Hamas leader’s death could help hostage situation – Netanyahupublished at 18:31 British Summer Time
Image source, EPA
Earlier we mentioned that Benjamin Netanyahu had met the US top diplomat Antony Blinken – and now the Israeli PM’s office has released more details of that meeting.
It said the two discussed post-war Gaza governance.
“The prime minister emphasised that the elimination of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar could have a positive impact on the return of the hostages” held in Gaza for more than a year, Netanyahu’s office said in a statement.
It added that Netanyahu thanked Blinken for US support “in the fight against Iran’s axis of evil and terror”.
Watch: Lebanon building crumbles to dust after Israeli strike todaypublished at 17:57 British Summer Time
Beirut building hit by Israeli strike collapses
Shortly after issuing an evacuation warning to residents in Beirut’s southern suburbs, Israel flattened a high-rise building in the Chiyah neighbourhood earlier today.
It is unclear whether anyone was injured in the attack, which coincided with a Hezbollah press conference taking place nearby.
Unrwa staff ‘waiting for their deaths’ amid northern Gaza ‘siege’, spokesperson sayspublished at 17:34 British Summer Time
Juliette Touma says Unwra staff are fearing for their lives in northern Gaza
Earlier today, the head of refugee agency Unwra urged Israel and Hamas to reach an immediate truce to enable residents of north Gaza to leave.
Just now, Unrwa’s spokesperson Juliette Touma repeated the commissioner-general’s pleas, telling the BBC that the organisation’s workers are fearing for their safety amid a “tight siege” in the region.
“We received overnight a call for help from our own team members in Gaza, who reported that life in northern Gaza has become hell,” she says. “They said themselves that they were waiting for their own deaths.”
After explaining that only a limited number of aid trucks have been able to reach the area, Touma says that the “smell of death is everywhere”, with rescue missions unable to access parts of north Gaza to retrieve bodies.
Without a truce, Touma says, Unrwa is “not allowed to do our job, to reach people in need and give them the basics; food and medicine and medication.”
This comes as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken met Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the hope of negotiating for a ceasefire in Gaza between Israel and Hamas.
Watch: BBC reports from site of Israeli strike near Beirut hospitalpublished at 17:07 British Summer Time
“All around us, in every direction, there is destruction,” says the BBC’s Orla Guerin, as she reports from the site of an airstrike near the Rafik Hariri University Hospital in Beirut.
At least 18 people were killed in that attack, the Lebanese health ministry says. The Israeli military says it hit a Hezbollah target near the hospital.
Israeli strike destroys high-rise close to Hezbollah news conferencepublished at 17:00 British Summer Time
Hugo Bachega
Middle East correspondent, in Beirut
Earlier, I described how a rare news conference by a Hezbollah press officer ended abruptly, with journalists and other people fleeing after an evacuation order was issued by the Israeli military for two buildings in Beirut’s southern suburbs.
Less than half an hour later, the Israeli military struck a high-rise residential building. It completely collapsed.
The site hit was in front of a large open area, near what usually is a busy intersection. A lot of people apparently waited there to capture the moment of the attack, and videos have been widely shared online.
It is difficult to believe this attack was just a coincidence.
The building struck was within walking distance from the location where the news conference – which had been announced hours earlier – was being held, and the evacuation order came about 15 minutes after it had started.
There was the constant sound of a drone overhead, possibly monitoring what was happening on the ground. The order caused some chaos and panic – and that was probably the intention behind it.
Blinken urges Israel to ‘capitalise’ on Sinwar’s death and reach Gaza trucepublished at 16:48 British Summer Time
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken emphasised the need to “capitalise on Israel’s successful action” that killed Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar by ending the conflict in Gaza and securing “lasting security”, during a meeting with Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu today.
As a reminder, Sinwar was killed by Israeli forces on October 16.
In a statement about today’s meeting, spokesperson Matthew Miller says that Blinken underlined the “need” for Israel to work towards increasing and sustaining humanitarian assistance into Gaza and discussed a “new path forward in the post-conflict period”.
Miller adds that the pair also discussed the situation in Lebanon as well as the need to “deter further regional aggression from Iran and its proxies”.
FBI investigates leak of classified documentspublished at 16:31 British Summer Time
The FBI is investigating the alleged leak of classified documents, the bureau has said in a statement.
It follows the publication of classified intelligence documents online on Friday. The documents contained an alleged US assessment of Israeli plans to attack Iran.
The FBI outlines there will be no further comment as it is an “ongoing investigation”.
63 killed in yesterday’s Israeli strikes, Lebanese health ministry sayspublished at 16:20 British Summer Time
The Lebanese ministry of public health has provided updated death toll and injury figures amid continued air strikes from Israel.
