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Iran calls for prosecution of Israeli “war criminals”, blasts Israel attack on Gaza reconstruction HQ

Nasser Kanaani

Nasser reiterated, “Such crimes clearly show the Zionists’ savage and inhumane nature.”

Kanaani further said, “The conscience of humanity is hurt by what is happening to the oppressed Palestinian nation because of the Zionists’ crimes and savagery in Gaza, and it cannot remain silent in the face of it.”

Kanaani highlighted Israel’s incessant and open violation of international laws and its continued aggression against the Palestinian people.

He called on the international community to use all available means to hold the Israeli regime to account and prosecute the its “war criminals”.

Qatar’s Foreign Ministry also on Monday strongly condemned the Israeli bombing of the headquarters of the Qatar Committee for the Reconstruction of Gaza.

The ministry labeled the attack as “a clear violation of international law and an extension of Israel’s approach to targeting civilians and civilian infrastructure,” according to its statement.

The ministry said the committee “has worked through its projects to alleviate the suffering of the population in the besieged Gaza Strip due to the long blockade and ongoing aggression.”

The ministry also called for immediate action from the international community to halt Israeli actions in Gaza.

Around 11,300 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s incessant strikes on Gaza with at least 2,500 of them being children.

Palestinian group Hamas attacked Israel on October 7 killing about 1,200 and taking more than 200 people hostage. The Gaza-based group said the attack came as a response to increased deadly attacks by Israeli settlers and the continued desecration of the Al-Aqsa Mosque by Israel.

At least two killed in Israeli attack in southern Lebanon as tensions mount

Lebanon Israel

Two people were killed in an Israeli raid on the town of Ainata on Monday, according to a first-responder organisation affiliated with the Hezbollah-allied Amal Movement and Lebanese state media.

It was not immediately clear if those killed were civilians.

The Israeli military announced earlier that “terrorists fired towards several locations in northern Israel”, and the army claimed its artillery struck the source of the fire and hit posts which “terrorists used to carry out launches toward Israel”.

In a separate attack, Israeli forces shelled media teams and journalists in the Lebanese border village of Yaroun, official Lebanese news agency NNA reported.

Separately, the Israel Electric Corporation said an employee died on Monday after being wounded in a missile attack carried out the previous day by the Iran-backed armed group Hezbollah.

Hezbollah has been trading fire with Israeli forces from its stronghold in southern Lebanon after Israel launched an assault on Gaza last month in response to a Hamas attack on southern Israel.

Palestinian officials in Gaza say more than 11,200 people, including more than 4,600 children, have been killed since the Israeli assault began on October 7.

Around 1,200 people were killed in the Hamas attack on southern Israel, according to Israeli authorities.

The exchanges of fire along the Israel-Lebanon border mark the deadliest violence in the area since Israel and Hezbollah fought a month-long war in 2006.

More than 70 Hezbollah fighters and 10 civilians have been killed in Lebanon, and 10 people including seven soldiers have been killed in Israel. Thousands more on both sides have fled shelling.

Until now, violence has largely been confined within a band of territory on either side of the border.

Israel has said it does not want war on its northern front as it seeks to topple Hamas in Gaza. The United States has said it doesn’t want conflict to spread around the region, sending two aircraft carriers to the area to deter Iran from getting involved.

Hezbollah leader Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah stated on Saturday that the Lebanon front would “remain active”, and added there was “a quantitative improvement” in the pace of the group’s operations.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned Hezbollah on Monday not to broaden its attacks.

“This is playing with fire. Fire will be answered with much stronger fire. They should not try us, because we have only shown a little of our strength,” he cautioned.

Asked at a news conference on Saturday about what Israel’s red line was, Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said: “If you hear that we have attacked Beirut, you will understand that Nasrallah has crossed that line.”

Lebanon’s caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati, in an interview with Al Jazeera on Sunday, stressed he was reassured by the “rationalism” of Hezbollah so far.

“We are preserving self-restraint, and it’s up to Israel to stop its ongoing provocations in south Lebanon,” he added.

Lebanon took years to rebuild from the 2006 war and can ill afford another one, four years into a financial crisis that has impoverished many Lebanese and paralysed the state.

