Israeli media are reporting that the death toll from a shooting attack in Jerusalem has risen to three after an elderly woman succumbed to her injuries. A 24-year-old woman and a man in his 70s were also killed.
According to police, at around 7.40am local time two gunmen got out of a vehicle and opened fire at people at a bus stop.
Police said two off-duty soldiers and an armed civilian in the area returned fire, killing the two attackers. The Shin Bet security agency said the attakers were Hamas members.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has said he doubts that Israel is respecting international law in Gaza.
“The footage we are seeing and the growing numbers of children dying, I have serious doubt [Israel] is complying with international humanitarian law,” he said in an interview with Spanish state-owned broadcaster TVE.
“What we are seeing in Gaza is not acceptable.”
The United Nations has warned that the amount of aid getting into Gaza remains far too low, despite an increase afforded by the temporary ceasefire.
Speaking to reporters via video-link from Gaza, James Elder, a spokesperson for children’s agency Unicef, said a rise in the flow of aid was the “right start”.
“(It’s) definitely the right type of aid - fuel, medicines, food, warmth,” he said.
But he went on to say that the needs in the territory were such that “all this aid is triage... It’s not even enough for triage”.
Triage is a process by which patients are assessed so that resources can be devoted to those who most need them or who are most likely to survive.
“The aid needs to multiply,” Elder added. “Everything here is emergency care right now.”
Israel’s opposition leader and former prime minister, Yair Lapid, has said the attack in Jerusalem has brought “another sad and painful morning … for all of us”.
Lapid leads the Yesh Atid party and is widely considered to be in the centre of Israeli politics.
“I send my condolences from the bottom of my heart to the families of the murdered and wishes for a speedy recovery to those injured from the heinous and horrible shooting attack,” he said.
“The security forces will continue to operate around the clock to bring the citizens of Israel to safety and to deal with the terrorist emissaries to the last of them. Israel will continue to strike terror wherever they try to raise their head.”
Seventeen Thai hostages freed by Hamas over recent days have landed back in Bangkok, where relatives had gathered at the airport to welcome them home.
The latest releases bring the total number of Thai nationals freed to 23, with nine still being held.
An El-Al flight carrying the party from Tel Aviv landed at Suvarnabhumi airport soon after 3pm local time (0800 GMT).
“The plane has landed. They are being processed now,” a foreign ministry official told AFP.
Accompanying the party was the Thai foreign minister, Parnpree Bahiddha-Nukara, who flew to Israel earlier this week and met some of the hostages as they were released.
The US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, has said the current ceasefire is “producing results” and that the US hopes to see it continue.
Blinken was speaking this morning at a meeting with the Israeli president, Isaac Herzog, in Tel Aviv as part of his third trip to the region since the 7 October attacks.
“We have seen over the last week the very positive development of hostages coming home, being reunited with their families,” he said.
“That should continue today. It’s also enabled an increase in humanitarian assistance to go to innocent civilians in Gaza who need it desperately.
“So this process is producing results. It’s important, and we hope that it can continue.”
Israel’s security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, has visited the scene of the shooting in Jerusalem, saying the attack shows the country can only combat Hamas “through war”.
“This type of incident proves again how much we can’t show weakness, how much we have to speak to Hamas only through intentions, only through the war,” he said, according to the Times of Israel.
He also said the shooting demonstrated the need for more Israeli civilians to carry guns.
Ben-Gvir is a member of Israel’s ruling coalition but leads the far-right party Otzma Yehudit and has previously called for an end to the current truce.
Israel’s armed forces have warned people in Gaza not to travel north “for your own safety”, saying the area remains a war zone.
The IDF has said: “You can only move to the south of Wadi Gaza via Salah al-Din Road. It is forbidden to enter the sea. It is forbidden to approach within a kilometre of the border.”
Hundreds of thousands of people in Gaza have moved south in the past few weeks in response to Israeli military warnings, leading to concerns about safety and conditions.
Israeli media are reporting that the death toll from a shooting attack in Jerusalem has risen to three after an elderly woman succumbed to her injuries. A 24-year-old woman and a man in his 70s were also killed.
According to police, at around 7.40am local time two gunmen got out of a vehicle and opened fire at people at a bus stop.
Police said two off-duty soldiers and an armed civilian in the area returned fire, killing the two attackers. The Shin Bet security agency said the attakers were Hamas members.
Israel’s military confirmed on Thursday that a truce with Hamas will continue, allowing further hostage and prisoner releases and the possibility of more a durable pause in hostilities, writes Jason Burke in Jerusalem.
There were frantic diplomatic efforts through the night to prolong the six-day halt to fighting in Gaza which was set to end at 7am local time (0500 GMT) on Thursday. The current extension appears to be only for 24 hours, though this has yet to be explicitly confirmed by all parties.
The Israeli military’s confirmation came just minutes before the ceasefire was due to expire.
Just over an hour later, a statement from the office of the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said the war cabinet had come close to ending the truce after unanimously deciding “that if an acceptable list of further prisoners to be released was not delivered by 0700 this morning [Thursday], fighting would resume at once”.
