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Pentagon confirms US spy drones flying over Gaza Strip

US Drone

In a brief statement on Friday, Pentagon spokesman Brigadier General Patrick Ryder confirmed that the drone missions “began after the October 7 attack by Hamas on Israel”, during which the Palestinian group took over 200 hostages.

“In support of hostage recovery efforts, the US is conducting unarmed UAV flights over Gaza, as well as providing advice and assistance to support our Israeli partner as they work on their hostage recovery efforts,” Ryder said.

The admission comes after journalists noticed MQ-9 Reaper drones circling the Palestinian enclave through flight-tracking websites. Though the UAVs can be equipped to conduct airstrikes, the Reaper is also frequently used for surveillance given its array of advanced sensors, as well as an ability to remain in the air for more than 24 hours straight.

According to multiple US officials cited by the New York Times, the missions mark the first time American drones have operated over Gaza. However, they stressed that the flights were “not supporting Israeli military operations on the ground” and were intended to “monitor for signs of life and pass potential leads to the Israel Defense Forces”.

At least six MQ-9s have been spotted loitering over southern Gaza, some 15 miles away from Israeli ground troops fighting to enter the territory from the north, aviation researcher Amelia Smith told NYT. Several UAVs hovered over Gaza for around three hours at an altitude of 25,000 feet, believed to be operated by US special forces.

Amid the latest round of fighting between Israel and Hamas, Washington has deployed thousands of troops to the Middle East, as well as a pair of aircraft carrier strike groups and other naval assets, saying the moves were meant to deter outside actors from getting involved in the conflict.

Despite earlier reports that US troops could act as peacekeepers in Gaza after the current war, the White House has dismissed that idea, insisting American personnel would not operate in the territory “now or in the future”.

While Washington has voiced strong support for Israel’s military action in Gaza, in recent days officials have proposed “humanitarian pauses” to facilitate aid shipments into the besieged enclave. During a speech in Tel Aviv on Friday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said a brief truce could allow “more effective and sustained distribution of humanitarian aid”, an idea quickly rejected by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The IDF will continue striking Gaza with “all of its power”, the PM stated in a statement, adding that Israel “refuses a temporary cease-fire that doesn’t include the return of our hostages”.

Politico has reported on Friday the United States has grown increasingly uncomfortable with the civilian death toll in Gaza, requesting an explanation from Israel for one of the airstrikes on the densely populated Jabalia refugee camp.

The request was in the context of “asking Israel to do more to avoid civilian casualties”, a US official, granted anonymity to discuss sensitive conversations, told the outlet. Washington has also asked for details on “the thinking and process” behind the strike and urged Israel to conduct “precision targeting” to avoid harming civilians.

Israel vows to use ‘all power’ to bomb Gaza Strip after US’ call for humanitarian pause, more than 9k killed

Gaza War

The IDF will continue striking Gaza with “all of its power”, Netanyahu said in a statement to the media. Israel “refuses a temporary cease-fire that doesn’t include the return of our hostages”, he added.

Around 240 people had been kidnapped by the Gaza-based Hamas armed group in a surprise attack on Israel on October 7. The fighters have since claimed they were open to the idea of releasing the hostages but maintained it can only be done after hostilities cease, adding that they cannot even gather information on people in their captivity between the bombardments and the communications blackout imposed by Israel.

Netanyahu’s statements came after he met US State Secretary Antony Blinken in Tel Aviv. During the meeting, America’s top diplomat and the Israeli prime minister discussed the so-called “humanitarian pauses” needed to protect Gaza civilians and increase humanitarian aid deliveries.

“We believe all these efforts would be facilitated by humanitarian pauses with arrangements on the ground increasing security for civilians and allowing more effective and sustained distribution of humanitarian aid,” Blinken stated at his own press conference in Tel Aviv.

He also reiterated Washington’s support for Israel by saying that the Jewish state would “never be alone”.

On Thursday, the Israeli security cabinet announced further restrictions against the Palestinian enclave. All workers from Gaza stranded on Israeli territory amid the IDF operation would be sent home, the Israeli authorities said.

“Israel cuts all ties with Gaza, there will be no more Palestinian workers from Gaza”, the statement issued by the security cabinet added.

Israel’s massive bombings of Gaza have faced criticism from many Arab nations as well as Turkey and even the UN, which spoke of “collective punishment” and potential war crimes committed by the Israeli military.

On Thursday, Israeli President Isaac Herzog blasted all those who, he said, sought to “tie our hands” with demands for a ceasefire.

“Anyone who thinks the cynical exploitation of civilian suffering will tie our hands and save Hamas this time is wrong. For us and for the Palestinians, the suffering will end only with the removal of Hamas”, he wrote in an opinion piece for the New York Times.