Israel has long seen Hezbollah as the biggest threat along its borders. The 2006 war killed 1,200 people in Lebanon, mostly civilians, and 157 Israelis, mostly soldiers.

US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin characterised the violence as “tit-for-tat exchanges between Lebanese Hezbollah and Israeli forces in the north”, predicting Israel would remain focused on the threat from Hezbollah “for the foreseeable future”.

“And certainly no one wants to see another conflict break out in the north on Israel’s border in earnest,” he told reporters in Seoul.

Mohanad Hage Ali of the Carnegie Middle East Center said, “I can definitely see a wider escalation, but I am not sure about a full conflict that nobody wants”, adding, “Nobody wants one on one hand, and I think the US is playing a strong role keeping things under control.”

Israel peddling illusionary advances in Gaza as part of psychological war: Hamas

Israeli Army

“The (Israeli) occupation tries to market illusionary advances in Gaza as part of its psychological war on the residents of Gaza,” Fawzi Barhoum, a spokesman for Hamas, said in a statement.

He added the Palestinian resistance in Gaza is steadfast and is controlling the battle and carrying out quality operations against Israeli tanks and military vehicles.

“The presence of the occupation tanks in certain places doesn’t mean its control over the area,” Barhoum stated.

Israeli army spokesperson Daniel Hagari had claimed that the Israeli army is advancing in Gaza from different areas.

The Israel Defense Forces also announced Hamas’ military organization has collapsed in the north of the Gaza Strip.

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Galant said on Monday Hamas has lost control of Gaza, its activists fleeing to the south.

According to the minister, Israeli forces are advancing “according to plans and carry out the tasks accurately, lethally”. The IDF, in his words, has intensified its operations against Hamas’ tunnels under Gaza.

According to the Israeli military, before the start of hostilities, Hamas units in the Gaza Strip numbered 30,000 fighters, which were grouped into five regional brigades, 24 battalions and approximately 130 companies. They possessed combat skills in engineering, anti-tank warfare, sniping, and had anti-ship and air defense units.

As the Israeli assault on the Gaza Strip entered its 38th day, at least 11,180 Palestinians have been killed, including over 7,700 children and women, and more than 28,200 others have been injured, according to the latest figures by Palestinian authorities.

Thousands of buildings including hospitals, mosques and churches have also been damaged or destroyed in Israel’s relentless air and ground attacks on the besieged enclave since last month.

The Israeli death toll, meanwhile, is nearly 1,200, according to official figures.

Over 190,000 applications filed for weapons licenses in Israel since start of war

Israeli settler

“Since the beginning of the war, more than 190,000 applications for weapons licenses have been submitted to the Ministry of National Security,” Israeli financial newspaper Calcalist reported on Monday.

It added that “in the first ten months of 2023, more than 210,000 applications have been submitted, and the year is not over yet.”

It also said so far 31,000 licenses have been issued since the start of 2023, while in 2022, 41,000 applications were submitted and only 13,000 licenses were granted.

The Israeli weapons industry has seen a surge in demand, in stark contrast to many businesses that have closed in Israel due to the ongoing war in Gaza, according to the newspaper.

As the Israeli assault on the Gaza Strip entered its 38th day, at least 11,200 Palestinians have been killed, including over 7,700 children and women, and more than 28,200 others have been injured, according to the latest figures by Palestinian authorities.

Thousands of buildings, including hospitals, mosques and churches, have also been damaged or destroyed in Israel’s relentless air and ground attacks on the besieged enclave since last month.

The Israeli death toll, meanwhile, is nearly 1,200, according to official figures.

Blinken acknowledges disagreements within US State Department on Gaza war

Antony Blinken

His message to personnel, sent on the heels of his recent travels, comes amid growing anger and dissent not only from staff at the State Department but within the broader Biden administration.

CNN reported last week that hundreds of personnel at the US Agency for International Development signed an open letter calling for a ceasefire, and there are reports of a “dissent memo” inside the State Department.

Last month, a State Department official publicly resigned in protest of the administration’s policy on the Israel-Hamas war.

“I know that for many of you, the suffering caused by this crisis is taking a profound personal toll,” Blinken wrote in his email Monday, which was seen by CNN.

“The anguish that comes with seeing the daily images of babies, children, elderly people, women, and other civilians suffering in this crisis is wrenching. I feel it myself.”

