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Tag: Gaza Strip

  • Israel launches deadly strikes on Hezbollah in Lebanon, warns people in Beirut and elsewhere to evacuate

    Israel launches deadly strikes on Hezbollah in Lebanon, warns people in Beirut and elsewhere to evacuate

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    Missiles slammed into southern Lebanon, shattering the early-morning silence Monday and reportedly killing more than 490 people as Israel said it was targeting Hezbollah weapons hidden in residential buildings. The explosions came as Israel heralded a new wave of attacks on the Iran-backed group in Lebanon, warning civilians to flee from any buildings or areas where the organization had weapons or fighters positioned.

    Lebanon’s health ministry said the strikes killed 492 people, including 35 children and 58 women, and wounded 1,645 people, The Associated Press reported. Monday marked the deadliest day of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah since 2006. The death toll also surpassed the deaths from the 2020 explosion at the Port of Beirut that killed nearly 200 people, injured thousands and devastated entire neighborhoods in the Lebanese capital.

    Israel’s military said at least 35 more rockets or drones were fired from Lebanon at northern Israel, many of which fell in open areas or were intercepted. Israeli media said at least one man was injured amid the barrage.

    Smoke billows over southern Lebanon following Israeli strikes, as seen from Tyre, southern Lebanon
    Smoke billows over southern Lebanon following Israeli strikes, amid ongoing cross-border hostilities between Hezbollah and Israeli forces, as seen from Tyre, southern Lebanon September 23, 2024

    Aziz Taher/REUTERS


    The new crossfire came as Israel warned people in Lebanon — via automated phone calls, text messages and reportedly even Lebanese radio stations hacked into by its military — to avoid buildings used by Hezbollah. 

    The IDF shared images online of what it said were secondary explosions following some of its strikes Monday in southern Lebanon, showing, it said, “Hezbollah’s weapons exploding inside homes.” 

    “Every house that we strike contains weapons — rockets, missiles, UAVs — that are intended to kill Israeli civilians,” the IDF said. It said 300 separate Hezbollah targets were hit in its Monday morning airstrikes in Lebanon.

    President Joe Biden said on Monday that the U.S. was trying to calm the situation in Lebanon.

    “I’ve been briefed on the latest developments in Israel and Lebanon. My team is in constant contact with their counterparts, and we’re working to de-escalate in a way that allows people to return home safely,” Mr. Biden said as he held talks with UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan at the White House.

    Meanwhile, the Pentagon said Monday the U.S. is sending additional troops to the Middle East. Pentagon press secretary Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder would provide no details on how many additional forces or what they would be tasked to do. The U.S. currently has about 40,000 troops in the region.

    The new violence came after a weekend of increasingly deadly crossfire between the two bitter enemies in the heart of the Middle East. 

    Hezbollah launched more than 100 rockets in one salvo Saturday night, sending them hurtling deeper into northern Israel and “toward civilian areas,” according to the Israeli military, wounding at least three people and spreading panic further into a region where many towns and villages have already been abandoned.

    In a video posted on social media, Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Avichay Adraee said Monday morning that raids on homes and other buildings being used by Hezbollah to hide and launch weapons in Lebanon would “begin soon,” warning residents to follow orders from the Israeli army to evacuate.

    “The raids will begin soon. Evacuate the houses where #Hezbollah has hidden weapons immediately,” Adraee said in the video, speaking Arabic. “Hezbollah is lying to you and sacrificing you.”

    “We are deepening our attacks in Lebanon, the actions will continue until we achieve our goal to return the northern residents safely to their homes,” Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Galant said in his own video message, warning his nation of “days ahead of us when the public will have to show composure.” 

    The warning to Israelis was likely a reference to expected retaliation from Hezbollah or Iran’s other so-called proxy groups in the region.

    Map of Middle East showing Iran-backed groups including the Houthis in Yemen and Hezbollah in Lebanon

    CBS News


    Lebanon’s state-run media said people in some parts of the capital Beirut and in southern areas of the country — both areas where Hezbollah has long enjoyed significant support — received automated phone messages warning them to evacuate. The French news agency AFP said someone in national Information Minister Ziad Makary’s office got one of the calls.

    The minister’s office told AFP that someone took a call on the office landline and heard a “recorded message” telling them to evacuate.

    The warnings about what appeared likely to be a significant intensification of Israel’s assault on Hezbollah came after a weekend of increased fire between the two sides over Israel’s northern border with Lebanon, where the Iranian-backed group is a powerful political and military force.


    Hezbollah responds to Israeli strikes with rocket strikes deep into Israel

    02:18

    Hezbollah started launching rocket and drone attacks on Israel as soon as Israel launched its war on Hamas in the Gaza Strip in response to that group’s Oct. 7 terrorist attack. Both Hezbollah and Hamas are backed by Israel’s long-time arch rival Iran, and both have long been designated as terrorist groups by both the Israeli and U.S. governments.

    The IDF has stepped up strikes on purported Hezbollah targets across Lebanon for weeks, vowing to remove the threat they pose to enable the safe return of tens of thousands of residents from towns and villages in Israel’s northern border region who’ve been evacuated due to the cross-border fire.

    As Israel ramps up offensive operations against Hezbollah, it does so with wary U.S. support. The Biden administration has voiced concern for months about the tit-for-tat attacks by Israel and Hezbollah, simmering in parallel to the war in Gaza, escalating into a full-scale conflict. The concern is based largely on an assessment that a wider conflict in the Middle East will put U.S. troops increasingly in direct danger. Iran-backed militias in Iraq and Syria have already targeted U.S. forces in the region with deadly drone fire during the Gaza war.

    U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin spoke on Saturday and Sunday with Gallant amid the increasing hostilities, and he “reaffirmed the United States’ commitment to Israel’s right to defend itself,” according to a readout of the first call from the Pentagon, but he also “stressed the importance of achieving a diplomatic solution” to the crisis and “his concern for the safety and security of U.S. citizens in the region.”

    According to the readout of the Sunday night phone call, Austin “made clear that the United States remains postured to protect U.S. forces and personnel and determined to deter any regional actors from exploiting the situation or expanding the conflict.”

    The long-feared escalation in violence between Israel and Hezbollah — which is a far larger and far better equipped militant group than its ally Hamas — started snowballing last week with Israel’s officially-unclaimed covert operations to blow up thousands of pagers and walkie talkies carried by Hezbollah members in Lebanon. Those attacks killed about 40 people, including an unconfirmed number of Hezbollah figures and at least two children, according to Lebanese officials.

    Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah admitted the explosions were a “severe blow” to the group, and he accused Israel of not only violating “all red lines” with the attacks, but of a “declaration of war.”

    Israel hasn’t admitted to carrying out the complex attacks using rigged communications device, but CBS News learned that American officials were given a heads-up by Israel about 20 minutes before the operations began, though no specific details were shared about the methods to be used.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Israel conducts

    Israel conducts

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    Beirut, Lebanon — The Israeli military said it carried out a “targeted strike” in Beirut on Friday, as social media video showed smoke rising from the site of an attack in the Lebanese capital.

    “At this moment, there are no changes in the Home Front Command defensive guidelines,” the Israel Defence Forces said in a statement.

    Lebanese health officials said at least 8 people were killed and 59 people were wounded in the strike. The IDF said it had “eliminated” Hezbollah commander Ibrahim Aqil.

    “During the strike, senior operatives in Hezbollah’s Operations Staff and commanders from the Radwan Unit were eliminated alongside Aqil,” the IDF said in a statement, claiming the killed Hezbollah operatives, including Aqil, had been planning an attack on Israel “in which Hezbollah intended to infiltrate Israeli communities and murder innocent civilians.”

    The United States had previously offered a “reward of up to $7 million for information leading to the identification, location, arrest, and/or conviction,” of Aqil, who it said was a leader of Hezbollah in the 1980s, when the group claimed responsibility for the 1983 bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut.

