Rabu, 19 Mei 2021

Matt Hancock announces trial of covid booster-jab to fight winter variants in world-first - Daily Record

The UK has launched a world-first clinical trial to see whether a booster vaccine dose could protect people against Covid-19 and its variants.

Seven existing vaccines are to be tested in the Cov-Boost trial to see which jabs could be used in any forthcoming autumn vaccination programme.

Some 2,886 people aged 30 and older are being recruited at 18 NHS sites from London to Glasgow, with the first booster jabs administered in early June.

Scientists want people who received their first dose of either Pfizer/BioNTech or AstraZeneca in December or January to sign up, and hope people aged 75 and over will also come forward.

Experts believe that all seven vaccines will boost immunity, and lab studies will check their response to variants circulating in the UK, including those from India, Kent and South Africa.

The £19.3 million clinical trial will test the Pfizer jab alongside those from AstraZeneca, Moderna, Novavax, Janssen from Johnson & Johnson, Valneva and CureVac.

Three of the vaccines will also be tested at a half dose, with experts expecting an adequate immune response at this level.

The half doses will inform whether side-effects are reduced at a lower dose, and could offer useful information to countries where vaccine supply may be more scarce.

The 18 NHS sites across the UK will be split into three groups, with each group testing a different set of vaccines.

All of the information will be fed to to the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) at the end of August or early September.

The JCVI will then guide the Government on whether people should be boosted with a third dose and which vaccines should be used, depending on supply.

The 18 sites include Southampton, London, Leicester, Bournemouth, Portsmouth, Wrexham, Bradford, Oxford, Glasgow, Leeds, Cambridge, Birmingham, Brighton, Stockport, Liverpool and Exeter.

Among the information gathered will be any data on side-effects, including among people whose third booster jab is a different type to that used for their first two shots.

Professor Saul Faust, director of the National Institute for Health Research Southampton clinical research facility and lead investigator for the trial, said the "hope of a booster is that we raise the antibody level enough to be able to cover existing and variant strains of coronavirus."

He added: "We're hoping the immune responses will be high enough to protect people against all the strains circulating in the UK, including we'll be testing in the lab against the Indian variant, the South African variant, the Kent variant as well as the original strain."

Any other variants that England's chief medical officer, Professor Chris Whitty, wants adding to the mix can be tested as part of the trial over the summer.

Experts believe booster shots of existing vaccines could be enough to provide protection against all variants, with some scientists suggesting that developing new vaccines against variant strains may actually impair people's immune responses.

Dr Matthew Snape, associate professor of paediatrics and vaccinology at the University of Oxford, told a briefing that changing the vaccine to, for example, one that targets the South African variant, could actually leave the body trying to respond to the original Wuhan strain of coronavirus that an earlier vaccine protects against.

He said more research was needed, but added: "In some situations you never forget your first love . . . you're still trying to respond to that first vaccine."

The researchers stressed that the aim of the new study is not to pit the vaccines against one another, but to check whether they all increase antibodies and to look for potential side-effects.

All participants in the trial will have bloods taken to measure their immune responses at days 28, 84, 308 and 365 of the trial - with a small number having blood tests at other times.

Health and Social Care Secretary Matt Hancock said: "The UK vaccination programme has been a phenomenal national effort, with seven in 10 UK adults now having had their first Covid-19 jab.

Coronavirus in Scotland

"It is vital that we continue to support the world-renowned British research sector that has contributed to its success.

"We will do everything we can to future-proof this country from pandemics and other threats to our health security, and the data from this world-first clinical trial will help shape the plans for our booster programme later this year.

"I urge everyone who has had both doses of a Covid-19 vaccine, and is eligible, to sign up for this study and play a part in protecting the most vulnerable people in this country and around the world for months and years to come."

Prof Faust added: "This trial will give the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation the important data to inform their recommendations of how to protect the population against any future wave.

"It is fantastic that so many people across the country have taken part in vaccine trials up to now so that we can be in a position to study the effects of boosters, and we hope that as many people as possible over the age of 30 who received their first dose early in the NHS programme will be able to take part."

Vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi said: "Having taken part in a Covid-19 vaccine clinical trial myself, I would encourage everyone eligible to volunteer - whatever your religion, ethnicity or background."

"It's a fantastic opportunity to get involved with such an historic initiative."

Further results from the ComCov clinical trial, which aims to determine the effects of using different vaccines for the first and second dose, are due in the coming months.

People can sign up for the new trial at covboost.org.uk

The Health Secretary said initial results of the trial are expected in September.

“We will do everything we can to future-proof this country from pandemics and other threats to our health security, and the data from this world-first clinical trial will help shape the plans for our booster programme later this year," Mr Hancock said today ahead of a Downing Street briefing.

“I urge everyone who has had both doses of a COVID-19 vaccine, and is eligible, to sign up for this study and play a part in protecting the most vulnerable people in this country and around the world for months and years to come.”

Follow our Covid-19 live blog for more updates.

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2021-05-19 17:58:51Z
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Ceuta: Teenagers and children swim from Morocco to Spanish enclave with just the clothes on their backs - Sky News

The tear gas gave us the first clue something was happening.

A large group of people approached the border with Ceuta from the Moroccan side.

We watched and waited and soon saw heads bobbing out at sea. A group of around 20 people were swimming their way into Spanish territory.

Soldiers have been waiting to intercept the swimmers
Image: Soldiers have been waiting to intercept the swimmers

But on the shore, soldiers were waiting. The military had been drafted in by Spain after thousands made this journey in the last few days.

The swimmers were ordered from the water. They emerged shivering and cold after their time in the sea. All were male but what struck us was just how young they all were.

I spoke to one boy, dripping in his T-shirt and shorts, trainers sodden.

I asked how old he was. He showed the fingers of both hands and then held up four. He was 14 and arriving in Ceuta without any family.

More on Migrant Crisis

He's one of more than 1,500 children and teenagers who have made it to this Spanish territory in North Africa this week.

The ages of those in the group weren't lost on the military. We saw moments of tenderness. A soldier placed his arm around a boy who looked even younger than he was. Another tussled the hair of a terrified-looking youngster as he was taken away to a makeshift Red Cross facility in the city to be cared for.

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Thousands of migrants swim to Spain enclave

We went there and watched from the road the overwhelming challenge facing the workers.

Warehouses are being used for youngsters to sleep in, with hundreds of people lining up for food and water. Efforts will be made to get in touch with the families of the teenagers.

But there are plenty of young people around Ceuta who want to keep out of the way of the authorities and the charities.

We spoke to one group of boys who'd managed to evade the police and soldiers.

More than 1,500 children and teenagers have arrived in Ceuta this week
Image: More than 1,500 children and teenagers have arrived in Ceuta this week
Some of the young boys have tried to avoid the police and military
Image: Some of the young boys have tried to avoid the police and military

One showed us the cuts and scrapes he got from the rocks as he spent an hour swimming to reach Ceuta.

Another mimicked a soldier holding a gun as he told us he spotted the men in uniforms but managed to evade them. If we hadn't known what he had just gone through, it would have looked like he was playing a game.

But what happens to those teenagers now? The Spanish prime minister is taking an increasingly hard line, sending many adults straight back to Morocco. The Red Cross is trying to provide help to youngsters.

But what of those who are in Ceuta with little or no money, no jobs, no phone or papers? Teenagers who swam in with just the clothes on their backs. Who looks after them now?

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2021-05-19 21:10:04Z
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As migrants continue to reach Ceuta, Spanish pushback hardens - Al Jazeera English

In a bid to prevent more people’s arrival in Ceuta, Spain has upped security along its shared border with Morocco, fired tear gas into the buffer zone between the countries, and returned people who have managed to cross into its enclave in North Africa.

More than 8,000 people – mostly men, but also some women and children – entered Ceuta on Monday and Tuesday after swimming around a breakwater that extends into the Mediterranean Sea, or climbing over the border fence that separates the Spanish territory from Morocco.

More people arrived on Wednesday, although in far lower numbers, after both countries moved to stem crossings.

At least one person has died attempting to make the crossing, according to Spanish authorities.