The top US diplomat noted that “some people in the Department may disagree with approaches we are taking or have views on what we can do better.”

The State Department head then noted that forums have been organized in Washington, DC, so that employees can provide feedback.

“We’re listening: what you share is informing our policy and our messages,” he added.

In his email, Blinken provided an overview of his trip to the Middle East and Asia last week, saying that the US’ “overarching objective remains the same: to bring this terrible conflict to a close as quickly as possible, while standing by Israel’s right and obligation, in full accordance with international humanitarian law, to ensure a terrorist attack like October 7th never happens again.”

He reiterated that “far too many Palestinian civilians have died” and “much more can and should be done to reduce their suffering”.

“As I said in private and in public, we believe Palestinian people’s voices must be at the center of post-crisis governance in Gaza,” Blinken wrote, adding, “We believe in Palestinian-led governance of Gaza, with Gaza unified with the West Bank. Gaza’s reconstruction must be supported with a sustained mechanism.”

HuffPost was the first to report on Monday’s email.

At a State Department briefing Monday, spokesperson Matt Miller noted that “the State Department, like every organization, not just in government but around the world, contains people with a diversity of views”.

“One of our strengths as an organization is that we have that diversity of views and that we welcome people to make those views known,” Miller said.

He added that Blinken has met with a number of people “from all ranks of the department, from different bureaus in the department, to hear exactly what they think about our policy, both with respect to Israel and its conflict with Hamas, and with respect to other matters, including very controversial matters.”

A State Department dissent cable has also accused Israel of committing “war crimes” in Gaza and slammed President Biden for “spreading misinformation” on the Israel-Palestine war.

The cable, first reported by Axios, was sent to the State Department’s policy office on 3 November. It was signed by 100 State Department and USAID employees, who urged the administration to reassess their policy toward Israel and demand a ceasefire to the war.

“Members of the White House and (the National Security Council) displayed a clear disregard for the lives of Palestinians, a documented unwillingness to de-escalate, and, even prior to October 7, a reckless lack of strategic foresight,” the authors said, taking a broad swipe at the Biden administration.

The authors alleged the US “doubled down on our unwavering military assistance” to Israel without imposing “clear or actionable redlines”, as Israel engaged in actions that constitute “war crimes and/or crimes against humanity under international law”.

Middle East Eye first reported how State Department officials were drafting dissent cables amid frustration with the Biden administration’s unconditional support for Israel.

The draft MEE exclusively reported on 25 October called for an immediate cessation of hostilities in Gaza and implored Washington to promote truthful and balanced public messaging towards resolving the war.

The 3 November memo was harsher in tone and also criticised Biden for “questioning the number of deaths” in Gaza.

Biden suggested last month that the death toll reported by Palestinian health officials in Gaza was not reliable. However, senior US officials have since backtracked.

Last week, the State Department’s top Middle East official stated that deaths in the Gaza Strip could likely be higher than are being reported.

Hamas says ready to release 100 hostages against ceasefire

Israel Hostages Hamas

“The occupation [authorities] provided the list of one hundred names of hostages. We told intermediaries that we know [the location] of just fifty among them and we need the ceasefire to find the others held by different groups,” the statement posted on the official Telegram channel of Hamas reads.

According to the Hamas version, the possibility of “releasing ten hostages every day during five days: is now being discussed”.

Abu Ubaida, the spokesperson for Hamas’s armed wing, the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades, has also said Israel requested 100 women and children be released from Hamas custody.

In return, the al-Qassam Brigades offered the exchange of 200 Palestinian children and 75 women held in Israeli custody, a five-day ceasefire, and entry of humanitarian aid to the entire besieged Strip.

The al-Qassam spokesperson added that Israel is stalling on a response to their offer and that Qatar is facilitating the talks.

There are currently 200 Palestinian children and 75 women in Israeli custody. Around 239 hostages are reported to be in Gaza after the Hamas-led attacks on Israel, but it is unclear how many are still alive after Israel’s heavy bombardment of the Gaza Strip.

Speaking to Al Jazeera by phone, Spokesman Osama Hamdan said that mediators have repeatedly come close to reaching an agreement on a captive release, but he accused Israel of repeatedly changing the terms at the last minute.

