Israel-Palestine live: Freed hostage shakes hands with Hamas captor as IDF ‘ready’ to invade Gaza

Israel-Palestine live: Freed hostage shakes hands with Hamas captor as IDF ‘ready’ to invade Gaza

“Ready and determined” and Israeli troops are awaiting orders to invade Gaza in the next stage of the country’s war on Hamas, the the IDF has said.

Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said Israel was learning from US experience in the Middle East but stressed “our war is on our borders”, adding that he was expecting weeks of fighting ahead.

The Palestinian death toll in Israeli airstrikes over the last fortnight has now reached 5,791, according to the the Palestinian health ministry. More than 1,400 Israelis were killed when Hamas launched its attack on 7 October.

Also on Tuesday, a freed Israeli hostage said she has been through “hell” in a “spiderweb” of underground tunnels during the 17 days she was held captive in Gaza by Hamas. But she also said her captors had been “very friendly” towards her and “looked after our needs”.

Yocheved Lifshitz, 85, was seen shaking hands with a masked gunman as she was freed into the care of the Red Cross on Monday night. As she left captivity, Mrs Lifshitz said “shalom”, which means “peace”.

Key Points

  • Elderly hostage was kidnapped by motorbike and ‘hit by sticks'

  • Number of Britons killed in Hamas attacks increases to 12

  • Israel strikes 400 targets in Gaza, IDF says

UN chief warns of ‘clear violations of humanitarian law’ in Gaza

06:48 , Namita Singh

UN chief Antonio Guterres condemned Israel‘s “clear violations of international law” in the Gaza Strip as he pleaded for civilians to be protected in the war between Israel and Hamas.

The United Nations secretary-general issued his toughest statement so far on Israel’s conduct in the war in Gaza at a UN Security Council meeting on Tuesday as Israeli troops awaited orders to invade Gaza in the next stage of the war on the Palestinian militants.

According to Gaza’s health ministry more than 700 Palestinians were killed in Israeli air strikes between Monday and Tuesday – the highest 24-hour death toll since Israel began its bombardment of the Strip in an effort to crush Hamas after the group launched a surprise attack on 7 October.

My colleague Alisha Rahaman Sarkar reports:

UN chief warns of ‘clear violations of humanitarian law’ in Gaza

Israel swears 'total destruction to the last one’ of Hamas militants

06:47 , Namita Singh

Israel’s foreign minister defended his country’s attack on Gaza as a proportionate response to the 7 October attack by Hamas as he swore “a total destruction to the last one” of the militants. “It is not only Israel’s right to destroy Hamas. It’s our duty,” he said.

The Israeli military said it thwarted an assault by a group of Hamas underwater divers who tried to infiltrate Israel on a beach just north of Gaza. They were attacked by air, naval and ground forces.

Across central and south Gaza, where Israel told civilians to take shelter, there were multiple scenes of rescuers pulling the dead and wounded out of large piles of rubble from collapsed buildings. Graphic photos and video shot by the AP showed rescuers unearthing bodies of children from multiple ruins.

A father knelt on the floor of the Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir Al-Balah next to the bodies of three dead children cocooned in bloodied sheets. Later at the nearby morgue, workers prayed over 24 dead wrapped in body bags, several of them the size of small children.

Israeli airstrikes surge in Gaza, destroying homes and killing dozens at a time

06:46 , Namita Singh

Israel escalated airstrikes across the Gaza Strip on Tuesday, crushing families in the rubble of residential buildings, as health officials said hundreds of Palestinians were killed in the past day and medical facilities were shut down because of bomb damage and lack of power.

The massive air bombardment continued through the night as Israeli jets hit sites across Gaza, the Hamas-run interior ministry said.

A view of buildings that were destroyed during Israeli air raids in the southern Gaza Strip on 25 October 2023 in Khan Yunis, Gaza (Getty Images)
A view of buildings that were destroyed during Israeli air raids in the southern Gaza Strip on 25 October 2023 in Khan Yunis, Gaza (Getty Images)

The soaring death toll from the bombardment is unprecedented in the decades-long Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It augurs an even greater loss of life in Gaza once Israeli forces backed by tanks and artillery launch an expected ground offensive aimed at crushing Hamas militants.

Gaza’s 2.3 million people have been running out of food, water and medicine since Israel sealed off the territory following the devastating 7 October attack by Hamas on towns in southern Israel.

White House scraps plan for B-52s to entertain at state dinner against backdrop of Israel-Hamas war

06:20 , Namita Singh

The White House scrapped plans to have the new wave band the B-52s perform at Wednesday’s state dinner for Australia’s prime minister after deciding that it would be inappropriate at a time when “so many are facing sorrow and pain,” in the words of first lady Jill Biden.

Without directly referencing the devastation of the Israel-Hamas war, the first lady announced Tuesday that “we’ve made a few adjustments to the entertainment portion” of the dinner. Instead of the band best known for “Love Shack” and other hits, the entertainment will be instrumental music provided by the Marine band and the Army and Air Force Strolling Strings.

“Nurturing our partnerships and relationships with our allies is critically important, especially in these tumultuous times,” she said. “Food is comforting, reassuring and healing, and we hope that this dinner provides a little of that as well.”

Report:

White House scraps plan for B-52s to entertain at state dinner against backdrop of Israel-Hamas war

Russia careful over Israel-Hamas war as it seeks to expand global clout

06:19 , Namita Singh

Russia has issued carefully calibrated criticism of both sides in the war between Israel and Hamas. But the conflict is also giving Moscow bold new opportunities – to advance its role as a global power broker and challenge Western efforts to isolate it over Ukraine.

While Moscow lacks leverage to mediate a settlement in the Middle East, it could try to play on some perceived credibility problems with the West’s response to the crisis.It also expects the Israel-Hamas war to distract attention from the fighting in Ukraine and erode support for Kyiv.