Israel-Palestine conflict LIVE: Israel fires missile at Gaza house of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh

Gaza War

Blinken rejects ceasefire calls during meeting in Amman

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has rejected calls for a ceasefire during a meeting with his Arab counterparts in Amman on Thursday.

He said that a truce would leave Hamas in a position to regroup and carry out similar attacks to the one on 7 October which killed around 1,400 Israelis.

Blinken added that the US believed humanitarian pauses can be a “critical mechanism for protecting civilians”, as well as for getting aid into Gaza and foreign nationals out of the enclave.

The comments were made at a news conference alongside the Jordanian and Egyptian foreign ministers, who have both repeatedly called for an immediate ceasefire.

According to Blinken, Washington and Arab states believe that a status-quo in which Hamas controls the Gaza Strip could not continue.

He added that the US was deeply concerned about “extremist violence against Palestinians in the West Bank”, which he said had worsened since 7 October.

“we remain resolutely committed and focused on securing the release of hostages held by Hamas”.


Qatar: Continued bombing of Gaza is ‘complicating’ efforts to release hostages

Qatar’s foreign ministry said on Saturday that the continued bombardment of the Gaza Strip complicated its efforts to mediate the release of hostages held by Hamas.

Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed Bin Abdulrahman Al Thani made the comment in a meeting with US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, the ministry added.


Israeli containment policy has failed: UAE official

Israel ‘committing war crimes’ in Gaza: Jordan FM

Following meetings with Arab leaders and top US officials, Ayman Safadi says Israel is “committing war crimes” in Gaza and it should not be above international law.

He told reporters though he condemned the Hamas attack, the war on Gaza could not be permitted to continue.

“The whole region is sinking in a sea of hatred that will define generations to come,” Safadi added.

“We don’t accept that this is self-defence,” Safadi continued, calling for an immediate ceasefire.

“It cannot be justified under any pretext and it will not bring Israel security, it will not bring the region peace.”


Al-Qassam Brigades says it has killed five Israeli soldiers

Hamas’s Qassam Brigades announced its fighters have killed five more Israeli soldiers in northern Gaza.

In a statement it said: “Qassam forces attacked a Zionist force holed up in a building northwest of Gaza City.”

Fighters confronted Israeli forces “with machine guns and bombs and killed five soldiers and wounded others”, it added.

This week, the Israeli army expanded its air and ground attacks on the Gaza Strip, which has been under relentless bombardment.


Israel bombs al-Azhar University in Gaza

Video footage shared by Al Jazeera Arabic shows Israel bombing al-Azhar University in Gaza.

Since the war started on 7 October, Israel has also bombed Gaza University, the Islamic University of Gaza and al-Aqsa University.

https://twitter.com/ajarabic/status/1720777915481133190?s=46

Blinken to visit Turkey as part of Middle East tour

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken will visit Turkey for two days from Sunday as part of a Middle East tour, according to Reuters.

Blinken is currently in Jordan, after visiting Israel the day before.


Turkey recalls ambassador to Israel for consultations

Turkey has recalled its ambassador to Israel for consultations due to the humanitarian crisis and ongoing Israeli attacks in Gaza, the foreign ministry said on Saturday.

Israel’s envoys to Turkey left the country last month due to security reasons, after protests erupted across the country in support of Palestinians. Tel Aviv later announced it had recalled its envoys to assess bilateral ties.

Ambassador Sakir Ozkan Torunlar was recalled in view of “the ongoing humanitarian tragedy in Gaza caused by Israel’s continued attacks on civilians and Israel’s refusal [to accept] a ceasefire,” the Turkish foreign ministry added.


Generators at Kamal Adwan Hospital ‘completely’ shut down

Generators at the Kamal Adwan Hospital in north Gaza have completely shut down, according to the Interior Ministry in Gaza.

Earlier today, a spokesperson for the Palestinian Ministry of Health confirmed that 16 hospitals in Gaza have now been rendered out of service due to Israeli bombing and the full siege imposed on 9 October.


Blinken shares “deep concern” about Lebanon-Israel border tension with Lebanese PM Mikati

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken expressed his “deep concern” in a meeting with Lebanon’s caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati in Amman on Saturday about the cross-fire along Lebanon’s southern border with Israel.

“Secretary Blinken thanked the Prime Minister for his leadership in preventing Lebanon from being pulled into a war that the Lebanese people do not want, as well as his efforts with regional partners to pursue durable and sustainable peace in the region,” State Department spokesperson Matt Miller said.

“The Secretary discussed US efforts to secure humanitarian assistance for civilians in Gaza and noted that Lebanon needs to select a President to lead the country through both the regional and domestic crises.”

Lebanese paramilitary group Hezbollah has been engaged in daily skirmishes with Israeli forces on the Lebanon-Israel border since October 8.