He stated the most recent arrangement would have seen Israel release 200 children and 75 women from Israeli jails in exchange for the release of 50 captives over a five-day period.

He added Hamas’s condition was also that Israel allow unfettered aid access to Gaza via the Rafah crossing with Egypt, including the entry of fuel into the besieged Palestinian enclave.

“When all those arrangements were done, the Israelis postponed that … It shows that they are not willing to go forward,” Hamdan told Al Jazeera.

“They did not reject [the deal]. There was an agreement about this and at the end, they added more conditions.”

He noted the Israelis were seeking more names of the captives, which he said Hamas has been unable to collect because many were taken by “different factions” in Gaza.

“If the Israeli side came back to the mediators today and said we are ready to implement [the agreement], things will go forward,” he said, adding, “I believe that the mediators are doing their best in order to bring them [the Israelis] back.”

Five hostages have been released thus far, most of them following negotiations through diplomatic channels with assistance from countries including Qatar and Egypt, and one after a ground incursion by Israeli soldiers inside Gaza.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected the idea of any ceasefire “without the return of our hostages”. The United States has advocated instead for “humanitarian pauses” to allow civilians to flee and for aid delivery.

EU says has given Ukrainian military €27 billion since last year

Russia Ukraine War

Speaking to reporters ahead of an EU meeting in Brussels on Monday, Borrell outlined the agenda for the event, stressing that even with renewed violence in the Middle East, member states should not “forget about Ukraine”.

“Our support is increasing. I can tell you that it has reached the level of €27 billion of military support,” he continued, adding “It is the highest figure ever reached. We continue training Ukrainian soldiers. We continue being behind Ukraine.”

While the bloc was set to discuss additional aid to Kiev, some member states have reportedly objected to continued largesse.

The EU is also seeking to deliver 1 million artillery shells to Ukraine by next March, a goal announced earlier this year. It is struggling to meet that target, however, with Bloomberg reporting it has provided just 30% of the total figure.

In his comments on Monday, Borrell acknowledged that the bloc might “not reach [the target] by the end of the year,” but noted that member states have “gone onto the production [of ammunition],” and that “the lines have started working.”

“It will depend on how quickly the contracts will be implemented and the factories will produce,” he added, noting, “The goal is to increase capacity.”

Ukrainian forces have burned through vast supplies of shells and other military gear amid the conflict with Moscow, with officials in Kiev repeatedly requesting more arms and ammunition from foreign sponsors. Despite the Western aid, however, Ukraine’s summer counteroffensive has lagged on into the fall, with troops struggling to advance beyond heavy Russian fortifications. Moscow’s Defense Ministry has estimated that Kiev has lost more than 90,000 troops, along with over 55 tanks and 1,900 armored vehicles, since its offensive began in June.

Kremlin says Putin hasn’t decided to run for 2024 presidential election

Vladimir Putin

The official was commenting on a report by the Russian business daily Kommersant business daily, which said that the president could run as an independent candidate in March year. No other potential candidate has so far announced a presidential bid.

“No decision on this issue has been taken yet,” Peskov told reporters on Monday, adding that it “was understandably drawing more attention from political scientists and experts.”

When asked about his potential candidacy at the Eastern Economic Forum in September, the Russian leader responded that he would decide once the date of the next election was set.

Under Russian laws, the presidential election should take place at some point in mid-March, but the Federation Council – the upper house of the Russian parliament – isn’t expected to announce the exact date of the vote until December.

Putin has been elected president four times, holding the post between 2000 and 2008 and since 2012. He is eligible to run for two more terms in 2024 and 2030, due to amendments introduced to the Russian constitution following a referendum in 2020.

In early October, the head of Russia’s Chechen Republic, Ramzan Kadyrov, proposed skipping next year’s presidential elections due to the ongoing conflict between Moscow and Kiev. The Chechen leader praised Putin’s leadership and called him the only person “able to defend our country today”.

The Kremlin, however, announced that the elections would be held according to the existing law. Peskov described Putin as the nation’s “leading politician,” adding that other candidates might struggle to successfully compete with him.

Israel-Palestine conflict LIVE: Health ministry says all Gaza hospitals could shut down in 48 hours

Gaza War

Gaza death toll rises to 11,500

At least 11,500 people have been killed in Gaza since the conflict escalated on October 7, Al Jazeera reported, citing the enclave’s government.