“A list of women and children – in accordance with the terms of the outline [of the ceasefire agreement last week] – was delivered to Israel a short time ago; therefore, the pause will continue,” it said.
Hamas, which freed 16 hostages in exchange for 30 Palestinian prisoners on Wednesday night, also confirmed the truce would be extended into a seventh day as did Qatar, which has been acting as a mediator.
Hamas claimed that Israel had refused to receive seven women and children and the bodies of three other hostages in exchange for extending the truce, and the last-minute negotiations underlined the extreme fragility of the current ceasefire agreement, as diplomats rush to find a more durable deal that will prevent a return to war.
Both sides have stressed they have the will and capabilities to continue the conflict.
More details of the shooting in Jerusalem are emerging. A second person has died, Reuters is reporting.
Two Palestinian attackers opened fire at a bus stop during morning rush hour at the entrance to Jerusalem on Thursday, killing at least two people and wounding eight others, Israeli police said.
The attackers came from East Jerusalem, the Jerusalem police district commander, Doron Turgeman, told reporters at the scene.
A large number of ambulances and police converged on the street that was crowded with morning commuters, and police said they were searching the area to make sure there were no other attackers.
The violence came as Israel and Hamas struck a last-minute agreement on Thursday to extend their six-day ceasefire in Gaza by one more day to allow negotiators to keep working on deals to swap hostages held in the coastal enclave for Palestinian prisoners.
It is now just past 9am in Gaza and Tel Aviv. Here is where the day stands so far:
The ceasefire between Israel and Hamas that was due to expire at 7am local time, 5am GMT – has now been extended. The Israel Defense Forces said on Telegram: “In light of the mediators’ efforts to continue the process of releasing the hostages and subject to the terms of the framework, the operational pause will continue.”
Hamas has also announced its agreement to extend the truce in Gaza for a seventh day.
Qatar, which has been mediating between the two sides, confirmed that another day of temporary truce had been agreed. It revealed more details of the extension, saying it was under the current terms.
Qatar’s ministry of foreign affairs spokesperson, Majed al-Ansari, said in a statement: “Palestinian and Israeli sides have reached an agreement to extend the humanitarian pause in the Gaza Strip for an additional day under the existing conditions, which are a cessation of all military activities and the entry of humanitarian aid to Gaza.”
In the lead-up to the deadline, mediators had been racing to reach a deal on another extension after the latest exchange of hostages for Palestinian prisoners.
16 Hamas-held hostages were released on Wednesday night in exchange for 30 Palestinian prisoners.
Hours before the deadline, Hamas’s armed wing told its fighters in the Gaza Strip to be ready to resume combat if the truce was not renewed. “The Al-Qassam Brigades asks its active forces to maintain high combat readiness in the last hours of the truce,” the militant group said in a statement.
With just around an hour to go before the truce was due to expire, Hamas said its offer to free another seven hostages, and hand over the bodies of another three it said were killed in Israeli bombardment, had been refused. Reuters reported that Israel was yet to comment on that development.
China’s government has released a position paper on the Israel-Hamas conflict. The country this month took the chair of the UN security council, and the position paper’s release coincided with an address to the council by China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi. The five-point proposal reiterated much of China’s ongoing position on the conflict, which is that a two-state solution remains the answer.
Prominent Palestinian activist Ahed Tamimi was among 30 prisoners freed by Israel early on Thursday. Israeli troops earlier this month arrested Tamimi, regarded in the occupied West Bank as a hero since she was a teenager, on suspicion of inciting violence. Her mother has denied the allegation and said it was based on a fake social media post, Reuters reports.
One woman has been killed and eight others wounded in a shooting attack in Jerusalem on Thursday, Israel’s Magen David Adom ambulance service said.
But it is unclear who is responsible for the shooting or the motivation behind it.
Israeli media reported that two shooters opened fire near a bus stop. Magen David Adom said that two of the wounded were in critical condition.
A large number of ambulances and police converged on the scene, which happened during morning rush hour at one of the entrances to the city.
“Two terrorists who arrived at the scene in a vehicle armed with weapons fired at civilians at a bus stop, and they were neutralized by security forces and a civilian who were nearby,” Israeli police said.
“Abhorrent terrorist attack in Jerusalem this morning. We unequivocally condemn such brutal violence,” the US ambassador to Israel, Jack Lew, said.
The Israeli government said it received a new list of women and children hostages in the Gaza Strip to be released by Hamas on Thursday in exchange for a one-day extension of the truce.
“A short time ago, Israel was given a list of women and children in accordance with the terms of the agreement, and therefore the truce will continue,” said the statement from the Israeli prime minister’s office, without specifying the number of hostages to be released, Agence France-Presse reports.
The truce, initially agreed last Friday, has brought a temporary halt to fighting for an exchange of hostages and prisoners.
The total number of freed hostages stands at 102 people, including 70 Israelis, from about 240 taken to the Gaza Strip after Hamas’s 7 October attacks when militants crossed the border and killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians.