    The White House earlier warned both Israel and the Iran-backed Hezbollah group against “escalation of any kind” following this week’s synchronized pager and walkie talkie explosions targeting Hezbollah members, but overnight, Israeli warplanes carried out dozens of strikes across southern Lebanon, and Hezbollah has continued firing back.

    An Israeli fighter jet takes off at an unidentified location to conduct strikes on Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon
    An Israeli fighter jet takes off from an unidentified location to conduct strikes on Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon, in a handout photo released Sept. 19, 2024 by the Israel Defense Forces.

    Israel Defense Forces/Handout/REUTERS


    There were loud explosions and fires ignited by what the IDF said were strikes targeting hundreds of active Hezbollah rocket launchers in Lebanon early Friday. Hezbollah struck northern Israel again in a counterattack, killing at least two soldiers, according to Israeli officials.

    The deadly escalation in violence followed a televised address from a weary-looking Hassan Nasrallah — the leader of Hezbollah — who admitted this week’s pager and walkie talkie explosions had delivered a “severe blow” to the powerful group, which like Hamas has long been designated a terrorist group by Israel and the U.S.

    Nasrallah accused Israel of not only violating “all red lines” with the explosions but of a “declaration of war.”

    Israel has not publicly claimed the complex communications device attacks, but CBS News learned that American officials were given a heads-up by Israel about 20 minutes before the operations began in Lebanon on Tuesday. There were no specific details shared about the methods to be used.

    For two terrifying days in Lebanon, thousands of low-tech communications devices — many used by Hezbollah members — exploded simultaneously across the country, wounding over 3,000 people and killing at least 37, including children, according to Lebanon’s health ministry.


    Hezbollah leader links Israel to Lebanon device explosions, calls them act of war

    05:59

    In his address, Nasrallah vowed that Israel would not achieve its goal of enabling the return of tens of thousands of people displaced from their homes in northern border towns. Even as he spoke on Thursday, however, sonic booms echoed above Beirut as Israeli fighter jets roared over the city, flexing Israel’s military might.

    But as the U.S. warning Thursday indicated, the next moves — be they further retaliation from Hezbollah or ground operations by the IDF against the group — could have major consequences.

    “Ultimately, if they [Israel] do invade, they would have to occupy” southern Lebanon, regional analyst Makram Rabah told CBS News. “This would lead to a kind of a slow, depleting war for Israel, and this would, more importantly, legitimize Hezbollah.”

    But hundreds of Hezbollah fighters were likely injured by the explosives attacks, which almost certainly left the group’s communications networks in complete disarray. And despite warnings from Israel’s defense chief of “a new phase” in the country’s war with Iran’s so-called proxy groups, and one IDF division already being transferred there from Gaza, there’s also been no major Israeli build-up of forces or hardware along the Lebanon border seen yet.

    contributed to this report.

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  • Israeli missile strike on Gaza humanitarian area near Khan Younis kills at least 40 people, Palestinians say

    Israeli missile strike on Gaza humanitarian area near Khan Younis kills at least 40 people, Palestinians say

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    An Israeli strike on an area in the Gaza Strip home to Palestinians displaced by the Israel-Hamas war has killed at least 40 people and wounded 60 others, authorities said Tuesday.

    The Palestinian news agency WAFA reported the toll for the strike, citing medical officials.

    Details about the strike in the Mawasi coastal community just west of Khan Younis that the Israeli military has designated as a humanitarian zone remained unclear. The area is home to many Palestinians displaced by the Israel-Hamas war in which the Israeli military has devastated the wider Gaza Strip after Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

    The Israeli military described the strike as hitting “significant Hamas terrorists who were operating within a command-and-control center,” without immediately providing additional evidence.

    Hamas in a reported statement denied that, though Israel long has accused Hamas and other militants of hiding in civilian populations.

    Footage circulating on social media showed deep craters at the site of the attack, the strewn ruins around it covered in shredded tents, a bicycle and other debris. Rescue workers used shovels to shift through the sand. Bystanders used their hands to dig, illuminated by mobile phone light. At least one crater at the site looked to be as deep as 32 feet.

    Several Palestinians lost their life after Israeli airstrike on tent encampment in Gaza
    Teams conduct a search and rescue operation after an Israeli airstrike on a tent encampment of displaced Palestinians in Al-Mawasi area of Khan Yunis, Gaza, on September 10, 2024.

    Abdallah F.s. Alattar/Anadolu via Getty Images


    The Israeli military said it used “precise munitions, aerial surveillance and additional means” it did not immediately describe to limit civilian casualties.

    Gaza’s Health Ministry says over 40,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since the war began. It does not differentiate between fighters and civilians in its count. The war has caused vast destruction and displaced around 90% of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million, often multiple times.

    Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, in their Oct. 7 attack. They abducted another 250 and are still holding around 100 after releasing most of the rest in exchange for Palestinians imprisoned by Israel during a weeklong cease-fire last November. Around a third of the remaining hostages are believed to be dead.

    Israeli airstrike on a tent encampment in Gaza kills several Palestinians
    Search and rescue teams work after an Israeli airstrike on a tent encampment of displaced Palestinians in the Al-Mawasi area of Khan Yunis, Gaza, on September 10, 2024.

    Jehad Alshrafi/Anadolu via Getty Images


    Meanwhile, the United Nations agency in charge of aid for displaced Palestinians said the Israeli military stopped a convoy for more than eight hours on Monday, despite it coordinating with the troops.

    The agency’s head Philippe Lazzarini said the staffers who were held had been trying to work on a polio vaccination campaign in northern Gaza and Gaza City. “The convoy was stopped at gun point just after the Wadi Gaza checkpoint with threats to detain UN staff,” he wrote on the social platform X. “Heavy damage was caused by bulldozers to the UN armoured vehicles.”

    He said the staff and the convoy later returned to a U.N. base but it was unclear if a polio vaccination campaign would take place Tuesday in northern Gaza.

    “UN Staff must be allowed to undertake their duties in safety + be protected at all times in accordance with international humanitarian law, he wrote. “Gaza is no different.” The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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  • A Palestinian team in Chile offers soccer with a heavy dose of protest

    A Palestinian team in Chile offers soccer with a heavy dose of protest

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    SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) — Arms raised high. Banners denouncing the war in Gaza. Crowds united in song and wrapped in keffiyehs, the black-and-white checkered scarves that have become a badge of Palestinian identity.

    It could have been any other pro-Palestinian rally erupting over the Israel-Hamas war if it weren’t for the fact that these thousands of protesters were actually soccer fans at a league match in Santiago, the capital of Chile.

    Image

    A Club Palestino fan wears a keffiyeh during a local league soccer match against Santiago Wanderers at La Cisterna stadium in Santiago, Chile, Friday, July 12, 2024. (AP Photo/Matias Basualdo)

    Image

    Club Palestino soccer team fans watch their team’s game with Santiago Wanderers at a local league match at La Cisterna stadium in Santiago, Chile, Friday, July 12, 2024. (AP Photo/Matias Basualdo)

    Although the players darting across the field had names like José and Antonio and grew up in a Spanish-speaking South American nation, their fervor for the Palestinian cause and red, white, black and green-colored jerseys underscored how Chile’s storied soccer club serves as an entry point for the world’s largest Palestinian community outside the Middle East to connect with an ancestral home thousands of miles away.

    “It’s more than just a club, it takes you into the history of the Palestinians,” said Bryan Carrasco, captain of Chile’s legendary Club Deportivo Palestino.

    As the bloodiest war in the history of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict rages in the Gaza Strip, the club’s electric game atmosphere, viewing parties and pre-match political stunts have increasingly tapped into a sense of collective Palestinian grief in this new era of war and displacement.

    “We’re united in the face of the war,” said Diego Khamis, director of the country’s Palestinian community. “It’s daily suffering.”

    In a sport where authorities penalize athletes for flaunting political positions, particularly on such explosive issues as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Club Palestino is an unabashed exception that wears its pro-Palestinian politics on its sleeve — and on its torso, stadium seats and anywhere else it can find.