There are risks for Moscow, however. It could damage its relationship with Israel, which until now has kept it from sending weapons to Ukraine.

Russian president Vladimir Putin listens to Russian deputy prime minister (AP)
Russian president Vladimir Putin listens to Russian deputy prime minister (AP)

Russian president Vladimir Putin has condemned the 7 October attack by Hamas militants on towns in southern Israel. At the same time, he warned Israel against blockading the Gaza Strip, likening it to Nazi Germany’s siege of Leningrad during World War II.

He has cast the war as a failure of US diplomacy, charging that Washington has opted for economic “handouts” to the Palestinians and abandoned efforts to help create a Palestinian state.

Mr Putin declared earlier this month that Moscow could play the role of mediator, thanks to its friendly ties with both Israel and the Palestinians, adding that “no one could suspect us of playing up to one party.”

US developing contingency plans to evacuate Americans from Middle East

06:00 , Sam Rkaina

The White House said Tuesday that “prudent contingency planning” is underway to evacuate Americans from the Middle East in case the Israel-Hamas war spreads into a broad regional conflict.

White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby stressed there are currently no “active efforts” to evacuate Americans from the region beyond charter flights the U.S government began operating earlier this month out of Israel.

“It would be imprudent and irresponsible if we didn’t have folks thinking through a broad range of contingencies and possibilities,” Kirby said. “And certainly evacuations are one of those things.”

The White House addressed the contingency plans amid growing concerns that the 18-day-old Israel-Hamas war could further escalate.

The U.S. has advised Israel that postponing a possible ground invasion of Gaza could be helpful as the U.S. and other partners in the region try to secure the release of more than 200 hostages who were captured in the 7 October attack on Hamas soil.

Watch: Plumes of smoke surround hospital in Gaza after heavy bombardment

05:54 , Namita Singh

Israel-Hamas: Plumes of smoke surround hospital in Gaza after heavy bombardment

Arab-Israeli medic stayed to help wounded at festival massacre – then was shot dead by Hamas

05:53 , Namita Singh

An Arab-Israeli paramedic who helped to treat wounded survivors at the desert music festival massacre was shot dead by Hamas militants, his family has revealed.

Awad Darawashe, 22, was manning a first aid tent at the Supernova festival, when Hamas launched its deadly attack In the early hours of 7 October.

His ambulance was captured by the militants and driven back to Gaza with hostages inside, his cousin, Kazim Khalileh, told The Independent.

Mr Darawashe, from Iksal – a small Arab-majority town near Nazareth – was seen treating victims with gunshot wounds just moments before militants completely overran the overnight rave.

Report:

Arab-Israeli medic stayed to help wounded at festival – then was shot dead by Hamas

Doctor warns Gaza wards could become ‘mass graves’ as a third of hospitals close over lack of power

05:33 , Namita Singh

A third of Gaza’s hospitals are closed and more will shut down within hours due to lack of fuel, the United Nations has said, as medics warn wards could turn into ”mass graves”.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has begged for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire and safe passage of supplies and generator fuel to the 42km-long strip, which is being pounded by Israeli airstrikes and a punishing siege.

The WHO said that supplies were so low that six hospitals had already closed across the strip. Many more will halt operations in the coming hours if fuel is not delivered.

Our chief international correspondent Bel Trew reports from Tel Aviv:

Doctor warns Gaza wards could become ‘mass graves’ as a third of hospitals close

Hostage families hope for breakthrough after grandmother released by Hamas

05:32 , Namita Singh

British families of those being held hostage by Hamas are continuing to hold out hope, amid global diplomatic efforts to de-escalate the deadly conflict between Israel and Hamas.

The Foreign Office said officials were working “tirelessly” to save UK nationals, as the release of a Briton’s mother sparked hope of similar breakthroughs for other families.

Downing Street on Tuesday said that at least 12 British nationals were killed in Hamas’s attack on Israel and a further five are still missing, with some of them believed to have been kidnapped.

Report:

Hostage families hope for breakthrough after grandmother released by Hamas

Muslim centre apologises after visit by Labour leader

05:30 , Sam Rkaina

Sir Keir has faced a backlash from Muslim and left-wing members over previous comments on Israel, after he appeared to suggest in an LBC interview that “Israel does have that right” to cut off power and water.

The Labour leader has since denied he ever backed Israel withholding humanitarian aid from Gaza and has sought to clarify his remarks about the Israeli-imposed siege of Gaza, which has sparked concerns about a humanitarian crisis in the region.

The centre’s statement said: “We wish to stress Keir Starmer’s social media post and images gravely misrepresented our congregants and the nature of the visit.

“We affirm, unequivocally, the need for a free Palestine. We implore all those with political authority to uphold international law, and to end the occupation of Palestine.”

The centre said it wanted to “apologise for the hurt and confusion that our hosting of this visit has caused”.

It added: “Our intention was to raise the concerns of the Muslim community around the suffering if Palestinians, and so we hosted an event initially with local representatives on the issue, and the knowledge of Keir Starmer’s attendance was given at short notice.

“There was a robust and frank conversation which reflected the sentiments Muslim communities are feeling at this time. Members of the community directly challenged Keir on his statements made on the Israeli Government’s right to cut food, electricity and water to Gaza, warranting war crimes as well as his failure to call for an immediate ceasefire.”

Hospitals in Gaza running out of fuel

05:18 , Namita Singh

Doctors in Gaza say patients arriving at hospitals are showing signs of disease caused by overcrowding and poor sanitation after more than 1.4 million people fled their homes for temporary shelters under Israel’s heaviest-ever bombardment.

All hospitals say they are running out of fuel to power their electricity generators, leaving them increasingly unable to treat the injured and ill. More than 40 medical centres have halted operations, a health ministry spokesman said.

UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, warned in a post on messaging platform X that it would halt operations in Gaza on Wednesday night because of the lack of fuel.

However, the Israeli military reaffirmed it would bar the entry of fuel to prevent Hamas from seizing it.

Don’t fight war ‘without rules’, Macron tells Israel

05:17 , Namita Singh

French president Emmanuel Macron, visiting Israel on Tuesday, told prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu that France stood “shoulder to shoulder” with Israel in its war with Hamas but that it must not fight “without rules”.

Mr Netanyahu said Israel would try to protect civilians as it worked to ensure they “will no longer live under Hamas tyranny”.

French president Emmanuel Macron and Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu (R) arrive for their joint press conference in Jerusalem on 24 October 2023 (AFP via Getty Images)
French president Emmanuel Macron and Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu (R) arrive for their joint press conference in Jerusalem on 24 October 2023 (AFP via Getty Images)

There appeared to be little prospect of a ceasefire any time soon in the bloodiest chapter of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict for decades, with civilian suffering spreading.

After an air strike in Khan Younis in south Gaza, Abdallah Tabash held his dead daughter Sidra, refusing to let go as he held her bloodstained face and hair. “I want to look at her as much as I can,” he said.

Israeli tanks and troops are massed on the border between Israel and Gaza awaiting orders for an expected ground invasion. It is an operation that may be complicated by fears for the hostages’ welfare and by militants heavily armed by Iran dug into a crowded urban setting using a vast network of tunnels.

Starmer ‘gravely misrepresented meeting with Welsh Muslim community’

05:00 , Sam Rkaina

Sir Keir Starmer has been accused of having “gravely misrepresented” a meeting with Muslim leaders in south Wales over the weekend, amid anger among some in Labour over the party leader’s position on the Israel-Hamas conflict.

In a statement published late on Tuesday by the South Wales Islamic Centre, it apologised for the “hurt and confusion” caused by hosting Sir Keir.

The Labour leader visited the centre on Sunday, posting images showing him meeting figures from the local community.

In a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, he said: “I was grateful to hear from the Muslim community of the South Wales Islamic Centre.

“I repeated our calls for all hostages to be released, more humanitarian aid to enter Gaza, for the water and power to be switched back on, and a renewed focus on the two state solution.”

He said he was “questioned by members” and “made clear it is not and has never been my view that Israel had the right to cut off water, food, fuel or medicines. International law must be followed”.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has been criticised by the South Wales Islamic Centre (PA Wire)
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has been criticised by the South Wales Islamic Centre (PA Wire)

‘Clear violations of international humanitarian law’ in Gaza, says UN

04:50 , Namita Singh

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres pleaded on Tuesday for civilians to be protected, voicing concern about “clear violations of international humanitarian law” in Gaza.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken told the Security Council: “Palestinian civilians are not to blame for the carnage committed by Hamas,” referring to the militants’ killing of 1,400 people, mainly civilians, and capture of over 200 in a one-day rampage through Israeli communities near Gaza.

“Palestinian civilians must be protected. That means Hamas must cease using them as human shields ... It means Israel must take all possible precautions to avoid harm to civilians,” Mr Blinken said.

People gather around a building demolished by Israeli airstrikes to rescue injured civilians and retrieve bodies from the rubble (Middle East Images/AFP via Getty)
People gather around a building demolished by Israeli airstrikes to rescue injured civilians and retrieve bodies from the rubble (Middle East Images/AFP via Getty)

Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau echoed Mr Blinken.

“There are a lot of conversations going on now about the need for humanitarian pauses and I think that’s something Canada supports,” he told reporters in Ottawa. “We must remain anchored on the priorities of protecting innocent (people) and freeing the hostages.”

The World Health Organization, in the latest of increasingly desperate UN appeals, called for “an immediate humanitarian ceasefire” to prevent food, medicines and fuel supplies from running out in Gaza.

International pressure urging ‘humanitarian pause’ in Hamas-Israel war

04:46 , Namita Singh

The United Nations, United States and Canada appealed on Tuesday for a humanitarian pause in the Israel-Hamas war to allow safe deliveries of aid to civilians short of food, water, medicine and electricity in the Israeli-besieged Gaza Strip.

UN agencies were pleading “on our knees” for emergency aid to be let into Gaza unimpeded, saying more than 20 times current deliveries were needed to support the narrow strip’s 2.3 million people amid widespread devastation from Israel’s aerial blitz.

Eight trucks containing water, food and medicine entered the Gaza Strip from Egypt late on Tuesday, the Palestinian Red Crescent said.

The United States is negotiating with Israel, neighbouring Egypt and the UN to smooth emergency deliveries into Gaza, but have wrangled over procedures for inspecting the aid and over bombardments on the Gaza side of the border.

IDF attacked 400 Hamas targets, says Israel

04:34 , Namita Singh

The Israeli military said that it killed dozens of Hamas fighters overnight while hitting over 400 Hamas targets, but that it would take time to destroy the Islamist militant group whose deadly cross-border attack on 7 October stunned Israel.

Israel air strikes ‘kill more than 700 Palestinians’ in Gaza

04:33 , Namita Singh

Israeli air strikes had killed more than 700 Palestinians overnight, said the health ministry in the Hamas-ruled Gaza on Tuesday.

In a statement released on social media, the Palestinian health ministry said at least 5,791 Palestinians had been killed by Israeli bombardments since 7 October, including 2,360 children. Some 704 were killed in the previous 24 hours alone, it said.

People gather around a building demolished by Israeli airstrikes to rescue injured civilians and retrieve bodies from the rubble (AFP via Getty)
People gather around a building demolished by Israeli airstrikes to rescue injured civilians and retrieve bodies from the rubble (AFP via Getty)

The figures could not be independently verified.