On Friday, Hezbollah leader Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah hailed the crossfire as an “unprecedented battle” but called for a ceasefire in Gaza, signalling a reluctance to widen hostilities with Israel.


Oman calls for war crimes investigation into Israel

Oman’s foreign ministry has demanded the formation of an international court to investigate alleged war crimes committed by Israel in Gaza.

In a statement, the ministry also called for “the prosecution of war criminals in all the massacres committed”.

It also condemned the latest attacks on two schools sheltering civilians, the entrance of a hospital and a public water tank that were all targeted in the past 24 hours.


Erdogan says Netanyahu ‘no longer someone we can talk to’

The Turkish president has stated he is breaking off contact with the Israeli prime minister due to Israel’s actions in Gaza.

“[Benjamin] Netanyahu is no longer someone we can talk to. We have written him off,” Turkish media quoted Recep Tayyip Erdogan as saying.


US special envoy: No record of Hamas blocking or seizing aid

US Special Envoy David Satterfield said on Saturday that there were no recorded instances of Hamas interdicting or seizing aid, according to Reuters.

Satterfield stated that between 800,000 to a million people have moved to the south of the Gaza Strip, while 350,000-400,000 remain in the north of the enclave.

Talking to reporters in the Jordanian capital, Amman, he added that there were no recorded instances of Hamas interdicting or seizing aid.

“Fuel in depots in Gaza has been accessed by UNRWA for aid trucks, desalinisation and hospitals in the south of Gaza,” he noted.


16 hospitals out of service in Gaza

In a live press conference in Gaza, a spokesperson for the Palestinian Ministry of Health said that 16 hospitals in Gaza have now been rendered out of service due to Israeli bombing and the full siege imposed on 9 October.

“The occupation is directly targeting the vicinity of hospitals… around 105 medical facilities have also been targeted,” Ashraf al-Qudra stated.

He also called for the Rafah border to be opened to allow those wounded to receive treatment, “otherwise we will lose hundreds of more lives”, he added.

Here is some more information provided by Health Ministry spokesperson at the press briefing:

  • 150 paramedics have been killed since October 7
  • 27 ambulance vehicles have been totally destroyed, including two carrying the convoy of victims headed for Rafah on Friday
  • 105 medical facilities have been deliberately targeted, 16 of which are now out of service
  • 32 primary care medical facilities are out of service, either due to lack of fuel or their total destruction.

2,200 people buried underneath rubble: Health ministry

The Palestinian health ministry in Gaza says an estimated 2,200 people including 1,250 children are buried underneath the rubble of destroyed buildings.

The death toll in Gaza has reached 9,488 since the start of the war on 7 October, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.

The number includes 3,900 children and 2,500 women.


Number of French nationals killed in Hamas attacks on Israel rises to 39: Foreign ministry

The number of French nationals killed in the Hamas attacks in Israel has risen to 39, according to the French foreign ministry.

“France mourns the tragic deaths of further French nationals, bringing the total number of French victims of Hamas terrorist attacks on Israel to 39,” the ministry said in a statement Saturday.

Nine French nationals are still missing following the October 7 attacks, the ministry announced, adding that it has “now been confirmed that some of them have been taken hostage by Hamas.”

The French government says it is in contact with the families of the missing individuals. French President Emmanuel Macron met with the family members of hostages during a recent trip to Israel.


At least 15 killed in al-Fakhoura school bombing

Palestine’s Ministry of Health says that at least 15 people have been killed by Israeli bombing of al-Fakhoura school. More than 54 others were wounded.

Thousands of Palestinians were sheltering at the school after being displaced from their homes by Israeli air strikes. The school is located in the Jabalia area in Gaza.

An Al Jazeera Arabic correspondent described “scattered limbs” all over the school, while a crater in the ground where the bomb hit was shown in live footage.

One survivor told Al Jazeera Arabic: “Shame on the Arab leaders, these are civilians, children’s body parts are scattered everywhere.”

The attack on al-Fakhoora school came hours after a deadly strike on another school sheltering displaced families in the al-Saftawi area north of Gaza City.


Blinken meets with Qatari counterpart in Amman

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with Qatari Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani in Amman.

Neither spoke during a brief photo spray at the beginning of their meeting on Saturday.

Qatar has served as a key negotiator in discussions with Hamas amid the conflict in Israel and Gaza. The US has credited the Persian Gulf nation for its help in securing the release of four hostages held by the group, as well as for the eventual opening of the Rafah gate between Gaza and Egypt.

Jordan has announced Blinken will meet with fellow foreign ministers from key Arab partners at a summit in Amman Saturday to discuss the conflict in Gaza.


