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Israeli forces raid Gaza strip ahead of “next stages of combat”

Israeli Army

Video published by the IDF showed tanks and armored vehicles, including a bulldozer, moving on a road near a fence. The tanks fired artillery, and some destruction could be seen nearby.

The IDF said the raid was “part of preparations for the next stages of combat.”

“The soldiers exited the area at the end of the activity,” the statement added.

IDF spokesperson Peter Lerner described the raid as large but limited in scope, stating it was “a clear and sweep operation intended to create better terms for ground operations if and when that comes in.”

“We actually engaged the enemy, killing terrorists who were planning to conduct attacks against us with anti-tank guided missiles,” he told stated.

Israel has vowed to wipe out Hamas, the armed group that controls Gaza, in response to its October 7 deadly attacks and kidnap rampage in which 1,400 people, mostly civilians, were killed and more than 200 taken hostage.

In a televised address Wednesday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed that Israeli is “preparing for a ground incursion”, into Gaza following nearly three weeks of airstrikes on the coastal strip.

The Israeli strikes have killed more than 6,500 people, and injured a further 17,000, according to information from Hamas-controlled health authorities in Gaza and published by the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Ramallah.

Limited skirmishes between Israel and Hamas militants have already taken place on the ground in Gaza. An Israeli soldier killed in a clash with Hamas on Sunday is the first publicly announced Israeli military death inside the enclave since October 7, the IDF confirmed Tuesday.

Tehran court sentences US govt. to paying $420mn in damages for 1980 terrorist attack

Iran Court

“The US government has been sentenced to paying $420 million for the crimes committed during [US forces’] invading the Tabas Desert in Iran,” said the Tehran Legal Court of International Relations.

In their terrorist operation, American forces attacked, for no good reason, ordinary bus passengers and drivers passing by.

Operation Eagle Claw, also known as Operation Tabas, was a failed operation by the US Armed Forces ordered by then US President Jimmy Carter to rescue 52 staff members held captive at the US Embassy in Tehran on April 24, 1980.

The operation encountered many obstacles and failures and was subsequently aborted. 8 US servicemen were killed in the operation.

Biden warns of response if Iran attacks American forces in Middle East

Joe Biden

Speaking at a joint news conference with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese at the White House, Biden said: “My warning to the Ayatollah was that if they continue to move against those troops, we will respond. And he should be prepared.”

The comments come on the heels of several attacks against US troops and military installations in the Middle East since the outbreak of a war between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas.

The latest escalation between Hamas and Israel began early on October 7, when the Palestinian fighters launched a surprise attack on multiple locations along the Gaza border in response to Israel’s repeated aggression against Palestinians and desecration of the al-Aqsa Mosque.

Israeli officials estimate that more than 1,400 people have been killed in the Hamas assault and over 5,000 have been wounded.

Israeli massive air strikes on the densely-populated Gaza Strip, has so far killed almost 6,500 people.

The US has publicly pledged to support Israel as it seeks to militarily defeat Hamas and end its rule over the Gaza Strip, which dates back nearly two decades. Several armed groups have threatened to attack US military installations if Israel goes through with its threats to invade the Gaza Strip and occupy it.

A spate of attacks last week spanned several days and targeted bases in both Iraq and Syria. An American contractor died of a cardiac episode while running from a false alarm at al-Asad air base in Iraq.

Several of the service members have suffered traumatic brain injuries, though all have returned to duty.

Washington has accused Iran-backed militias, but admitted there is no evidence to pin blame on Tehran’s leadership for ordering the strikes.

U.S. House approves resolution backing Israel in first move by new Speaker

US House

The legislation, which spans four pages, was the first measure approved under the leadership of Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), who clinched the gavel hours before the chamber voted on the resolution. He succeeded former Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) in the position after the California Republican was ousted from the top job earlier this month.

The House approved the resolution in a 412-10-6 vote, a strong show of support for Israel after Hamas launched an unprecedented attack on the U.S. ally Oct. 7, killing more than 1,400 in the south of the country, kidnapping more than 200 and raining thousands of rockets down.

The resolution declares that the House “stands with Israel as it defends itself against the barbaric war launched by Hamas and other terrorists” and “reaffirms Israel’s right to self-defense”. It also “condemns Hamas’ war against Israel” and calls on the group “to immediately cease these violent attacks and safely release all living hostages and return the bodies of deceased hostages”.

