Israel - Palestinian militants launch massive attack, 7 Oct 2023 #10

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  • #621
  • #622

Laura Kuenssberg asks president if Israel has gone too far​

A short time ago, the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg asked Israeli President Isaac Herzog whether his country had gone too far in its response to the 7 October attacks by Hamas. Watch their exchange in the video above.

 
  • #623

Short pauses in fighting not enough, UK's main opposition party says​


The UK's main opposition party, Labour, has said the short pauses in fighting Israel has agreed to in Gaza are not enough to allow in sufficient aid and humanitarian support.

Earlier this week, Israel said it had agreed to four-hour pauses in fighting in Gaza. Earlier, it confirmed that another was under way today.

Speaking to the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg, Labour's shadow home secretary, Yvette Cooper, said the short pauses were not enough.

"It is absolutely devastating what's happening and we've seen some of the consequences too, with the hospitals not having fuel - it's why we've called for some kind of immediate suspension of hostilities to get the humanitarian pause in place," Cooper said.

"The short pauses are just not enough," she added. She called for humanitarian aid including fuel to be allowed into Gaza, and for "civilian protection measures" to be put in place.

Israel has barred fuel from being brought into Gaza over concerns it would be used by Hamas rather than by hospitals.

Palestinian civilians have been photographed evacuating the north during the daily short pauses announced by Israel late last week, but so far these pauses are confined to certain areas while fighting continues elsewhere.

 
  • #624

Herzog quizzed on Israel's 'endgame' for region​

Let's bring you a bit more from Laura Kuenssberg's interview with Israel's President, Isaac Herzog.

Asked about what his country's "endgame" for the region is, Herzog does not spell out what arrangements might be in place once the conflict ends.

Instead, he says the first step to peace is to stop "terror" in the region - a reference to Israel's pledge to "destroy" Hamas.

Herzog says it is terror attacks that have derailed attempts to achieve peace in the region.

Israel-Palestinian peace talks were held on and off between the 1990s and 2010s, interspersed with outbreaks of violence, but finally stalled in 2014.

 
  • #625

Herzog denies that Al-Shifa hospital has been left without power​

The Israeli president is asked by Laura Kuenssberg about the situation at Al-Shifa hospital, the largest hospital in Gaza.

A doctors' group says two premature babies have died because of a lack of electricity at the hospital, while a surgeon said the facility had run out of water, food and power.

"That is not true," Herzog says about there being a lack of power at the hospital. "There is a lot of spin by Hamas. There is electricity in Shifa, everything is operating."

Herzog says the army is speaking to managers at the hospital, and claims that Hamas has its headquarters underneath the building. He claims that it was, in fact, Hamas that bombed Al-Shifa.

Israel has been accused of attacking the hospital - which it denies - with a number of medical organisations warning of a dire situation.

The World Health Organization has expressed "grave concerns" for the safety of staff and patients at the hospital who have become trapped by the fighting.

The BBC has been sent pictures of at least 20 newborn babies being kept in a surgical theatre at Al-Shifa hospital.

Physicians for Human Rights Israel said two premature infants have already died, with a "real risk" to the lives of 37 others.

 
  • #626

BREAKING​

Red Crescent says Al-Quds hospital out of service​

The Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) says the Al Quds hospital in northern Gaza is no longer operational as its fuel reserves have run out.

Medical staff are still attempting to treat patients without electricity, the PRCS says in a statement, "amid dire humanitarian conditions and a shortage of medical supplies, food, and water".

"The hospital has been left to fend for itself under ongoing Israeli bombardment, posing severe risks to the medical staff, patients, and displaced civilians," the statement on to X (formerly Twitter) says.

It adds that the Israeli presence has intensified, and it has been prevented from from sending ambulances to affected areas - resulting in "numerous unclaimed bodies".

Asked by the BBC yesterday about reported activity at Al-Quds hospital, the Israeli military said it was "unable to address or confirm specific queries" relating to ongoing military operations. But it has denied accusations of other strikes on hospitals.

 
  • #627

'I felt death was very close this time'​

Rushdi Abualouf
BBC journalist in Gaza City

Around two hours ago, I went to buy some supplies for my children from the village of Bani Suhaila, east of Khan Yunis.

A nice man invited me to have a cup of hot tea.

Suddenly, four bombs fell around us in quick succession.

Stones flew over our heads. There were sounds of screaming, and glass flying around us.

I felt that death was very close this time.

I quickly ran towards the area. A block of around 10 houses had been destroyed.

People were covered in dust and blood.

A man was carrying an injured little girl, screaming: “Call an ambulance!”

I saw four dead and more than a hundred injured, and I heard the voices of those trapped under the rubble screaming for help.

 
  • #628

Palestinian officials say man killed overnight in West Bank​

The Palestinian health ministry says a man has been killed by Israeli forces in the West Bank in the early hours of this morning.