More than 29,000 people have suffered wounds in Gaza.


Heavy rain compounds misery for displaced Palestinians in Gaza

Heavy rainfall has descended on the besieged Gaza Strip, causing flooding in some areas and miserable conditions for displaced Palestinians.

In southern Gaza, where many displaced Palestinians are now living in temporary accomodation, the rain has seeped through their tents, soaking belongings and causing makeshift beds to become damp.

People are also struggling to stay warm in the cold conditions, with little to no source of heating due to the cutting of electricity and scarce levels of fuel.


Death toll in Tulkarm rises to seven

The death toll of Palestinians killed by an Israeli raid on the occupied West Bank city of Tulkarm has risen to seven, according to medics.

Israeli forces used snipers, bulldozers and drones in an operation that lasted over 12 hours.

At least 32 Palestinians have been killed in Tulkarm since 7 October, and 195 across the whole of the occupied West Bank.


UN: Water supplies halted due to lack of fuel

The United Nations says that infrastructure servicing running water and waste management in southern Gaza has ceased to function.

“Due to lack of fuel, public sewage pumping stations, 60 water wells in the south, the two main desalination plants in Rafah and the Middle Area, the two main sewage pumps in the south, and the Rafah wastewater treatment plant have all ceased operations,” the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported, citing the organisation’s Palestinian relief agency UNRWA.

“Coupled with the shutdown of municipal sanitation work, this is posing a serious threat to public health, increasing the risk of water contamination and the outbreak of diseases,” it added.


UN food agency says all Gaza population suffers from food insecurity

The UN Food and Agriculture Organization has announced all the population of Gaza is currently suffering from food insecurity due to relentless Israeli attacks on Gaza.

“At this point, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) considers all the civilian population in Gaza to be food insecure,” QU Dongyu, director-general of the UN agency, said in a statement.

He also stated that before the current escalation, “close to 60% of households in Gaza were considered food insecure or vulnerable to food insecurity.”

Dongyu added that the FAO “is fully committed to addressing the pressing humanitarian needs of the population in the Gaza Strip,” and stressed that an “immediate cease-fire” is “a prerequisite for food security, and the right to food is a basic human right.”


Al-Shifa Hospital director says 179 buried in ‘mass grave’

The director of Gaza’s largest hospital has confirmed 179 people have been buried in a “mass grave” in the complex.

“We were forced to bury them in a mass grave,” said al-Shifa Hospital Director Mohammad Abu Salmiya.

He added that seven babies and 29 intensive care patients are among those buried.


Over 1mln civilians could have left northern Gaza: IDF spokesperson

More than one million civilians could have left northern Gaza since the start of Israel’s ground operations, Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesperson Peter Lerner said at a briefing.

“Over the different periods of time, I can say that we’ve had quite a substantial success with several hundreds of thousands – some estimate that over a million – people have evacuated from northern areas and headed down south, which, of course, gives the ground operations the ability to maneuver and identify the enemy wherever they are hiding,” he pointed out.

However, according to Lerner, distinguishing between terrorists and civilians is “a huge challenge.”


Israel destroys 15,000 targets since start of Gaza operation: Spokesperson

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has destroyed 15,000 targets since the start of its ground operations in the Gaza Strip, IDF spokesperson Peter Lerner said at a briefing.

“I can report that as we move into day 38, the IDF has had some substantial successes, including destroying some 15,000 targets, including 300 tunnel shafts,” he specified.

According to Lerner, IDF forces are also seeking out terrorist infrastructure, including places where members of the Hamas movement “are hiding out, where they are colluding, where they are planning their next attack.”


Far-right Israeli minister calls for Palestinians to leave Gaza

Israel’s controversial Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich says he supports “voluntary migration” of Palestinians in Gaza, calling it the “right humanitarian solution.”

On Monday, lawmakers Danny Danon, former ambassador to the UN, and Ram Ben-Barak, former deputy director of the Mossad, published a comment piece in the Wall Street Journal suggesting moving some people of Gaza to nations that will accept them.

