Israel ups bombing in central Gaza, strikes kill 17 people
Israel ups bombing in central Gaza, strikes kill 17 people/node/2580908/middle-east
Israel ups bombing in central Gaza, strikes kill 17 people
Update
Palestinians inspect the damage at the site of an Israeli airstrike in the Nuseirat camp in central Gaza on November 27, 2024, amid the ongoing war in the Palestinian territory between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
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Updated 28 November 2024
Reuters
Israel ups bombing in central Gaza, strikes kill 17 people
Israelâs 13-month campaign in Gaza, with the avowed intent of eradicating Hamas militants, has killed nearly 44,200 people and displaced nearly all the enclaveâs population
Updated 28 November 2024
Reuters
CAIRO: Israeli military strikes killed at least 17 Palestinians across the Gaza Strip on Thursday, medics said, as forces stepped up bombardments on central areas and pushed tanks deeper in the north and south of the enclave.
Six people were killed in two separate air strikes on a house and near the hospital of Kamal Adwan in Beit Lahiya in the northern Gaza Strip, while four others were killed when an Israeli strike hit a motorcycle in Khan Younis in the south.
In Nuseirat, one of the Gaza Stripâs eight historic refugee camps, Israeli planes carried out several air strikes destroying a multi-floor building and hitting roads outside mosques. At least seven people were killed in some of those strikes, health officials said.
Medics said at least two people, a woman and a child, were killed in tank shelling that hit western areas of Nuseirat, while an air strike killed five others in a house nearby.
In Rafah, near the border with Egypt, tanks pushed deeper into the northern-west area of the city, residents said.
There has been no Israeli comment on the fighting in Gaza overnight and early Thursday.
Israelâs 13-month campaign in Gaza, with the avowed intent of eradicating Hamas militants, has killed nearly 44,200 people and displaced nearly all the enclaveâs population at least once, according to Gaza officials. Vast swathes of the territory are in ruins.
The war was launched in response to an attack by Hamas-led fighters who killed around 1,200 people and captured more than 250 hostages in Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, Israel has said.
Months of attempts to negotiate a ceasefire have yielded scant progress, and negotiations are now on hold. Mediator Qatar has suspended its efforts until the sides are prepared to make concessions.
A ceasefire in the parallel conflict between Israel and Hamasâ Lebanese ally Hezbollah took effect before dawn on Wednesday, bringing a halt to hostilities that had escalated sharply in recent months and overshadowed the conflict in Gaza.
Announcing the Lebanon accord on Tuesday, US President Joe Biden said he would now renew his push for an elusive agreement in Gaza, urging Israel and Hamas to seize the moment.
UN asks Israel to immediately halt plan to control Gaza
Australia, Britain also urge Israel to reconsider its decision to take over Gaza City
The Turkish foreign ministry strongly condemned Israel's decision saying it dealt a heavy blow to global peace
Updated 43 min 11 sec ago
Agencies
SYDNEY/GENEVA: UN human rights chief Volker Turk on Friday said that âthe Israeli Governmentâs plan for a complete military takeover of the occupied Gaza Strip must be immediately halted.â
âIt runs contrary to the ruling of the International Court of Justice that Israel must bring its occupation to an end as soon as possible, to the realization of the agreed two-State solution and to the right of Palestinians to self-determination,â he said in a statement.
Australia earlier urged Israel ânot to go down this path,â after Prime Minister Netanyahu said Israel intended to take military control of Gaza.
âAustralia calls on Israel to not go down this path, which will only worsen the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza,â Foreign Minister Penny Wong said in a statement on Friday.
Wong said permanent forced displacement was a violation of international law and repeated calls for a ceasefire, aid to flow unimpeded and for militant group Hamas to return the hostages taken in October 2023.
âA two-state solution is the only pathway to secure an enduring peace â a Palestinian state and the State of Israel, living side-by-side in peace and security within internationally-recognized borders,â she added.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Friday also said Israelâs decision to take control of Gaza City was wrong and urged the government in Jerusalem to reconsider.
âThe Israeli Governmentâs decision to further escalate its offensive in Gaza is wrong, and we urge it to reconsider immediately,â he said in a statement.
âThis action will do nothing to bring an end to this conflict or to help secure the release of the hostages. It will only bring more bloodshed.â
Australia has not yet joined Western allies such as the UK, Canada and France in announcing it would recognize Palestinian statehood but has said it would make a decision âat an appropriate time,â while escalating its criticism of Israelâs actions.
Wongâs comments come in response to Netanyahu saying Israel intended to take military control of all of Gaza during an interview with Fox News.
He said Israel wanted to hand over the territory to Arab forces that would govern it, without elaborating on the governance arrangements or which Arab countries could be involved.
After a security cabinet meeting on Friday, Netanyahuâs office confirmed a plan to take over Gaza City had been approved.