Israeli drone strike in West Bank kills three Palestinians, officials say

04:33 , Namita Singh

Israeli forces on an overnight raid in the occupied West Bank came under fire by a group of Palestinians whom the military then hit with a drone, the Israeli military said on Wednesday, and Palestinian officials said three people were killed.

The military said armed Palestinians “fired and hurled explosive devices” at its forces in Jenin refugee camp, in the northern West Bank. The military then struck them with a drone, and “hits were identified”, it added.

Palestinian youth sit on a street on 24 October 2023 in the West Bank city of Ramallah (AFP via Getty Images)
Palestinian youth sit on a street on 24 October 2023 in the West Bank city of Ramallah (AFP via Getty Images)

The drone fired at least two projectiles, the Palestinian Authority’s official news agency WAFA reported, citing sources in the camp.

Three people were killed and more than 20 others injured, WAFA reported, citing Wissam Bakr, director of Jenin Governmental Hospital.

The drone attack was at least the third use of Israeli air power in the West Bank since violence in the territory surged after Hamas’ 7 October armed rampage in southern Israel.

Jenin refugee camp, a Palestinian militant stronghold, was the focus of a major Israeli military operation earlier this year.

Varadkar says it is ‘wrong’ to be fired for views after Israeli firm sacks woman

04:00 , Sam Rkaina

Premier Leo Varadkar has said he would advise an Irish woman fired from an Israeli company to seek legal advice if her dismissal was over her political views.

Speaking in the Dail, Solidarity TD Mick Barry raised the dismissal of Courtney Carey from her role as a customer care team lead at Israeli tech company Wix, which employs 500 people in Dublin.

Mr Barry said: “She commented online about what she described correctly as the indiscriminate bombing of Gaza. She was fired from her job for doing so. I am calling on the Irish Congress of Trade Unions to speak out on this case.

“It could have a chilling effect on thousands of workers in this country who wish to speak out against a brutal war. It also creates a terrible precedent whereby workers can be fired for expressing a political point of view.”

Ms Carey posted on LinkedIn “Free Palestine” and “Israel is a terrorist state” prior to her dismissal.

Mother recuperates after Palestinian American boy killed in ‘hate crime'

03:00 , Sam Rkaina

A Palestinian-American woman whose 6-year-old son was killed in what police are calling a hate crime in a Chicago suburb has asked the public to “pray for peace” as she recuperates from her injuries.

Hanaan Shahin issued a statement Tuesday through the Chicago chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations after meeting with the group’s executive director a day earlier. The written statement marked her first public comments since the brutal 14 October attack that left her with more than a dozen stab wounds and stitches on her face.

Authorities said the family’s suburban Chicago landlord singled them out because of their Islamic faith and as a response to the escalating Israel-Hamas war.

“Pray for peace,” Shahin said, thanking authorities, doctors and others. She was released from the hospital last week and has declined interviews with reporters.

Shahin, who works as a caregiver to seniors, lost her son, Wadea Al-Fayoume, in the attack that has contributed to fears about rising hostility against Muslims and Palestinians in the U.S.

Wadea Al-Fayoume (CAIR-Chicago)
Wadea Al-Fayoume (CAIR-Chicago)

BBC condemned in Lords over Hamas reporting

02:00 , Sam Rkaina

Lord Wolfson of Tredegar, a practising Orthodox Jew, has criticised the BBC’s “abject failure to describe Hamas as what it is in plain English, a terrorist group”.

Speaking in the Lords on Tuesday, he criticised a BBC report in which it “cited uncritically that Israel had struck the Al-Ahli hospital”, which he claimed was “parroting Hamas propaganda”.

Lord Wolfson added: “Others repeated that propaganda, including I’m afraid, a noble friend of mine, who tweeted not just that the Israelis had hit the hospital, but they had targeted it. She used that word twice.

“I called that out as a modern blood libel and I’m delighted to see that the most Reverend Primate the Archbishop of Canterbury used the same language recently as well.

“But the damage was done – other terrorist groups will have seen and taken note, so we should remember the old injunction: careless talk costs lives.”

His comments came after an exchange on social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter, with fellow Tory peer Baroness Warsi about the explosion at Al-Ahli hospital.

Russia put forward its own alternative draft resolution

01:00 , Sam Rkaina

Russia put forward its own alternative draft resolution on Tuesday after saying it does not support the proposed U.S. action.

“The whole world is expecting from the Security Council a call for a swift and unconditional ceasefire,” Russia’s U.N. Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia told the Security Council. “This is precisely what is not in the American draft. Therefore, we don’t see any point in it, and we cannot support it.”

Russia last week failed to get the minimum nine votes needed for a draft resolution that called for a humanitarian ceasefire. The draft resolution received five votes in favor and four votes against, along with six abstentions.

Nebenzia said on Tuesday that the new Russian text drew on humanitarian language from the U.S., Brazilian and first Russian drafts.

Arab states made clear at the United Nations on Tuesday that they firmly back a call for a humanitarian ceasefire.

“We followed with regret the inability of this council twice to adopt a resolution or even to call for a ceasefire to end this war,” Egypt’s Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry told the council.

US tones down resolution draft

00:30 , Sam Rkaina

The United States last week vetoed a Brazil-drafted resolution for humanitarian pauses, arguing that time was needed for U.S.-led diplomacy focused on brokering aid access to Gaza on the ground and trying to free hostages held by Hamas.

Twelve members voted in favor of the draft text on Wednesday, while Russia and Britain abstained.

The U.S. then proposed its own draft text on Saturday that initially shocked some council diplomats with its bluntness in stating that Israel has a right to defend itself and demanding Iran stop exporting arms to militant groups in the region.

