Tag: Israel

  • Israel announces 4-hour window for Gaza civilians to escape south

    Israel announces 4-hour window for Gaza civilians to escape south

    Israel’s army has said that it is giving civilians in northern Gaza another window to flee to the southern region of the coastal strip.

    The army would open a four-hour window on a specific road to the south, a spokesman wrote on Monday on platform X, formerly Twitter, accompanied by a map.

    The spokesman called on people to move south as quickly as possible for their own safety.

    About a week ago, the military expanded its ground operations in the war against Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip.

    On Sunday night, the army said it had divided up the territory, and that there is now “a northern Gaza and a southern Gaza.”

    Israel’s army has repeatedly called on people in the north to flee to the south.

    According to the military, about 700,000 people have already left.

    The United Nations said there are about 1.4 million internally displaced people and has described dire humanitarian conditions in Gaza.

    In total, more than 2.2 million people live in the densely populated Gaza Strip.

    The Israeli military is currently fighting Hamas mainly in the north, however, there have also been Israeli airstrikes in the south.

    The south is not a “safe zone” but is safer “than any other place in Gaza,” an army spokesperson said last week.

    The current fighting started after the Palestinian Islamist Hamas movement launched a terrorist attack from the Gaza Strip against Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,400 mainly civilians and taking some 240 people hostage.

    Israel then launched a retaliatory bombing campaign to eliminate Hamas that has killed at least 9,770 Palestinians in Gaza, according to the Hamas-run Health Ministry there.

    Israel steps up Gaza strikes, pressure grows over civilian casualties

    Israel’s military said on Monday Israeli fighter jets struck 450 Hamas targets in Gaza and troops seized a militant compound in the past 24 hours in attacks that killed dozens of people.

    A Reuters journalist in the Gaza Strip described the overnight bombardment from the air, ground, and sea as one of the most intense since Israel launched its offensive in response to a surprise attack by Hamas on southern Israel a month ago.

    Health officials in Hamas-controlled Gaza said more than 9,770 Palestinians have been killed in the war since Hamas killed 1,400 people and seized more than 240 hostages on Oct. 7.

    Israel, which said its forces have encircled Gaza City, faces mounting pressure to avoid civilian casualties after refusing to countenance a ceasefire until the hostages are released.

    However, the U.S. diplomatic blitz in the region is intended to reduce the risks of the conflict escalating.

    The health ministry in Gaza said dozens of people were killed by the Israeli air strikes in Gaza City and further south in Gaza neighbourhoods such as Zawaida and Deir Al-Balah. Hamas-affiliated Al-Aqsa TV quoted medical sources as saying at least 75 Palestinians were killed and 106 hurt in the attacks.

    The Israeli army said its strikes hit “tunnels, terrorists, military compounds, observation posts, and anti-tank missile launch posts”.

    Ground troops killed several Hamas fighters while taking a militant compound containing observation posts, training areas, and underground tunnels, it said.

    Reuters could not independently verify these accounts.

    U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken was due to meet Turkey’s foreign minister in Ankara, hours after hundreds of people at a pro-Palestinian protest tried to storm an air base that houses U.S. troops in southern Turkey.

    Blinken made an unannounced visit to the West Bank on Sunday to meet Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, who joined international calls for an immediate ceasefire.

    Blinken reiterated U.S. concerns that a ceasefire could aid Hamas, but Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ruled one out for now.

  • Germany calls on Israel to respect press freedom

    Germany calls on Israel to respect press freedom

    The German Government has called on Israel to respect press freedom,
    following an incident between Israeli soldiers and team of German journalists reporting in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

    Spokeswoman for Germany’s Foreign Office said on Monday that “in such a tense situation as we currently find ourselves in, freedom of the press is of course an extremely valuable asset.”

    She demanded that press representatives on the ground be granted free access for their reporting.

    Journalists from German public broadcaster ARD said they were temporarily detained and threatened by Israeli soldiers in the West Bank while reporting on violent attacks against Palestinians by extremist Jewish settlers.

    According to ARD, the soldiers behaved extremely aggressively towards the journalists and repeatedly pointed weapons into the reporting team’s vehicle.

    When asked about the incident on Monday, the Israeli military apologised “for any inconvenience caused.”

     

  • Israel v Palestine: Netanyahu gives condition to ceasefire

    Israel v Palestine: Netanyahu gives condition to ceasefire

    The number of killed palestinians in the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas has been put at 9,770 according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run Gaza Strip.