Hamas has so far released four hostages, with an estimated 220 people kidnapped from Israel still in captivity in the Gaza Strip. Americans and other nationalities are believed to be among them. Israel and the U.S. have not confirmed that any hostages have been killed, saying any claims by Hamas cannot be trusted.

Wednesday’s resolution was a long time coming.

Lawmakers in both parties and chambers have spoken about their desire to move a resolution supporting Israel since Hamas launched its attack earlier this month, but the decision by eight House Republicans and Democrats to vote to oust McCarthy plunged the chamber into a standstill, leaving members unable to move such a measure.

The House was unable to conduct legislative business without a permanent Speaker in place.

Johnson spoke to that dynamic Wednesday.

“The country demands strong leadership of this body, and we must not waver. Our nation’s greatest ally in the Middle East is under attack. The first bill that I’m gonna bring to this floor in just a little while will be in support of our dear friend Israel,” Johnson said in the House chamber after winning the gavel.

“And we’re overdue in getting that done.”

“We’re going to show not only Israel, but the entire world, that the barbarism of Hamas that we have all seen play out on our television screens and wretched and wrong, and we’re gonna stand for the food in that conflict,” he added.

The House’s action in support of Israel is unlikely to end with Wednesday’s resolution.

Last week, the White House unveiled a roughly $100 billion supplemental request that includes funds for Israel, Ukraine, U.S. border security and allies in the Indo-Pacific region. The package asks for $14 billion for Israel, roughly $61 billion for Ukraine, almost $14 billion for personnel and operations at the U.S.-Mexico border, $10 billion in humanitarian aid and $2 billion for Indo-Pacific security assistance.

The supplemental has received an icy reception from some Republicans, who are taking issue with the linking of aid for Israel and Ukraine. Support for Kyiv has become a polarizing topic in the House GOP conference, as more GOP lawmakers call for aid to be curtailed.

President Joe Biden has pledged U.S. support to Israel in its declaration of war against Hamas, and made note of his supplemental request in a statement following Johnson’s election as Speaker.

“While House Republicans spent the last 22 days determining who would lead their conference, I have worked on those pressing issues, proposing a historic supplemental funding package that advances our bipartisan national security interests in Israel and Ukraine, secures our border, and invests in the American people. These priorities have been endorsed by leaders in both parties,” Biden wrote.

“We need to move swiftly to address our national security needs and to avoid a shutdown in 22 days. Even though we have real disagreements about important issues, there should be mutual effort to find common ground wherever we can,” he added.

The House did not unanimously clear the resolution Wednesday.

Nine Democrats opposed the resolution: Reps. Jamaal Bowman (N.Y.), Andre Carson (Ind.), Cori Bush (Mo.), Al Green (Texas), Summer Lee (Pa.), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (N.Y.), Ilhan Omar (Minn.), Delia Ramirez (Ill.) and Rashida Tlaib (Mich.). Republican Rep. Thomas Massie (Ky.) joined them.

Six other Democrats voted “present” on the resolution: Reps. Greg Casar (Texas), Joaquin Castro (Texas), Nydia Velázquez (N.Y.), Ayanna Pressley (Mass.), Jesús “Chuy” Garcia (Ill.) and Pramila Jayapal (Wash.).

US asks Qatar to ‘tone down’ Al Jazeera

Al Jazeera

Blinken reportedly revealed this to a group of America’s Jewish community leaders on Monday, according to three people who attended the meeting and spoke with the outlet. The US diplomat visited Doha on October 13, just days after the Hamas attack against Israel triggered the latest escalation of hostilities in the Middle East.

During the visit, according to Axios’ sources, Blinken asked the Qatari government to “change its public posture” towards Hamas. As one example of how this could be done, he reportedly said they could “turn down the volume on Al Jazeera’s coverage because it is full of anti-Israel incitement”.

Blinken did not offer any examples of the rhetoric he wanted “toned down”.

Israel has accused the Doha-based network of being “a propaganda mouthpiece” for the Palestinian armed group, and has been looking at banning the channel.

“The government is working on something,” Israel’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Lior Haiat told the Jerusalem Post last week, adding, “The idea is if they are crossing the line in assisting Hamas, we can shut out the entire channel.”