Israeli forces target house of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh

Israeli missiles have targeted the Gaza home of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, according to the Al-Aqsa Radio.

It was unclear whether any of his family members were at the house when it was struck.

Haniyeh has been outside the Gaza Strip since 2019, residing between Turkey and Qatar.

In a televised address broadcast on Wednesday, Haniyeh accused Israel of “committing barbaric massacres against unarmed civilians”.


At least 41 children killed in occupied West Bank: Save the Children

At least 41 children have been killed in the occupied West Bank since October 7, while thousands of children have been killed by ongoing bombardment of Gaza, Save the Children has confirmed.

“Children across the occupied Palestinian territory are increasingly caught up in a horrifying spiral of violence, while the world is watching. But the conflict’s devastating impact on children did not start on 7 October,” Save the Children’s director for the occupied Palestinian territory, Jason Lee said in a statement.

“Violence and displacement have been ongoing for years, with children paying the highest price for a conflict they have no part in. By September this was already the deadliest year on record for children in the West Bank, and we’re nearing the same number in less than a month.”

“Time and time again, children are shot at, locked-up, harassed. This has to stop,” he continued, adding, “The international community must use its influence to ensure that international law is respected, as is their obligation.”


US green lights vicious Israeli strikes against Palestinians in Gaza: Hamas chief

The chairman of the political bureau of Hamas resistance movement has lashed out at Washington over its unconditional support for Israel’s military campaign against the Gaza Strip, stating that the occupying Tel Aviv regime has the carte blanche for its vicious attacks on Palestinians in the besieged coastal sliver.

Ismail Haniyeh denounced the latest meeting between United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Israeli leaders, as Israel intensified its bombing of the Palestinian territory, hitting hospitals, ambulances and civilians fleeing to safety, stating that the White House has given the green light to the Zionist regime to press ahead with its atrocities.

“The massacres being committed by the Zionist regime are a clear manifestation of the quagmire that the occupying regime and its ground forces are bogged down in,” the Hamas leader said.

Haniyeh also called on Arab and Muslim nations as well as freedom-loving people of the world to vociferously express their outrage over the mass killings of Palestinians at the hands of Israeli forces.


Gaza media office: 46 journalists killed since start of war

A spokesperson for Gaza’s official media office announced that Israel has killed 46 journalists since the start of the war on 7 October.

In a press conference outside Gaza’s Al-Shifa Hospital, he questioned where the international community and international journalists were, and why they are not speaking out about the hostilities journalists and media officials in Gaza face.

“There are no red lines that have not been crossed…these are organised crimes that have been documented. We will not outline a list of demands, all we say is that if you are human, and you see the people here as humans like you, then show your humanity and stand up for what is right,” the spokesperson stated.


Israeli army targets entrance of Al-Nasr Children’s Hospital in Gaza City

The Israeli army has targeted the entrance of Al-Nasr Children’s Hospital in western Gaza City, according to Al-Aqsa TV.

Several Palestinian local media outlets reported civilian casualties.

The Israeli army has recently targeted Palestinian hospitals in the Gaza Strip including Al Shifa Hospital, Al-Quds Hospital, and Indonesian Hospital.


Captives’ families set up tents to stage protest in Tel Aviv

The relatives of those seized and taken into Gaza during Hamas’s attack on October 7 have set up a makeshift camp at the entrance of the Kirya military base in Tel Aviv to pressure the government into doing more for the release of their loved ones.

“We will not leave until they all return home!” read a statement from the Hostages and Missing Families Forum.

“They will stay in tents with mattresses and sleeping bags until all hostages return home. Every Israeli citizen is invited to come and show their support!” the forum said, adding that a rally will start today at 8pm (18:00 GMT).


Survey suggests support for Netanyahu’s party nearly halved

A survey published on several Israeli media outlets suggests that if Israel held a parliamentary election now, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party would see a steep drop in its seats from 32 to 18.

Overall, his governing ultra-nationalist far-right coalition would get 42 seats compared to 78 for the opposition, according to the poll.

To achieve a majority, a party or coalition must hold more than 60 seats in the 120-seat Israeli parliament, or Knesset.


730 foreign nationals expected to cross through Rafah Saturday: Egyptian source

Some 730 foreign nationals are expected to leave Gaza through the Rafah crossing Saturday, according to an official source on the Egyptian side of Rafah.

Here is breakdown of nationalities expected:

  • 55 Egyptians
  • 386 Americans
  • 112 British
  • 77 French
  • 151 Germans

Honduras joins other countries in calling back its ambassador to Israel

Honduras announced Friday it was calling back its ambassador to Israel, joining a list of other nations that have scaled back on diplomatic ties following criticism of the country’s actions in Gaza.