    The ministry said at least 4,800 children were among those killed since Israel began striking the Gaza Strip in retaliation to the October 7 attacks carried out by Hamas militants in southern Israel, which Israeli officials said killed over 1,400, most of them civilians.

    The latest information brings the death toll on both sides to 11,187.

    Israels’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu  has given  conditions for Israel to ceafefire with palestine

     

    Israel won’t agree to any ceasefire activity in the Gaza war without the return of the hostages, Netanyahu said during a visit to the Ramon Air Force base in southern Israel, as he explained that he was delivering this message both to the country’s allies and enemies.

    “I also want you to know that there is one thing that we will not do – there will be no ceasefire without the return of the captives,” Netanyahu told the pilots according to The Jerusalem Post. “The very idea of doing that has to be removed from the conversation,” he added.

    “We (are saying) this to both our enemies and our friends. We will continue (the battle) until we have defeated them (our enemy). We have no alternative. I think today everyone understands that “The Jerusalem Post quoted him as saying.

    Also, Pope Francis said on Sunday that he “begs” in God’s name for a ceasefire in the Israeli-Hamas war.

    “I continue to think about the serious situation in Palestine and in Israel where many, many people have lost their lives. In God’s name, I beg you to stop; cease using weapons!” the pope said on X, formerly Twitter, via @Pontifex.

    “I hope that avenues will be pursued so that an escalation of the conflict might be absolutely avoided,” Francis said, adding “Let the hostages be freed immediately. Let’s think of the children, of all the children affected by this war, as well as in Ukraine and by other conflicts: this is how their future is being killed. Let us pray that there might be the strength to say, ‘enough.’

    More than 300 Americans, United States residents and their families have been evacuated from the Gaza Strip, the White House said on Sunday.

    The evacuation, carried out in recent days, was the result of “pretty intensive negotiations with all sides relevant to this conflict,” White House Deputy National Security Advisor Jonathan Finer told CBS News.

    Despite these efforts, the US believes there are still “a number” of Americans inside Gaza, he added.

    “This is obviously a major priority and one that we’re going to continue to work out until every American who wants to leave is able to do so,” Finer said.

  • Israel-Hamas war:  Drake, Jennifer Lopez, others join Artists4Ceasefire appeal

    Israel-Hamas war: Drake, Jennifer Lopez, others join Artists4Ceasefire appeal

    following the ongoing Israel-Hamas war, Canadian singer, Drake, and his American counterpart, Jennifer Lopez have joined several other artistes to call for a Ceasefire.

    According to Billboard, the celebrities have added their voices to the growing list of artists who have signed an open letter calling on Congress and President Joe Biden to back a cessation of hostilities in the Israel-Hamas conflict.

    Thousands of people have lost their lives in Israel and Palestine since the Israel and Gaza war started on October 7.

    It was in solidarity, that these popular artists from Hollywood, including Drake, Jennifer Lopez, Adam Lambert, and others, have come forward in support of the ceasefire.

    The letter they signed urged Congress and Biden to support a cease-fire in the war between Israel and Hamas.

    The letter of Artists4Ceasefire was sent to the US President last week, urging them to get both Israel and Hamas to agree to a cessation of fighting in the three-week war.

    The letter further added that more than 5,000 people have lost their lives in the last week and a half.

    Regardless of religion or ethnicity, the actors said they regard all life as sacred and reject the killing of Israeli and Palestinian civilians.

    The letter partly read, “We come together as artists and advocates, but most importantly as human beings witnessing the devastating loss of lives and unfolding horrors in Israel and Palestine.”

     

     

  • UN chief ‘horrified’ by strike on ambulance convoy in Gaza

    UN chief ‘horrified’ by strike on ambulance convoy in Gaza

    UN Secretary-General António Guterres has described a strike on an ambulance convoy outside a hospital in the Gaza Strip as horrific, reiterating his appeal for a humanitarian ceasefire.

    The ambulances evacuating critically injured and sick patients to Al Shifa Hospital in the south of the Gaza Strip were struck at the entrance of the hospital on Friday, according to reports.

    “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 said in a statement.

    He stated that he did not forget the terror attacks committed in Israel by Hamas and the killing, maiming and abductions, including of women and children.

    He stressed that all hostages held in Gaza must be released immediately and unconditionally.

    Guterres added that for nearly one month, civilians in Gaza, including children and women, have been besieged, denied aid, killed and bombed out of their homes.

    “This must stop,” he stressed.

    Guterres further noted that the humanitarian situation in Gaza is “horrific”.