The 34-year-old was shot in the town of Burqa, the Palestinian Authority-run ministry said.

Another three Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces yesterday, according to the ministry.

Its statement said one of those killed was from the town of Jenin while the other two were from Arraba, a town in the north of the West Bank.

Israeli newspaper Haaretz said two of them were aged 22 and 23, and Al Jazeera said the other was 19.

The Palestinian Authority (PA) governs parts of the West Bank that are not under full Israeli control. Its health ministry is separate to the one run by Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip.

The leader of PA, Mahmoud Abbas, yesterday said that the West Bank and Jerusalem were facing daily aggression. Earlier this week, Israel's military said it was conducting counter-terrorism raids in Jenin.

 
  • #629

Eyes on Rafah border crossing today​

Gaza's Hamas-run border authority yesterday announced the Rafah border crossing into Egypt would open today, after remaining closed yesterday.

The Rafah crossing, which connects Gaza to Egypt, is the main route in and out of the strip not controlled by Israel.

It has become the focus of international efforts to deliver humanitarian aid to the 2.2 million people living in Gaza, where access to basic supplies such as water, fuel and medicines is severely limited.

In recent weeks, people with non-Palestinian passports have been able to evacuate Gaza through the crossing.

We don't know yet know what time the gates will open today, but we will keep an eye on it throughout the day.

 
  • #630

Al-Shifa medic warns other hospitals may struggle to look after babies​


Nick Beake
Reporting from Jerusalem

1699789502502.jpeg

BBCCopyright: BBC
An image passed to the BBC of newborn babies being kept in a surgical theatre at Al-ShifaImage caption: An image passed to the BBC of newborn babies being kept in a surgical theatre at Al-Shifa.

Moving dozens of babies from intensive care is a delicate process at the best of times, but today we’re told it will be attempted from Al-Shifa hospital, which is now at the heart of the fighting in northern Gaza.

We’re waiting to see how the process will happen.

Israel says it will help the evacuation but staff inside Gaza’s biggest hospital seem unclear on the details - with the head of surgery warning that other hospitals in the territory don't have the expertise or facilities to look after the reported 37 babies who were being cared for at Shifa’s neonatal unit before it lost electricity.

The photos sent to the BBC last night – showing more than 20 babies – appearing to be in need of oxygen treatment is a striking illustration of how urgently these youngest of patients must be helped.

Israel maintains there is still a safe exit route out of the hospital for patients - and others who had sought refuge there - to start on the journey further south into Gaza.

But with heavy fighting on their doorstep and stories of evacuees being fired on, many inside the hospital feel any attempt to leave is fraught with the greatest of danger.

 
  • #631

WHO loses communication with Al-Shifa contacts​

More from the UN - whose agency the World Health Organization (WHO) last night said it had lost communication with its contacts at Gaza's Al-Shifa hospital.
The body says it assumed its contacts had joined "tens of thousands of displaced people and are fleeing the area", amid "horrifying reports of the hospital facing repeated attacks".

The WHO expressed "grave concerns" for the safety of staff and patients there who have become trapped by the fighting, including "babies on life support and displaced people who remain inside the hospital".

In its social media post, it went on to call for an "immediate ceasefire in Gaza as the only way to save lives and reduce the horrific levels of suffering".
It also called for more more "sustained, orderly, unimpeded and safe medical evacuations" of critically injured and sick patients into Egypt via the Rafah crossing.

UN says its office in Gaza shelled​

The UN says one of its offices in Gaza City was shelled overnight, with "reports of deaths & injured" among civilians sheltering there.

"This is wrong on every count," the administrator of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Achim Steiner says in a post on X (formerly Twitter).

"Civilians, civilian infrastructure & the inviolability of UN facilities must be always protected."

 
  • #632
We’re helping to evacuate their babies.

They
’re still holding ours hostage.

That’s the difference between us and them.

When you quote Hamas’ unverified death toll, you’re counting not only the terrorists—but also everyone killed from misfired Hamas and PIJ rockets.

Including everyone from the Al Ahli Hospital car park.
Really interesting that here no distinction is made between Hamas and Palestinians.

THEY - Hamas
THEIR BABIES - Palestinians’ babies.
 
