of Israel.”

“There is a great determination here on your part and on the part of the government to return to the way things were before the war,” Netanyahu continued, adding: “First of all, restoring security – making sure that Hamas does not exist and that Hamas does not return.”

Israel has repeatedly announced that the goal of the war, which it started last month after the Palestinian group’s surprise attack, is to end Hamas’s rule in Gaza, eliminate its military capabilities, and bring back hostages.


Mass grave to be dug at Al-Shifa: Palestinian health ministry director

The director of the Palestinian health ministry in Gaza, Munir al-Bursh, announced that a mass grave will be dug at Al-Shifa Hospital on Saturday to bury the people who have been killed so far at the hospital, according to several Palestinian news outlets.

Bursh stated the grave would be dug on hospital grounds “because we cannot go out to bury them”.

The Israeli military has launched relentless air strikes, artillery fire and gunfire for hours near the al-Shifa hospital on Friday and Saturday.

Much of the bombardment is targeting al-Shati refugee camp and Nasser Street, according to local media reports.

The two locations are just metres away from al-Shifa, the largest hospital in Gaza.

Intense Israeli aerial and artillery shelling fighting were also reported near Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City late on Friday.


UN Security Council addresses dire humanitarian situation in Gaza

United Nations officials addressed the humanitarian situation in Gaza as Israeli and Palestinian UN representatives accused one another of targeting medical facilities during a UN Security Council briefing Friday.

The meeting began with a minute of silence for the deaths of Palestinians, Israeli citizens and foreign nationals, as well as UN officials and journalists in Gaza and the West Bank.

While describing the dire situation unfolding in Gaza, World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Tedros Ghebreyesus said there are “morgues overflowing; surgery without anesthesia; tens of thousands of displaced people sheltering at hospitals.”

Ghebreyesus added the WHO has verified more than 250 attacks on health care in Gaza and the West Bank since October 7. The WHO also identified 25 attacks on health care in Israel, he continued.

“Half of the Gaza Strip’s 36 hospitals and two-thirds of its primary health care centers are not functioning at all,” Ghebreyesus said.

“I fully understand the anger, grief and fear of the Israeli people following the horrific, barbaric and unjustifiable attacks by Hamas and other armed groups on Israeli civilians on the 7th of October,” Ghebreyesus added.

“I also understand the anger, grief and fear of the people of Gaza, who had already suffered through 16 years of blockade, and are now enduring the destruction of their families, their homes, their communities and the life they knew.”

The head of the WHO has described the situation on the ground in Gaza, from hospitals conducting operations without anaesthetics to the fact that a child is killed every 10 minutes.

“Nowhere and no one is safe,” Ghebreyesus told the UN security council on Friday.

The Israeli and Palestinian UN representatives traded accusations of targeting medical facilities.

Ambassador Riyad Mansour, the Permanent Observer of the State of Palestine to the UN, pleaded for UN countries to “stop the massacre.”

“Hospitals have become Israel’s primary target. They are besieged and their vicinity bombed,” Mansour said.

Mansour accused Israel of driving the displacement of Palestinians.

“They want us out of our country, out of our land. Their strategic enemy is the independence of our state,” Mansour added.

Wearing a yellow star with the words “Never Again,” Israeli UN Ambassador Gilad Erdan harshly rebuked UN officials who brief the council.

“Sadly, they are relaying falsehoods that are completely detached from reality,” Erdan said.

Erdan accused Hamas of targeting hospitals and using hospitals as bases and using ambulances as taxis.

“Every medical worker, doctor and patient in Gaza is a human shield to the Hamas terrorists,” Erdan added.


Water, electricity and communications cut from Indonesian Hospital

Electricity, water and communication have been completely cut from the Indonesian Hopsital in northern Gaza, according to the Palestinian health ministry.

The ministry posted a video on its Telegram channel showing the medical facility in total darkness.

The Interior Ministry in Gaza has also announced a “series of violent raids” by Israeli fighter jets have attacked the vicinity of the Indonesian Hospital in the enclave’s north.

On Thursday night, scores of civilians were killed and wounded after Israeli bombardment that targeted the vicinity of the Indonesian Hospital.