    The club’s brazen gestures have caused offense before. Chile’s Football Federation fined the club in 2014 after the number “1” on the back of their shirts was shaped as a map of Palestine before Israel’s creation in 1948.

    But players’ fierce pride in their Palestinian identity has otherwise caused little controversy in this country of 19 million, home to 500,000 ethnic Palestinians.

    “It’s our roots and it feels like home,” said Jaime Barakat, a Palestino fan and shawarma vendor.

    Leftist President Gabriel Boric, who called Israel a “genocidal, murderous state” on the campaign trail in 2021, has harshly criticized Israel’s campaign in Gaza. His government recalled the Israeli ambassador and joined South Africa’s case accusing Israel of genocide in the International Court of Justice — allegations that Israel denies.

    Israel has pushed back, castigating Chile for what it sees as an insufficient response to Hamas’ brutal Oct. 7 attack that killed 1,200 people and led to the abduction of 250 others.

    The country’s small Jewish population of 16,000 is unsettled. “Boric, who frequently speaks of peace, has imported the Middle East conflict to Chile,” the Jewish Community of Chile said in a statement.

    Chile’s Palestinians say the Mideast conflict was imported decades before Boric, spurring waves of displacement that forged the surprising history of Arab immigration to this Pacific coast nation from the late 1800s as the Ottoman Empire crumbled and the Zionist movement took root.

    In 1920, the League of Nations approved the British Mandate of Palestine, unleashing tensions over Britain’s Balfour Declaration that promised historic Palestine as a homeland for the Jewish people. More Palestinians crossed the Atlantic and braved treks across the Andes by mule to reach far-flung Chile. That same year, Club Palestino was created by a group of Palestinian soccer enthusiasts who gathered one winter day in Chile’s southern city of Osorno.

    “My father told me they came here because there were more possibilities,” said 90-year-old Juan Sabaj Dhimes in Patronato, a historically Palestinian neighborhood in the capital, with its coffee shops and hookah bars splashed in the colors of the Palestinian national flag and plastered with Palestino club crests.

    Chile’s Palestinian community exploded after the 1948 war surrounding Israel’s creation — in which more than 700,000 Palestinians fled or were pushed from their homes in what Arabs call the Nakba, or “catastrophe,” and dispersed all over the world.

    Chile was then an upwardly mobile nation among poorer neighbors seeking to attract migrants to populate the country. Palestinian descendants say the arid land, coastal desert and fresh figs and olives conjured an earlier generation’s nostalgia for historic Palestine.

    “The climate is one of the things that most captivated the Palestinians who arrived,” said Mauricio Abu-Ghosh, former president of Chile’s Palestinian Federation.

    The scrappy soccer club went professional in 1947, becoming the pride of the community. Rocketing to Chile’s top division and clinching five official titles, its appeal soon stretched to the Middle East, where the descendants of Palestinian refugees in Lebanon and Jordan still congregate in camps and cafes to catch Palestino matches broadcast by satellite network Al Jazeera.

    The team’s political message also won supporters across Chile — a soccer-crazed country with a spirit of social activism and an ex-protest leader as president — and beyond.

    Despite of being a small soccer club, with an average of only about 2,000 spectators per game, Deportivo Palestino — winner of five official titles and a regular fixture in continental tournaments — is the third most followed Chilean club on Instagram, with more than 741,000 followers, only behind eternal rivals Universidad de Chile (791,000) and Colo-Colo (2.3 million).

    “They tell us about the violence suffered by their people,” said 20-year-old Chilean fan Luis Torres at Palestino’s home stadium in Santiago. “It makes me angry, sad, so we’re here to bring a bit of joy.”

    Joy has been harder to come by in the Palestinian diaspora since Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack triggered Israel’s bombardment and invasion of the Gaza Strip, which has killed over 40,000 Palestinians and spawned a humanitarian catastrophe.

    Palestinians streaming out of church in Patronato on a recent Sunday said they had prayed for the safety of their families in Gaza. “We all have cousins, siblings, grandparents who still live there,” said Khamis.

    The war has wrenched Palestino, forcing the club’s training school in Gaza to shut down and disrupting programs it supports across the occupied West Bank.

    But within Chile it has breathed new life into players and fans. Before kickoff, the team now rushes the pitch clad in keffiyehs, brandishing anti-war banners and taking a knee.

    In May the team abandoned one little pre-match ritual of emerging on the field holding hands with child mascots. Instead, players extended their arms to the side, grasping at empty space.

    It was a subtle gesture — a tribute to the “invisible children” killed in Gaza, the team later explained — that could have been lost entirely on ordinary soccer fans.

    This crowd, however, went wild. ___

    Follow AP’s coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america

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  • Family of U.S. citizen killed in the West Bank demands independent investigation into her death

    Family of U.S. citizen killed in the West Bank demands independent investigation into her death

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    The family of Aysenur Eygi, an American woman who was shot and killed in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Friday, is demanding an independent investigation into her death.

    Witnesses, activists and Palestinian media said the dual U.S.-Turkish national was shot by Israeli troops while attending a pro-Palestinian demonstration against settlement expansion in the Nablus area of the northern West Bank, near the town of Beita. 

    Palestinian medics rushed Eygi to an ambulance, but by the time she got to the hospital, it was too late.

    “They killed her. They shot her in the head,” a woman told CBS News.

    Jonathan Pollak, with the Defend Palestine activist group who was participating in the protest, told CBS News that IDF forces fired two shots from a distance of 150 or 200 yards during the protest attended by the American woman. He said the first bullet hit a local boy in the thigh and the second hit the U.S. demonstrator, who was standing under an olive tree.

    “I saw her lying on the ground under an olive tree. Bleeding to death. I looked up and I saw a clear line of sight to the soldiers,” he said. 

    Eygi, who was raised in Seattle, arrived in the West Bank days before her death to volunteer with the International Solidarity Movement, which helps young foreigners support Palestinians. Pollack helps train them.

    She was attending a weekly demonstration against settlement expansion that has been held for years and has often brought Israeli crackdowns and protester stone-throwing.

    According to a statement from the BBC released by her family on social media, Eygi had just turned 26 and graduated three months ago from the University of Washington, where she studied psychology and Middle Eastern languages and cultures. Her family said she was “compelled to travel to the West Bank to stand in solidarity with Palestinian civilians who continue to endure ongoing repression and violence.”

    “A U.S. citizen, Aysenur was peacefully standing for justice when she was killed by a bullet that video shows came from an Israeli military shooter,” the statement says. “We call on President Biden, Vice President (Kamala) Harris and Secretary of State (Antony) Blinken to order an independent investigation into the unlawful killing of a U.S. citizen and to ensure full accountability for the guilty parties.”

    “We deplore this tragic loss,” Blinken said during a Friday visit to the Dominican Republic, adding that when the U.S. government had more information, “we will share it, make it available and, as necessary, we’ll act on it.”

    Asked about the incident, the Israel Defense Forces said in a statement that troops operating near Beita had “responded with fire toward a main instigator of violent activity who hurled rocks at the forces and posed a threat to them.” 

    The IDF said it was “looking into reports that a foreign national was killed as a result of shots fired in the area” and that the “details of the incident and the circumstances in which she was hit are under review.”

    At least three activists from the International Solidarity Movement have been killed since 2000.

    contributed to this report.

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  • At least 187,000 Gaza children vaccinated for polio so far, U.N. says

    At least 187,000 Gaza children vaccinated for polio so far, U.N. says

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    United Nations officials on Wednesday hailed limited pauses in the fighting between Israel and Hamas to allow children’s polio vaccinations as rare moments of hope in the nearly yearlong war in Gaza.

    The U.N. World Health Organization says 187,000 children in Gaza have been vaccinated for polio, with an eventual goal of 640,000. WHO and its partners launched the campaign this week after Gaza recently reported its first polio case in 25 years — a 10-month-old boy — now paralyzed in a leg.