A statement said the Israeli Defense Forces would prepare to take control of Gaza City while providing humanitarian aid to the civilian population outside the combat zones.
The Turkish foreign ministry also strongly condemned Israel's decision to take control of Gaza City, saying every step taken by the âfundamentalist Netanyahu governmentâ to continue its genocide and expand its occupation dealt a heavy blow to global peace and security.
Palestinian ex-footballer killed by Israeli forces in Gaza
Former Palestine national team player Suleiman Al-Obeid, known as the âPalestinian Pele,â has been killed by Israeli gunfire in the Gaza Strip, the sportâs local governing body said
Updated 08 August 2025
AFP
JERUSALEM: Former Palestine national team player Suleiman Al-Obeid, known as the âPalestinian Pele,â has been killed by Israeli gunfire in the Gaza Strip, the sportâs local governing body said.
Obeid, 41, was killed Wednesday when Israeli forces âtargeted people waiting for humanitarian aid in the southern Gaza Strip,â the Palestinian Football Association (PFA) said in a statement.
With Gaza in the throes of a hunger crisis, the UN rights office said last month that Israeli forces had killed more than 1,300 Palestinians trying to get food aid in the territory since late May.
An ex-star of the Khadamat Al-Shati club in Gaza, Obeid played 24 international matches for team Palestine, the PFA said.
âDuring his long career, Al-Obeid scored more than 100 goals, making him one of the brightest stars of Palestinian football,â it added.
The midfielder also played for the Al-Amari Youth Center Club in the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967.
While living there in 2010, Obeid was among six players on the national team from Gaza who were turned back at the Jordanian border for âsecurity reasonsâ on their way to a friendly in Mauritania.
An Israeli security official said at the time that the players had failed to renew special permits allowing them to play in the West Bank.
âWhen I heard that we would be forbidden from traveling I was very upset, because any athlete dreams of wearing his national jersey in international forums,â Obeid told AFP in 2010.
âWe want to be able to travel freely with our families, just like athletes anywhere else in the world.â
Israel had previously allowed the six players to travel with the team.
Born in Gaza City, Obeid was married and had five children.
Since the start of the Gaza war, triggered by Palestinian militant group Hamasâs October 2023 attack on Israel, 662 people from the sport and scouting sector have been killed, including 321 in the football community, according to the PFA.
Israelâs offensive has killed at least 61,258 in Gaza, according to the Hamas-run territoryâs health ministry.
The 2023 attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
Japanese warships visit New Zealandâs capital for the first time in almost 90 years
Two destroyers with more than 500 crew on board sailed into Wellington harbor accompanied by the New Zealand navy ship HMNZS Canterbury
The JS Ise and destroyer JS Suzunami were on an Indo-Pacific deployment and arrived from Sydney
Updated 08 August 2025
AP
WELLINGTON: Japanese warships docked in New Zealand âs capital Friday for the first time in almost 90 years amid efforts by Tokyo to deepen its strategic ties in the South Pacific Ocean.
Two destroyers with more than 500 crew on board sailed into Wellington harbor accompanied by the New Zealand navy ship HMNZS Canterbury. The JS Ise and destroyer JS Suzunami were on an Indo-Pacific deployment and arrived from Sydney, where Japanâs military took part this month in war games involving New Zealand, Australia and other countries.
The Wellington visit was a ceremonial one, but it came as Japan, whose only treaty ally is the United States, has increasingly sought to deepen bilateral military cooperation amid ongoing regional tensions.
âOur defense force are developing cooperative work, not only with New Zealand and Australia but also many Pacific Island countries,â Japanâs envoy to Wellington, Makoto Osawa, told reporters Friday. âOur main goal is the free and open Indo-Pacific.â
The ambassadorâs remarks followed the announcement Tuesday by Australiaâs government that Japanese firm Mitsubishi Heavy Industries had won the bid for a contract to build Australian warships, beating out a German firm. While officials in Canberra said the Japanese proposal was the best and cheapest, they also hailed it as the biggest defense industry agreement between the countries.
New Zealand too has sought to shore up its strategic and military relations in Asia as part of a foreign policy reset in recent years that the government says has turned more attention on Pacific cooperation and security. Officials in Wellington announced in July that work had started on a defense logistics agreement with Japan, intended to make it easier for the countriesâ militaries to work together.
Japanese naval vessels do not often make visits so far south in the Pacific Ocean, but the rich and strategically important waters of New Zealand, Australia and smaller Pacific Island countries are increasingly contested by the worldâs major powers, making it the site of a fierce battle for influence between Beijing and Western nations.
Although remote, New Zealand has recently been drawn into more fraught questions of regional security. In February, live firing exercises by Chinese naval frigates in the Tasman Sea between New Zealand and Australia drew alarm from those countriesâ governments after flights were forced to divert at short notice.