Israel lowers its estimated death toll from Hamas attacks on October 7 to 1,200

Israel now believes around 1,200 people were killed by Hamas in a series of brutal attacks on Israeli communities and gatherings near Gaza on October 7.

The number includes foreign workers and other foreign nationalities, foreign ministry spokesperson Lior Haiat said in response to online questions from journalists – and is a downward revision from a previous figure of 1,400.

The current estimate is not a final number, Haiat emphasized, because some of the bodies have yet to be identified.

The spokesperson’s online communication did not include a reason for the reduction, and he did not immediately respond to subsequent requests for an explanation.


Macron says ‘no justification’ for killing civilians in Gaza

The French president became one of the first Western leaders to call for a “ceasefire”, as France hosted a summit discussing humanitarian aid for Gaza. Many leaders have instead opted to use the term “humanitarian pause”.

He repeated the appeal during an interview with the BBC: “De facto – today, civilians are bombed – de facto. These babies, these ladies, these old people are bombed and killed.”

“So there is no reason for that and no legitimacy. So we do urge Israel to stop,” Emmanuel Macron said

Macron also stated he hoped the US and UK would join the call for a ceasefire. Still, he said he was a head of state, “not a judge”, and was thus not qualified to say if Israel had committed war crimes.

He added while he shared Israel’s “pain”, their approach risked further undermining security: “It’s extremely important for all of us because of our principles, because we are democracies. It’s important for the mid- to long-run, as well as for the security of Israel itself, to recognise that all lives matter.”


UK health workers call for ceasefire on Downing Street

The demonstration is the latest seeking to pressure Western governments to lean on Israel for a ceasefire.

Israeli officials have stated a ceasefire is not currently on the table.

The group also called for the immediate entry of aid into the bombarded enclave.

Israel has blocked fuel deliveries from being included in the small amount of aid that has been allowed to enter Gaza, leaving many hospitals forced to shutter and others working at a skeletal capacity.


About 200,000 people have lost homes in Gaza, where 45% of housing is damaged or destroyed: UN office

At least 45% of Gaza’s housing has been destroyed or damaged as of November 4, and as many as 200,000 people no longer have homes, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

Gaza is one of the most densely populated places in the world, with more than 500 people per 100 square meters in many areas, according to the European Commission.

Israel has carried out multiple airstrikes about a kilometer from the Rafah crossing — the only way in and out of Gaza that isn’t controlled by Israel. The crossing, which is controlled by Egypt, has been mostly closed since Hamas launched its unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7.

Northern Gaza has had no electricity or fuel since October 11. One-third of hospitals have had to close, and those that remain open are often operating with limited electricity and without anesthesia or clean water, the UN humanitarian office announced.

All bakeries in the north have had to close, either due to damage or lack of fuel.

Gaza’s sole power plant is out of fuel, and the seawater desalination plant in the north is also down. Drinking water is running out for hundreds of thousands of civilians. Most sewage pumping facilities are not operating.

UN officials report that 14 hospitals and 71% of primary care facilities across Gaza are closed.


More than 100 UN workers killed in Gaza since the Israel-Hamas war began: Agency

At least 101 employees of the main United Nations agency working in the Palestinian territories have been killed in Gaza since October 7, the agency confirmed Friday.

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) said it was “devastated” by the deaths of more than 100 colleagues in a post on social media Friday.

“Mothers, fathers, teachers, nurses, doctors, guards, logisticians, support staff, all at the service of their community,” UNRWA noted, adding, “We honor their memory and their service.”

Earlier Friday, UNRWA head Philippe Lazzarini also stated he was “devastated” by the deaths of colleagues and called for a humanitarian ceasefire.

The UN agency has more than 10,000 people working in its Gaza Field Office, according to the UNRWA website.

UNRWA runs the largest humanitarian operation in the Gaza Strip and provides assistance and protection for registered Palestinian refugees.


At least 25 people killed in Israeli attacks on Gaza City school

At least 25 people were killed in Israeli attacks on a Gaza City school, said the director of Al-Shifa Hospital where the casualties were taken.

“We received 25 martyrs from Al-Buraq School after missile and artillery strikes targeted the school this morning,” director Mohammad Abu Salmiya of Gaza’s largest hospital complex told Al Jazeera on Friday.