    The boy’s mother, Neveen Abu El Jidyan, told CBS News in an interview last week that she has been able to do very little for her son, Abdul Rahman, since he contracted polio.

    “We haven’t given him any treatments. We live in a tent and there is no medication,” El Jidyan, 35, told CBS News on Aug. 27.

    “Abdul Rahman was supposed to take his vaccination on the first day of the war, and our home was targeted and his medical booklet was left at home,” she said. “As we were moving from one place to another, I couldn’t give him the vaccination.”

    Israel has said the vaccination program will continue through Monday and last eight hours a day.

    polio vaccines Gaza
    Men unload from a truck crates of polio vaccines provided by the United Nations Children’s Fund in Deir el-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on Sept. 4, 2024. 

    EYAD BABA/AFP via Getty Images


    Top U.N. officials on peacebuilding and humanitarian affairs spoke Wednesday at a meeting requested by Israel, which was backed by its allies, veto-holding permanent council members France, Great Britain and the United States. Israel’s ambassador on Wednesday focused on the hostages taken during Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks on Israel that launched the war and the recent killing of six captives.

    Algeria, which sits on the 15-member council until next year, also requested that the U.N. body meet to discuss the broader situation in the Palestinian territories.

    Both Rosemary DiCarlo, U.N. undersecretary-general for political and peacebuilding affairs, and Edem Wosornu, director of the Operations and Advocacy Division at the U.N.’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, spoke about the polio-inspired pauses in fighting as rare rays of hope, as did the representatives of France, Britain, the U.S. and other nations.

    “It does not have to be this way. Indeed, over the past few days, there have been signs that humanitarian objectives can inspire positive steps,” Wosornu told the council.

    “This vaccination campaign demonstrates that it is possible to allow humanitarian actors to act on the ground,” French Ambassador to the U.N. Nicolas de Rivière told the council. “That must become the rule.”

    Health officials expressed alarm about diseases spreading in the besieged territory as the war has created a humanitarian catastrophe, with people crammed into squalid tent camps and dirty wastewater flowing through the streets.

    Ambassador Samuel Zbogar of Slovenia, which is president of the Security Council for September, told reporters on Tuesday that there is “a rising anxiousness in the council” about the lack of a cease-fire and hostage release deal to halt the violence.

    The Security Council approved a resolution in June endorsing a cease-fire plan aimed at ending the war, with Russia abstaining.

    “It has to move, one way or the other,” Zbogar said about fulfilling the deal or finding other options.

    The Oct. 7 Hamas attacks killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took about 250 people hostage. The Israeli military’s retaliation has killed over 40,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count.

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  • Israeli union goes on strike as Netanyahu faces rage over Hamas killing of hostages without cease-fire deal

    Israeli union goes on strike as Netanyahu faces rage over Hamas killing of hostages without cease-fire deal

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    There were widespread disruptions across Israel on Monday as members of the country’s largest labor union went on strike to pressure Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to agree to a deal to bring home the remaining hostages held by Hamas in Gaza.

    The leader of the Histadrut union, which has hundreds of thousands of members in Israel, called for the strike on Sunday after news broke of the recovery of the bodies of six hostages who had previously been known to be alive, including Israeli-American Hersh Goldberg-Polin.

    The Israel Defense Forces said all six were killed a short time before their bodies were found by Israeli troops inside a tunnel in Gaza.

    Funeral of Hersh Goldberg-Polin one of six Israeli hostages whose body was recovered from Hamas captivity in Gaza, in Jerusalem
    People pay their respects on the street on the day of the funeral of Hersh Goldberg-Polin, one of six Israeli hostages whose body was recovered from Hamas captivity in Gaza, in Jerusalem September 2, 2024

    Ronen Zvulun / REUTERS


    “My message to Prime Minister Netanyahu is that my brother Keith and all the remaining hostages need to be home immediately,” Israeli-American Lee Seigel, whose brother Keith is among the roughly 75 hostages still believed to be held alive in Gaza, told CBS News at a protest on Sunday that drew hundreds of thousands of Israelis onto the streets.

    Seigel said a deal was needed immediately for “those who are alive, to start rebuilding, as the country needs to rebuild, and those who are deceased, for a proper burial. Eleven months, almost 11 months of war is too much, too long,” he said.

    While many private sector businesses were open as usual on Monday, municipal services as well as services at Israel’s main air transport hub, Ben Gurion Airport, were at least partially disrupted. Banks were closed and hospitals were only partially operating, the Reuters news agency reported.

    Israel’s labor court ruled that the general strike would need to end by 2:30 p.m. local time on Monday, and the ruling was accepted by the union.

    The nationwide strike came after months of regular protests led by the families of the hostages over Netanyahu’s handling of negotiations aimed at securing a cease-fire and hostage release agreement.  

    As negotiations have taken place between Israel and Hamas through mediators including Qatar, Egypt and the United States, one of the biggest recent sticking points has been whether Israel would agree to pull back its troops from the border area between Gaza and Egypt known as the Philadelphi Corridor after any deal.

    “The country needs quiet. The region needs quiet,” Seigel told CBS News. “Politics are driving the speech, the [cease-fire] non-negotiations negotiations, and are driving an extreme government in attempts to hold on to their power.”

    Seigel said the killing of the six additional hostages meant President Biden should rethink the way the U.S. supports the Israeli government.

    The war “serves political interests that do not jibe with the needs of our country, nor the region, nor Gaza,” Seigel said. “President Biden… we know you will not give up. But not giving up at this point means doing whatever is necessary. The United States can leverage many different interests, issues within Israel, within the region… They need to make some very, very hard decisions now that we have crossed a red line, where everything is available in the arsenal of the United States government to bring a cease-fire, to bring quiet and return hostages.”

    Israel Palestinians
    This combination of six undated photos shows hostages, from top left, Hersh Goldberg-Polin, Ori Danino, Eden Yerushalmi, from bottom left, Almog Sarusi, Alexander Lobanov, and Carmel Gat, who were held hostage by Hamas militants in Gaza. On Sept. 1, 2024, the Hostages Families Forum announced their deaths while in Hamas captivity.

    The Hostages Families Forum via AP


    The six hostages whose bodies were recovered were Hersh Goldberg-Polin, Carmel Gat, Eden Yerushalmi, Alexander Lobanov, Almog Sarusi, and Master Sgt. Ori Danino. The Israeli Ministry of Health said that autopsies showed they had each been shot at close range on Thursday or Friday.

    Hersh Goldberg-Polin’s family confirmed his death in a statement released early Sunday, thanking supporters and asking for privacy. His funeral was schedule to take place on Monday, and thousands lined the funeral procession route to pay their respects.

    President Biden, who spoke to the Goldberg-Polin family, said he was “devastated and outraged” by Goldberg-Polin’s killing.

    “Hersh was among the innocents brutally attacked while attending a music festival for peace in Israel on October 7. He lost his arm helping friends and strangers during Hamas’ savage massacre,” Mr. Biden said.

    Netanyahu blamed Hamas for the stalled cease-fire negotiations, saying “whoever murders hostages doesn’t want a deal.”

    Mr. Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris were scheduled to meet with the team representing the U.S. in the hostage deal negotiations at the White House later on Monday.

    contributed to this report.

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  • Father of Israeli-American hostage says negotiating with Hamas is “dealing with Satan” but Netanyahu’s idea of total victory is “not realistic”

    Father of Israeli-American hostage says negotiating with Hamas is “dealing with Satan” but Netanyahu’s idea of total victory is “not realistic”

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    After the Israeli military recovered the bodies of six hostages who had been held for almost a year by Hamas in Gaza, the father of an Israeli-American still in captivity reiterated calls for a conclusion to cease-fire negotiations that have stalled.