In a thread on X, the health authority says a total of 63 people had been killed with a further 234 wounded, in yesterday’s attacks.
This means, the health ministry says, that a total of 2,546 people have been killed and 11,862 wounded in the latest phase of fighting.
For context: Israel began an intense air campaign and ground invasion against Hezbollah after almost a year of cross-border fighting sparked by the war in Gaza, saying it wanted to ensure the safe return of tens of thousands of residents of Israeli border areas displaced by rocket attacks.
Videos show burning schools in north Gazapublished at 16:08 British Summer Time
by Benedict Garman
Image source, Social Media
Jabalia camp in northern Gaza has been surrounded by IDF forces for weeks, with dozens reported dead in air strikes, and imagery has been emerging of the scene there. BBC Verify has been trying to build up a picture of the level of destruction there.
For example, these three pictures of schools on fire, shared publicly by Palestinian journalist, Younis Tirawi, on X. He has attributed two of them to the social media accounts of IDF soldiers. BBC Verify hasn’t been able to source the original postings.
By matching the buildings to previous videos and satellite imagery, we can confirm one, posted yesterday evening, shows a fire inside Aleppo Elementary School. Two more, posted on Sunday and Monday respectively, show Kuwait School burning.
The schools neighbour one another and are about 150m from the Indonesian Hospital.
Although many posts and reports about schools burning in Jabalia reference three schools, two of these photos actually show the same one – Kuwait – from a different angle.
The fires are reported to have happened on Sunday, the same day the first photo was shared. Though it’s impossible to say from the photos alone, the schools are not burned in a satellite image of the area from 14 October, so we can be sure it happened between those days.
Large groups of people were seen escorted from this area by the IDF in footage shared over the weekend.
Israel says its offensive is aimed at stopping Hamas from regrouping in northern Gaza.
Headquarters of elite Hezbollah soldiers destroyed – IDFpublished at 15:53 British Summer Time
The IDF says it has hit approximately 10 Hezbollah “command and control centres” in the al-Hawsh area of southern Lebanon with air strikes.
These sites include the headquarters of the Radwan forces – the group’s elite unit of soldiers – it says.
Before the attack, the IDF says, it posted “numerous warnings” to the population in the area, to reduce the chance of harming civilians.
Charity collective raises £15m in five days for Middle East aidpublished at 15:32 British Summer Time
Image source, Reuters
There have been calls for more aid to reach sites like Jabalia in northern Gaza, pictured here in August
A group of charities has raised £15m in the first five days of an appeal for donations towards those affected by the ongoing conflict in the middle east.
The Disasters Emergency Committee Middle East Humanitarian Appeal is a collective of 15 UK charities, including Oxfam GB and Save the Children UK.
Following an appeal, the group says it has received donations from the UK public, as well as Royal Family members and household brands.
The DEC says the money raised will be allocated to support in Gaza and Lebanon, where it says “millions of people are displaced and desperately need humanitarian support”.
The charity collective also says that it will continue to monitor “the situation and needs in Israel”, and will expand its support to the country “should the situation change”.
Death toll from strike on southern Beirut hospital reaches 18published at 15:17 British Summer Time
The death toll following an Israeli strike that hit near Lebanon’s largest public hospital in southern Beirut has now risen to 18, the Lebanese health ministry says.
The Israeli military previously said it hit a “Hezbollah terrorist target” near the hospital – adding that the hospital was not targeted.
War in Gaza ‘setting region back to 1950s’, UNDP sayspublished at 15:00 British Summer Time
As US Secretary of State Antony Blinken negotiates for a ceasefire in Gaza between Israel and Hamas, the UN has issued a warning about the consequences of the conflict continuing.
In a new report, the UN Development Programme (UNDP) says that “poverty in the State of Palestine will rise to 74.3% in 2024, affecting 4.1 million people”.
The UNDP also projects huge disruptions to Gaza’s Human Development Index – a metric that measures a country’s development in terms of health, knowledge and standard of living.
The UNDP says that this measure is due to drop to 0.408. It says this is the same as the level estimated in 1955, and would erase “over 69 years of progress”.
According to the UNDP, Gaza’s gross domestic product – a way of measuring wealth – will also “contract by 35.1%” in 2024 compared with a no-war scenario, with unemployment “rising to 49.9%”.
The UN Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia says the report’s findings should “sound the alarm” over “decades of development efforts that are being wiped out”.
Palestinians flee northern Gaza following Israeli evacuation orderspublished at 14:46 British Summer Time
The Israeli military has ordered Palestinians in the city of Beit Lahia, in northern Gaza, to evacuate. We have some photos now of civilians leaving, along with their families and belongings.
Northern Gaza has been under continuous Israeli bombardment in recent weeks, with evacuation orders a regular occurrence. At least 87 people were killed and more than 40 were injured during an Israeli air strike on Beit Lahia on Saturday.