It did not initially call for any pause or truce. But - responding to growing international pressure - it amended the draft to include a call “for all measures necessary, such as humanitarian pauses” to allow aid access.

The U.S. also toned down the overall draft, removing direct references to Iran and to Israel’s right to self-defence.

US and Russia poised for UN showdown on Israel

23:59 , Sam Rkaina

The United States and Russia have put forward rival plans at the United Nations to help Palestinian civilians caught in the Israel-Hamas conflict in the Gaza Strip: a humanitarian pause or a ceasefire.

Both countries seek U.N. Security Council resolutions to address shortages of food, water, medical supplies and electricity in Gaza. But the U.S. has called for pauses to allow aid to enter Gaza, while Russia wants a humanitarian ceasefire.

A pause is generally considered less formal and shorter than a ceasefire. While the differences may seem semantic, the U.S. proposal for pauses has grown out of an initial draft given to the 15-member council on Saturday that was staunchly pro-Israel, Washington’s longtime ally.

Russia announced on Tuesday that it could not support the U.S. plan for action and put forward its own text that calls for a ceasefire, an idea backed by Arab states.

A council resolution needs at least nine votes and no vetoes by the United States, France, Britain, Russia or China to be adopted. It was not immediately clear if or when the U.S. and Russian draft resolutions could be put to a vote.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken made the case for the U.S. draft resolution at a Security Council meeting on Tuesday, saying the body had a crucial role to play and that the U.S. text “sets out practical steps.”

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken (EPA)
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken (EPA)

Eight trucks with water, food and medicine enter Gaza Strip from Egypt

23:00 , Sam Rkaina

The United Nations, United States and Canada have appealed for a humanitarian pause in the Israel-Hamas war to allow safe deliveries of aid to civilians short of food, water, medicine and electricity in the besieged Gaza Strip.

International pressure for unimpeded aid to Gaza rose as the health ministry in the Hamas-ruled coastal territory said Israeli air strikes had killed more than 700 Palestinians overnight. Ministry spokesman Ashraf Al-Qidra said this was the highest 24-hour death toll in Israel’s two-week-old siege.

U.N. agencies were pleading “on our knees” for emergency aid to be let into Gaza unimpeded, saying more than 20 times current deliveries were needed to support the narrow strip’s 2.3 million people amid widespread devastation from Israel’s aerial blitz.

Eight trucks containing water, food and medicine entered the Gaza Strip from Egypt late on Tuesday, the Palestinian Red Crescent said.

The United States is negotiating with Israel, neighbouring Egypt and the U.N. to smooth emergency deliveries into Gaza, but have wrangled over procedures for inspecting the aid and over bombardments on the Gaza side of the border.

“While we remain opposed to a ceasefire, we think humanitarian pauses linked to the delivery of aid that still allow Israel to conduct military operations to defend itself are worth consideration,” a senior U.S. official said.

 (AFP via Getty Images)
(AFP via Getty Images)

Grandmother, 85, held hostage by Hamas describes ‘hell’ of captivity in Gaza

22:30 , Bel Trew in Tel Aviv

An 85-year-old Israeli hostage released by Hamas has said she went “through hell” during her kidnap, describing how she was beaten with sticks during her abduction, driven off on a motorbike and forced to walk for a number of hours through a huge “spider’s web” of wet tunnels in Gaza.

However, Yocheved Lifshitz – the first to offer a picture of the ordeal faced by those taken hostage by Hamas – also spoke of the “care” she received from some of her captors once she was in the tunnels and saying was told she was not going to be hurt, something that may have led to an extraordinary gesture at the moment of her release after two weeks in captivity.

A pause and then turning to shake the hand of a masked Hamas militant. “Shalom,” she said, the Hebrew word for peace.

Click here for the full story.

Yocheved Lifshitz, 85, speaking from a hospital in Tel Aviv, her British daughter Sharone Lifschitz beside her (REUTERS)
Yocheved Lifshitz, 85, speaking from a hospital in Tel Aviv, her British daughter Sharone Lifschitz beside her (REUTERS)

Tens of thousands sign petition supporting Tube driver suspended over Palestine chant

22:00 , Sam Rkaina

Tens of thousands of people have signed a petition supporting a suspended Tube driver who led a chant of “free, free Palestine” on a London Underground train.

After around 100,000 protesters took part in a pro-Palestinian demonstration in central London, footage posted online and then deleted by Open Democracy journalist Ruby Lott-Lavigna appeared to show the chant being led over the train’s speaker system.

After the uproar, the driver was quickly identified and suspended whilst TfL vowed to “fully investigate the incident in line with our policies and procedures”.

Click here for the full story.

Plumes of smoke surround hospital in Gaza after heavy bombardment

21:30 , Sam Rkaina

Plumes of smoke filled the sky near Al-Amal Hospital in Kana Yunis, Gaza earlier today.

Footage published by the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) shows crowds of people running after reports of heavy bombardment in the surrounding area. Reuters have verified the location of this video.

The Palestinian health ministry have said more than 5,000 people have been killed in Gaza following two weeks of intense air strikes by Israeli forces in response to a devastating Hamas attack on southern Israel on 7 October.

More than 1,400 people have been killed in Israel following the attack by Hamas, according to Israeli officials.

“We thought that our area would be safe”

21:00 , Sam Rkaina

Scenes of rescuers pulling dead and wounded out of large piles of rubble from collapsed buildings were repeated in main towns of central and south Gaza on Tuesday, where Israel had told civilians to take shelter. Graphic photos and video shot by The Associated Press showed rescuers digging to unearth small bodies from the ruins.

A father knelt on the floor of the Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir Al-Balah next to the bodies of three dead children cocooned in bloodied sheets. Later at the nearby morgue, workers prayed over 24 dead wrapped in body bags, several of them the size of small children.