Ceuta, with a population of 80,000, is on the northern tip of Morocco across from Gibraltar.

“We have never seen such an arrival of this magnitude,” said Red Cross spokeswoman Isa Brasero. “The city has the means to take care of all the people that arrive to its shores, but you never imagine that you will face this type of situation.”

On their side, Moroccan police on Wednesday drove hundreds of young men away from the border fence and stopped others from approaching.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez meanwhile promised to “restore order” after the unprecedented surge in arrivals, telling Parliament on Wednesday that about 4,800 migrants and refugees had already been sent back to Morocco.

Spain does not grant Moroccans asylum status.

Some of those who made the crossing were unaccompanied children, however, which Spanish law says must be taken into care by the country’s authorities.

But according to The Associated Press news agency, Spanish police ushered back some teenagers who appeared to be below 18.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez promised to ‘restore order’ after the unprecedented surge in arrivals into Ceuta [Jon Nazca/Reuters]

‘A show of disrespect’

In his address to Parliament, delivered a day after he visited Ceuta, Sanchez criticised Moroccan officials for a “lack of border control” in comments that could escalate a diplomatic row between his government and Rabat.

“This is an act of defiance,” he said. “The lack of border control by Morocco is not a show of disrespect of Spain, but rather for the European Union.”

Meanwhile, Spanish Foreign Minister Arancha González Laya said for the first time in public that Madrid believes Morocco loosened its border control in retaliation against a decision by Spain last month to give medical assistance to a rebel leader from Western Sahara, a disputed territory held by Morocco.

Rabat had been angered by the assistance to Brahim Ghali, who heads the Polisario Front, an Algeria-backed breakaway movement that seeks to establish an independent state in the Western Sahara region.

“It tears our hearts out to see our neighbours sending children, even babies … [because] they reject a humanitarian gesture on our part,” González Laya told Spanish public radio.

Ceuta and Melilla, Spain’s other enclave in the region, have the EU’s only land borders with Africa, making them popular entry points for those seeking a better life in Europe [Jon Nazca/Reuters]

Humanitarian crisis

As people continued to attempt to reach Ceuta on Wednesday, Spanish soldiers in combat gear and police officers patrolled the border, while swimmers were escorted back to Morocco.

Ceuta’s social services buckled as they attempted to respond to the simmering humanitarian crisis.

Hundreds spent the night in the streets, parks or on the hills bordering the city.

About 2,000 children were sent to warehouses run by charity groups.

AP journalists saw unaccompanied children sleeping on the floor of a warehouse, as well as in tent beds set up by the Red Cross.

Many shops were closed in Ceuta, a city of 20 square kilometres (7.7 square miles).

City head Juan Jesús Vivas, with the main opposition right-wing People’s Party, said school attendance dropped by 60 percent on Tuesday with families concerned for what he called “an invasion”.

Among the arrivals were sub-Saharan Africans, who often migrate to flee poverty or violence at home and saw the suddenly porous border as a chance to avoid an even more deadly sea journey to the Spanish mainland.

Aisha Diakaté, 25, fled conflict in Mali in 2018 after rebels killed her parents. She ended up in Morocco where she struggled to find work and had to beg to survive.

She walked from Tangier and then swam across the border with her small child in arms. Now, after sleeping outside a warehouse, she was crushed to hear that she could be deported.

“I swam here with my child, why are they now asking me to go? That’s not right,” Diakaté said.

“We have nothing. If we return to Morocco, it is just suffering.”

Ceuta’s social services have buckled under the strain of responding to the migrant and refugee crisis [Jon Nazca/Reuters]

Spanish court serves Ghali summons

The developments came as Spain’s High Court on Wednesday served Ghali with a June 1 summons for a preliminary hearing in a war crimes case against him, a court document seen by Reuters news agency showed.

The summons is the first step towards a potential trial of the Polisario Front leader.

But Ghali, who is currently in hospital in northern Spain, declined to sign the summons, saying he had to refer to the Algerian embassy first, the document said.

Ghali and other leaders of the Polisario Front are accused by human rights groups and Western Sahara individuals of genocide, murder, terrorism, torture and disappearances, the document said.