“Given the grave humanitarian situation that the civil population of the Gaza Strip are enduring, the government of President Xiomara Castro has decided to immediately call the ambassador of the Republic of Honduras in Israel, Roberto Martinez, to go to consultations to Tegucigalpa,” the Honduran Minister of Foreign Affairs Eduardo Enrique Reina wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

Reina has stated that Honduras is advocating for a ceasefire in Gaza in order to establish a humanitarian corridor and to start peace talks.

Honduras is not the only country readjusting diplomatic ties with Israel. On Tuesday, Bolivia cut diplomatic relations, citing “crimes against humanity committed against the Palestinian people”, while Colombia and Chile recalled their ambassadors to Israel for consultation due to Israel’s strikes on Gaza.

A day later, Israel said it regretted the Jordanian government’s decision to recall its ambassador.

Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi said in a statement the immediate move was “an expression of Jordan’s position rejecting and condemning the Israeli war raging in Gaza.”

On Thursday, Bahrain also withdrew its ambassador.


US anticipates shift in Israel’s tactics in the coming days: Senior official

US officials are anticipating a new phase of Israel’s war with Hamas in the coming days in which Israel decreases the scale of its air campaign and focuses on a more tactical ground operation.

As humanitarian aid continues to flow into Gaza, the Joe Biden administration expects that Israel’s air campaign will see “a decrease in what we’ve seen”, a senior administration official told CNN on Friday.

The administration anticipates a move to a “more of a tactical focus on the ground campaign” aimed at clearing out the vast network of underground tunnel complexes Hamas operates out of, the official added.

The official maintained that the administration has been “very direct…about wartime decisions and being deliberate and asking hard questions” in discussions with Israel, even as the Israeli military has drawn international criticism over the targeting of the Jabalya Refugee Camp in northern Gaza.

Asked when the Biden administration might feel compelled to call for a ceasefire — something it has so far declined to do — the official stated that given the scale and nature of Hamas’ attacks on Israel on October 7, a ceasefire was not appropriate.

“A terrorist group takes 200 hostages and kills 1,400 people and is hiding under tunnels, including the leaders — ceasefire is not really the word … to use,” the official told CNN.

The official reiterated that the US is actively calling on Israel to enact so-called “humanitarian pauses”, and that it is stressing to Israel that even as it has a right to defend itself, it must adhere to international humanitarian laws.

Ultimately, “a ceasefire I think, depends on the Israelis feeling secure in ensuring that something like this cannot happen again”, the official added.


Israel bombs school where thousands are sheltering, wounding dozens

Israeli bombs struck the al-Fakhoura school in the Jabalia neighbourhood in Gaza, according to Al Jazeera Arabic and local media.

Thousands of Palestinians were sheltering in the school when the bomb hit.

Dozens have reportedly been wounded in the bombing, with exact numbers yet to be announced.


UNRWA no longer able to provide protection to civilians under UN flag

The UN agency for Palestinian refugees is no longer able to provide shelter and protection to civilians under the UN flag, according to its Gaza director.

Speaking in a video address from the besieged coastal territory, Thomas White at least 72 UNRWA staff have been also been killed.

“The reality is we’ve lost contact with many of the shelters in the north,” White told member states gathered to listen to a report on the humanitarian situation.

Some 600,000 people in Gaza have been sheltering in UN buildings since the start of the war.

“These are people seeking shelter under a UN flag seeking protection under international humanitarian law,” White continued, adding, “Let’s be very clear, there is no place that is safe in Gaza right now.”


Average person in Gaza living on two pieces of bread a day: UN official

Thomas White, the United Nations’ top aid official for Palestinian refugees in Gaza, has provided a sobering assessment of the water and food situation in the besieged enclave.

White said in a video briefing to diplomats that the average resident in Gaza is living on two pieces of Arabic bread a day and is increasingly desperate for water, according to the Associated Press.

White added the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East is supporting about 89 bakeries in Gaza, but “now people are beyond looking for bread. It’s looking for water”.

White also stated that, based on his extensive travel throughout Gaza in recent weeks, the enclave had become a “scene of death and destruction”.

Israel began allowing limited aid into Gaza on October 21 after earlier imposing a near-total blockade on the enclave, but inspections of incoming convoys have caused lengthy delays.

Last week, thousands of residents stormed a warehouse in central Gaza where the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) was storing food.

Samer Abdeljaber, WFP Representative and country director in Palestine, announced the incident showed that people were “losing hope and becoming more desperate by the minute”.


WHO chief ‘utterly shocked’ by attacks on ambulances near al-Shifa Hospital

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus renewed his call for a ceasefire in light of the attack.

“We reiterate: patients, health workers, facilities and ambulances must be protected at all times. Always,” he wrote on social media.