Buildings collapsing on residents killed dozens at a time in several cases, witnesses said. Two families lost a total 47 members in a leveled home in Rafah, the Health Ministry said.

A strike on a four-story building in Khan Younis killed at least 32 people, including 13 members of the Saqallah family, said Ammar al-Butta, a relative who survived the airstrike. He said there were about 100 people sheltering in the building, including many who had evacuated from Gaza City.

“We thought that our area would be safe,” he said.

Another strike destroyed a bustling marketplace in the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza, witnesses said. AP photos showed the floor of a vegetable shop covered with blood.

Israel ‘expands area of targets, killing up to 50 in Gaza'

20:30 , Sam Rkaina

The Israeli army has expanded areas of its targets in the Palestinian Gaza Strip that resulted in the killing of up to 50 people in the last hour, Ashraf al-Qidra, spokesman for the health ministry in Gaza has said.

It comes after a barrage of Israeli airstrikes across the Gaza Strip on Tuesday crushed multiple residential buildings and buried families under rubble, as health officials in the besieged territory reported hundreds killed in the past day and the closure of medical facilities because of bomb damage and a lack of power.

The soaring death toll from Israel‘s escalating bombardment is unprecedented in the decades-long Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It augurs an even greater loss of life in Gaza once Israeli forces backed by tanks and artillery launch an expected ground offensive aimed at crushing Hamas militants.

Gaza’s 2.3 million people have been running out of food, water and medicine since Israel sealed off the territory following the devastating Oct. 7 attack by Hamas on towns in southern Israel.

The Gaza Health Ministry, which is run by Hamas, said Israeli airstrikes killed at least 704 people over the past day, mostly women and children. The AP could not independently verify the death tolls cited by Hamas, which says it tallies daily figures from hospital directors.

Smoke is rising after an Israeli strike on Gaza seen from a viewpoint in Southern Israel (REUTERS)
Smoke is rising after an Israeli strike on Gaza seen from a viewpoint in Southern Israel (REUTERS)

Biden and Saudi crown prince discuss Israel-Hamas war

20:15 , Sam Rkaina

U.S. President Joe Biden and Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohamed bin Salman held a call on Tuesday to discuss the war between Israel and Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, the White House said in a statement.

They agreed on pursuing broader diplomatic efforts “to maintain stability across the region and prevent the conflict from expanding,” the White House said, adding the two leaders will remain in close coordination directly and through their teams over the coming period.

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (AFP via Getty Images)
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (AFP via Getty Images)

Heavier Gaza casualties means less chance of peace, warns Archbishop

19:57 , Sam Rkaina

The heavier the casualties the less chance there is of securing peace, the Archbishop of Canterbury has warned amid the escalating Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.

Speaking in Parliament, the Most Rev Justin Welby cautioned the hopes of a truce and reconciliation were set not only after a military victory but how it was achieved.

In the face of Israeli air strikes on the besieged Gaza Strip and an expected offensive into the territory aimed at crushing Hamas, Mr Welby told the House of Lords: “The hopes of peace and reconciliation are set not only after a military victory but how that victory is achieved. The more heavy the casualties the less chance there is of renewed peace.

“And Gaza has gone from level to level of violence over the last 15 years.

“That aim of war conducted is not fair. There is no equivalence between Israel and Hamas. The latter is a terrorist organisation, the former is a legitimate state, whose citizens since 1945 have written much of the laws of war. They know how to do this.”

The church leader, who has just returned from a visit to Jerusalem, said: “The innumerable deaths on October 7 and the taking of over 200 hostages has created a situation of trauma in Israel that it is hard to exaggerate.”

Conflict ‘needs Palestinian Mandela'

18:31 , Sam Rkaina

A Palestinian “Mandela” is needed to secure a two-state solution in the Middle East, Tory former leader Michael Howard has said.

The Conservative peer, who sits in the upper chamber as Lord Howard of Lympne, also stressed the need for an Israeli leader who backed such an arrangement, aimed at providing a lasting peace.

Lord Howard said: “Even in the midst of the most terrible darkness it is human instinct to look for hope.”

He added: “If a lasting peace is to be secured there has to be a two state solution. Of course it can’t happen now. It wasn’t going to happen before October 7. It wasn’t going to happen because Israel has a prime minister who has shown no interest in a two-state solution and alas the Palestinian Authority is led by those who lack the authority and respect of their own people. Something which is essential if an agreement is to be made to stick.

“So we need an Israeli prime minister who does believe in a two-state solution… and we need a Palestinian leader with the authority to make an agreement.

“We need a Palestinian Mandela.

“I know there will be many who dismiss this as fantasy but we must dare to hope.

“As we contemplate the bleak darkness of the current conflict let us pray that one day we will see what so many crave – a lasting peace in the Holy Land.”

The late Nelson Mandelawith then Prime MInister Tony Blair at the Labour Party Conference in 2000 (PA)
The late Nelson Mandelawith then Prime MInister Tony Blair at the Labour Party Conference in 2000 (PA)

Archbishop of Canterbury praised dignity of families of Hamas victims

17:45 , Sam Rkaina

The Archbishop of Canterbury has said the dignity shown by relatives of those killed in Israel by Hamas militants “is the first ray of light… in a situation of almost unredeemed darkness”.

Speaking in Parliament, the Most Rev Justin Welby, who has just returned from a visit to Jersualem, said: “The inumerable deaths on October 7 and the taking of over 200 hostages has created a situation of trauma in Israel that it is hard to exaggerate.”

Among those he met was the family of a British-Israeli soldier killed as he sought to defend against the murderous insurgent attack.

Mr Welby said: “He gave his life against overwhelming odds as wave after wave of terrorists sought to kill people in one of the kibbutzes. I wonder if the Government is considering, given he is a British citizen, what official recognition of his supreme courage can be offered.”