Spain has previously said its decision to allow Ghali’s hospitalisation was a “humanitarian gesture”.

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2021-05-19 14:59:28Z
CAIiEDpmPnQN9ER9sTE68fi96jAqFAgEKgwIACoFCAowhgIwkDgw0O8B

Israel-Gaza violence: The children who have died in the conflict - BBC News

A child walks through rubble in Gaza
Anadolu Agency

Of the 219 people who have been killed in Gaza, at least 63 are children, according to its health ministry. Of the 10 people killed in Israel, two children are among the dead, the country's medical service says.

Here are the stories of some of the children who have been killed.

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Children of the al-Kawalek family, 5 to 17

Nine-year-old Yara (left) and five-year-old Rula (right)
Al-Kawlak family/DCIP/NRC

When an Israeli strike hit al-Wihda street in central Gaza City early on Sunday, at least 13 members of the extended al-Kawalek family are believed to have been killed, buried in the rubble of their own home.

Many of the victims were children, with one said to be as young as six months.

"We saw nothing but smoke," one of the surviving members of the family, Sanaa al-Kawalek, told Felesteen Online. "I couldn't see my son next to me and I was hugging him, but I could see nothing."

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) described the bombing as "abnormal" and said the civilian casualties were unintended. A spokesman said air strikes had caused a tunnel to collapse, bringing houses down with it.

Among those killed were sisters Yara, 9, and Rula, 5. Both had been receiving treatment for trauma from the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC).

The al-Kawaleks were polite girls who always did their homework on time, one of their teachers, who did not want be named, told the BBC.

A picture circulating online is said to show 10-year-old Aziz al-Kawalek, the only surviving member of his direct family, sitting by his mother's body.

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Ido Avigal, 5

Ido Avigal, five, who was killed in a Hamas rocket attack
Twitter

The youngest victim on the Israeli side is thought to be Ido Avigal, a five-year-old boy killed last Wednesday in the southern town of Sderot.

Ido was killed inside a fortified room in what the Israeli military described as an "incredibly rare" incident.

His mother grabbed him and took him to the fortified room when incoming rocket sirens sounded on Wednesday evening in Sderot, the Times of Israel reports.

Rocket shrapnel pierced the protective metal plating used to cover the window of the room he was in, also injuring his mother and seven-year-old sister. He died of his injuries several hours later.

"It was a piece of the rocket that came in at a very specific angle, at a very specific speed and at a very specific point," IDF spokesman Hidai Zilberman said of the incident.

"We were at home and the kids were a little bored, so my wife Shani went with them to her sister's house two buildings over," Ido's father, Asaf Avigal, told Channel 13.

"I'm sorry I did not take the shrapnel in your place," Mr Avigal said at his son's funeral. "A few days ago, you asked me: 'Dad, what will happen if the siren goes off while we are outdoors?' I told you that so long as you were with me you would be protected. I lied."

A few months ago, Mr Avigal and his wife had spoken about what an especially bright child Ido was, as if he was a 50-year-old in the body of a five-year-old. He would often urge his father to leave the computer and spend more time with him. "Enough with the screens - be with me," he would say.

Ido's mother remains in hospital.

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Nadine Awad, 16

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Nadine Awad, a 16-year-old Arab-Israeli schoolgirl, was with her 52-year-old father in the early hours of last Wednesday, when a rocket struck their car and home, killing them both. Her mother, who was also in the car, was seriously injured, medics said.

Nadine's cousin, Ahmad Ismail, says he heard the sound of a rocket hitting from inside the family home, in the city of Lod, close to Tel Aviv, where Arab and Jewish Israelis live together.

"It happened so quickly," he told the public broadcaster Kan. "Even if we had wanted to run somewhere, we don't have a safe room."

Nadine was a "very special girl" in her first year of high school, who dreamed of becoming a doctor, those who knew her said.

Her school principal said she "had dreams of changing the world".

"She was such a special girl, such a talented girl. She wanted to conquer the world," Shirin Natur Hafi told local radio, the Times of Israel reports.