“I welcome the initiative of members of Knesset Ram Ben-Barak and Danny Danon on the voluntary immigration of Gaza Arabs to the countries of the world. This is the right humanitarian solution for the residents of Gaza and the entire region,” Smotrich wrote in a Facebook post on Tuesday.

“The reception of refugees by the countries of the world that really want their best interests, with the support and generous financial assistance of the international community, and within the state of Israel is the only solution that will bring to the end of the suffering and pain of Jews and Arabs alike.”

In March, Smotrich received a backlash after saying the Palestinian people are “an invention” of the past century, with Palestinian officials blasting his comments as proof of the “racist” outlook of Israel’s far-right government.


UN says fighting preventing emergency workers from responding

Street fighting in Gaza City is preventing emergency workers from responding to calls for help from people trapped under rubble after Israeli bombardments, according to a UN report.

People who can no longer get out of their homes and those who need ambulances for the wounded often wait in vain, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported, citing the Palestinian Red Cross.

The emergency numbers of the Red Cross had received hundreds of calls from desperate people. There is a lack of fuel for the ambulances and fighting near the hospitals was so intense that rescue teams were unable to mobilise, the report added.


Israeli military names two soldiers killed fighting in the Gaza Strip

The Israeli military confirmed two more soldiers have been killed in its ground-invasion of the Gaza Strip, bringing its death toll to 46.

Staff Sergeant Roee Marom, 21, a squad commander in the 906 Battalion; and Major Raz Abulafia, 27, of the 6863 Battalion, were killed fighting in Gaza, a military spokesperson confirmed Tuesday morning.

Israel and Hamas’ military wing, the Al-Qassam brigades, have been engaging in fierce urban combat around Gaza City.

On Tuesday, Hamas released a video showing its fighters hiding in bombed-out buildings as they fired on Israeli tanks and soldiers with Rocket Propelled Grenades (RPG’s) and bazookas.


All Gaza hospitals could shut down in 48 hours: Health ministry

At least nine killed by Israeli strikes in Khan Younis

At least nine Palestinians, including children, have been killed and several more injured by Israeli air strikes on Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip.

Israeli raids hit two homes belonging to the Al-Agha and Abu Gemayzeh families, according to Palestinian news agency, Wafa news.


Gaza is on the brink of a communication blackout: Palestinian telecommunication minister

The Gaza Strip is facing an imminent, complete halt of communications and internet services by Thursday, the Palestinian telecommunication minister has stated.

The expected interruption is due to the depletion of fuel supplies and is expected to exacerbate the ongoing humanitarian crisis by hindering Palestinians’ ability to reach emergency, relief and rescue services, according to Ishaq Sidr, the minister of telecommunications and information technology.

An outage could prevent Civil Defense and Red Crescent teams from coordinating a response to emergency sites, Sidr said at a news conference from the occupied West Bank.

Any interruption between the crews of these groups on the ground and their centers of communication “may cause the inability to direct these crews to distress sites, which means the loss of many lives, and deliberately depriving our people in Gaza of their right to communicate, especially in light of the displacement and continuous bombing,” Sidr added.

The minister characterized these developments as a “violation of international law and basic human rights.”


Five killed in Israeli assault on Tulkarm refugee camp in occupied West Bank

Five Palestinians were killed by the Israeli military during a large-scale raid on Tulkarm refugee camp in the occupied West Bank, according to local media.

Saeed Suleiman Youssef Abu Tahoun, 24, Jihad Khaled Muqbil Ghanem, 27, and Musab Omar Ahmed Al-Ghoul, 21, were killed by an Israeli drone strike, according to local media.

Meanwhile, Palestinian health officials said Mahmoud Ali Hadayda, 25, and Hazem al-Hosary, 28 were both shot by Israeli soldiers. They were rushed to Martyr Thabet Thabet Government Hospital for treatment where they died of their wounds.

Israeli forces raided homes throughout the camp and initially prevented ambulances from entering.

Israeli troops were supported by rooftop snipers, a reconnaissance plane and military bulldozer. Heaving fighting was reported between Palestinian fighters and the Israeli military, according to local media

The Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, a Palestinian armed group, announced it damaged 3 Israeli military vehicles and targeted a military bulldozer with an explosive device amid the fighting. The group claimed to have inflicted casualties amongst the Israeli troops.

