January 10, 2024 Israel-Hamas war | CNN

January 10, 2024 Israel-Hamas war

robertson khan younis vpx
CNN reporter crawls over 60 feet underground to visit tunnels IDF says were used by Hamas
05:12 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

35 Posts

Israel's military took CNN on a tour of what it says is a Hamas tunnel under Khan Younis. Here's what we saw

Editor’s Note: CNN reported from Gaza under Israel Defense Forces’ escort at all times. As a condition for journalists to join the embed with the IDF, media outlets must submit footage filmed in Gaza to the Israeli military for security review. CNN did not submit its final report to the IDF and retained editorial control.

On the streets of Khan Younis in southern Gaza, the scars of war are clear to see.

The city’s heavily damaged buildings bear testament to some of the fiercest fighting that has taken place in the nearly 100 days since the devastating Hamas attacks on October 7 that killed more than 1,200 people and sparked Israel’s war in Gaza. In the more than three months since, at least 23,357 people in Gaza have been killed, according to the Hamas-run health ministry. CNN cannot independently confirm those numbers due to the difficulty of access to Gaza for international media.

But the carnage above ground tells only half the story of the Israel Defense Forces’ effort to drive out Hamas from a city it has described as a “main stronghold” of the militant group.

It is below ground, in the massive Hamas tunnel networks that the IDF says stretch for miles in all directions that its soldiers face a task with no obvious parallel in modern military history.

Dan Goldfus, IDF Division Commander, told CNN’s International Diplomatic Editor Nic Robertson he believes some of the more than 200 people taken hostage by Hamas on October 7 were held in tunnels under the heart of Khan Younis, including some of the 106 who are still believed to be in Gaza.

WATCH THE REPORT:

4e4b4874-ba68-48ba-8248-d4e19a2ceca1.mp4
05:12 - Source: cnn

Some of the tunnels are 60 meters deep (nearly 200 feet), according to Goldfus. Some are wide and some narrow. Penetrating them is a notoriously dangerous task.

Goldfus says the biggest issue facing his troops is the “multi-dimensional” nature of the fighting “on all fronts.”

He led a CNN team on a tour that illustrated the complexity of the task.

The tour took the team down a metal ladder and two flights of stairs, wiring visible all the way, to about 15 meters (50 feet) under the ground.

The CNN team descended over 20 meters (65 feet), taking steps into a complex network. Yet asked how deep this tunnel went, Goldfus replied, “This is not a very deep tunnel.”

Some, he said, are nearly three times as deep.

Branching off from the side of the tunnel CNN entered, the ceiling was so low it was impossible to stand up straight. And at the end was a small room with a metal frame around the door.

It is in small rooms like this where some of the hostages kidnapped by Hamas have been kept, Goldfus claims.

It is a grim, unforgiving place for anyone, whether hostage or soldier, but Goldfus says the IDF will continue its fight until Hamas is eliminated.

This week, the IDF claimed to have completed the dismantling of Hamas’ command structure in northern Gaza and said it was switching its focus to southern and central Gaza.

Goldfus knows his job is far from over.

“If we give in to the Hamas, we give in to this area, you have to understand that, and I think no sovereign state would agree to such a thing,” he says.

He believes the IDF’s objectives are clear:

Houthi senior leader says UN Security Council vote condemning attacks is a “political game”

A Houthi senior leader described a UN Security Council resolution condemning the group’s attacks on vessels in the Red Sea as a “political game” and called on Israel to stop all attacks in Gaza.

In a message on X, formerly known as Twitter, Mohamed Ali al-Houthi, member of the Supreme Political Council and former head of Yemen’s Houthi Supreme Revolutionary Committee, called on the UN Security Council to release the people in Gaza from what he called “the largest prison in which collective criminal punishment is practiced.” 

He argued that what “the Yemeni armed forces are doing comes within the framework of legitimate defense” and that the United States, Britain, and Israel are the ones violating international law in their response to Gaza. 

Some background: Before the UN Security Council resolution was approved, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned “there will be consequences” for the continued Houthi attacks in the Red Sea.

“I’m not going to telegraph or preview anything that might happen,” Blinken said in a press gaggle in Bahrain. “We’ve made clear, we’ve been clear with more than 20 other countries that if it continues, as it did yesterday, there will be consequences.”