Meanwhile, the White House has relied on Qatar’s relationship with Hamas to negotiate the release of some of the hostages taken on October 7. Blinken stated that he was “deeply appreciative of the role Qatar is playing” in freeing American captives amid their release last week, according to an unnamed State Department official speaking in a background briefing.

At least 1,400 Israelis were killed and thousands more were injured during the Hamas raid. Tel aviv responded by declaring war on the Palestinian group and launching artillery and air strikes against Gaza.

Al Jazeera has stated that its bureau chief in Gaza, Wael Al Dahdouh, lost his wife, son, daughter, and grandson in what it claimed was an Israeli airstrike on Wednesday.

Israel delaying Gaza incursion to give US time: Report

Israeli Army

Washington has persuaded West Jerusalem to “hold off” the planned operation until “later this week”, unnamed US and Israeli officials told the newspaper on Wednesday. Meanwhile, the Pentagon has reportedly been “scrambling” to deploy a dozen or so air defense systems to bases in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, Iraq, Jordan and Syria.

Israeli officials told the WSJ that diplomatic efforts to free hostages still held by Hamas, and the provision of humanitarian aid to Gaza, also factored in the decision to delay the attack.

Drone and rocket strikes have targeted American troops at least ten times in Iraq and three times in Syria over the past seven days. The US Central Command (CENTCOM) initially reported no damage or casualties from the strikes. However, on Tuesday CENTCOM told NBC News that the October 18 drone strike on the Al-Tanf outpost in Syria caused “minor injuries” to 20 troops.

Several previously unknown militias have taken responsibility for the strikes. The US has accused Iran and its Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps of “supporting” the militants, but has not provided any evidence of Iranian culpability.

Israel declared war on Hamas after the Palestinian group’s October 7 attack, which resulted in the deaths of around 1,400 Israelis. Another 200 were taken captive. Tel Aviv has vowed to “dismantle” Hamas and forever change the face of Gaza, and has launched heavy artillery and air strikes against the territory in preparation for a ground invasion.

The US has endorsed Israel’s war plans and pledged billions of dollars in military aid. The Pentagon has also deployed two aircraft carrier strike groups and a Marine expeditionary force to the eastern Mediterranean.

US and Russia fail to pass Gaza resolutions at UNSC

Russia and China vetoed the US draft resolution on the Middle East, while Russia’s draft resolution did not get enough votes to be adopted. It failed to require the nine votes needed for consideration.

The result for the US resolution was announced as “10 votes in favor, 3 against veto, and 2 abstentions”.

US Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield said she was “deeply disappointed” by the veto.

Russian Permanent Representative to the United Nations Vasily Nebenzya also stated Moscow regrets that the UN Security Council has fallen short of expectation, despite Moscow’s efforts.

Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh has hailed Russia, China’s vetoing the US-drafted UN Security Council resolution on the Middle East.

“The head of the Political Bureau [of the Hamas Palestinian movement] highly assesses Russia and China’s position in the UN Security Council and their blocking the American draft resolution backing the occupational [Israeli] forces. He also expresses gratitude to all countries both within the Security Council and outside it who called for stopping the aggression against our Palestinian people in Gaza,” Hamas said in a statement posted on its Telegram channel.

Hamas called on the international community to oblige Israel to respect human rights and “use humanitarian law in respect of the Palestinian people both in the Gaza Strip and in entire Palestine”.

On October 18, the US vetoed Brazil’s draft resolution on the Middle East. The United Kingdom and Russia abstained from voting in light of the UN Security Council’s rejection of its suggested amendments to the document, while the remaining 12 members of the UN Security Council voted in favor of the resolution.

On October 17, the UN Security Council did not adopt the Russia-drafted resolution on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, as five countries voted in favor. Thus, the resolution did not receive enough votes to pass.

On October 7, Hamas initiated a multi-pronged surprise military operation via land, sea and air. The group announced it was in response to the storming of Al-Aqsa Mosque in occupied East Jerusalem and Israeli settlers’ growing violence against Palestinians. The attacks have so far killed more than 1,400 and injured over 5,000, according to Israeli officials. Hamas also announced it is holding between at least 200 and 250 hostages.

Following the multi-front attack by Hamas, Israel carried out heavy bombardment across the Gaza Strip, killing more than 6,500 Palestinians, including hundreds of children and women, and wounding over 16,000 others. Tel Aviv has also ordered a “complete siege” of Gaza, saying it would halt its supply of electricity, food, water and fuel.