Image source, Reuters
Image source, Reuters
Image source, Reuters
Dozens of Democrats sign letter urging independent media access in Gazapublished at 14:33 British Summer Time
Image source, EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock
Ghazi Ashraf El-Alloul is a 29-year-old Palestinian journalist, working in a displaced camp in Gaza
Sixty-four Democrat members of the US House of Representatives have signed a letter to President Biden calling for “unrestricted, independent media access to Gaza”.
“Biden must push for independent access for US and international journalists in the interest of transparency, accountability, and the fundamental principle of press freedom,” Representative James McGovern, who is leading the call, says on X, external.
Only a limited amount of international media access has been granted to Gaza since 7 October, under conditions set by Israel.
Israel’s military says its troops have taken journalists on escorted trips in Gaza to allow them to report safely.
According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, 128 journalists have been killed since the beginning of the war on 7 October 2023, 123 of them Palestinian.
Three paramedics hit by shrapnel on rescue operation – Lebanese Red Crosspublished at 14:17 British Summer Time
The Lebanese Red Cross has said its medical officers were struck while carrying out a rescue operation in Nabatieh, southern Lebanon.
In a post on X, the Red Cross says it was attempting to “search for the injured in order to treat and rescue them” following a “raid” on Nabatieh earlier this afternoon.
In the course of this operation – which it says was confirmed with peacekeeping force Unifil – the Red Cross says that the site they had travelled to was targeted, and “3 paramedics were injured by shrapnel”.
The Lebanese Red Cross says its medics were then transferred to hospital.
The IDF has not yet responded to these reports.
Lebanon coastal city Tyre hit todaypublished at 14:03 British Summer Time
Emir Nader
reporting from Beirut
Image source, Reuters
As airstrikes continue today in the Lebanese capital Beirut, in the south of the country the Israeli army has also been hitting the coastal city of Tyre.
Warnings issued at around 10:30 local time by the Israeli army called on residents of Tyre’s al-Hawsh neighbourhood to move one kilometre away from the densely populated area where it said Hezbollah-linked sites were located.
First videos from the scene showed great plumes of smoke above the neighbourhood and local media report that the site was hit with 10 rounds of strikes.
A number of other areas in the country have also been struck today including the city of Nabatieh in the south and Hermel in the north, according to local media. However the Israeli army spokesperson did not issue warnings today to locals of those areas.
‘Eighty projectiles’ fired by Hezbollah at Israel today, IDF sayspublished at 13:45 British Summer Time
Through the start of the day, Israel has been reporting a number of “projectiles” crossing into its territory from Lebanon.
As of 15:00 local time (13:00 BST), the Israeli military says that “approximately 80 projectiles” have been fired towards the country by Hezbollah forces.
Earlier on, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it had detected approximately 10 rockets launched from Lebanon towards Neot Mordechai – a kibbutz in northern Israel.
A little later, the IDF said that “approximately 30 projectiles” were identified crossing from Lebanon.
This update follows sirens in the upper and western Galilee areas at 13:27 and 13:28 local time.
It is unclear what damage – if any – was caused by these missiles, but no injuries have been reported.
IDF says Beirut hospital was not hit in strikepublished at 13:27 British Summer Time
Image source, EPA
The Israeli military has confirmed it struck a site close to the Rafik Hariri University Hospital on Monday that killed at least 13 people, including a child.
The IDF said the strike hit a Hezbollah facility, and not the hospital, adding that it and its operations were not affected.
As we reported earlier, the hospital’s neighbourhood wasn’t on the list of targets announced in advance by the IDF as part of a barrage of air strikes on Monday night. A BBC producer who was nearby the hospital at the time said a sharp bang sent people running for cover.
At least three multi-storey buildings collapsed and several others were heavily damaged in the attack on the impoverished and densely populated part of the city.
The Lebanese health ministry said at least 57 people have been injured.
Hezbollah claims responsibility for drone attack on Netanyahu’s holiday homepublished at 13:12 British Summer Time
Image source, Reuters
We reported earlier on a Hezbollah news conference which was disrupted by an Israeli evacuation order near the location.
In it Hezbollah’s press official claimed the group’s responsibility for last week’s drone attack on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s holiday home in the coastal town of Caesarea.
As a reminder, Netanyahu’s office said a drone was “launched towards” the residence on Saturday morning. Neither Netanyahu nor his wife were there at the time and no-one was injured.
Netanyahu attributed the attack to Hezbollah in a post on X on the same day.
Hezbollah’s comments came in a news conference given by the head of the group’s media office Mohammad Afif today.
The Reuters news agency quotes Afif as saying: “Hezbollah takes the full and sole responsibility for targeting Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s house.”