Blinken’s warning comes as the Iranian-backed militant group shows no signs of de-escalation and the potential for regional flare-up looms large.

On Tuesday, the US Navy shot down 21 Houthi missiles and drones launched from Yemen, according to a statement from US Central Command, in one of the largest Houthi attacks to take place in the Red Sea in recent months.

WHO director-general highlights health care challenges in Gaza due to lack of access to enclave

Director-General of the World Health Organization, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, is seen at a press briefing in Geneva, Switzerland, on December 15.

Although many around the world rang in the new year earlier this month, “2024 is not a happy new year,” World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Wednesday.

This Sunday will mark 100 days since the Israel-Hamas conflict, Tedros noted, adding that “the situation is indescribable.” 

Disruptions to the health care and water sanitation systems, the lack of food and water as well as having people displaced in the winter is “a cocktail for diseases,” said Dr. Richard Peeperkorn, the WHO’s representative in the occupied Palestinian territories.  

WHO Health Officer Dr. Teresa Zakaria, the incident manager for the escalation of violence in Israel and the occupied Palestine territories, said the agency’s surveillance systems are capturing the manifestation of diseases, but they aren’t able to verify the bacteria, parasite or virus causing the illnesses. 

The agency canceled six planned missions to northern Gaza since December 26 “because our requests were rejected and assurances of safe passage were not provided,” the director-general said.

A mission scheduled today to a hospital instrumental for maternal and child health was canceled as well, according to Peeperkorn.

CNN has contacted the Israel Defense Forces and COGAT, the government entity responsible for implementing policy in the Palestinian territories, for comment.

US warns of consequences for Houthi attacks in Red Sea. Here's what you should know

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned Wednesday that “there will be consequences” for the continued Houthi attacks in the Red Sea.

Blinken’s warning comes as the Yemen-based Iranian-backed militant group shows no signs of de-escalation and the potential for regional flare-up looms large.

On Tuesday, the US Navy shot down 21 Houthi missiles and drones launched from Yemen, according to a statement from US Central Command, in one of the largest Houthi attacks to take place in the Red Sea in recent months.

The Houthis say they will only relent when Israel allows the entry of food and medicine into Gaza; its strikes could be intended to inflict economic pain on Israel’s allies in the hope they will pressure it to cease its bombardment of the enclave.

Here are more headlines you should know:

  • UNSC vote on Houthis: The UN Security Council approved a resolution on Wednesday calling on Yemen’s Houthi rebels to “cease its brazen” attacks in the Red Sea and violation of international law. The vote was 11 in favor, 0 against, and four abstentions, including from Russia and China.
  • Official visits: Blinken discussed “ongoing efforts to minimize civilian harm” and increase the delivery of humanitarian assistance in Gaza during a meeting with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, the US State Department said. He also urged Israel to pass on a tax revenue it takes from Palestinian imports to the Authority. 
  • Developments on the ground: Hamas is no longer in control in large parts of the Gaza Strip, Israeli war cabinet member Benny Gantz said. He also reiterated the importance of the return of all hostages abducted in the October 7 attack, saying this is the priority in every combat decision. Blinken said he believes Hamas “can and will engage” in hostage talks even after an Israeli strike killed a senior Hamas official in Beirut last week.
  • Humanitarian crisis: The food situation in northern Gaza is “absolutely horrific,” according to the World Health Organization. A British surgeon in central Gaza who was treating patients in the Al-Maghazi refugee camp recounted the daily horror of working at the hospital: Scores of displaced civilians covering every inch of the medical facility, hundreds of wounded people – mainly children – arriving every day with traumatic burns, missing limbs and shrapnel injuries to the chest and abdomen. A United Nations envoy on sexual violence will travel to Israel and the West Bank to gather information on reports of sexual assaults committed during the attacks on October 7 and its aftermath.

UN Security Council approves resolution condeming Houthi attacks on commercial vessels

The United Nations Security Council approved a resolution Wednesday calling on Yemen’s Houthi rebels to “cease its brazen” attacks in the Red Sea and violation of international law.

The vote was 11 in favor, 0 against, and four abstentions, including from Russia and China.

US Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield said:

She also blamed Iran for helping the Houthis.