Gaza is one of the most densely populated places on Earth, where some 2 million people live in an area of 140 square miles. It has been almost completely cut off from the rest of the world for nearly 17 years. More than half of its population lives in poverty and is food insecure, with nearly 80% of its population relying on humanitarian assistance.

Iran FM: Iranian mission to UN tried hard to get US resolution vetoed

Hossein Amirabdollahian

“As for the proposed resolutions on the question of Palestine, Russia, the US and Brazil tabled some draft resolutions,” said Hossein Amirabdollahian.

“The draft resolutions proposed by the United States and Russia were finally not approved, or failed to secure the required number of votes, or were vetoed,” he added.

“Now, the text proposed by Brazil, which holds the rotating presidency of the UN Security Council, is on the agenda,” said the top diplomat.

“What is important is that, with regards to the text of the United States’ proposed resolution, the Iranian mission in New York acted very actively given that our intended objectives, which would guarantee stability, security and tranquility in the region, had not been taken into account in that resolution,” Amirabdollahian explained.

Elsewhere in his remarks, the Iranian foreign minister called for an immediate end to the Israeli regime’s war crimes and genocide against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza.

He also called for humanitarian aid to be sent in promptly and on a large scale.

The top diplomat further defended the recent operation conducted by Palestinian resistance movement Hamas against Israel.

“Hamas is a Palestinian liberation movement which is standing up to the evil phenomenon of occupations, a right given by international law to any liberation movement whose country or part of whose land is occupied,” he explained.

UN says identified Israeli commander likely responsible for 2022 killing of Al Jazeera reporter

Shireen Abu Akleh

Abu Akleh, an experienced and highly respected Al Jazeera journalist, was shot while covering an early morning raid by Israeli forces in the city of Jenin in May 2022.

Navi Pillay, chair of the UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and Israel, said that an investigation had concluded Israeli security forces “used lethal force without justification under international human rights law, and intentionally or recklessly violated Shireen Abu Akleh’s right to life”.

Following forensic analysis and expert testimony, the commission believed the fatal shot was likely fired by a solider belonging to the Israel Defense Forces’ Duvdevan unit, she stated

“We didn’t name the commander, but we have that information,” she added.

In May, the IDF apologized for Abu Akleh’s death, after conceding last year there was a “high possibility” she was shot by an Israeli soldier.

Pillay said the commission’s investigation had observed an increase in operations by Israeli forces targeting armed Palestinian groups in the occupied West Bank, with some operations “appearing to involve the use of unnecessary and disproportionate force”.

She also added Israel treated large raids as military rather than law enforcement operations, “resulting in the application of far more permissible rules of engagement in violation of international law”.

Israel insists it is targeting “terrorist groups” in the West Bank that have carried out, or are planning to carry out, attacks on Israelis, and claims it always acts within international law.

Israel-Palestine conflict LIVE: UN says ‘Nowhere is safe in Gaza’

Gaza War

3,000 children in Gaza killed by Israel since Oct 7: Palestine’s UN envoy

Some 3,000 children have been killed by Israel since the attacks it launched on Oct. 7, Palestine’s UN envoy stated Thursday.

“I repeat, 3,000 children, innocent children, angels killed in Gaza during the last three weeks,” Riyad Mansour said in an emotional address to an emergency UN General Assembly session on the Israel-Palestine conflict.

“There is no time to mourn, more death is on the way,” Mansour warned.

Mansour added 7,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli attacks in Gaza, saying that fully 70% of all those killed are women and children.

“Is this the war some of you are defending? These are crimes. This is barbarism. If you don’t stop it for all those who were killed, stop it for all those whose lives we can still save,” he implored.

Some 1,600 Palestinians still lie under the rubble, killed or injured and no one can reach them, to save them or bury them, he continued.

The ambassador also stated Israel has destroyed over 40% of all homes in Gaza, making an entire population homeless and displacing 1.4 million people, in the hope to forcibly transferring them outside of the territory.

Mansour also cited Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen’s remarks at the Security Council calling for the release of the hostages held by Hamas, saying: “Bring them home.”

“For millions of Palestinians, there is no home to go back to. For thousands, there is no family left to embrace. Not by an act of God, but by the acts of a government represented here,” said Mansour.

“Vengeance is dead and the only path forward is justice,” he added.