Video footage shared on social media showed dozens of bodies strewn across the school in the Al-Nasr neighbourhood in the aftermath of the attack. People whose homes had been destroyed were sheltering in the school.

Last week, an Israeli air missile struck the Al-Fakhoora School run by the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) in the Jabalia refugee camp, killing at least 15 people and injuring 54, according to Gaza’s Ministry of Health.

Health Ministry says 21 Gaza hospitals out of service as death toll exceeds 11k

Gaza War

This is according to a new update from Palestinian Health Ministry spokesman Ashraf al-Qudra.

The previous number given by the ministry was 18 hospitals.

The Palestinian death toll from Israeli attacks in the Gaza Strip has climbed to 11,078, the Health Ministry in the blockaded enclave said on Friday.

“The victims include 4,506 children, 3,027 women, and 678 elderly people, while 27,490 people were injured,” al-Qudra told a news conference in Gaza City.

He added 2,700 people, including 1,500 children, were also reported to be trapped under the rubble of buildings flattened by Israeli strikes.

“The Israeli aggression has left 198 medics dead and 53 ambulances destroyed,” the spokesman added.

“Israel targeted 135 health institutions and put 21 hospitals and 47 primary care health centers out of service,” he continued.

Israel has launched relentless air and ground attacks on the Gaza Strip since a cross-border attack by Hamas on Oct. 7. Nearly 1,600 Israelis have been killed since then, according to official figures.

Besides the large number of casualties and massive displacements, basic supplies are running low for Gaza’s 2.3 million residents due to an Israeli siege.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has also called for the “immediate protection of all civilians, including humanitarian workers and medical personnel” in Gaza, as it warns that the besieged enclave’s health system has collapsed.

“The healthcare system in Gaza has reached a point of no return risking the lives of thousands of wounded, sick and displaced people,” a statement from the ICRC said.

It added that ICRC teams in Gaza “have witnessed horrendous images that have now gotten worse due to sharpened hostilies”.

Children’s hospitals have been heavily damaged by the fighting, the ICRC noted.

“Any military operation around hospitals must consider the presence of civilians, who are protected under international humanitarian law”.

“The rules of war are clear. Hospitals are specially protected facilities under international humanitarian law,” it noted.

The Palestinian Ministry for Foreign Affairs and Expatriates also announced Israel “kidnaps hospitals as hostages for extortion” in Gaza.

In a statement, the ministry said Israel was continuing its siege of hospitals to “blackmail” the international community for “political gains” and to force Palestinians to move to the south in a “new episode of genocide”.

The ministry also called on the international community to respect its position on protecting civilians and to apply pressure on the “occupying state” to commit to this.

During the past few hours, the Israeli military has been surrounding three hospitals in Gaza City and the Indonesian Hospital in the north.

Using tanks and armoured vehicles, they have closed a roughly 100-metre perimeter around these hospitals, still sheltering thousands of wounded and displaced people.

People have sent appeals from inside al-Rantisi Hospital and Nasser Hospital, asking to be allowed to flee.

The Israeli military ordered the evacuation of these hospitals, but without assurances from international organisations like the Red Cross, people are not taking that risk.

The journey from Nasser and al-Rantisi hospitals to the east of Salah al-Din Street in Gaza City is very dangerous and has been hit repeatedly by air strikes.

Israel has also attacked four hospitals in Gaza, including the enclave’s biggest medical complex, resulting in what appear to be multiple casualties, according to the health ministry.

Arab League demands “complete ceasefire” in Gaza ahead of OIC summit in Riyadh

Arab League

“Humanitarian truces are not at the core of the Arab position, for the Arab position demands a complete ceasefire. Humanitarian truces are an idea that some people talk about to try to deal with the deteriorating humanitarian situation due to the war and Israeli aggression. The Arab position is clearly and explicitly based on an immediate ceasefire,” the statement citing the Arab League spokesperson Hossam Zaki said.

Arab foreign ministers held a preparatory meeting in Riyadh led by Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud on Thursday ahead of an emergency Arab summit scheduled to be held in Saudi Arabia on Saturday, to discuss ways to stop the “Israeli aggression on Gaza”, the statement added.