    “Not nearly enough food, water and medicine are coming in to meet people’s needs. Fuel to power hospitals and water plants is running out,” he said, noting that shelters by the UN agency assisting Palestine refugees (UNRWA) were at nearly four times their full capacity “and are being hit in bombardments”.

    “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.”

    Renewing his appeals for a humanitarian ceasefire, the secretary-general underscored that international humanitarian law must be respected.

    “Civilians and civilian infrastructure, including humanitarian and medical workers and assets must be protected. Civilians must also not be used as human shields,” he said.

    The UN chief also urged that essential supplies and services, and unimpeded humanitarian access must be safely allowed into and across Gaza “at a scale commensurate with this dramatic situation”.

    The UN chief underscored that “all those with influence must exert it to ensure respect for the rules of war, end the suffering and avoid a spillover of the conflict that could engulf the whole region.”

    Similarly, Director-General  of World Health Organisation Tedros Ghebreyesus, said he was “utterly shocked” by the strike on the ambulances.

    “Utterly shocked by reports of attacks on ambulances evacuating patients close to Al Shifa hospital in Gaza, leading to deaths, injuries and damage,” Ghebreyesus said in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

    “We reiterate: patients, health workers, facilities, and ambulances must be protected at all times, always,” he stressed.

    In a separate statement, the agency also said that attacks on healthcare, including the targeting of hospitals and restricting the delivery of essential aid such as medical supplies, fuel, and water, may amount to violations of international humanitarian law.

    “WHO reiterates its call for an immediate ceasefire, emphasizing the urgent need to protect all health workers, patients, health transport, and health facilities.’’

  • Israel vs Hamas: Muslims protest in support of Palestine in Ibadan

    Israel vs Hamas: Muslims protest in support of Palestine in Ibadan

    Scores of Muslims in Ibadan, the Oyo state capital trooped to the street to stage a peaceful protest in solidarity with Palestinians, who they described as the victims of the ongoing war between Israel and Palestine militant group, Hamas.

    The protest started at the Iwo Road under bridge around 9:00 am and culminated at OTM Mosque in Iwo Road around 12:00 pm.

    According to the protesters, many innocent lives have been lost as a result of the war.

    They explained that they organised the rally in solidarity with Palestinians, who they said have been adversely affected by the war.

    It was gathered that the protesters were surrounded by security men, including men of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps and the Police, to prevent a breakdown of law and order.

    Those who were at the rally organised by Conference of Islamic Organisations in the state include top Islamic scholars, clerics and leaders of various Muslim organisations

  • Saudi Arabia announces $13m in aid for Gaza

    Saudi Arabia announces $13m in aid for Gaza

    Saudi Arabia is making another 13 million dollars available to aid civilians in Gaza, King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSRelief) said on Thursday.

    Saudi King Salman and Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman are donating the money themselves.

    KSRelief, founded in 2015, works with UN organisations and says it has recipients in almost 100 countries.

    Since the war broke out between Israel and Hamas, the UN Emergency Relief Office OCHA has appealed for urgent financial aid amounting to 300 million dollars.

  • Israel would fight until this battle is won – Netanyahu vows

    Israel would fight until this battle is won – Netanyahu vows

    Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said that a ceasefire in the Gaza war “will not happen” as it would be “to surrender” to Hamas.

    Netanyahu in a press conference on Monday noted that other countries must give more help in the struggle to free more than 230 hostages seized by Hamas in its October 7 attacks.

    He said the international community must demand the captives “be freed immediately, unconditionally”.

    “I want to make clear Israel’s position concerning the ceasefire, just as the United States did not agree to a ceasefire after the bombing of Pearl Harbor or after the terrorist attack of 9/11. Israel will not agree to the cessation of hostilities with Hamas after the horrific attack of October 7th.”

    “Calls for a ceasefire are calls for surrender to Hamas, surrender to terrorism, surrender to barbarism, that will not happen,” Netanyahu said.

    Vowing that Israel would “fight until this battle is won”, Netanyahu said the army was going out of its way to “prevent civilian casualties” in Gaza.

    The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza says at least 8,306 people, mostly civilians, have been killed in Israeli air and artillery strikes since the war erupted on October 7 after Hamas’s deadly attack on southern Israel killed 1,400 people, mostly civilians.

     

  • UN agency loses contact with staff as Israel continues ground attacks in Gaza

    UN agency loses contact with staff as Israel continues ground attacks in Gaza

    The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) has lost contact with its staff in Gaza amid the Israeli bombardment of the coastal strip.

    UNRWA Commissioner General Philippe Lazzarini said he had lost contact with the “vast majority” of his team.