Health Ministry in Gaza warns of ‘health catastrophe’, calls on Egypt to open Rafah crossing

Israel defence minister says ‘more stages’ of war to come

Hamas official calls for stronger intervention from Hezbollah

Health ministry: ‘The world must break its silence on Israeli crimes’

A spokesperson for Palestine’s health ministry has called on the world to take urgent action, as the death toll in Gaza exceeds 7,000.

“The Ministry of Interior is undertaking its role to support our people, where nothing is sacred to Israel, and people, trees, homes, are being destroyed, hundreds are being killed over the past few hours,” said in a live press conference broadcast on Al Jazeera Arabic.

“Entire neighbourhoods have been wiped out in central Gaza, with even civil defence crews being targeted,” he stated.

“The occupation is carrying out massacres non-stop, and the bombings are increasing overnight. With the cutting off of electricity, it is making treating patients more difficult,” he added.

“Israel, with the cover of the US, is targeting civilians. On the 20th day of attacks on Gaza, we call on people all around the world to take urgent action and to break your silence. The United Nations must take action as we are suffocating with no water, fuel, food or electricity.”


Arab countries make joint statement condemning collective punishment in Gaza

The United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Qatar, Kuwait, Egypt, Morocco have published a joint statement condemning the targeting of civilians in Gaza, and Israel’s violations of international human law.

In the statement, the countries condemned the forced displacement and collective punishment in Gaza.


WHO warns Gaza health crisis reaching ‘catastrophic proportions’

Palestinian health ministry slams ‘insolence’ of those questioning validity of death toll

Ashraf al Qudra, a spokesperson for the Palestinian Ministry of Health, has slammed those doubting the death count published by the ministry since the start of the war on 7 October.

“To those who are questioning the validity of the numbers, we say to them, enough of your insolence. It would be better for you to stand up for the truth and prosecute the perpetrators of the massacres, and stop supporting them,” he said in a statement.

“We call on all institutions to come and observe the work and operations of the Ministry of Health, so the world can see that behind every number is a story and a person with a name and identity. Our people and our sons are not nobodies that can be forgotten,” he added.

“We reaffirm that we will publish a detailed review in front of the entire world, about the genocide committed by the Israeli occupation against our people, which has taken place in front of the world this October.”


Palestinian rights groups call on UNSC to ‘urgently’ adopt ceasefire resolution

Senior UN official: ‘Nowhere is safe in Gaza’

Lynn Hastings, the UN’s Humanitarian Coordinator in Palestine, says Israel’s system of notifying Gaza residents before airstrikes makes “no difference” as they have nowhere safe to go.

Israel has frequently demanded the eviction of Palestinians from the north of Gaza to the south but also continues to bomb the southern half of the territory and has even attacked convoys of displaced people trying to comply with its orders.

“For people who can’t evacuate – because they have nowhere to go or are unable to move – advance warnings make no difference.”

“When the evacuation routes are bombed, when people north as well as south are caught up in hostilities, when the essentials for survival are lacking, and when there are no assurances for return, people are left with nothing but impossible choices. Nowhere is safe in Gaza.” She added.


Hamas’s military wing says about 50 captives killed in Israeli attacks

Official Palestinian death toll crosses 7,000

At least 7,028 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since Israel launched its bombing campaign after the Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel on 7 October.

According to the Palestinian Ministry of Health’s latest figures, of those killed 2,913 are children and another 1,709 are women.

The ministry added that at least 18,484 people are wounded.

Significantly, there are also 1,650 resident missing, including 940 children. The vast majority of these people are presumed dead and there bodies are believed to be trapped under the rubble of destroyed buildings.

The figures were accurate at the time of publication.


Israeli forces destroyed over a quarter of populated areas: Minister

Israeli forces have so far destroyed about 200,000 housing units completely or partially since October 7, accounting for more than 25 per cent of populated areas in Gaza, Minister of Public Works and Housing Mohammad Ziyara has said.

“The criminality of the occupier in the current aggression is unprecedented,” he stated in a statement, as reported by Palestinian Wafa news agency.

“The occupation’s bombing erased entire families from the civil registry; erased neighbourhoods and residential communities with their inhabitants; and also destroyed facilities including hospitals, places of worship, bakeries, water filling stations, markets, schools, and educational and service institutions.”


Brazil’s president: ‘It’s not a war, it’s a genocide’

Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has made his strongest comments on the ongoing war in Israel-Palestine so far.