The last port visit to Wellington by a Japanese naval vessel was in 1936, New Zealandâs military said. A Japanese ship visited New Zealandâs largest city, Auckland, in 2016.
Israeli Security Cabinet approves plan to take over Gaza City in escalation of war
Netanyahu earlier said Israel planned to retake control over the entire territory and eventually hand it off to friendly Arab forces opposed to Hamas
Israel has repeatedly bombarded Gaza City and carried out numerous raids there, only to return to different neighborhoods again and again as militants regrouped
Updated 11 min 22 sec ago
AP
TEL AVIV: Israelâs Security Cabinet has approved a plan to take over Gaza City, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuâs office said. The decision taken early Friday marks another escalation of Israelâs 22-month offensive launched in response to Hamasâ Oct. 7 attack.
The war has already killed tens of thousands of Palestinians, destroyed much of Gaza and pushed the territory of some 2 million Palestinians toward famine.
Ahead of the Security Cabinet meeting, which began Thursday and ran through the night, Netanyahu said Israel planned to retake control over the entire territory and eventually hand it off to friendly Arab forces opposed to Hamas.
The announced plans stop short of that, perhaps reflecting the reservations of Israelâs top general, who reportedly warned that it would endanger the remaining 20 or so living hostages held by Hamas and further strain Israelâs army after nearly two years of regional wars. Many families of hostages are also opposed, fearing further escalation will doom their loved ones.
Israel has repeatedly bombarded Gaza City and carried out numerous raids there, only to return to different neighborhoods again and again as militants regrouped. Today it is one of the few areas of Gaza that hasnât been turned into an Israeli buffer zone or placed under evacuation orders.
A major ground operation there could displace tens of thousands of people and further disrupt efforts to deliver food to the territory.
Itâs unclear how many people reside in the city, which was Gazaâs largest before the war. Hundreds of thousands fled Gaza City under evacuation orders in the opening weeks of the war but many returned during a ceasefire at the start of this year.
Expanding war risks countless lives and could further isolate Israel
Expanding military operations in Gaza would put the lives of countless Palestinians and the roughly 20 remaining Israeli hostages at risk while further isolating Israel internationally. Israel already controls around three quarters of the devastated territory.
Families of hostages held in Gaza fear an escalation could doom their loved ones, and some protested outside the Security Cabinet meeting in Jerusalem. Former top Israeli security officials have also come out against the plan, warning of a quagmire with little added military benefit.
An Israeli official had earlier said the Security Cabinet would discuss plans to conquer all or parts of Gaza not yet under Israeli control. The official, speaking on condition of anonymity pending a formal decision, said that whatever is approved would be implemented gradually to increase pressure on Hamas.
Israelâs air and ground war has killed tens of thousands of people in Gaza, displaced most of the population, destroyed vast areas and caused severe and widespread hunger. Palestinians are braced for further misery.
âThere is nothing left to occupy,â said Maysaa Al-Heila, who is living in a displacement camp. âThere is no Gaza left.â
At least 42 Palestinians were killed in Israeli airstrikes and shootings across southern Gaza on Thursday, according to local hospitals.
âWe donât want to keep itâ
Asked in an interview with Fox News ahead of the Security Cabinet meeting if Israel would âtake control of all of Gaza,â Netanyahu replied: âWe intend to, in order to assure our security, remove Hamas there, enable the population to be free of Gaza.â
âWe donât want to keep it. We want to have a security perimeter,â Netanyahu said in the interview. âWe want to hand it over to Arab forces that will govern it properly without threatening us and giving Gazans a good life.â
The Security Cabinet, which would need to approve such a decision, began meeting Thursday evening, according to Israeli media, and it was expected to stretch into the night.
Israelâs military chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir, warned against occupying Gaza, saying it would endanger the hostages and put further strain on the military after nearly two years of war, according to Israeli media reports.
Hamas-led militants abducted 251 people and killed around 1,200 in the Oct. 7, 2023, attack that triggered the war. Most of the hostages have been released in ceasefires or other deals but 50 remain inside Gaza, around 20 of them believed by Israel to be alive.
Almost two dozen relatives of hostages set sail from southern Israel toward the maritime border with Gaza on Thursday, where they broadcast messages from loudspeakers.
Yehuda Cohen, the father of Nimrod Cohen, an Israeli soldier held in Gaza, said from the boat that Netanyahu is prolonging the war to satisfy extremists in his governing coalition. Netanyahuâs far-right allies want to escalate the war, relocate most of Gazaâs population to other countries and reestablish Jewish settlements that were dismantled in 2005.
âNetanyahu is working only for himself,â Cohen said.