    “This makes me immensely worried for colleagues and their families.”

    He said he sincerely hoped his message would reach staff.

    Lazzarini described the communications blackout as “yet another action taken to try to impede the humanitarian response to the civilians of the Gaza Strip.”

    But he said the agency would not be discouraged by this. “Our determination remains unshaken.”

    “We will continue to fulfil our humanitarian duty, even in the face of these unprecedented challenges.”

    UNRWA remains committed to protecting the approximately 2.2 million people in Gaza, he said.

    “You are the face of humanity during one of its darkest hours,” he told staff.

    Lazzarini earlier warned of many more deaths as aid is unable to reach people in Gaza due to the Israeli blockade. He called for a humanitarian ceasefire.

    “We can no longer ignore this human tragedy,” he said, calling Gaza a “hell on earth.”

    Israel defense forces continue expanding ground attacks in Gaza

    After expanding its ground operations in Gaza, Israel’s army said on Saturday that it had identified and attacked several terror cells in the area.

    “Since early Friday evening, combined combat forces of armour, combat engineers and infantry have been operating on the ground in the northern Gaza Strip,” the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said.

    “As part of the operation, IDF soldiers identified terrorist cells attempting to launch anti-tank missiles and mortar shells and struck them. IDF soldiers also identified and destroyed a booby-trapped structure,” it said.

    The army’s tanks directed helicopters toward a “Hamas operational meeting point for its terrorist operatives inside a building” and struck the building, the IDF said.

    “In addition, several terrorist cells attempted to fire anti-tank missiles at the soldiers.

    “The soldiers neutraliSed the cells,” the army said.

    It was initially unclear whether the people were killed.

    Hamas has given no sign of abiding by ceasefire, London says

    Hamas has given no indication it “desires or would abide by calls for a ceasefire”, according to the British Foreign Secretary.

    James Cleverly also urged pro-Palestinian supporters demonstrating on British streets over the weekend to be “conscious of disinformation and manipulation” following reports Iran is attempting to use the rallies to sow division.

    The Cabinet minister’s intervention comes as Israel’s military continued to expand its ground operation in Gaza as part of its ongoing retaliation against Hamas’s deadly raids three weeks ago that left 1,400 people, mainly civilians, dead.

    A spokesman for Tel Aviv’s military on Saturday said infantry and armoured vehicles were being backed by “massive” strikes from the air and sea in a sign it could be moving closer to an all-out invasion of Gaza.

    As part of the stepped-up bombardment of the 25-mile stretch, Israel also knocked out communications and created a near-blackout of information, largely cutting off the 2.3 million people in besieged Gaza from contact with the outside world.

    As the Palestinian death toll mounts, with the Hamas-controlled Gazan health ministry saying more than 7,000 people have been killed, demands for a ceasefire are growing among UK politicians.

    Cleverly said “calls for a ceasefire in the abstract aren’t going to help the situation”.

    The British government’s position, backed by Labour and Opposition leader Sir Keir Starmer, has been to push for “humanitarian pauses” to allow aid into Gaza and to allow people, including 200 trapped British nationals, to escape the territory.

    Sir Keir is facing pressure to change tack after a number of senior Labour figures, including London Mayor Sadiq Khan and a host of shadow ministers, came out in support of a ceasefire.

    The Foreign Secretary told broadcasters: “We have consistently sought to bring about pauses to facilitate the inward passage of humanitarian aid that we are providing and the release of hostages and the evacuation of British nationals in Gaza, so that has been our position from the start.

    “Of course we want to see this resolved, we want to see Israel safe, peaceful and secure.

    “But, as yet, I have seen or heard nothing from Hamas that gives me any confidence that they desire or would abide by calls for a ceasefire.”

    He said the Palestinian militant group “habitually embed military capabilities within civilian infrastructure” in a move he said was “internationally recognised” as “completely inappropriate”.

    Mr Cleverly reiterated the Government’s position that Israel has a right to defend itself after Hamas’s attack on Oct. 7.

    “Of course we are having conversations and will continue to have conversations with the Israeli military about the preservation of civilian life, about the adherence to international law,” he added.

    “But they do have a right to self-defence and throughout this operation, since the atrocities of Oct. 7, Hamas and other terrorist organisations have consistently bombarded Israel from Gaza, from among civilian infrastructure.”

    The senior Conservative minister also had a word of caution for those joining demonstrations in the UK in support of Palestine on Saturday.

    Police were expecting about 100,000 people to join a demonstration in London demanding a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war, with other rallies organised elsewhere in the UK including in Manchester and Glasgow.