According to the statement, a “large number” of Arab leaders will participate, stressing that Arab countries will be “well represented”.

The Arab League is an organization of Middle Eastern and African countries and the Palestine Liberation Organization. Its purpose is to promote closer political, economic, cultural and social relations among the members.

Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) has also called for an end to the war in Gaza and the end of the “forced displacement” of Palestinians.

“We stress the need to stop this war and the forced displacement of Palestinians,” he said in remarks at the Saudi-Africa summit in Riyadh on Friday.

“We condemn what the Gaza Strip is experiencing in terms of military aggression, targeting of civilians and the continued violations of international humanitarian law by the Israeli occupation authorities,” he added.

“We stress the need to create conditions for the return of stability and the establishment of peace,” he continued.

If there is a hell on earth today, it’s name is northern Gaza’: OCHA

Gaza War

Jens Laerke expressed his frustration that no aid had reached northern Gaza in over one month.

“We cannot drive to the north at the current point, which is of course deeply frustrating because we know there are several hundred thousand people who remain in the north,” Laerke said.

“If there is a hell on earth today, its name is northern Gaza,” he added.

“It is a life of fear by day and darkness at night. And what do you tell your children in such a situation, it’s almost unimaginable – that the fire they see in the sky is out to kill them?”

A group of UN experts have recently warned that Palestinians are “at a grave risk of genocide” as the Israeli government maintains a complete siege on the Gaza Strip.

At least 11,000 Palestinians, including more than 4,500 children and 3,000 women, have been killed in Gaza so far, according to Palestinian authorities.

The head of UNRWA has also called for an end to the “carnage” afflicting war-torn Gaza.

“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 wrote in a media opinion piece.

“The carnage simply must stop.”

Gazans facing ‘never-ending humanitarian nightmare’: UN head

Gaza War

“Their neighborhoods wiped out. Their loved ones killed. Bombs raining down, while being denied life’s very basics: food, water, medicine, electricity,” Guterres said in a video message.

He also stated that the amount of aid trickling in was “a drop in the ocean” and said the international community must step up to protect civilians, urging nations to invest in a $1.2 billion UN humanitarian appeal.

“We can help civilians in Gaza see at last, and at the very least, a glimmer of hope – a sign of solidarity – and a signal that the world sees their plight and cares enough to act,” he added.

Martin Griffiths, the UN’s top relief official, has recently pressed his concerns about any proposal to push thousands into “safe zones”.

He said that the UN could not be “part of a unilateral proposal to push hundreds of thousands of desperate civilians in Gaza into so-called safe zones”. It had not been involved in any preparations for the arrival of displaced people to a prospective “safe zone” in Gaza, Griffiths added.

Griffiths also raised concerns about “safe zone” conditions, stating that “satisfactory conditions do not exist anywhere in Gaza to ensure adequate shelter, food, water, sanitation and health”.

The top United Nations human rights official has also raised doubts over Israel’s unilateral establishment of “safe zones” in the besieged Gaza Strip, cautioning that nowhere within the territory was safe for civilians.

“Demands for civilians to relocate to an Israeli Defence Force designated ‘safe zone’ are also very alarming,” Volker Türk, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said during a news conference in Amman, Jordan, on Friday.

“A so-called ‘safe zone,’ when established unilaterally, can heighten risks to civilians, and raises real questions as to whether security can be guaranteed in practice. At the moment, nowhere in Gaza is safe, as bombardments are being reported in all parts of the Strip.”

Israel on Friday announced another six-hour window for civilians to evacuate south from northern Gaza. US National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby on Thursday announced that Israel would “begin to implement four-hour pauses in areas of northern Gaza each day”, but it was as yet unclear whether that is just a formalization of what the IDF has already been doing, or something new.

In response to the US announcement, the UN spokesperson, Stéphane Dujarric, stressed any plans for short-term pauses in the fighting in Gaza must be carried out in coordination with the UN and agreed to by all sides in order to be “truly effective”.

Türk stated that he believes that the Israeli occupation is at the root of violence between Israelis and Palestinians.

“The solution to this situation is the end of the occupation, and full respect for the right to self-determination for Palestinians. As I have said time and again, for the violence to end, the occupation needs to end. Member States need to invest all the effort that is necessary into finding a sustainable peace for all Palestinians and Israelis,” he added.