“It’s not a war, it’s a genocide that has killed nearly 2 thousand children who have nothing to do with this war, they are victims of this war,” he said in comments reported by the country’s publicly owned news outlet Agencia Brasil.

“I don’t know how a human being is capable of war knowing that the result of that war is the death of innocent children,” Lula added without mentioning either Israel or the Palestinians by name.

The veteran left-winger stated he was also working with Qatar to make sure Brazilians in Gaza were returned home safely.

According to Agencia Brasil, there are 30 Brazilians in Gaza. It is not clear whether that number includes a Brazilian hostage held by Palestinian armed groups in the area.


Erdogan: Silence of international community over Gaza ’embarrassing’

Turkey’s President Tayyip Erdogan told Pope Francis in a phone call on Thursday that Israel’s attacks on Gaza amounted to a massacre, and that the silence of the international community was “embarrassing,” the presidency said.

In the call, Erdogan stated that all countries must raise their voice against the humanitarian crisis in the region, according to a statement by the Turkish presidency.


WHO calls for ‘immediate and uninterrupted’ access to Gaza

The World Health Organization has called for “immediate and uninterrupted” access to Gaza as its supplies wait at the Egyptian border.

The WHO said that the supplies could provide essential health services for 110,000 people, as well as surgical interventions for 3,700 trauma patients.

“Without fuel, medicines, and health supplies, Gaza’s hospitals are on the precipice of an unimaginable humanitarian catastrophe,” the agency added.

“WHO calls for immediate and uninterrupted access into and across Gaza, so that its ailing health system can be urgently revived.”

More than 60 vehicles carrying aid have entered Gaza from Egypt in recent days, but aid workers say the supplies are insufficient.


Gaza set to run out of fuel today, stopping relief efforts

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) warned that they would have to halt operations in Gaza by Wednesday night unless fuel was delivered.

“No  fuel will further strangle the children, women and people of Gaza,” a UNRWA statement read.

Officials on the ground in Gaza say this will have a huge impact on the remaining hospitals, which are running on generators, as well as bakeries which are serving thousands of people daily after Israel stopped all food, water and electricity from entering the Strip.

Relief operations will also be forced to come to a halt if fuel supplies do not reach the Strip, worsening the humanitarian crisis.

Israel has banned all fuel into Gaza from 9 October, which has had a catastrophic impact on the besieged enclave, debilitating hospitals, desalination plants and bakeries.

The UNRWA commissioner-general, Philippe Lazzarini, has stated: “Without fuel, we will fail the people of Gaza whose needs are growing by the hour, under our watch. This cannot and should not happen.”


Palestinian journalist, child killed in Israeli attack

Palestinian journalist Duaa Sharaf and her child were killed in the early hours of Thursday after Israeli jets bombed her house in Gaza.

The Palestinian WAFA news agency reported that multiple missiles were fired at a residence in the az-Zawayda area in the central Gaza Strip, resulting in their death.

In a Telegram post, Voice of Al-Aqsa Radio confirmed the death of Sharaf, who was a presenter at the station.

At least 22 Palestinian journalists have been killed by Israeli attacks in Gaza since October 7.


Amnesty: Israeli orders asking people to leave northern Gaza may amount to war crimes

The UK-based human rights organisation announced Israeli authorities must rescind the forced “evacuation” orders in Gaza, and to put an end to threats creating fear and panic amongst civilians.

“Declaring a whole city or region a military target flies in the face of international humanitarian law,” Donatella Rovera, Amnesty International’s senior crisis response adviser, said in a statement, adding that those carrying out attacks “must distinguish at all times between civilians or civilian objects and military objectives”.

“Violating the principle of distinction by targeting civilians or civilian objects or by carrying out indiscriminate attacks that kill or injure civilians is a war crime,” she continued.

Moreover, the human rights group said the leaflets being dropped by the Israeli army, ordering residents to evacuate, lacked effective warnings, “suggesting Israel may be trying to forcibly displace Northern Gaza’s civilians”.

A quick reminder that Israel nearly two weeks ago told some 1.1 million residents of Northern Gaza to head South “for their safety and protection”.

Amnesty added Israel’s order may amount to forced displacement of the civilian population.