    Jonathan Dekel-Chen said Sunday on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan” that he believes Israel’s government, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, is navigating the ongoing war and the cease-fire talks with personal political interests in mind, rather than in pursuit of the remaining hostages’ freedom. His comments echoed the views of many Israelis who have criticized Netanyahu and his cabinet as the fighting has drawn on, although Dekel-Chen acknowledged the challenges embedded in negotiations and likened the task of settling terms with Hamas to “dealing with Satan.” 

    “Given that we’re dealing with Satan, I mean, that’s sort of the launching point for any discussion, Israelis at large, and myself included, have been extremely critical of the Israeli government for not negotiating in good faith now, for many, many months,” he said. “There is no explanation, a reasonable explanation why our government is refusing to deeply engage in these negotiations and complete them, when our entire senior military establishment and intelligence community has been saying publicly and openly for weeks and months that the time has come to end the fighting in Gaza, get our hostages home, as many alive as possible.”

    The Israel Defense Forces said Early Sunday that the bodies of six being held hostage, including Israeli-American Hersh Goldberg-Polin, were found in Gaza. There are still eight American citizens believed to be hostages, including Dekel-Chen’s son, Sagui. Sagui is the father of three daughters, including one born while he has been in captivity.

    1725204336029.png
    Jonathan Dekel-Chen on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” Sept. 1, 2024.

    CBS News


    “The only thing that we know for sure about Sagui is that, as of late November, early December, we know that he was alive, wounded, but alive,” Dekel-Chen said Sunday.

    When Hamas terrorists invaded southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing over 1,000, they also kidnapped 250 hostages and took them into the Gaza Strip, where many have been held for the duration of the Israeli military siege that ensued. Around 100 of the hostages, mainly women and children, were returned as part of a weeklong cease-fire deal in November that also saw a pause in the bombardment and the release of Palestinians imprisoned by Israel.

    Few hostages have been freed since then. Before the military announced the latest discovery of bodies, Israel said it believed 101 hostages remained in Gaza and about one-third were dead. The bodies of six other hostages were recovered by Israeli troops last month in southern Gaza. Eight have been rescued by Israeli forces, with the most recent found on Tuesday.

    1725204336029.png
    Jonathan Dekel-Chen on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” Sept. 1, 2024.

    CBS News


    Previous operations by the Israeli military to free hostages being held there have left scores of Palestinians dead. Hamas has said some hostages were killed in Israeli airstrikes and in failed rescue attempts, while the IDF said that their troops mistakenly killed three Israelis who had escaped captivity several months into the war. In the wake of the discovery of six bodies of those being held hostage by Hamas, a forum of hostage families called for a mass protest on Sunday — a “complete halt of the country” — to demand a cease-fire and the hostages’ release.

    Despite their calls, Netanyahu has continued to forge ahead with the war effort, which he says aims to eliminate Hamas entirely.

    “I think the vast majority of Israelis now have come to believe, by his actions, not his words, but by his actions, that he’s been driven primarily by a desire to retain power with a narrow, very radical messianic coalition in the Israeli government,” Dekel-Chen said Sunday about Netanyahu. “And he has made choices to pursue this fantasy of total victory over Hamas, a terrorist organization, and no doubt, but this idea of total victory is a messianic one from his coalition partners, and not realistic. And he’s preferred that, at least to date, over the well being of all the hostages.”

    Hamas has offered to release the hostages in exchange for an end to the war, in which the Hamas-run Palestinian Health Ministry has said more than 40,000 Palestinians have been killed, as well as the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza and the release of more Palestinian prisoners, some of whom are known militants.

    Netanyahu on Saturday repeated claims that Hamas has stalled the cease-fire negotiations, saying “whoever murders hostages doesn’t want a deal” and vowing to hold Hamas accountable for killing the prisoners in “cold blood.” 

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  • Israeli-American Hersh Goldberg-Polin one of 6 hostages found dead in Gaza, Biden says

    Israeli-American Hersh Goldberg-Polin one of 6 hostages found dead in Gaza, Biden says

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    President Biden announced late Saturday that the bodies of six Hamas-held hostages were recovered by Israeli forces in a tunnel under the Gaza city of Rafah, including that of Israeli-American Hersh Goldberg-Polin.  

    “I am devastated and outraged,” Mr. Biden said. “Hersh was among the innocents brutally attacked while attending a music festival for peace in Israel on October 7. He lost his arm helping friends and strangers during Hamas’ savage massacre.”

    Goldberg-Polin’s family also confirmed he was killed. The family issued a statement early Sunday, hours after the Israeli army said it had located bodies in Gaza.

    “With broken hearts, the Goldberg-Polin family is devastated to announce the death of their beloved son and brother, Hersh,” it said. “The family thanks you all for your love and support and asks for privacy at this time.”

    Goldberg-Polin was one of the best-known hostages as his parents had met with world leaders and pressed relentlessly for their help. Earlier this month, they addressed the Democratic convention, where the crowd chanted “bring them home.”

    In April, Hamas released a video of an injured man missing his left hand who identified himself as Goldberg-Polin, delivering a long statement that had been clearly crafted by Hamas.  

    Goldberg-Polin was kidnapped by Hamas at the music festival he was attending when the militant group conducted its Oct. 7 terrorist attack. 

    This is a developing story and will be updated. 

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  • Biden gave go-ahead for Gaza aid pier despite doubts from some USAID staffers

    Biden gave go-ahead for Gaza aid pier despite doubts from some USAID staffers

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    President Biden ordered the construction of a temporary pier to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza earlier this year even as some staffers for the U.S. Agency for International Development expressed concerns that the effort would be difficult to pull off and undercut the effort to persuade Israel to open “more efficient” land crossings to get food into the territory, according to a USAID inspector general report published Tuesday.

    Mr. Biden announced plans to use the temporary pier in his State of the Union address in March to hasten the delivery of aid to the Palestinian territory besieged by war between Israel and Hamas.

    But the $230 million military-run project known as the Joint Logistics Over-the-Shore system, or JLOTS, would only operate for about 20 days. Aid groups pulled out of the project by July, ending a mission plagued by repeated weather and security problems that limited how much food and other emergency supplies could get to starving Palestinians.

    “Multiple USAID staff expressed concerns that the focus on using JLOTS would detract from the Agency’s advocacy for opening land crossings, which were seen as more efficient and proven methods of transporting aid into Gaza,” according to the inspector general report. “However, once the President issued the directive, the Agency’s focus was to use JLOTS as effectively as possible.”

    Gaza aid pier
    The reinstallation of the U.S.-built floating pier on the coast in the Wadi Gaza area of central Gaza, on July 10, 2024. 

    Ahmad Salem/Bloomberg via Getty Images


    At the time Mr. Biden announced plans for the floating pier, the United Nations was reporting virtually all of Gaza’s 2.3 million people were struggling to find food and more than a half-million were facing starvation.

    The Biden administration set a goal of the U.S. sea route and pier providing food to feed 1.5 million of Gaza’s people for 90 days. It fell short, bringing in enough to feed about 450,000 people for a month before shutting down.

    High waves and bad weather repeatedly damaged the pier, and the U.N. World Food Program ended cooperation with the project after an Israeli rescue operation used an area nearby to whisk away hostages, raising concerns about whether its workers would be seen as neutral and independent in the conflict.

    U.S. National Security Council spokesman Sean Savett said Tuesday that the project “had a real impact” of getting food to hungry Palestinian civilians despite the obstacles.

    “The bottom line is that given how dire the humanitarian situation in Gaza is, the United States has left no stone unturned in our efforts to get more aid in, and the pier played a key role at a critical time in advancing that goal,” Savett said in a statement.

    The watchdog report also alleged the U.S. had failed to honor commitments it had made with the World Food Program to get the U.N. agency to agree to take part in distributing supplies from the pier into Palestinian hands.

    The U.S. agreed to conditions set by the WFP, including that the pier would be placed in north Gaza, where the need for aid was greatest, and that a U.N. member nation would provide security for the pier. That step was meant to safeguard WFP’s neutrality among Gaza’s warring parties, the watchdog report said.