His trip to Amman is part of a five-day visit to the Middle East he started on Tuesday to discuss “Israel’s escalation in Gaza,” his office said in a statement.

Before stopping in Jordan, Türk was in Egypt where he said he visited El-Arish Hospital, one of the hospitals treating seriously wounded Palestinians who were evacuated from Gaza. He talked about seeing many children injured by Israeli bombardment, kids with broken legs and severe burns.

“These were the “lucky” children who suffered terribly but are still alive and receiving proper medical treatment”, he added.

Speaking at the Egyptian side of the Rafah crossing earlier this week, Türk said that both Israel and Hamas had committed war crimes over the course of the war.

He talked about his UN colleagues in Gaza who have had to flee with their families to find shelter, stating they always “keep their bags close” in case they need to flee again. He recounted their stories of mourning the killings of dozens of their loved ones over the past month.

“The extensive Israeli bombardment of Gaza, including the use of high impact explosive weapons in densely populated areas, razing tens of thousands of buildings to the ground, is clearly having a devastating humanitarian and human rights impact… Israel must immediately end the use of such methods and means of warfare, and the attacks must be investigated,” he stressed.

Francesca Albanese, the UN special rapporteur on the Palestinian territories, has also described Israel’s decision to allow four-hour pauses in fighting 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.

“So four hours ceasefire, 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.”

Seven fighters killed in Syria: Hezbollah

Hezbollah

On Thursday, Israel announced it struck areas in Syria in response to a drone that hit a building in the Israeli port city of Eilat.

Hezbollah has confirmed on Friday that Israeli fire killed seven of its fighters, though it did not specify where or when they died.

In a statement, the group named the seven fighters and said they were “martyred on the road to Jerusalem”, the phrase Hezbollah uses to mourn members – now numbering 70 – killed since border clashes with Israel began last month.

Amid the conflict in the Gaza Strip between Israeli troops and Hamas, tension has flared along the border between the Israeli-occupied territories and Lebanon, with exchanges of fire between Israeli forces and Hezbollah.

Hezbollah and the Israeli regime have been exchanging sporadic fire since October 8, a day after the Zionist regime started bringing the Palestinian territory of the Gaza Strip under a relentless and indiscriminate war.

The Lebanese resistance movement has announced the group’s “guns and rockets” were with Palestinian fighters, and stressed that it will intensify its attacks against Israel if necessary.

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant has recently told senior Israeli officials that Hezbollah is “ten times stronger than Hamas”, Israel’s Kan public broadcaster has reported.

President Joe Biden and his aides have advised Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu not to launch pre-emptive strikes against Hezbollah in Lebanon, The New York Times daily newspaper has reported.

Hezbollah has already fought off two Israeli wars against Lebanon in 2000 and 2006, forcing a humiliating retreat upon the Tel Aviv regime’s military in both cases.

The resistance movement has vowed to resolutely defend Lebanon in case of any Israeli-imposed war.

Gaza must choose own leadership: Islamic Jihad

Gaza War

The future of the enclave should be decided by the Palestinians and no one else, he stressed on Friday.

He also dismissed the notion of the Palestinian Authority taking over, saying, “The Palestinian Authority controls the West Bank, but armed resistance is building momentum there as well.”

Hamas has also announced the governance of the Gaza Strip is a “pure Palestinian affair”, in response to US statements that the movement could not be part of the ruling equation in the enclave.

“Governing Gaza or part of our land is a Palestinian affair, and no force will be able to change reality or impose its will,” Hamas spokesman Abdul-Latif al-Qanou said Wednesday.

White House national security spokesman, John Kirby, stated Tuesday that Hamas could not be part of the governance equation in Gaza.

“There needs to be a healthy set of conversations about what post-conflict Gaza looks like and what governance looks like,” he added.

The Hamas spokesman termed Kirby’s call for ejecting Hamas as a “pure imagination.”

“Hamas is a national liberation movement and resides in every Palestinian home,” al-Qanou continued, adding, “Hamas is an integral part of our people and has the right to resist the occupation in accordance with all laws and customs.”

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas also stated Wednesday that any move by the Israeli occupation forces to divide Gaza into two sections is unacceptable and emphasized that the enclave is an integral part of Palestine.