UN chief ‘horrified’ by Israeli strike on Gaza ambulances

The Secretary-General of the United Nations said he was “horrified” by a strike by Israeli forces on a convoy of ambulances in Gaza on Friday.

Antonio Guterres said in a statement early Saturday that the conflict “must stop.”

“I am horrified by the reported attack in Gaza on an ambulance convoy outside Al Shifa hospital. The images of bodies strewn on the street outside the hospital are harrowing,” Guterres added.

“For nearly one month, civilians in Gaza, including children and women, have been besieged, denied aid, killed, and bombed out of their homes.”

He stressed, “This must stop.”

Guterres added that there is “not nearly enough” food, water, and medicine; fuel to power hospitals is running out.

“Morgues are overflowing. Shops are empty. The sanitation situation is abysmal. We are seeing an increase in diseases and respiratory illnesses, especially among children. An entire population is traumatised. Nowhere is safe,” he continued.


Palestine Red Crescent urges international community to stop Israeli attacks on medical teams in Gaza

The Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) urged the international community to intervene and protect civilians as well as medical teams from Israeli attacks in the Gaza Strip.

The statement Saturday comes after Israel admitted to targeting an ambulance in a medical convoy near the Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on Friday. Fifteen people were killed in the strike and 60 others were injured, according to the Hamas-controlled Ministry of Health in Gaza.

Two medics were injured in the strikes, according to statements by the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Gaza and PRCS.

“[M]edic Shadi Al-Taif sustained minor shrapnel injuries to the leg and bruises, while the ambulance driver, Ahmad Al-Madhoon, suffered chest bruises and extreme panic,” the PRCS said on Saturday.

The PRCS added the strikes directly hit a Ministry of Health ambulance and damaged another one belonging to PRCS, which was carrying a 35-year-old wounded woman in critical condition.

“[PRCS] stresses that deliberately targeting medical personnel constitutes a grave violation of the Geneva Conventions and a war crime,” the statement said, adding that Israeli attacks have killed four PRCS ambulance staff while on duty, injured 21 staff and volunteers, and pushed eight ambulances out of service since October 7.


Hamas calls on Egypt to fully open Rafah crossing

Hamas political bureau chief Ismail Haniyeh has slammed the latest Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip and stated the “resistance will continue to defend our people with all its might”.

“These massacres are a reflection of the predicament the occupation and its ground forces find themselves in as they are combated by our resistance fighters, who are defending our land and avenging thousands of martyrs,” he said in a statement.

He added that Egypt should fully open the Rafah crossing with Gaza and praised international responses in solidarity with the Palestinians.

“The brutality, coinciding with the new visit of the US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, is a result of the green light and open support provided by the United States to the occupation at this level of challenge to all human values and international laws.”


Families of 11 Hamas victims file complaint with the International Criminal Court

Families of eleven victims of the Hamas attack on October 7 have accused the perpetrators of “crimes against humanity” in a complaint filed to the International Criminal Court (ICC).

Relatives of the victims, who were all civilians, have also called on International Criminal Court Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan to investigate Hamas’ actions as “war crimes” that were carried out as part of a “genocidal plan,” according to a press statement shared by their lawyer Francois Zimeray on Friday.

“It was the execution of a genocidal plan assumed by its perpetrators. In the face of denial in real time, the truth must be defended, these atrocities must be known and engraved in the collective memory,” the complaint lodged by Zimeray, a lawyer at the Paris Bar and ICC said.

The complaint concerns 11 victims who were either killed or injured within Israeli borders. Several had been at the Nova music festival, where Hamas gunmen killed more than 260 people.

According to Zimeray’s law firm, Zimeray & Finelle, “the material facts cannot… be disputed” as Hamas has “amply documented and broadcast” its actions, which shocked the “universal conscience”.

Zimeray asked the prosecution to “consider the advisability of issuing an international arrest warrant for the leaders of Hamas, following the example of the warrant issued for the Russian President in relation to the aggression in Ukraine”.

The development comes days after Khan visited the region and where, from Cairo, he gave a speech in which he said that impeding the flow of aid into Gaza could constitute a war crime.


Israeli jets target three Gaza hospitals within hours

Israeli warplanes targeted three hospitals in Gaza on Friday within the space of a few hours, the Palestinian Ministry of Health announced.

Bombs were dropped in the courtyards of the Indonesian hospital, the al-Quds hospital, and al-Shifa hospital, Gaza’s biggest medical facility.

At least 15 people were killed in the Shifa shelling, according to Al Jazeera.

Dozens of others have been wounded, including people injured during previous attacks.

One of the bombs hit a convoy carrying patients that departed from Shifa and was en route to southern Gaza for further treatment.


UN estimates $1.2bn needed to meet needs of people in Gaza

The United Nations humanitarian office had on 7 October appealed for $294mn to support nearly 1.3 million people but the situation has grown “increasingly desperate”, according to the agency.