Israel’s subsequent air and ground campaign in Gaza has killed nearly 15,000 people, also mostly civilians, according to Hamas officials, and reduced large parts of the north of the territory to rubble.
Israel has released 210 Palestinian prisoners.
In New York, videos posted to social media showed several hundred chanting pro-Palestinian protesters, many carrying Palestinian flags, crowded in front of the News Corp building, not far from the site of the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree, Associated Press reports.
Footage from the scene showed a few protesters clashing with police outside the media company’s building as they tried to push forward to the tree but they were held back by police and the lighting ceremony was not disrupted.
The demonstrators then turned around and marched away down Sixth Avenue.
Last week, a group of protesters carrying a banner that read “Free Palestine” briefly interrupted the annual Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade, blocking the front of parade floats on the street.
Qatar has revealed more details of the terms of the current ceasefire extension. Qatar’s ministry of foreign affairs spokesperson, Majed al-Ansari, said in a statement:
Palestinian and Israeli sides have reached an agreement to extend the humanitarian pause in the Gaza Strip for an additional day under the existing conditions, which are a cessation of all military activities and the entry of humanitarian aid to Gaza.
He added that the truce would operate “within the framework of the joint mediation of the State of Qatar with the Arab Republic of Egypt and the United States of America,” AFP reports.
Qatar has been engaged in intense negotiations, with support from Egypt and the United States, to extend the truce in Gaza, which was due to end on Thursday morning.
For a full sum-up of the events leading up to the ceasefire deadline, read our full report which is now live.
Israel’s military said early on Thursday that a truce with Hamas would continue into a seventh day, minutes before it was due to expire, as mediators continued to work towards further exchanges of hostages for Palestinian prisoners.
Let’s look back at events that have just taken place. It’s now 7:15am in Israel and Gaza and 5:15am GMT. The ceasefire between Israel and Hamas was due to expire at the top of the hour but has now been extended.
The Israel Defense Forces said on Telegram a short time ago:
In light of the mediators’ efforts to continue the process of releasing the hostages and subject to the terms of the framework, the operational pause will continue.
Hamas has also announced its agreement to extend the truce in Gaza for a seventh day, Reuters is reporting.
Qatar, which has been mediating between the two sides, confirmed that another day of temporary truce had been agreed.
In the lead-up to the deadline, mediators had been racing to reach a deal on another extension after the latest exchange of hostages for Palestinian prisoners.
The expiry of the six-day halt to fighting in Gaza was set to end Thursday morning and follows the release of a group of 16 Hamas-held hostages on Wednesday night in exchange for 30 Palestinian prisoners.
Since the truce began on 24 November, 70 Israeli hostages have been freed in return for 210 Palestinian prisoners.
Israel said on Wednesday that about 160 hostages are still held in Gaza.
Hours before the deadline, Hamas’s armed wing told its fighters in the Gaza Strip to be ready to resume combat if the truce was not renewed. “The Al-Qassam Brigades asks its active forces to maintain high combat readiness in the last hours of the truce,” the militant group said in a statement.
With just an hour to go before the truce was due to expire, Hamas said its offer to free another seven hostages, and hand over the bodies of another three it said were killed in Israeli bombardment, had been refused. Reuters reported that Israel was yet to comment on that development.
We’ll keep you across any further developments here.
Israel’s military said on Thursday that a truce with Hamas would continue “in light of the mediators’ efforts to continue the process of releasing hostages, and subject to the terms of the agreement”.
Hamas has agreed to extend the truce for a seventh day, Reuters is reporting.
The six-day halt to fighting in Gaza was set to end at 7am local time (0500 GMT) on Thursday, and follows the release of a group of 16 Hamas-held hostages on Wednesday night in exchange for 30 Palestinian prisoners.
There was an emotional meeting between freed Thai hostages and the Thai foreign minister.
Four Thai workers were released late on Wednesday, bringing the total released to 23. Another two were set free on Tuesday and taken to Shamir medical center, where they embraced one another on arrival.
“We survived! We survived!” they cheered, and one was seen wiping away tears.
“We are not part of the conflict,” the foreign minister, Parnpree Bahiddha-Nukara, said in a Reuters interview after his meeting with the workers on Tuesday. He said there were no conditions for their release.
Thailand’s foreign minister said he hoped for freedom soon for the remaining hostages from his country. Read our full story here.
https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMioQFodHRwczovL3d3dy50aGVndWFyZGlhbi5jb20vd29ybGQvbGl2ZS8yMDIzL25vdi8zMC9pc3JhZWwtaGFtYXMtd2FyLWxpdmUtdXBkYXRlcy1uZXdzLWNlYXNlZmlyZS1lbmRpbmctZ2F6YS1wYWxlc3RpbmUtaG9zdGFnZS1kZWFsLXBhbGVzdGluaWFuLXByaXNvbmVycy1yZWxlYXNlZNIBAA?oc=5
2023-11-30 08:47:02Z
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