Israel has launched relentless air and ground attacks on the Gaza Strip since a cross-border attack by Hamas a month ago.

At least 11,500 Palestinians, including more than 4,500 children and over 3,000 women, have been killed since then. The Israeli death toll, meanwhile, is nearly 1,600, according to official figures.

Besides the large number of casualties and massive displacements, basic supplies are running low for Gaza’s 2.3 million residents due to the Israeli siege.

Iranian president to visit Saudi Arabia Saturday to attend OIC summit

Following the “barbaric and criminal” attacks of the Zionist regime against the defenseless people of Gaza, President Raisi, took a series of diplomatic moves and in telephone and face-to-face conversations with the leaders of Islamic countries, pushing for an emergency meeting of the OIC heads of state.

On Thursday, on the sidelines of the 16th Summit of the Economic Cooperation Organization in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, the Iranian president emphasized the need to exert pressure on Islamic countries to stop the crimes of the Zionists.

He also stressed the importance of implementing a solution proposed by the leader of Iran’s Islamic Revolution who called for all Muslim countries to cut political and economic relations with the Zionist regime as a deterrent.

Around 11,000 Palestinians have died in Israel’s strikes on Gaza over the past few weeks.

Israel’s war could set economy in Gaza, West Bank back decades: UN

A report released Thursday by the organization paints a dire picture of the economic conditions in the Palestinian enclave, where more than 10,800 people have been killed, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Ramallah.

Since the start of the latest conflict, the number of Palestinians living in poverty has risen by 300,000, according to Abdallah Al Dardari, director of the UNDP Regional Bureau for Arab States.

Almost 1.5 million people in Gaza have been displaced since the fighting began last month, according to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, while Israel’s blockade on fuel combined with severe restrictions on food, water and medical deliveries has sparked a humanitarian crisis.

Key economic measurements, including employment rates and GDP, have all plunged across Gaza and the West Bank, according to the UNDP analysis.

The past month of conflict has erased 61 percent of employment in Gaza and 24 percent of employment in the West Bank, the report warns. Palestinian GDP is expected to have fallen 4.2 percent after one month of war compared with pre-war estimates, a loss of about $857 million. If the war lasts through a second month, that figure would rise to $1.7 billion, about an 8.4 percent loss of GDP, it adds.

“That is massive,” Al Dardari said in an interview.

“I’ve been following conflicts for 30 years and writing on them, I have never seen such a dramatic shock in such a short time,” he told CNN.

Poverty in Gaza was already severe before Israel’s October campaign – with 61 percent of the population considered below the poverty line in 2020, according to the World Bank.

Access to the crowded enclave of some 2 million people has been severely curtailed by Israel and Egypt for the last 17 years in what NGO Human Rights Watch has long dubbed an “open-air prison.”

The latest outbreak of war has only deepened the economic misfortune.

After one month of fighting, the number of people living in poverty in Gaza and the West Bank increased by nearly 20 percent, the UNDP report says. If the war were to last a second month, the total increase of the population in poverty would top 34 percent, or 500,000 people, according to Al Dardari.

Structural damage in the densely developed area has been extensive throughout the four-week Israeli campaign, with nearly half of the housing stock said to have been damaged or destroyed by the bombardment and 40 percent of educational facilities damaged, according to United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

Overall, the UNDP report predicts an 11 to 16-year setback in a metric it calls “human development” across Gaza and the West Bank, due to the conflict so far. The estimation comes from a UNDP assessment of educational, health, and economic indicators that contribute to the state’s score on the Human Development Index.

If the fighting were to continue through a second month, the Palestinian economy would be set back 19 years’ worth of development, Al Dardari stated.

“That means Palestine will go back to 2001, 2002,” he continued, adding, “Every investment the international community, the Palestinian people, have put into their human development – health, education, growth, business – everything that was built since 2002 is lost.”

Officials in Israel have not given any public indication of the expected length of the military operation in Gaza, outside of declarations that the war is likely to be long, and that the goal of the air and ground offensive is the complete elimination of Hamas.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reiterated as recently as Wednesday that he would not approve of a cease fire until the around 240 hostages being held in Gaza were released.