Referring to his meeting with relatives of those killed, the top Anglican cleric added: “There was, although huge anger, an absence of hate from those families. And that dignity that they are showing is the first ray of light… in a situation of almost unredeemed darkness.”

Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby (PA Wire)
Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby (PA Wire)

‘We’re not talking the same language’: Families of Hamas attack victims decry brutality

17:00 , Alexander Butler

16:45 , Natalie Lisbona

An Arab-Israeli paramedic who helped to treat wounded survivors at the desert music festival massacre was shot dead by Hamas militants, his family has revealed.

Awad Darawashe, 22, was manning a first aid tent at the Supernova festival, when Hamas launched its deadly attack In the early hours of 7 October.

His ambulance was captured by the militants and driven back to Gaza with hostages inside, his cousin, Kazim Khalileh, told The Independent.

Arab-Israeli medic stayed to help wounded at festival – then was shot dead by Hamas

Robert Jenrick: ‘Deportation of foreign nationals spreading hatred has begun’

16:30 , Archie Mitchell

The immigration minister has revealed the government is revoking visas and expelling foreign nationals who spread “hate and division”.

Robert Jenrick said the process of removing those given the right to remain in the UK has already begun “in a small number of cases”.

Mr Jenrick’s comments came after Tory MP Jill Mortimer (Hartlepool) told the Commons: “On Saturday, we witnessed the most appalling scenes of lawbreaking on the streets of our capital.

“Can the minister reassure me that anyone found to have been breaking our laws and inciting racial hatred and violence in this country who is here as an asylum seeker or on a visa, including students, will have that status revoked and will be removed?”

Mr Jenrick replied: “I’ve been very clear that people who spread hate and division in our country have no right to be here and so those individuals who are foreign nationals who have a visa, which is a privilege, not an entitlement, and conduct themselves in that manner, fall below the standard we expect in our country, will find that visa revoked, and they will be expelled.

“We have already begun that process in a small number of cases. And I have written to all chief constables across England and Wales, inviting them to bring to our attention at the Home Office any examples that we should consider.”

Immigration minister Robert Jenrick (Parliament TV)
Immigration minister Robert Jenrick (Parliament TV)

Gaza on brink of ‘humanitarian catastrophe', charity warns

16:08 , Alexander Butler

Gaza is on the brink of a “humanitarian catastrophe”, a charity has warned.

“We are at the brink of humanitarian catastrophe. It is critical there is a ceasefire. The needs for children are growing and it is getting more desperate every day,” Jason Lee, director of Palestine’s Save the Children charity, told Sky News.

“There is no food, there is no water and my staff are in exactly the same situation,” he added.

Doctors treat a prematurely born baby in Gaza (AP)
Doctors treat a prematurely born baby in Gaza (AP)

UN chief concerned by humanitarian violations in Gaza

15:37 , Alexander Butler

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told the Security Council he was “deeply concerned about the clear violations of international humanitarian law that we are witnessing in Gaza.”

“At a crucial moment like this, it is vital to be clear on principles - starting with the fundamental principle of respecting and protecting civilians,” he said.

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres (AP)
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres (AP)

Air raid sirens go off in central Israel, IDF says

15:24 , Alexander Butler

Air raid sirens have gone off in central Israel after Hamas launched rockets at Tel Aviv, according to the IDF.

No injuries have been reported other than some people slightly hurt while heading for shelter, Israeli emergency services said.

Freed elderly hostage says Hamas captors were ‘very friendly'

15:22 , Alexander Butler

An elderly woman who was captured by Hamas and held captive for 17 days said her captors were “very friendly” and spoke about “all kinds of things”.

“Each person had a guard watching him or her. They took care of all the needs. They talked about all kinds of things, they were very friendly,” Yocheved Lifshitz, 85, said.

Up to 222 hostages were taken during Hamas’s attack on Israel. The IDF said more than 20 of the hostages taken to Gaza were under the age of 18, and between 10 and 20 of the hostages were over the age of 80.

Yocheved Lifshitz said her captors were ‘very friendly’ (Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)
Yocheved Lifshitz said her captors were ‘very friendly’ (Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Freed hostage says Israel didn’t take warning signs ‘seriously'

15:06 , Alexander Butler

A freed Israeli hostage said the country’s military didn’t take warning signs Hamas were planning something near the Israel-Gaza border “seriously”.

Yocheved Lifshitz, 85, said: “The lack of knowledge by the IDF hurt us badly. The IDF, somewhere, didn’t take it seriously. We were made scapegoats for the leadership.

“And suddenly on Shabbat morning, when everything was quiet, there was very heavy shelling on the communities, and along with the shelling, the mob burst in, burst through the fence, opened the gate of the kibbutz and broke in en masse.

“It was very unpleasant, very difficult. My memory keeps replaying those pictures.”

Yocheved Lifshitz, 85, said the IDF didn’t take warning signs ‘seriously’ (PA)
Yocheved Lifshitz, 85, said the IDF didn’t take warning signs ‘seriously’ (PA)

Elderly woman’s release ‘gives hope’ to families of Hamas hostages

14:50 , Alexander Butler

A British psychotherapist whose elderly mother is being held hostage by Hamas has said the recent release of another Briton’s mother gives him “some hope” for the future.

Noam Sagi’s 75-year-old mother Ada was taken hostage after the militant group entered Kibbutz Nir Oz near the border with Gaza on October 7.

Speaking after a press conference at the Israeli embassy on Tuesday, he described the release of London-based Sharon Lifschitz’s mother Yocheved as the “best bit of news” he has had since the attack.

“She is a very, very dear friend and a close member of the community where I grew up. I am intensely happy. It is the best bit of news that I have had since all this started.