The resolution condemned the two dozen Houthi attacks on merchant and commercial vessels since November 19, when the Houthis first attacked and seized the commercial vessel, Galaxy Leader. 

UK Ambassador Barbara Woodward said the Houthi attacks in the Red Sea “hit the world’s poorest the hardest.” 

Earlier the UN Security Council rejected three proposed amendments to the Red Sea text by Russia after the amendments failed to earn the required nine votes needed to bring the matter before the council. 

 Some background: On Tuesday, the US Navy shot down 21 Houthi missiles and drones launched from Yemen, according to a statement from US Central Command, in one of the largest Houthi attacks to take place in the Red Sea in recent months.

The Houthis say they will only relent when Israel allows the entry of food and medicine into Gaza; its strikes could be intended to inflict economic pain on Israel’s allies in the hope they will pressure it to cease its bombardment of the enclave.

"It's a horrific situation across the board," says UN agency about food scarcity in Gaza

Palestinians line up in front a bakery in Rafah, Gaza, on Wednesday.

The food situation in Northern Gaza is “absolutely horrific,” according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

“There’s almost no food available and everybody we talked to begs for food,” Sean Casey, an emergency coordinator for the WHO said during a news briefing Tuesday.

Casey, who has carried out several WHO missions to northern Gaza, said each time his team delivered medical supplies to the region, they were asked to bring food the next time.

WHO has “no communication with entire areas,” but Casey said when he meets a patient who has had a double amputation and asks for food or water, it is clear “they’re not getting their basic needs met.”

The WHO was unable to reach northern Gaza since December 26 and was forced to cancel six planned missions, according to briefing notes sent to CNN.

Many people in central Gaza are also going hungry because there is not enough food coming in, Casey said.

Even in southern Gaza, closest to the Rafah border crossing with Egypt where deliveries are received, not many people are eating a full meal a day, he said.

UN envoy will visit Israel to gather information about reports of sexual violence during October 7 attacks

A United Nations envoy on sexual violence will travel to Israel and the West Bank to gather information on reports of sexual assaults committed during the attacks on October 7 and its aftermath.

Pramila Patten, who is the special representative of the Secretary-General on sexual violence in conflict, will conduct the mission at the end of the month, according to a UN statement on Wednesday. 

The UN said the trip by Patten is not intended “to be investigative in nature” and her findings will be included in an annual report on sexual violence.

Hamas has repeatedly denied allegations that its fighters committed sexual violence during the attack despite the evidence.

"Nothing had prepared me," British surgeon says about treating severely wounded children in central Gaza

Nick Maynard speaks in an interview with CNN.

Nick Maynard still remembers treating the little boy from the Al-Maghazi refugee camp.

The British surgeon found the 6-year-old on the floor of the emergency ward of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in central Gaza.

Maynard has recounted the daily horror of working at the hospital: Scores of displaced civilians covering every inch of the medical facility, hundreds of wounded people – mainly children – arriving every day with traumatic burns, missing limbs and shrapnel injuries to the chest and abdomen.

Leading a five-member emergency team of clinicians, he worked with Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP) and the International Rescue Committee (IRC) from December 26 to January 5.

Maynard, who has been coming to Gaza for 14 years, told CNN the overcrowding in and around the hospital in Deir al-Balah, one of the last remaining functioning hospitals in the enclave, was like “something I’ve never, ever seen before.”

“When you’re dealing with acutely ill patients like that, you have to have a really comprehensive triage system where you can prioritize, and that system collapsed completely,” he said on Tuesday, speaking from the Egyptian capital Cairo.

The ratio of doctors to patients spiraled, as medical workers who were volunteering at the hospital increasingly fled south after the Israeli military issued evacuation orders.

In Al-Aqsa hospital, many of the patients were refugees from local camps including Al-Maghazi, Al-Bureij and Nuseirat, in what Maynard called “the clearest evidence you could ever want that there was an indiscriminate slaughter of people.”

The office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the military “does its utmost to avoid civilian casualties including providing early warning before attack, safe passage corridors and designated safer zones.”

“Hamas targets Israeli civilians and embeds itself in Palestinian civilian neighborhoods, using Palestinian civilians and Israeli hostages as human shields,” the office added.