Palestinians killed and wounded as they seek food
Israelâs military offensive has killed over 61,000 Palestinians, according to Gazaâs Health Ministry, which does not say how many were fighters or civilians. The ministry is part of the Hamas-run government and staffed by medical professionals who keep and share detailed records.
The United Nations and independent experts view the ministryâs figures as the most reliable estimate of casualties. Israel has disputed them without offering a toll of its own.
Of the 42 people killed on Thursday, at least 13 were seeking aid in an Israeli military zone in southern Gaza where UN aid convoys are regularly overwhelmed by looters and desperate crowds. Another two were killed on roads leading to nearby sites run by the Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, an American contractor, according to Nasser Hospital, which received the bodies.
GHF said there were no violent incidents at or near its sites on Thursday. There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military. The military zone, known as the Morag Corridor, is off limits to independent media.
Hundreds of people have been killed in recent weeks while heading to GHF sites and in chaotic scenes around UN convoys, most of which are overwhelmed by looters and crowds of hungry people. The UN human rights office, witnesses and health officials say Israeli forces have regularly opened fire toward the crowds going back to May, when Israel lifted a complete 2 1/2 month blockade.
The military says it has only fired warning shots when crowds approach its forces. GHF says its armed contractors have only used pepper spray or fired into the air on some occasions to prevent deadly stampedes. Israel and GHF face mounting criticism
Doctors Without Borders, a medical charity known by its French acronym MSF, published a blistering report denouncing the GHF distribution system. âThis is not aid. It is orchestrated killing, â it said.
MSF runs two health centers very close to GHF sites in southern Gaza and said it had treated 1,380 people injured near the sites between June 7 and July 20, including 28 people who were dead upon arrival. Of those, at least 147 had suffered gunshot wounds â including at least 41 children.
MSF said hundreds more suffered physical assault injuries from chaotic scrambles for food at the sites, including head injuries, suffocation, and multiple patients with severely aggravated eyes after being sprayed at close range with pepper spray. It said the cases it saw were only a fraction of the overall casualties connected to GHF sites; a nearby Red Cross field hospital has independently reported receiving thousands of people wounded by gunshots as they sought aid.
âThe level of mismanagement, chaos and violence at GHF distribution sites amounts to either reckless negligence or a deliberately designed death trap,â the report said.
GHF said the âaccusations are both false and disgracefulâ and accused MSF of âamplifying a disinformation campaignâ orchestrated by Hamas.
The US and Israel helped set up the GHF system as an alternative to the UN-run aid delivery system that has sustained Gaza for decades, accusing Hamas of siphoning off assistance. The UN denies any mass diversion by Hamas. It accuses GHF of forcing Palestinians to risk their lives to get food and say it advances Israelâs plans for further mass displacement.
Israeli minister vows âreturnâ to evacuated West Bank settlement
Updated 08 August 2025
AFP
SANUR, Palestinian Territories: An Israeli minister has announced plans to rebuild Sa-Nur, a settlement in the occupied West Bank that was evacuated two decades ago, as the far right spearheads a major settlement expansion push.
Sa-Nurâs settlers were evicted in 2005 as part of Israelâs so-called disengagement policy that also saw the country withdraw troops and settlers from the Gaza Strip.
Many in the Israeli settler movement have since called to return to Sa-Nur and other evacuated settlements in the northern West Bank.
During a visit to the area on Thursday, accompanied by families who claim they are preparing to move there, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich stated that âwe are correcting the mistake of the expulsionâ in 2005.
âEven back then, we knew that ... we would one day return to all the places we were driven out of,â said the far-right minister who lives in a settlement. âThat applies to Gaza, and itâs even more true here.â
The Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority issued a strong condemnation for Thursdayâs visit, which it regards as part of Israelâs âplans to entrench the gradual annexation of the West Bank, posing a direct threat to the possibility of implementing the two-state solution.â
In a statement, the Palestinian Foreign Ministry said the push âto revive settlements that were evacuated 20 years agoâ would lead to further confiscation of Palestinian lands. Israeli settlements in the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967, are illegal under international law and seen by the international community as a major obstacle to lasting peace, undermining the territorial integrity of any future Palestinian state.
In May, Israel announced the creation of 22 settlements, including Sa-Nur and Homesh â two of the four northern West Bank settlements that were evacuated in 2005.
Israeli NGO Peace Now, which monitors settlement activity in the West Bank, said some of the 22 settlements the government announced as new had in fact already existed on the ground.
Some are neighborhoods that were upgraded to independent settlements, and others are unrecognized outposts given formal status under Israeli law, according to Peace New.
The West Bank is home to some three million Palestinians as well as about 500,000 Israeli settlers.
Settlement expansion in the West Bank has continued under all Israeli governments since 1967, but it has intensified significantly under the current government alongside the displacement of Palestinian farming communities, particularly since the outbreak of the Gaza war in October 2023.