Israeli military claims its ground forces raided sites in Gaza overnight, then withdrew

Israel’s military claimed that its ground forces operated within northern Gaza in the early hours of Thursday, attacking multiple Hamas targets before withdrawing.

The military posted online that the incursion was carried out “in preparation for the next stages of combat”, likely referring to the looming large-scale ground invasion that Israeli leaders have threatened.

Israel’s Army Radio described the overnight raid as the largest it has conducted since 7 October.

“The soldiers have since exited the area and returned to Israeli territory,” the military statement announced.

Hamas did not immediately comment on the statement.


Overcrowding in shelters is “severely constraining access to basic assistance”: UN group

The United Nation’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has warned about the overcrowding in UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) shelters in Gaza.

Overcrowding conditions are “severely constraining access to basic assistance and essential services, increasing health and protection risks, and negatively affecting mental health,” OCHA announced in a statement early Thursday.

OCHA said the number of displaced people in UNRWA’s shelters has reached nearly 629,000 out of a total of 1.4 million people displaced since October 7.

Meanwhile, OCHA added the water supply in the areas south of Wadi Gaza has temporarily improved.

“This happened after UNRWA and UNICEF managed to deliver small quantities of fuel they had retrieved from their existing reserves to key facilities. However, the available fuel in these facilities will be exhausted by 26 October and supply of piped water is expected to cease again.”


WHO calls for ‘immediate release’ of Israeli captives in Gaza

The World Health Organization (WHO) has called for the “immediate release” of all captives held in the Gaza Strip on humanitarian and health grounds.

“We are gravely concerned by the humanitarian and health situation facing approximately 200 people, including health workers and up to 30 children,” said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO director-general, in a post on social media.

He called for urgent access to each of them and the delivery of medical care.

“Many of the hostages, including children, women and the elderly, have pre-existing health conditions requiring urgent and sustained care and treatment,” he added.


Biden hasn’t sought assurances from Netanyahu on delaying ground operation

US President Joe Biden says he has told Israel’s prime minister that if it’s possible to secure the release of hostages in Gaza ahead of a potential ground operation, he should do so.

Biden flatly said he had not sought assurances from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that he would hold off on a ground operation while hostages remain in custody.

“What I have indicated to him is that if that’s possible to get these folks out safely, that’s what he should do,” Biden stated at The White House.

“It is their decision, but I did not demand it.”

“Obviously, they’re in jeopardy,” Biden continued, adding, “The question is whether or not there’s any way of getting them out. If we can get them out, we should get them out.”

Biden also stated he has no confidence in civilian death figures provided by the Hamas-controlled Gaza Health Ministry, but said it was imperative for Israel to focus on targeting Hamas leaders as the country responds to this month’s terror attacks.

“I have no notion that the Palestinians are telling the truth about how many people are killed,” Biden stated, adding, “I’m sure innocents have been killed, and it’s a price of waging war.”

Israel must be “incredible careful to be sure that they’re focusing on going after the folks that are propagating this war against Israel,” rather than civilians, he added.

“It’s against their interests when that doesn’t happen,” he said, adding, “But I have no confidence in the number that the Palestinians are using.”


More than 613,000 displaced people are sheltering in UN facilities

The number of internally displaced people (IDPs) sheltering in United Nations facilities across Gaza has surpassed 613,000, according to a statement from the UN agency in Gaza on Wednesday.

“The average number of IDPs per shelter has reached 2.7 times capacity, with some shelters reaching 12 times intended occupancy,” the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) said in the statement.

Since October 7, 38 UNRWA staff members have been killed in Gaza and 20 others injured, including one in critical condition, the organization added. A total of 41 of the agency’s 150 facilities in the strip have also been “impacted.”

The UNRWA also warned of the devastating impacts of the fuel shortage on its work on the strip.

“If fuel is not received into Gaza, UNRWA will be forced to significantly reduce and in some cases bring its humanitarian operations across the Gaza Strip to a halt,” UNRWA noted, adding, “The coming 24 hours are very critical.”


US agrees to send two Iron Dome batteries to Israel

The US has agreed to send two Iron Dome batteries from the US to Israel, a defense official and US official told CNN on Wednesday.

It’s unclear if the batteries, owned by the US Army, have already been shipped. The US Army and Israel signed an agreement for the US to procure two Iron Dome batteries in 2019, according to the Army, and they were delivered in 2020.