Separately, local media reported that Mohammad Abd al-Majid al-Halayqa, died after being shot by the near the Beit Aynoun intersection in Hebron.


About 200,000 Palestinians in Gaza have moved south since November 5: UN

Israeli airstrikes leave 31 Palestinians killed in Gaza’s Jabalia refugee camp

Israeli air raids on the Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza killed dozens of Palestinians on Monday evening, Palestinian official news agency Wafa reported.

At least 31 Palestinians were killed in the Israeli attack, which also left dozens injured, said the agency.

It added that the Israeli airstrikes targeted 12 homes in a densely populated area near the Jabalia Services Club in the camp for Palestinian refugees.


Over 100 UN staffers killed in Gaza since war began: Aid agency

At least 102 United Nations staff members have been killed in Gaza since the war began, a UN aid agency operating in the enclave confirmed Monday.

“In the last 24 hours, one UNRWA staff member was killed with her family in the north of the Gaza Strip due to strikes,” bringing the death toll to more than 100, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) said in a statement.

At least 27 staff members have also been injured since the start of the war, it said.

“This is the highest number of United Nations aid workers killed in a conflict in the history of the United Nations,” UNRWA added.

United Nations offices around the world lowered their flags to half-mast on Monday and all UN staff held a moment of silence to mourn and honor their colleagues who lost their lives in Gaza, according to the statement.


Humanitarian disaster in Gaza ‘happening in plain sight’: UN

The United Nations on Monday voiced concern over the “really dire” situation in the Gaza Strip, stressing that the humanitarian disaster there is taking place in “plain sight”.

“The situation is really, really dire. We’re extremely concerned about what may happen over the next few days,” Spokesman Stephane Dujarric said at his daily press briefing.

“This is not happening behind closed doors. This is happening in plain sight, this humanitarian disaster, and we need all the help that we can get,” he stated.

Dujarric added that the UN has been taking the initiative to remain side by side with the people of Gaza.

“We’re continuing to deliver whatever humanitarian aid we can as safely as possible. This is one of the reasons we have and will continue to push for humanitarian cease-fire,” he continued.


US: ‘We don’t know how many hostages are alive’

In a press briefing on the Gaza war, US national security advisor Jake Sullivan stated: “I cannot look you in the eye and tell you how many of those hostages are still alive.”

Among the 239 hostages being held in Gaza, there are also nine Americans.


Israel executed Palestinians fleeing North Gaza: Human rights group

The Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor says it has documented reports of the execution of dozens of Palestinians by Israeli army forces during their displacement from northern Gaza to central and southern parts of the Strip, even though they did not pose any threat.

The group did not give an exact number of “executions” but announced it received hundreds of reports.

The Euro-Mediterranean Observatory added there were reports that Palestinians were targeted by live bullets and sometimes artillery in premeditated killings during their attempt to flee at the request of the Israeli army to the area south of Wadi Gaza.

The Observatory received reports from displaced people reporting killings at military checkpoints set up by the Israeli army as part of its designation of a “safe corridor” along the main traffic artery, Salah al-Din Road, between 9:00 and 16:00 local time during the day.

The group has called on the United Nations and the International Criminal Court to open an independent investigation into the matter.


MSF staff say snipers shot at patients in al-Shifa Hospital

More than 700,000 children displaced in Gaza: UNICEF

UNRWA says received reports Israel used school, health centres for military operations

Netanyahu says it’s “war to end” against Hamas

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday doubled down on Israel’s war against Hamas, vowing that Israel will see the “war to the end.”

“This is neither an ‘operation’ nor a ’round’ but a war to the end. It is important to me that you know this. This is not lip service, but from the heart and mind. If we do not finish them, it will come back,” Netanyahu told soldiers of Israel’s Caracal Battalion during a visit.

Netanyahu on Sunday refused to answer whether he would take responsibility for failing to prevent the October 7 attack on Israel, saying that there would be time for such “difficult” questions once the war is over.

In an interview with CNN’s Dana Bash, Netanyahu acknowledged that it is “a question that needs to be asked,” but that the country for now needs to unite around the goal of defeating Hamas – the militant group that controls Gaza and launched the assault on Israel.

“We’re going to answer all these questions,” the prime minister continued, adding that, “Right now, I think what we have to do is unite the country for one purpose; to achieve victory.”