  • #633

Here's what you need to know this morning​

Good morning. We're re-launching this live coverage. Here's where things stand just now:

  • The Israeli military says it's agreed to help evacuate vulnerable babies from Gaza's main hospital today
  • Concerns from doctors for dozens of newborns at Al-Shifa hospital are growing - after a doctors' group said two had already died due to a lack of electricity
  • The BBC has been sent pictures of at least 20 infants being kept in a surgical ward at the hospital. They are lined up on adult hospital beds, with several appearing to need of oxygen treatment that is not available
  • The Israeli military has been accused of attacking Al-Shifa, which has been effectively shut down due to a lack of water, power, staff and medical supplies. It denied the hospital was under siege but acknowledged fighting in the area. It said the east side of the hospital was open for the safe passage of those who wanted to leave
  • Israel accuses Hamas of using tunnels under the hospital as a command centre, which its enemy denies
  • The charity MSF has warned that hospitals more widely in Gaza have been under "relentless bombardment"
  • Thousands of Palestinians continue to flee south, in hope of finding shelter and safety from the more intense fighting and air strikes in the northern Gaza Strip
  • Meanwhile, the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has again rejected calls for a ceasefire, saying the war will continue until Hamas is destroyed and all its hostages released
 
  • #634
5m ago

Pope Francis on Sunday called for the wounded in Gaza to be taken care of immediately and the protection of civilians to be assured, along with more humanitarian aid for the territory and the freeing of hostages held by Hamas, Reuters reports.

 
  • #635
13m ago
The head of Poland’s national bureau of security, Jacek Siewiera, has posted to social media to say that “The first Polish citizens staying in the Gaza Strip crossed the border crossing in Rafah and are on the Egyptian side. The process has begun.”

Reuters reports that he added that Poland was ready with air transport in Egypt to bring them home.

Earlier, in Russia, Tass reported that the evacuation of Russian citizens from the Gaza Strip had begun. It quoted the Russian ministry of emergency situations saying “At the moment, citizens of the Russian Federation who wish to leave the conflict zone are crossing the checkpoint.

Images sent over the news wires this morning from the Rafah Crossing show people being processed.

 
  • #636
29s ago
Four Egyptian security sources have told Reuters that so far on Sunday morning after the Rafah border crossing re-opened, several injured Palestinians arrived on Egyptian soil to receive medical treatment, plus 80 foreign nationals and dependents, with more undergoing border procedures.

 
  • #637
  • #638
Really interesting that here no distinction is made between Hamas and Palestinians.

THEY - Hamas
THEIR BABIES - Palestinians’ babies.
I noticed it too.
It was very unfortunate statement.
To put it mildly.

JMO
 
  • #639
1 hr 4 min ago

Gaza's second largest hospital "no longer operational," says Palestine Red Crescent​

From CNN's Tim Lister and Abeer Salman

The Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) has announced that Al-Quds Hospital in Gaza City – the second largest in the territory – is now out of service.

In a statement Sunday, the PRCS said the hospital was “no longer operational. This cessation of services is due to the depletion of available fuel and power outage.”

“Medical staff are making every effort to provide care to patients and the wounded,” despite “dire humanitarian conditions and a shortage of medical supplies, food, and water,” it added.

The PRCS said it “deeply regrets reaching this critical point despite efforts to prevent it. Repeated appeals for urgent international assistance, given the week-long siege and a five-day communication and internet blackout, have been unsuccessful.”

The hospital has been left to fend for itself under ongoing Israeli bombardment, posing severe risks to the medical staff, patients, and displaced civilians,” it said.

The PRCS claimed that hospitals were under siege, an allegation that has been repeatedly rejected by the Israel Defense Forces.

It asserted that there is "only one operational hospital in Gaza and two in the north."

On Saturday, the PRCS said in a statement that fighting around the al-Quds hospital had caused “panic and extreme fear” amongst the people inside.

Nibal Farsakh, director of the PRCS media unit in Ramallah, told CNN the organization's medics were trapped in the hospital, at which there was "heavy direct fire" and "which was "surrounded by tanks from all sides."

Asked about the situation at Al-Quds Saturday, the IDF said: “The IDF is in the midst of ongoing intense fighting against Hamas in the vicinity of the area in question, and unlike Hamas, adheres to the law by taking all feasible measures to mitigate harm to civilians.”

 
  • #640
1 hr 37 min ago

UN "deeply distressed" by reports of significant casualties from shelling at its Gaza City compound​

From CNN's Tim Lister


A screen grab captured from a video shows that smoke rises after Israeli airstrikes on Indonesian Hospital in Gaza City, Gaza on November 12.
A screen grab captured from a video shows that smoke rises after Israeli airstrikes on Indonesian Hospital in Gaza City, Gaza on November 12. Fadi Alwhidi/Anadolu/Getty Images

The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) said it is “deeply distressed” by reports that shelling has resulted in significant casualties at a UN compound in Gaza City.

In a statement Sunday, the UNDP said the compound had been managed by its Programme of Assistance to the Palestinian People until October 13, when UN staff vacated the premises.

The shelling has reportedly resulted in a significant number of deaths and injuries,” it said.

“On 6 November UNDP reported that several hundred people seeking refuge had entered the compound, and there are indications that this number has since increased significantly,” it added.

The UNDP said: “The ongoing tragedy of death and injury to civilians ensnared in this conflict is unacceptable and must stop. Civilians, civilian infrastructure, and the inviolability of UN facilities, must be respected and protected at all times. International humanitarian law, including the principles of distinction, proportionality, and precaution, must be respected and upheld.”


 
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