“The cost of meeting the needs of 2.7 million people – that is the entire population of Gaza and 500,000 people in the occupied West Bank – is estimated to be $1.2 billion.”


Israeli strike on UN-run school leaves 20 dead

An Israeli air strike on a UN-run school housing displaced Palestinians has left at least 20 people dead, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health.

Dozens were also left injured in the attack on the Osama Ben Zaid school, located in the Saftawi neighbourhood of northern Gaza.

UK foreign secretary urges Iran efforts to prevent spread of war

James Cleverly

Cleverly and Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian held a phone conversation on Friday evening, discussing Gaza developments and some bilateral issues.

Cleverly called the process of cooperation between Iran and the UK important within the framework of diplomatic conventions.

Iran’s foreign minister also said in any approach to the issue, the Israeli occupation must be viewed as the root-cause of the Palestine crisis.

Amirabdollahian added that from the perspective of international law, people of an occupied country have a legitimate right to defend themselves.

Amirabdollahian further made it clear that under international law, the principle of proportionality should also be taken into account in every war.

In that vein, he noted, the massacre of more than 9,000 Palestinian civilians, in an act of revenge and genocide openly declared by the Zionist regime, is not acceptable by any metric.

Referring to the British foreign secretary’s support for Israel, Amirabdollahian
underlined that “the Israeli regime’s genocide in Gaza” must be stopped immediately and humanitarian aid should be provided to Gaza in large quantities.

Amirabdollahian said the extensive support provided by the US government to Tel Aviv is to blame for the escalation of the war in the region.

He also said the resistance forces in the region do not take orders from Iran, but they make decisions based on their own considerations and on the conditions as well as in line with their country’s national and regional security.

The Iranian foreign minister, while emphasizing mutual respect, highlighted the importance of focusing on diplomacy and dialogue as a proper option when it comes to cooperation between Tehran and London.

Gaza health ministry says several killed, injured in Israeli attack on ambulance convoy

Gaza War

The health ministry said “several citizens were killed and dozens wounded in an Israeli strike at the entrance to al-Shifa hospital” in Gaza City on Friday.

A convoy of ambulances was transporting critically wounded patients from al-Shifa Hospital to the Rafah border crossing with Egypt when it was targeted in an Israeli attack, said Ashraf al-Qudra, a spokesman for the health ministry in Gaza.

“We informed the Red Cross and the Red Crescent, we informed the whole world, that those victims were lined up in those ambulances,” he added.

“This was a medical convoy.”

The Israeli military announced it was looking into the report.

The Palestinian Red Crescent said one of its ambulances was targeted in the attack near al-Shifa.

“The staff is safe,” it added.

Palestinian Red Crescent spokesman Mohamed Abu Musbah stated the area where the ambulance was hit was “extremely crowded” with civilians.

The largest hospital in Gaza, al-Shifa is facing severe overcrowding, with a bed occupancy rate of 164 percent, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), amid Israel’s continuing bombardment and blockade of the territory.

At least 16 hospitals across Gaza are no longer functioning due to damage from bombing and a lack of fuel, the health ministry has announced.

The WHO warned Wednesday that the fuel shortage “immediately risks the lives” of the wounded and other patients.

More than 9,200 people have been killed and 23,500 others wounded in Gaza since Israel launched a bombardment of the besieged enclave on October 7, according to Palestinian authorities.

Hezbollah leader says they entered war against Israel, all options on table

Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah

Speaking in a televised speech on Friday, Nasrallah repeated that Hezbollah is ready for all possibilities.

The Hezbollah chief said whoever wants to prevent a regional war, must quickly stop the Israeli aggression against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

Addressing the US deployment of warships in the region, Nasrallah stressed Hezbollah is not intimidated.

He added that the Lebanese resistance movement entered the battle against Israel on October 8, the day after Palestinian resistance movements launched its surprise attack against Israeli occupation forces.

Nasrallah noted the daily exchange of fire with Israeli forces along the Lebanese border might seem modest but it is very important, calling it unprecedented since 1948.

The Hezbollah chief confirmed that 57 Hezbollah fighters have been martyred so far.

He blamed the United States for the aggression the Israeli regime is perpetrating against Palestinians in the besieged Gaza Strip.

He also said that Operation Al-Aqsa Storm was carried out entirely by Palestinian resistance movements.

“The great Al-Aqsa Storm Operation was decided and implemented 100 percent Palestinian.”

“Absolute secrecy is what ensured the success of the Al-Aqsa Storm operation on October 7,” added the chief of the Lebanese Hezbollah resistance movement.

“We were not bothered by Hamas’s concealment of the October 7 attack plan,” he stated.