US official tells reporters he cannot say whether Israel is abiding by laws of war

Parachuting aid into Gaza ‘last resort’: UN

Parachuting aid into the Gaza Strip is a “last resort”, a UN official said on Monday but stressed that it would be logistically “very challenging.”

“Parachuting is always the last resort in terms if you ask any logistical colleagues because it’s very, very expensive and not sustainable,” Andrea De Domenico, head of the UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, stated at a news briefing.

De Domenico added that there are ways to bring in assistance if the parties agree on unimpeded and continuous access.

His remarks came after Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh called on the EU and the UN to parachute aid into the Gaza Strip.

“So I think it is the first entry points should be insisting in opening the crossings and making sure that sustained supplies goes in rather than thinking of extreme scenarios.”

“I know that the Jordanians did already a launch with aid through aircraft. But of course as you can imagine the quantities are limited and as I said is really logistically very, very challenging,” De Domenico continued.

Turning to the intensified fighting around Al-Shifa hospital over the weekend, he said infrastructure, including water tanks, oxygen stations, the cardiovascular facility, and the maternity ward, were damaged.

“We call everybody to respect hospitals… Hospitals must not be made places of warfare. Any military operation around or within hospital must take steps to spare and protect the patients, medical staff and other civilians.”

“And all feasible precautions must be taken, including the effective warnings which consider the ability of patients, medical staff and other civilians to evacuate safely,” he stressed.

De Domenico added that there are “simply no options” to relocate the patients in safety in any place in Gaza.

The official also warned that the lives in Gaza are “hanging by a thread” due to depleting fuel and medical supplies.


Israeli foreign minister admits global pressure over Gaza war increasing

Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen stated on Monday that his country may have up to three weeks to continue its bombardment of Gaza before pressure for a ceasefire ratchets up.

“From a political point of view, we recognise that Israel has come under more pressure,” Cohen said.

“The pressure is not very high, but it is increasing.”

He added that “in conversations I hold with foreign ministers, they emphasise the humanitarian issue [in Gaza], the aspect of their identification and shock from the October 7 massacre is reduced. There are also those who request – not publicly – to work towards a ceasefire.”


UNRWA says fuel shortage will shut down aid work in Gaza within 48 hours

Palestinian death toll in Gaza tops 11,240

The Israeli bombardment of Gaza since 7 October has killed 11,240 Palestinians, including 4,630 children and 3,130 women, the government media office in Gaza confirmed on Monday.

Around 29,000 people have been wounded, 70 percent of them women and children.

More than 3,000 people are still missing, including at least 1,500 children. The vast majority of these people are believed to be dead and buried under rubble.


US president says ‘somewhat hopeful’ on captive release negotiations

Biden also said that the hospital, referring to al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, must be protected and that he hopes there will be “less intrusive” action there.

He added that there is an effort to use a pause in hostilities to deal with the release of prisoners being negotiated by Qatar.

Al-Shifa, the enclave’s largest hospital, has been under siege for days and running without fuel.

Palestinian PM rejects any plan to displace Gazans “under guise of aid”

Gaza War

At a cabinet meeting, Ishtaye rejected “a proposal to create a maritime corridor between Cyprus and Gaza by some countries”, affirming that “while we seek the arrival of aid, we do not accept the displacement of our people on ships for deportation under the guise of aid”.

He also rejected establishing temporary camps for displaced persons as requested, saying that “we want our people to return to where they were displaced”.

Ishtaye believed that “our people will never be able to go back to Gaza if we accept such solutions.”

He expressed regret that some countries still advocate for “Israel’s right of self-defense,” emphasizing that “the occupation of others’ land is not self-defense.”

He called on the United Nations and the European Union to airdrop aid to war-torn Gaza, especially its northern part, asking for the opening of more relief corridors for Gaza in addition to the Rafah crossing.

Regarding the recent declaration by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on retaining security control over Gaza after the conflict while refusing the Palestinian Authority to return to the enclave, Ishtaye added, “Gaza is an integral part of Palestine … we do not need permission from anyone to help our people there.”

More than 11,100 Palestinians have been killed, including more than 8,000 children and women, in Israeli air and ground attacks on the Gaza Strip since last month, the government media office in Gaza announced on Sunday.