Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu orders military to immediately carry out strikes in Gaza
- On Tuesday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered Israel's military to carry out immediate, powerful strikes in the Gaza Strip.
- Hamas' return of remains identified as Ofir Tzarfati prompted Netanyahu's office to call the transfer a `clear violation` shortly after Hamas opened fire on Israeli forces in southern Gaza.
- Since Oct. 10, the ceasefire has seen a second problematic transfer of remains by Hamas as an AP videographer in Khan Younis witnessed Egypt deploy search teams and machinery.
- Holding a security assessment, Netanyahu met defence officials to discuss a response while Israeli troops in Rafah were shot at and returned fire, and 13 bodies of hostages remain in Gaza.
- The problematic handovers complicate next ceasefire stages like disarmament of Hamas and an international security force in Gaza, while Gaza's Health Ministry reports over 68,500 Palestinians dead.
533 Articles
533 Articles
Israeli airstrikes kill at least 18 in Gaza, violating ceasefire
ISTANBUL: At least 18 people were killed and dozens injured on Tuesday in Israeli airstrikes across the Gaza Strip, marking a new violation of a ceasefire agreement between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas, according to medical sources. Read full story
Just three weeks after the start of a ceasefire, the situation in the Gaza Strip has escalated again, but US Vice-President Vance is appeasing.
Vance downplays ‘little skirmishes’ as Israel bombs in Gaza and Hamas fails to return hostages
(JTA) — Israel carried out a bombing campaign in Gaza on Tuesday in response to what it said was violations of the two-week-old ceasefire by Hamas. Hamas, meanwhile, rejected the claim that it was behind an attack on Israeli soldiers and said Israel’s bombing was the ceasefire violation. The two developments, plus Hamas’ continued holding of 13 hostages’ remains, represented the biggest threats yet to the U.S. brokered ceasefire in the two-year-…
Israel strikes Gaza after accusing Hamas of violating U.S.-brokered ceasefire
Israeli planes launched strikes in Gaza on Tuesday after Israel accused the militant group Hamas of violating a ceasefire in the Palestinian territory, the latest test of a fragile deal brokered earlier this month by U.S. President Donald Trump.
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