    Instead, however, the Pentagon placed the pier in central Gaza. WFP staffers told the USAID watchdog that it was their understanding the U.S. military chose that location because it allowed better security for the pier and the military itself.

    Israel’s military ultimately provided the security after the U.S. military was unable to find a neutral country willing to do the job, the watchdog report said.

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  • At least 18 killed in Israeli airstrike on Gaza as more evacuations ordered

    At least 18 killed in Israeli airstrike on Gaza as more evacuations ordered

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    An Israel airstrike in Gaza killed at least 18 people, all from the same family, on Saturday, hours after mediators expressed optimism for a possible cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas following 10 months of war.

    Saturday’s airstrike hit a house and adjacent warehouse sheltering displaced people at the entrance to the town of Zawaida, according to the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah, where casualties were taken. An Associated Press reporter there counted the dead.

    Among those killed was Sami Jawad al-Ejlah, a wholesaler who coordinated with the Israeli military to bring meat and fish to Gaza. The dead also included his two wives, 11 of their children ages 2 to 22, the children’s grandmother and three other relatives, according to a list provided by the hospital.

    At least 18 killed in Israeli airstrike in Gaza as more evacuations ordered
    Damaged structures after Israel’s airstrike on the Zawaida area of Gaza on Aug. 17, 2024.

    Ashraf Amra/Anadolu via Getty Images


    “He was a peaceful man,” said Abu Ahmed, a neighbor. More than 40 civilians were sheltering in the house and warehouse at the time, he said.

    The Israeli military, which rarely comments on individual strikes, said it struck “terrorist infrastructure” in central Gaza where rockets had been fired toward Israel in recent weeks. It said it was continuing attacks on militants in central Gaza.

    Meanwhile, an Israeli strike Saturday in southern Lebanon killed at least 10 Syrians, including a woman and her two children, Lebanon’s Health Ministry said. Israel said it targeted a Hezbollah weapons depot.

    Another evacuation is ordered in Gaza

    Another mass evacuation was ordered for parts of central Gaza. Israeli military spokesperson Avichay Adraee in a post on X cited Palestinian rocket fire and said Palestinians in areas in and around the urban Maghazi refugee camp should leave.

    “The suffering began from the day we left our homes,” said Ahmad Omrani, one of those affected by the order, as heavily laden vehicles, bikes and donkey carts weaved through the rubble. “We suffer from fear and anxiety, and fear for the children playing in the street. You cannot sleep, sit or eat well.”

    The vast majority of Gaza’s population has been displaced, often multiple times, and around 84% of the territory has been put under evacuation orders by the Israeli military, according to the United Nations.

    The war began when Hamas-led militants stormed across the border on Oct. 7, killing about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting 250 to Gaza. More than 100 were released in a November cease-fire.

    Israel says it has killed more than 17,000 Hamas militants, without providing evidence.

    Gaza’s Health Ministry said at least 40,074 Palestinians have been killed in the war. The ministry does not distinguish between fighters and civilians.

    In the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Israel’s military said it struck a “terrorist cell” in Jenin. The health ministry there said two bodies were taken to a government hospital. Hamas claimed the two men as commanders in its military wing.

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  • Biden optimistic about Gaza cease-fire deal as talks set to resume next week

    Biden optimistic about Gaza cease-fire deal as talks set to resume next week

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    Biden optimistic about Gaza cease-fire deal as talks set to resume next week – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    The U.S., Egypt and Qatar say cease-fire talks between Israel and Hamas will continue in Cairo next week. The three countries, acting as mediators, say they presented both parties with a proposal that “builds on areas of agreement over the past week, and bridges remaining gaps in the manner that allows for a swift implementation of the deal.” President Biden expressed optimism about a potential cease-fire, saying “we are closer than we’ve ever been” after talks in Doha. CBS News foreign correspondent Ramy Inocencio has the latest.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


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  • Rally shows support for Golden Gate Bridge protesters facing deadline to surrender to CHP

    Rally shows support for Golden Gate Bridge protesters facing deadline to surrender to CHP

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    Supporters rallied in San Francisco Monday morning for the pro-Palestinian protesters who were recently charged for shutting down traffic on the Golden Gate Bridge last spring.

    Dozens gathered outside of the San Francisco jail Monday, playing drums, chanting and waving signs that proclaimed their backing of the 26 protesters charged with false imprisonment of the drivers, trespassing, unlawful assembly and refusal to disperse in connection with the pro-Palestinian demonstration that held up traffic for hours on the Golden Gate Bridge back in April.      

    Monday’s rally comes after San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins announced the charges against the protesters Saturday morning. Of the 26 protesters who were charged, eight also face felony conspiracy charges. The announcement gave the protesters until Monday to turn themselves in to CHP.

    At around 8 a.m. on April 15, a group of protesters blocked traffic on the Golden Gate Bridge. Chopper footage of the protest on the Golden Gate Bridge showed protesters with a banner that read “STOP THE WORLD FOR GAZA” across the southbound lanes.

    The protesters used chains concealed in pipes to connect themselves to each other, slowing the process of clearing the demonstration. It wasn’t until noon that tow trucks began to remove vehicles from the bridge. 

    CHP that day confirmed 26 people were arrested. However, the protesters were later released as DA Jenkins said charges were not ready to be filed. 

    At the rally Monday morning, supporters called for the charges against those who participated in the demonstration to be dropped.  

    Jenkins is hoping the more serious charges this time will stick.

    “In this case, we took a great length to work with the CHP There are elevated charges to make sure that we were filing appropriate charges. There are elevated charges,” Jenkins said over the weekend. “So we will see what happens with that. There is still potential for a judge to decide that they believe that the conduct should be a misdemeanor, and they do have the lawful ability to reduce that charge.”

    There was a similar protest on the Bay Bridge in November of last year as San Francisco was hosting President Joe Biden and other world leaders for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit.

    Prosecutors charged 78 protesters in connection with the protest that blocked traffic for hours. However, the protesters were able to reach an agreement with the court that allowed them to avoid jail time.

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    Dave Pehling

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  • Video: Breaking Down Netanyahu’s Speech in Congress

    Video: Breaking Down Netanyahu’s Speech in Congress

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    In his fourth speech to Congress, a record for a foreign leader, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel attempted to change the narrative about the fallout from the war in Gaza. Patrick Kingsley, the Jerusalem bureau chief for The New York Times, explains how Netanyahu used the speech to shift the focus to Iran and the threat it poses to Israel.

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    Patrick Kingsley, Farah Otero-Amad, Nikolay Nikolov, Rebecca Suner, Claire Hogan and James Surdam

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  • Israel retrieves bodies of 5 hostages believed killed during Oct. 7 Hamas attack, military says

    Israel retrieves bodies of 5 hostages believed killed during Oct. 7 Hamas attack, military says

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    Israeli forces recovered the bodies of five people believed to have been killed during the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas militants on southern Israel and brought into the Gaza Strip, where they were being held hostage, the military said Thursday.

    The army said the bodies of hostage Maya Goren as well as four soldiers had been returned to Israel. The troops were identified as Sgt. Oren Goldin, Staff Sgt. Tomer Ahimas, Sgt. Maj. Ravid Aryeh Katz and Sgt. Kiril Brodski.

    The bodies were recovered on Wednesday during an operation in Khan Yunis, the main city in the southern Gaza Strip, the military said.

    The military had announced Goren’s death in December.

    maya-goren.jpg
    Maya Goren, a 56-year-old kindergarten teacher believed to have been killed during the Oct. 7, 2023 Hamas attack on southern Israel whose body was being held hostage in southern Gaza. Israeli military said on July 25, 2024 that her body had been recovered by Israeli forces.  

    The Hostages Families Forum / Handout via REUTERS


    Thursday’s announcement came after two Israeli kibbutzim, Nir Oz and Nir Yitzhak, said in separate statements that the army had retrieved the bodies of Goren and Goldin.