“Conditions in Palestine in recent years have been extremely harsh, especially with this extremist, foolish, stupid, and savage [Israeli] regime,” he said, adding, “The Operation Al-Aqsa Storm led to an earthquake in [Israel].”

“It has strategic and existential repercussions and will leave its effects on the present and future of [Israel],” he stated.

He stated that what is happening in Gaza shows Israel’s foolishness and inability because what it is doing is killing children and women.

The Hezbollah leader called Israel “frail” and said that for a whole month, it has been unable to record a single military achievement.

Nasrallah offered “condolences and congratulations” to the families of those killed in Gaza and the occupied West Bank.

“This is a seamless battle at the human, ethical and religious levels. It’s the most evident, the most honest and the most noble,” he continued.

“Our true strength lies in our firm belief, unshaken conviction, our devotion and commitment to the cause,” the Hezbollah chief said.

“We must salute the… strong and brave Iraqi and Yemeni hands who are now involved in this holy war,” he noted.

“There had to be a major event that would shake the usurping entity and its supporters in Washington and London and this is when the blessed operation of the October 7 took place.”

“These messages, conveyed separately and repeatedly, bear the collective plea of the United States and some of its allies, urging Hezbollah to refrain from engaging in battle with the Zionist regime,” he stated.

The Hezbollah official highlighted that his movement’s response has been “unequivocal”, stressing the group’s independence and unwavering commitment to its own agenda.

Hezbollah has warned that it will join the Palestinian resistance group Hamas and its allies in the fight against Israel if the regime escalates its aggression on Gaza and in case foreign military forces intervene to help the Israeli regime in the battle.

Unseasonal snow blankets western Iranian city of Ghorveh

Here are some breath-taking images of the unseasonal snow:

President Raisi likens Gaza war to Western-backed Iraq war on Iran

Addressing a crowd on Friday in the western Iranian city of Baneh, near the Iraqi border that bore a huge brunt of the war with the former Ba’athist regime through 1980 to 88, Ebrahim Raisi said, “During the (Iraqi) imposed war, the people of Baneh saw examples of what you see in Palestine today.”

He added, “If the US and Europeans crimes in the west of our country had been condemned yesterday, we would not witness such crimes in Palestine and Gaza now.”

President Raisi said that the same current that ravaged Iranian cities by funding the Saddam regime, are now supporting Israel to kill Palestinian people and raze their houses today.
“Four thousand Palestinian children have been killed. Where will this crime be dealt with?” he said.

However, the Iranian president sounded optimistic that the Palestinian resistance movement will emerge victorious in the face of the ongoing conflict that started on October 7.
Thw war has so far left nearly 10,000 Palestinians killed, almost two thirds of them women and children, according to Palestinian health ministry sources.

Death toll in drug rehab center in northern Iran rises to 32

The deputy governor of the Gilan Province for political, security and social affairs, Mohammad Jalayi, told Mehr news agency that the fire started at 06:00 am local time (0230 GMT) near the city of Langeroud.

The wounded were taken to the hospitals in Lanegroud, according to earlier reports.

Jalayi said an investigation is underway to find out the cause of the incident.

Israel’s military says surrounding Gaza City, as death toll exceeds 9k

Israeli Army

“Our soldiers have been operating in Gaza City for the past few days, surrounding it from several directions, deepening the operation,” Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi stated.

“Our forces are in very significant areas of Gaza City,” he added.

The Israeli army began its full ground operation in Gaza last Friday, moving tanks, bulldozers, infantry, and combat engineer units into the strip. While the ground operation around Gaza’s largest population center has developed slowly, Israel has maintained its constant bombardment of the besieged strip by air.

At least 9,000 people have been killed in Israeli attacks on Gaza since October 7, according to figures released Thursday by the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Ramallah. More than 32,000 others have been wounded.

A group of United Nations experts have warned time is running out to “prevent genocide and humanitarian catastrophe” in Gaza, expressing their deep frustration with Israel’s refusal to halt plans to decimate the besieged Gaza Strip.

“We remain convinced that the Palestinian people are at grave risk of genocide,” the experts said in a joint statement on Thursday.

“The time for action is now. Israel’s allies also bear responsibility and must act now to prevent its disastrous course of action.”

The experts expressed “deepening horror” about Israeli airstrikes against the Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza since Tuesday night, which have reportedly killed and injured hundreds of Palestinians, calling it a brazen breach of international law.

“The Palestinian people in Gaza, particularly women, children, persons with disabilities, youth, and older persons, have endured decades of hardship and deprivation,” added the experts, including several UN special rapporteurs on the rights to food, safe drinking water, and the situation in the occupied Palestinian territories.

“We call on Israel and its allies to agree to an immediate ceasefire. We are running out of time.”