    The Times reported that counter-terrorism officers have privately said Iran is attempting to heighten tensions at rallies over Israel’s bombing of Gaza and were warning of increased hostile-state activity in Britain.

    The newspaper said Iranian activity included a campaign of online disinformation and Tehran operatives being physically present at protests.

    Iran is reportedly backing Hamas in Gaza and Lebanon’s Hezbollah, another Islamist political and militant group agitating against Israel.

    Asked about suggestions that Iran could be attempting to create unrest in the UK, Cleverly said there had “often been attempts to subvert the actions of other people”.

    He added: “It is perfectly possible to support the Palestinian people but also to condemn Hamas.

    “But, sadly, we do see people being manipulated, subject to disinformation, distortion, and sadly I do think a minority — a small minority — within those protests have got very much more negative aims.

    “I would say to everyone involved in the protests, be conscious of this, be conscious about disinformation and manipulation.”

    In central London, protesters gathered with banners and posters, with some letting off red and green flares along the route.

    Demonstrators clashed with police, with two arrests made on Saturday afternoon by officers policing the protest.

    One man was arrested on Whitehall after a police officer was assaulted, the Metropolitan Police said on X, formerly Twitter.

    A Section 60 and Section 60AA authority was put in place until midnight, giving police stop and search powers in the London boroughs of the City of Westminster and Kensington and Chelsea.

    A Section 60 AA requires a person to remove items that might be used to conceal their identity, such as masks.

    Participants also chanted “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free”, despite controversy around the slogan’s meaning.

    Cries of “Allahu akbar”, the Arabic phrase for “God is great”, also rang out.

    Counter demonstrations also took place in London, with dozens of people with Union flags standing close to the Cenotaph on Whitehall.

    Ahead of the pro-Palestine demonstration, the Met had said that officers would intervene if protesters use the word “jihad” in chants in London over the weekend.

    Kyle Gordon, who is leading the force’s command team, told a news conference that, following an intervention, officers would gather information and report back before a decision is taken in collaboration with its counter-terrorism unit to determine “what the best course of action is”.

  • Nigeria calls for peaceful resolution in Israel – Hamas crisis

    Nigeria calls for peaceful resolution in Israel – Hamas crisis

    Again, Nigeria  has called for an immediate and sustained humanitarian truce between Israel forces and Hamas in the Gaza conflict.

    Amb. Yusuf Tuggar the Foreign Affairs Minister, made this appeal known via a statement  issued in Abuja on Saturday.

    According to the minister, it’s now very pertinent for the Israeli Government to grant humanitarian access to the millions of people that have been displaced since the crisis broke while asking for the opening of humanitarian corridor.

     

    “The situation in Gaza is dire and requires immediate attention as a result of the recent uptick in violence.

    “Women, children, and other vulnerable groups are among Innocent civilians that have suffered greatly as a result of the indiscriminate violence and are currently bearing the consequences.

    “Parties in the conflict must uphold the fundamental values of human rights and international humanitarian law, which places premium on ensuring civilians’ safety and well-being even in times of conflict,” he said.

    The minister said the lack of water, food, medical supplies and fuel shortages have compounded the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza.

    The federal government also called on all parties involved to immediately agree to a ceasefire and engage in diplomatic negotiations to resolve the conflict.

    It urged both parties to exercise utmost restraint and prioritise the safety and well-being of civilians.

    “Indiscriminate attacks that result in civilian casualties must be avoided at all costs.

    “The prayer of the Nigerian nation is with those who have lost their lives in the conflict and families that have suffered human and material losses and also those that are currently recuperating from injuries.

    “Nigeria urges both sides to return to the negotiating table and continue the search for peaceful resolutions and the implementation of the two-state solution as a permanent settlement of the ‘inter-generational’ cycle of violence,” he said.

    Recall that Nigeria and 119 Members States on Friday voted in favour of a resolution calling for an “immediate durable and sustained humanitarian truce” between Israeli forces and Hamas militants in Gaza.

    The resolution also demands continuous, sufficient and unhindered” provision of lifesaving supplies and services for civilians trapped inside the enclave, as news reports suggest Israel has expanded ground operations and intensified its bombing campaign.

    The resolution drafted by Jordan secured 120 votes, 14 against and 45 abstentions.

    The resolution adopted is a non-binding expression of the majority view of UN Member States.

    However, it marks the first formal response of the UN to the hostilities since the Hamas terror attacks of October 7, after the Security Council failed on four occasions to reach consensus on any action.