    “Last night, we were informed that in a military rescue operation, the body of the late Maya Goren was recovered,” kibbutz Nir Oz said, adding that her family had been informed and more information would follow. Goren was a 56-year-old kindergarten teacher.

    Later, kibbutz Nir Yitzhak said the army had returned Goldin’s body.

    “This evening, we were informed about the rescue operation for the late Oren Goldin, a member of the kibbutz emergency team, who fell on October 7 during the attack by Hamas militants,” Nir Yitzhak said.

    On October 7, Hamas militants attacked southern Israeli communities, which resulted in the deaths of 1,197 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

    Militants also seized 251 hostages, 111 of whom remain in Gaza, including 39 the military says are dead.

    Israel’s retaliatory military campaign in Gaza has killed at least 39,145 people, also mostly civilians, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory.

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  • Israelis and Palestinians anguish as Netanyahu set to address Congress amid growing backlash over Gaza war

    Israelis and Palestinians anguish as Netanyahu set to address Congress amid growing backlash over Gaza war

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    Hundreds of Jewish activists calling for a cease-fire in the war between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip were removed from the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday as they staged a sit-in protest against visiting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The Israeli leader’s visit has also drawn protests from Palestinian demonstrators, and family members of the hostages still held by Hamas and its allies in Gaza.

    Netanyahu will deliver a speech to both houses of the U.S. Congress later Wednesday on the state of the war he launched immediately in response to Hamas’ Oct. 7 terrorist attack. That attack saw Hamas kill some 1,200 people across southern Israel and take about 240 others hostage.

    But the war that has now raged for 291 days has killed almost 40,000 Palestinians in Gaza, according to the health officials in the Hamas-run territory, with a devastating impact on children in particular.

    It has also been a traumatic 291 days for the families of the Israeli hostages, including Rachel Goldberg-Polin, whose 23-year-old son Hersh was among those kidnapped by the Hamas militants who raided a music festival in the southern Israeli desert on Oct. 7. He lost most of one arm in the assault, but is believed to be among the roughly 80 captives still held alive. About 30 others are thought to be dead, but their bodies still in the possession of Gazan militants.


    Hersh Goldberg-Polin’s mother speaks out after Hamas releases hostage video of her son

    06:24

    “We wake up every single day and we hit the ground running, and we run to the ends of the Earth, doing every single thing possible to try to save Hersh and the other 119 people who are still in Gaza,” Goldberg-Polin told CBS News ahead of Netanyahu’s address.

    She’s in the U.S. this week, along with the families of seven other dual U.S.-Israeli national hostages held in Gaza, calling on Netanyahu to make a deal to bring back their loved ones.

    It’s a demand that has been echoed almost daily by angry protesters in Jerusalem, and by a group of top former Israeli security and political officials who sent a blistering letter to U.S. congressional leaders on Tuesday, accusing Netanyahu of destabilizing Israeli and American security.


    Children of Gaza

    10:14

    The scathing letter describes Israel’s leader as selfishly prioritizing his own political survival over the hostages’ fate and the security of his nation, the region, and even the world. It holds him responsible for the failure to defeat Hamas and to formulate a plan for what comes after the war in Gaza.

    “We are all pawns in a game of this handful of deciders,” Rachel Goldberg-Polin told CBS News. “Everyone in the region is oozing with pain and agony and misery, and it is enough.”

    It’s been 291 days of suffering for Palestinians in Gaza, too — more than half of 18-month-old Sewar’s life. The tiny girl lost both of her parents in an Israeli airstrike. Covered in shrapnel wounds and severe burns, she’s fighting for her life this week in an intensive care unit — but laying in a cardboard box, as the hospital has run out of cots.

    Goldberg-Polin told CBS News the hostage families understand why Israel went to war, but she argued the military has diminished Hamas’ capacity to stage another attack like Oct. 7, and that the priority now must be to bring the hostages back home.

    hersh-goldberg-polin-hamas-video-2024-april.jpg
    Israeli-American hostage Hersh Goldberg-Polin appears in a propaganda video released by the Palestinian militant group Hamas, April 24, 2024. 

    Netanyahu has not signaled what he’ll tell the gathered U.S. lawmakers on Wednesday, but so far, he’s been adamant that the war will continue until his stated mission to secure the hostages’ release — and to destroy Hamas — is complete.

    Goldberg-Polin said she’s hoping Israel’s leader is not just in Washington to reiterate those points.

    “How can you leave this dire situation [in Israel] unless there’s something that’s really good, that you want to share,” she said. “So, we are hopeful and optimistic that he is going in order for something good to be shared, and I’m going to pray that that’s what happens when he speaks on Wednesday, that he’s going to be sharing some positive news.”

    The Israeli leader will meet with President Biden on Thursday at the White House, according to Netanyahu’s office, and he’s also expected to meet Vice President Kamala Harris while he’s in Washington, according to a White House official. 

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  • Hamas says Israel’s deadly strike on a Gaza school could put cease-fire talks back to “square one”

    Hamas says Israel’s deadly strike on a Gaza school could put cease-fire talks back to “square one”

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    Tel Aviv — A surge of hope for a breakthrough in Israel-Hamas cease-fire talks drew CIA Director William Burns back to the Middle East this week, but the hopes have been tempered by a blistering Israeli airstrike on a school sheltering displaced Palestinians in southern Gaza. The attack killed at least 29 people at the Al Awda school in Khan Younis, according to an official at the nearby al-Nasser Hospital.

    In a statement, the Israel Defense Forces said it used a “precise munition” in the strike on the school to kill a militant who took part in Hamas’ Oct. 7 terrorist attacks, which killed almost 1,200 people. 

    The IDF said it was reviewing the incident, but it has always blamed Hamas for all of the deaths in the war, accusing the group of using Palestinian civilians as human shields and basing weapons and fighters in schools, hospitals and homes.

    TOPSHOT-PALESTINIAN-ISRAEL-CONFLICT
    A youth wounded during Israeli bombardment is carried to the emergency ward at Al-Nasser hospital in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, July 9, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas.

    BASHAR TALEB/AFP/Getty


    The IDF has also launched a new assault further north, in Gaza City, calling for yet another evacuation of Palestinian civilians. Images posted online Wednesday showed people holding fliers dropped by the military in the area, urging people to leave.

    Hundreds of thousands of people trapped in Gaza, a narrow strip of land sandwiched between Israel and the Mediterranean Sea, have fled from the fighting four or five times already. 

    The United Nations called the forced exodus “dangerously chaotic” — with doctors and nurses at two hospitals rushing to move their patients.

    The IDF said medical facilities did not need to evacuate, but its previous raids at other hospitals in Gaza have left medical staff fearful.


    Israel releases chief of Gaza’s Al-Shifa hospital

    02:49

    Hamas said the new assault could “reset the negotiation process to square one,” despite Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu agreeing to send a delegation to restart the talks.

    Netanyahu agreed to send the Israeli delegation back to the talks after Hamas replied to the latest draft cease-fire proposal with some requested changes, but both sides have remained at odds on key points of a staged truce process. One of the biggest obstacles has been Netanyahu’s insistence that any cease-fire agreement leaves his military the option to resume operations against Hamas.

    Alon Pinkas, a former advisor to four Israeli foreign ministers and an outspoken critic of Netanyahu, told CBS News on Wednesday that he believes — as do many Israelis — that the country’s leader doesn’t really want a cease-fire.

    Asked if Netanyahu, by agreeing to continue with the truce talks, was just throwing a bone to his backers in Washington to keep the pressure off, Pinkas said the Israeli leader’s actions were even more disingenuous than that.

    “He’s just taking them for a ride,” he said. “He’s [Netanyahu] been doing so for the better part of the last nine months, and he’s been doing so with impunity and immunity.”