“I am very, very happy that she is back in safe hands. It gives me hope of course,” he said.

Noam Sagi said the release of an Israeli hostage gives him ‘some hope’ for the future (AFP via Getty Images)
Noam Sagi said the release of an Israeli hostage gives him ‘some hope’ for the future (AFP via Getty Images)

WHO can’t get fuel and vital supplies to Gaza

14:27 , Alexander Butler

The World Health Organization said it is unable to provide fuel and life-saving supplies to major hospitals in northern Gaza due to a lack of security.

It called for an “immediate humanitarian ceasefire so health supplies and fuel can be delivered safely throughout the Gaza Strip”.

Meanwhile, some humanitarian convoys have managed to provide aid to the region. On Sunday, a third convoy of trucks delivered water, food and medicine.

Humanitarian aid trucks at the Egypt-Gaza border (Reuters)
Humanitarian aid trucks at the Egypt-Gaza border (Reuters)

The ‘kamikaze’ weapons Israel’s soldiers will fear most in Gaza

14:12 , Tom Watling

When thousands of Hamas militants crossed into Israeli territory through the most militarised border fence in the world on 7 October, few understood how such a feat was possible, Tom Watling reports.

The multilayered Gaza border fences are roughly seven metres tall and replete with high-tech sensors, remote-controlled machine guns, cellular communication stations and surveillance towers roughly every two kilometres.

How could those within what is considered an “open air prison”, their imports thoroughly vetted, overcome a state-of-the-art fence purpose built to keep them in?

The ‘kamikaze’ weapons Israel’s soldiers will fear most in Gaza

Aid to Gaza ‘wholly inadequate’, says Tory minister

13:30 , Alexander Butler

The number of aid trucks being allowed into Gaza is “wholly inadequate”, the international development minister Andrew Mitchell has told the Commons.

Labour MP Kerry McCarthy warned that the aid reaching Gaza is “nowhere near enough to avert a humanitarian catastrophe” as she pressed for fuel to be allowed in.

Mr Mitchell, in his reply, said: “The number of trucks that are going through every day is far too small and we will continue to press all the relevant authorities to allow humanitarian support.”

The minister also said: “The key thing is to increase the number of lorries that are getting through Rafah – the current number is wholly inadequate.”

Mr Mitchell said he is talking to Martin Griffiths, the British diplomat who is the UN’s under-secretary-general for emergency relief, every day to “beef up” the number of lorries.

A convoy of lorries carrying aid crossed Egypt into Gaza (AFP via Getty Images)
A convoy of lorries carrying aid crossed Egypt into Gaza (AFP via Getty Images)

Elderly hostage shakes hands with Hamas captor after release in propaganda footage

13:15 , Alexander Butler

No UK aid money goes to Palestinian Authority, says Cleverly

12:50 , Alexander Butler

Foreign secretary James Cleverly has insisted that no British aid money goes directly to the Palestinian Authority, after a Tory MP condemned the payment of “so-called martyr salaries”.

Conservative MP Chris Clarkson asked Cleverly: “It’s been reported that the Palestinian Authority is to pay up to three million dollars a month in so-called martyr salaries to the families of dead and captured Hamas terrorists … will he also use his good offices to ensure that no British aid money has gone towards this filthy practice?”

Cleverly said: “I can reassure him that we always ensure that UK aid money is protected from misappropriation, and I can confirm to him and the House that no British aid money goes directly to the Palestinian Authority.”

James Cleverly said no British money goes to the Palestinian Authority (PA Wire)
James Cleverly said no British money goes to the Palestinian Authority (PA Wire)

British warship to remain in Middle East

12:38 , Adam Forrest

Rishi Sunak’s spokesperson said HMS Lancaster will remain in the Middle East as part of British efforts to “deter threats to regional security”.

The No 10 official said it will continue to “monitor and deter threats to regional security, tackle terrorist activity at sea, including arms and drug smuggling, and support humanitarian operations”.

HMS Lancaster pictured near the UK in 2022 (PA Archive)
HMS Lancaster pictured near the UK in 2022 (PA Archive)

Number of Britons killed in Hamas attacks increases to 12

12:14 , Alexander Butler

The number of Britons killed in Hamas’s attack on southern Israel has increased to 12, a spokesperson for Rishi Sunak said.

A further five are missing. It comes after British finance minister Victoria Atkins said at least 10 British nationals had been killed in the attacks.

Among those killed are two teenagers, a soldier, people visiting Israel on holiday and a music festival security guard.

A spokesperson for Mr Sunak said 12 British nationals were killed in Hamas’s attack on Israel (PA Wire)
A spokesperson for Mr Sunak said 12 British nationals were killed in Hamas’s attack on Israel (PA Wire)

Nearly 5,800 Palestinians killed, Gazan health ministry says

12:09 , Alexander Butler

The number of Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes since 7 October now stands at 5,791, according Gaza’s health ministry.

It said 704 people had been killed in the last 24 hours alone. This is up from 5,087 reported on Monday, which included 1903 children.

The Ministry of Health of the State of Palestine is a government agency. It is controlled by the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank.

Since Hamas’s takeover of Gaza in 2007, Hamas governments have appointed different health ministers for the region.

Palestinians evacuate a building damaged in the Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip (Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)
Palestinians evacuate a building damaged in the Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip (Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Hezbollah will 'suffer horrible consequences' if it joins war, Netanyahu warns

11:23 , Alexander Butler

Mr Netanyahu warned militant group Hezbollah would suffer “horrible consequences” if it decided to start a second Lebanon war.

“If Hezbollah makes the mistake of joining this war in a significant way, it will regret it,” he said.

The “devastation against Hezbollah will be unimaginable,” he added.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu holds a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron (POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu holds a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron (POOL/AFP via Getty Images)