Nadine had been involved in a number of science-related and social projects with Jewish schools in the area, and she had planned to participate in a biomedical studies programme, Ms Hafi said.

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Children of the al-Hadidi family, 6 to 13

Five-month-old Palestinian baby Omar Hadidi who lost his mother and siblings in the Israeli airstrike, whose homes in Shati Refugee Camp were completely destroyed, receives medical treatment at Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, Gaza
Getty Images

On Friday, Muhammad al-Hadidi's four children - Suhayb, 13, Yahya, 11, Abderrahman, eight, and Osama, six - put on their finest clothes and went to visit their cousins nearby, in the Shati refugee camp outside Gaza City, to celebrate Eid, which marks the end of Ramadan.

"The kids put on their Eid clothes, took their toys and headed off to their uncle's house to celebrate," their 37-year-old father told reporters.

"They called in the evening to beg to stay the night and I said OK."

The next day, the building where they had been staying was hit. Only their five-month-old baby brother, Omar, survived, after being dragged from the rubble where he lay next to his dead mother.

"They were safe in their homes, they did not carry weapons, they did not fire rockets," Mr Hadidi said of his children. "What did they do to deserve this? We're civilians."

Amid the wreckage were children's toys, a Monopoly board game and, sitting on the kitchen counter, unfinished plates of food from the holiday gathering.

"When my children went to sleep, they were hoping that when they woke up it would all be over. But they are gone now. I have only their memory, and the scent of them in my home," Mr Hadidi told The Times newspaper in London.

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Ibrahim al-Masry, 14

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم (يا أَيَّتُهَا النَّفْسُ الْمُطْمَئِنَّةُ ارْجِعِي إِلَى رَبِّكِ رَاضِيَةً مَّرْضِيَّةً...

Posted by ‎مدرسة ذكور بيت حانون الإعدادية "ج"‎ on Monday, May 10, 2021
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Ibrahim al-Masry was playing with his siblings in the front yard of their home in a northern neighbourhood of Gaza last week, when a strike hit, according to reports.

Ibrahim and his brother Marwan, and several other relatives, were instantly killed.

"Every day in Ramadan they play in the street at this time before Iftar," their father, Youssef al-Masri, told The Independent.

"We didn't see it coming, we just heard two big explosions... Everyone was running in the street, children were bleeding, mothers were crying, blood was everywhere."

Their brother, also called Ibrahim, said they had been filling sacks of straw to sell at a local market.

"We were laughing and having fun, when suddenly they began to bomb us, everything around us caught fire," he told the AFP news agency.

"I saw my cousins set alight, and torn into pieces."

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Hamza Nassar, 12

Hamza Nassar had left his home in Gaza last Wednesday evening to get some vegetables so his mother could prepare a meal to break the Ramadan fast, according to reports. He never made it home.

Israeli strikes started near the Abu al-Kas cemetery and killed him, Al Jazeera reported.

Hamza was a nice kid and an excellent student, his father told Al Jazeera.

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Tala Abu al-Ouf, 13

Tala Ayman Abu al-Ouf
Abu al-Auf family/DCIP/NRC

The same strike that hit the al-Kawaleks' home also took the life of their 13-year-old neighbour, Tala Abu al-Ouf, and her 17-year-old brother Tawfik.

Their father, Dr Ayman Abu al-Ouf, was also killed in the attack. He was the head of internal medicine at Gaza City's al-Shifa hospital, where he was in charge of its coronavirus response.

In the days before the attack, Dr Abu al-Ouf had been working longer and longer hours at the hospital, family friends told the BBC.

Tala's teacher, who did not want to be named, described her as an "excellent student" in seventh grade.

Tala was "interested in religious classes and she liked to read and memorise the Quran," the teacher told the BBC, adding that she was always ready for exams.

She had also been taking part in the NRC's programme to help children deal with trauma.

"They had already suffered a lot," Hozayfa Yazji, the refugee council's area field manager, told the BBC.

"This madness should stop... the violence should stop, in order to give these kids a future."