    Children starving to death in Gaza, Netanyahu says part of Rafah operation could soon end

    02:07

    The Israeli leader has accused Hamas of blocking progress in the talks, suggesting the group isn’t serious about the negotiations as it has also continued its military operations against Israel during multiple rounds of discussions.

    The White House has consistently backed Israel’s right to defend itself against Hamas and, with few exceptions, has and never halted the supply of U.S. weapons to the country. But Mr. Biden and his subordinates have also heaped pressure on Netanyahu to allow more humanitarian aid into Gaza and limit the number of civilian casualties in a war that medical officials in the Hamas-run enclave say has killed more than 38,200 Palestinians.

    President Biden announced a project in March to boost the flow of aid into the territory — a floating pier built by the U.S. military on Gaza’s coast at a cost of more than $230 million.

    The pier project, always touted by U.S. officials as an additive measure and not a solution to the dire humanitarian crisis in Gaza, has been plagued by logistical challenges, mostly weather related, and it has never managed to facilitate a significant flow of aid materials.

    After being knocked out of service again by rough seas, operations on the pier were to be reestablished this week — but then the structure could be permanently dismantled. The removal could come as soon as next week, but no final decision has been made according to U.S. military officials. 

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  • Hamas appears to clear way for possible cease-fire deal with Israel after reportedly dropping key demand

    Hamas appears to clear way for possible cease-fire deal with Israel after reportedly dropping key demand

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    There is new hope for a cease-fire deal in the Middle East after Hamas responded to a U.S.-backed proposal for a phased deal in Gaza.

    The militant group – which controlled Gaza before triggering the war with an Oct. 7 attack on Israel – has reportedly given initial approval of the cease-fire deal after dropping a key demand that Israel give an up-front commitment for a complete end to the war, a Hamas and an Egyptian official told the Associated Press on Saturday.

    A senior U.S. official says that Hamas’ response to the proposal “may provide the basis for closing the deal.”

    The apparent compromise could deliver the first pause in fighting since November and set the stage for further talks on ending the devastating nine months of fighting. But all sides cautioned that a deal is still not guaranteed.

    The two officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss ongoing negotiations, told the Associated Press that Washington’s phased deal would first include a “full and complete” six-week cease-fire that would see the release of a number of hostages, including women, older people and the wounded, in exchange for the release of hundreds of Palestinian prisoners. During the 42 days, Israeli forces would withdraw from densely populated areas of Gaza and allow the return of displaced people to their homes in northern Gaza, the officials said.

    Over that period, Hamas, Israel and mediators would negotiate the terms of the second phase that could see the release of the remaining male hostages, both civilians and soldiers, the officials said. In return, Israel would free additional Palestinian prisoners and detainees. The third phase would see the return of any remaining hostages, including bodies of dead captives, and the start of a years-long reconstruction project.

    South Korea Israel Palestinians
    Demonstrators supporting Palestinians march during a rally calling to stop genocide in Gaza, in Seoul, South Korea, Saturday, July 6, 2024.

    Ahn Young-joon / AP


    Hamas still wants “written guarantees” from mediators that Israel will continue to negotiate a permanent cease-fire deal once the first phase goes into effect, the officials said.

    The Hamas representative told The Associated Press the group’s approval came after it received “verbal commitments and guarantees” from the mediators that the war won’t be resumed and that negotiations will continue until a permanent cease-fire is reached.

    “Now we want these guarantees on paper,” he said.

    In line with previous proposals, the deal would see around 600 trucks of humanitarian aid entering Gaza daily — including 50 fuel trucks — with half of them bound for the hard-hit northern of the enclave, the two officials said. Following Israel’s assault on the southernmost city of Rafah, aid supplies entering Gaza have been reduced to a trickle.

    Israel launched the war in Gaza after Hamas’ October attack in which militants stormed into southern Israel, killed some 1,200 people — mostly civilians — and abducted about 250. Israel says Hamas is still holding about 120 hostages — about a third of them now thought to be dead.

    Since then, the Israeli air and ground offensive has killed more than 38,000 people in Gaza, according to the Hamas-run Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between combatants and civilians in its count. The offensive has caused widespread devastation and a humanitarian crisis that has left hundreds of thousands of people on the brink of famine, according to international officials.

    Months of on-again off-again cease-fire talks have stumbled over Hamas’ demand that any deal include a complete end to the war. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has offered to pause the fighting but not end it until Israel reaches its goals of destroying Hamas’ military and governing capabilities and returning all hostages held by the militant group.

    Netanyahu’s office did not respond to requests for comment, and there was no immediate comment from Washington.


    Israel says it’s restarting stalled negotiations for a cease-fire deal in Gaza

    01:22

    CBS News previously reported that an Israel delegation headed by Mossad Director David Barnea was traveling to Qatar for talks. Sources told CBS News that Barnea was set to meet with Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani for discussions.

    On Friday, the Israeli prime minister confirmed that the spy agency’s chief had paid a lightning visit to Qatar, a key mediator. But his office said “gaps between the parties” remained.

    President Biden held a 30-minute call with Netanyahu on Thursday, a senior Biden administration official told reporters, during which the two leaders walked through the latest draft of the proposal.

    U.S. officials have said the latest proposal has new language that was proposed to Egypt and Qatar on Saturday and addresses indirect negotiations that are set to commence during the first phase of the three-phase deal that Mr. Biden laid out in a May 31 speech.

    Hamas has expressed concern Israel will restart the war after the hostages are released. Israeli officials have said they are worried Hamas will draw out the talks and the initial cease-fire indefinitely, without releasing all the hostages.

    Netanyahu is under pressure from Israel’s closest ally – the United States – to negotiate a ceasefire, but at home, two far-right wing members of his cabinet have threatened to bring down the governing coalition if he agrees to a truce.

    Israel bombardment continues

    The Hamas-run Interior Ministry said four police officers were killed in an Israeli airstrike Saturday in Rafah, the AP reported. The ministry, which oversees civilian police, said the officers were killed during foot patrol securing properties. It said eight other police officers were wounded. Israel’s military did not immediately respond to questions.

    In Deir al-Balah, prayers were held for 12 Palestinians, including five children and two women, killed in three separate strikes in central Gaza on Friday and Saturday, according to hospital officials. The bodies were taken to al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, where AP journalists counted them.

    Two of those killed in a strike that hit the Mughazi refugee camp Friday were employees with the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees, the organization’s director of communications told the AP. Juliette Touma said a total of 194 workers with the agency have been killed since October.

    Israel Palestinians
    Palestinians displaced by the Israeli air and ground offensive on the Gaza Strip walk next to sewage flowing into the streets of the southern town of Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, July 4, 2024.

    Jehad Alshrafi / AP


    Earlier this week, an Israeli evacuation order in the southern city of Khan Younis and the surrounding areas affected about 250,000 Palestinians. Many headed to an Israeli-declared “safe zone” centered on the Muwasi coastal area or Deir al-Balah.

    Ground fighting has raged in Gaza City’s Shijaiyah neighborhood for the past two weeks, forcing tens of thousands of people to flee their homes. Many have sheltered in the Yarmouk Sports Stadium, one of the strip’s largest soccer arenas.

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  • 6/26: The Daily Report with John Dickerson

    6/26: The Daily Report with John Dickerson

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    6/26: The Daily Report with John Dickerson – CBS News


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    Jeff Glor reports on the Supreme Court social media ruling seen as a win for the Biden administration, a presidential pardon that could affect thousands of LGBTQ+ service members, and the nuclear power race against China.

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  • U.S. humanitarian aid pier in Gaza under scrutiny

    U.S. humanitarian aid pier in Gaza under scrutiny

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    U.S. humanitarian aid pier in Gaza under scrutiny – CBS News


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    Senior U.N. officials have told Israel they’ll suspend aid operations across Gaza unless urgent steps are taken to better protect humanitarian workers, according to the Associated Press. A floating pier built by the U.S. military to get much-needed humanitarian aid into Gaza has spent more time being fixed than it has delivering food. Imtiaz Tyab got an up-close look.

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