The batteries from US stocks are in addition to Iron Dome interceptors the US provided from stocks already in Israel. Pentagon spokesperson Brig. Gen. Patrick Ryder told reporters last week that interceptors from stocks “that the United States has in country have been quickly provided to Israel”, and additional interceptors would be provided “in the days ahead.”

The Iron Dome is designed to shoot down incoming projectiles. It is equipped with a radar that detects rockets and then uses a command-and-control system that quickly calculates whether an incoming projectile poses a threat or is likely to hit an unpopulated area. If the rocket does pose a threat, the Iron Dome fires missiles from the ground to destroy in the air.

Defense News was first to report the Iron Dome batteries being sent to Israel from the US.


Halt of UN humanitarian operation in Gaza would mark end of “lifeline” for civilians

The wind-down of services by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) in Gaza would mark the end of a “lifeline” for struggling civilians in the enclave, the agency told CNN Wednesday.

UNRWA runs the “largest humanitarian operation in Gaza,” Juliette Touma, the agency’s director of communications, told CNN in a statement Wednesday.

“We are sheltering at the moment 600,000 people in our shelters. UNRWA is their only lifeline.”

UNRWA has long played a pivotal role in the provision of essential services to Palestinian refugees residing in Gaza. On its official website, the agency announced it has “supported multiple generations of Palestine refugees with health, education and social assistance.”

But on Tuesday, UNRWA issued a stark warning that it will be forced to halt its operations in Gaza by Wednesday night if no fuel is delivered to Gaza. Without fuel supplies, the agency said it will no longer be able to operate desalination stations, hospital services or deliver food supplies, essentially severing its humanitarian services in Gaza.

“The humanitarian situation is getting worse by the minute. Time is running out,” Touma stated Wednesday.

The Israeli military said it would not let fuel to reach Gaza because it says Hamas is stockpiling existing supplies. This contradicts earlier comments from the Israel Defense Forces chief of staff, who said efforts would be made to provide access to fuel in Gaza, but that the IDF would “not allow” the fuel to reach Hamas.

During the recent fighting, the agency has turned its education centers into shelters for the thousands of Gazans who have fled their homes. Even before Israel told all civilians in north Gaza to evacuate to southern areas, close to 160,000 internally displaced people had sought shelter in 56 UNRWA schools in northern Gaza and Gaza City areas as of October 12, according to an agency situation report.

But now UNRWA is “struggling to to provide basic shelter in these locations. Essentially, we have people now sleeping in the open, we are struggling to keep the sanitation systems going, and now as aid supplies run out, we can’t provide the basics of food and water,” said Thomas White, the director of UNRWA affairs.

UNRWA clinics have not been spared from recent airstrikes, White added, recounting to CNN Tuesday details of a strike that took place roughly 200 meters (656 feet) from its facility in Rafah on Monday.

“It sent shockwaves through the building. (These are) people who were seeking medical care in a UN facility very close to an airstrike,” he continued.


Al Jazeera journalist’s family killed in Gaza strike

Al Jazeera says its bureau chief in Gaza, Wael Al-Dahdouh, lost his wife, son and daughter in what it said was Israeli airstrike. The blast hit a house in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip where the family was taking shelter after being displaced, according to Al Jazeera.

“Members of the family of our colleague Wael Al-Dahdouh, including his wife, son, and daughter, were martyred in an Israeli bombing,” Al Jazeera wrote in an on-air message Wednesday.

Al Jazeera reported Al-Dahdouh’s grandson Adam was declared dead two hours later.

Al Jazeera anchor Abdisalam Farah announced the deaths on air, visibly struggling to keep his composure and tearing up.

The Al-Dahdouh family were displaced from Tal El Hawa to Nuseirat refugee camp which they thought would be a safe place for them to stay, Al Jazeera’s office in Ramallah told CNN.

The International Press Institute (IPI) has condemned the killing of the Al-Dahdouh’s family, calling it “horrifying and outrageous news,” in a statement on Wednesday.

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) also issued a statement calling for the protection of all journalists shortly after the family was killed in what it said was an Israeli airstrike.

“During any conflict, journalists and media workers are civilians under international humanitarian law,” CPJ said, without naming Al-Dahdouh.

According to a CPJ statement released earlier Wednesday, at least 24 journalists have lost their lives in the Israel-Hamas war since October 7, including 20 Palestinians, three Israelis and one Lebanese.