Additional reporting by the BBC's Ahmed Nour, Tala Halawa, Dana Doulah and Joana Saba

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2021-05-19 12:09:47Z
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Ceuta: Tear gas used by Spanish police as migrants pushed back from Spanish enclave to Morocco - The Telegraph

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2021-05-19 12:54:46Z
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Lebanon launches rockets at Israel - huge escalation erupts in Middle East crisis - Daily Express

Lebanon: Footage appears to show rockets launched at Israel

The rockets were fired from near Seddiqine, a village in the region of Lebanon's southern coastal city of Tyre, security sources have confirmed. Sirens warning of incoming had sounded in 's lower Galilee region, east of . Residents of the town of Krayot, near Haifa, reported hearing three explosions.

The Israeli military said it is shelling a “number of targets” in response to the latest attack.

Israel's Iron Dome missile defences intercepted one of the projectiles and "the rest most likely fell in open areas", the military said.

The rockets caused air raid sirens to blare in the northern Israeli city of Haifa and areas to the east.

Security sources in Lebanon confirmed that four rockets had been launched towards Israel from Seddiqine, a village in the region of Lebanon's southern coastal city of Tyre.

 

Benjamin Netanyahu

Benjamin Netanyahu's Israel has been targeted by rockets launched from Lebanon (Image: GETTY)

Palestine Israel

Rockets are fired by Palestinian militants towards Israel, near Rafah (Image: GETTY)

It was not immediately clear who had fired the rockets, and there were no reports of damage on either side.

One security source said militant group Hezbollah, which has sway in southern Lebanon, had not been involved in the launches, and that the group was trying to determine the source of the rockets.

In an earlier incident, on Monday, six shells were fired from Lebanon towards northern Israel but fell short of the border, drawing retaliatory Israeli artillery fire.

The Israeli military says that some rockets fired from Lebanon, including in an initial incident on Thursday, had landed in the Mediterranean Sea, causing no damage or casualties.

READ MORE: Boris’s Brexit deal repeals key law which binds UK together

US President Joe Biden

US President Joe Biden (Image: GETTY)

It was the third incident of rocket fire from Lebanon since hostilities between Israel and Palestinian militants in Gaza flared up on May 10.

On Monday, six shells were fired from Lebanon towards northern Israel but fell short of the border, drawing retaliatory Israeli artillery fire.

Three rockets launched towards Israel on Thursday landed in the Mediterranean Sea, causing no damage or casualties.

Palestinian medical officials said 219 people have been killed in 10 days of aerial bombardments, which have destroyed roads, buildings and other infrastructure, and worsened the already dire humanitarian situation in Gaza.

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Lebanon video

A video shot in Lebanon appears to show the aftermath of a rocket launch (Image: NC)

Israel Palestine: Iron Dome intercepts rockets in Fox broadcast

Israeli authorities put the death toll at 12 in Israel, where repeated rocket attacks have caused panic and sent people rushing into shelters. Regional and US-led diplomatic efforts to secure a ceasefire have intensified but so far failed.

Israel fought a war in 2006 against Hezbollah guerrillas, who have sway in southern Lebanon and access to advanced rockets. The border has been mostly quiet since then.

Small Palestinian factions in Lebanon have fired on Israel sporadically in the past.

US President Joe Biden urged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday to de-escalate tensions in the Gaza conflict "on the path" to a ceasefire, a White House spokeswoman said.

Israel Iron Dome

Israel's Iron Dome missile defence system has intercepted most of the rockets (Image: GETTY)

White House spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters: "The two leaders had a detailed discussion on the state of events in Gaza, Israel's progress in degrading the capabilities of Hamas and other terrorist elements, and ongoing diplomatic efforts by regional governments and the United States.

"The president conveyed to the prime minister that he expected a significant de-escalation today on the path to a ceasefire."

It was the fourth call in past week between the US and Israeli leaders.

Meanwhile, the worrying possibility of Iran being sucked into the conflict took a step closer after Revolutionary Guards chief Hossein Salami said his country supported the Palestinians in their "fight against Israel".

Iran Palestine

Iranian men take part a protest to condemn the Israeli missile attack on Gaza (Image: GETTY)

In his televised speech, Mr Salami said: "Tehran backs the Palestinians' fight against the Zionist regime.

"The Palestinians have emerged as a missile-equipped nation."

Iran supports the Hamas militants who rule the Gaza Strip and have fired hundreds of rockets across the border at Israel.

Israel, which Iran does not recognise, said on Wednesday it was not setting a timeframe for an end to hostilities with Gaza's Islamist militias as it pounded the enclave with air strikes.

Demonstrations against Israel have been taking place in Iran this week in protest at the missile strikes on Palestine.

This is a breaking story…more to follow

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2021-05-19 13:58:00Z
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Israeli air raid kills Palestinian journalist in his Gaza house - Al Jazeera English

Colleagues and officials condemn killing of Yusef Abu Hussein, whose house in Gaza’s Sheikh Radwan neighbourhood was struck by Israeli missiles.

Palestinian journalist Yusef Abu Hussein has been killed in an Israeli air raid that struck his house in the besieged Gaza Strip, according to his family and colleagues.

Hussein, a broadcaster for the the local Voice of Al-Aqsa radio station, was among the four Palestinians killed in the early hours of Wednesday as Israel continued its relentless bombardment on the besieged enclave.

The journalist’s father, Muhammed Abu Hussein, said the family home in the Sheikh Radwan neighbourhood was targeted by a missile, followed by two more strikes.

“We were able to get out of the house. But my boy, Yusef … was killed,” he said.

The news of Hussein’s killing sparked an outpouring of grief and calls for the Israeli government to be held accountable.

The Voice of Al-Aqsa radio station said in a statement it mourned the loss of its “son and employee” and called for a vigil at 5pm at al-Shifa hospital.

“We also document, in front of the world, this heinous crime committed by the Israeli enemy, including targeting civilians in their homes and attacking the press and media personnel,” it said.

“Let us affirm that the Voice of Al-Aqsa Radio will continue to be a voice of truth that exposes the crimes of the Israeli occupation. We will remain a platform for Palestinian resistance and the Palestinian right until our people obtain their right to freedom and live in dignity.”

Salama Maarouf, head of the ministry of government information in Gaza, offered “warm condolences” to Hussein’s family, loved ones and colleagues.

“Occupation crimes against journalists and civilians remain a stain on the international community in general and international organizsations and institutions concerned with freedom of opinion and expression in particular. When will you act? And when can it seek to curb the aggression of the Israeli occupier, put an end to its crimes, and hold it accountable?”

The Palestinian Journalists Syndicate also offered its deepest condolences to Hussein’s family and said it held the “Israeli occupation responsible for this crime”.

The International Federation of Journalists reported Hussein’s killing in the air raid, with General Secretary Anthony Bellanger writing on Twitter: “The Israeli government must be held responsible.”

The air raid came days after Israel bombed to the ground a Gaza building that housed residential apartments and the offices of international news organisations, including Al Jazeera and The Associated Press news agency.

Press freedom advocates sharply condemned the May 15 destruction of al-Jalaa tower as a brazen attempt to “silence” journalists covering the Israeli military’s ongoing offensive. Israel justified the attack by saying the building contained military assets of Hamas, the group running the Strip. It has not provided any evidence for its claim, which was vehemently rejected.

On May 11 and 12, Israeli fighter jets had also bombed and destroyed the al-Jawhara and al-Shorouk office buildings in Gaza City, which housed more than a dozen international and local media outlets.

“It is utterly unacceptable for Israel to bomb and destroy the offices of media outlets and endanger the lives of journalists, especially since Israeli authorities know where those media outlets are housed,” said Ignacio Miguel Delgado, Middle East and North Africa representative for the Committee to Protect Journalists. “Israeli authorities must ensure that journalists can do their jobs safely without fear of being injured or killed.”

At least 219 Palestinians, including 63 children, have been killed in the Gaza Strip since Israeli air raids on the coastal Palestinian territory began on May 10. More than 1,500 others have been wounded.

Twelve people in Israel, including two children, have been killed by rockets fired from Gaza, which came after days of protests of the forced expulsion of Palestinians from the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood in East Jerusalem and resulting crackdowns and raids at the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound.

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2021-05-19 11:27:02Z
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