Israeli attacks on Gaza have killed at least 23,210 Palestinians since October 7, and injured another 59,167, according to the Hamas-run Ministry of Health — more than 1% of the enclave’s total pre-war population of 2.27 million people.

Israeli forces are “deliberately blocking the delivery of water, food, and fuel,” and “depriving the civilian population of objects indispensable to their survival,” Human Rights Watch has warned. The World Health Organization (WHO) reported the enclave’s healthcare sector is crumbling at a “rapid pace.”

Maynard said most patients arrived at Al-Aqsa with “dirty wounds” after bomb blasts had pelted fallen glass, gravel, dust and dirt into their injuries. Rampant shortages of painkillers, drinkable water, and medical equipment including gloves, and skin staple removers meant “the wound infection rate was stratospheric.”

Some patients suffered blast injuries where shrapnel passed through multiple parts of the body, damaging the liver, the spleen, the stomach and bowel, while others sustained internal bleeding in the lungs. Worst of all, Maynard said, was the sheer number of Palestinians, mainly children, arriving with traumatic burns and amputations.

More than 10 children on average have lost one or both of their legs every day in Gaza since October 7, Save the Children said on Sunday.

He still thinks of the little boy he found on the floor at the hospital. The kid was just one of many orphaned by the war and coming in with no family, “screaming for their parents” who had been killed.“He was alive when we left, but I don’t know whether he survived,” Maynard said.

The post was updated with more details from the interview with Maynard.

Blinken believes Hamas "can and will engage" on hostage talks even after killing of Hamas official

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he believes that Hamas “can and will engage” on hostage talks even after an Israeli strike killed a senior Hamas official in Beirut last week.

“We succeeded before in the midst of this conflict in getting more than a hundred hostages out, and it’s my belief that they can and will engage on this, and that’s something we’re intensely focused on with Qatar and with Egypt,” Blinken said in an interview with NBC News’ Andrea Mitchell on Tuesday, which aired Wednesday.

On Sunday, Qatari Prime Minister and Minster of Foreign Affairs Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani said that the assassination of Saleh al-Arouri “is something that can affect such a complicated process.”

“We are not giving up; we are moving forward. We are continuing our discussions with the parties and trying to achieve as soon as possible an agreement that can bring assistance for humanitarian relief and the release of the hostages,” Al Thani said at a press conference alongside Blinken in Doha.

Blinken told NBC News that he again met with hostage families on his trip, saying that “for them, these three months have been an eternity; every day, every hour, every minute feels like an eternity.”

Hamas no longer controlling large parts of Gaza, Israel says

Israeli war cabinet member Benny Gantz attends a meeting with the press on October 29 in Ramot Naftali, Israel.

Hamas is no longer in control in large parts of the Gaza Strip, Israeli war cabinet member Benny Gantz said.

He also reiterated the importance of the return of all hostages abducted in the October 7 attack, saying this is the priority in every combat decision. “If any of the abductees are watching us now, it is important for you to know — we are doing everything so that you return to your loved ones who never stop fighting for you,” Gantz added.  

Top US diplomat warns of "consequences" if Houthi attacks continue

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken boards a plane as he departs for Tel Aviv in Manama, Bahrain, on January 10.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned “there will be consequences” for the continued Houthi attacks in the Red Sea.

Amid the efforts to prevent a regional conflict from spreading, it is “particularly important that we respond when we see something like the aggression coming from the Houthis,” the top US diplomat said.

He noted that the threat posed by the Houthi attacks has drawn together an international coalition to counter it.

One of the largest Houthi attacks to date was on Tuesday — when three US Navy destroyers, Navy F/A-18s from the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower, and a UK destroyer, the HMS Diamond — shot down 21 missiles and drones. There were no ships damaged by the attack and no injuries reported.

Blinken lands in Bahrain, where he will meet with king ahead of Egypt visit

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, left, walks with Bahrain's King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa in Manama, Bahrain, on January 10.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has landed in Bahrain, where he will meet with King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa after meeting earlier in the day with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.

After his meeting with Blinken, Abbas traveled to the Jordanian city of Aqaba for a summit with Egyptian President Abdel Fatah al-Sisi and Jordanian King Abdullah II.

Blinken will return to Tel Aviv Wednesday afternoon, before traveling to Egypt Thursday.

The top US diplomat has held a flurry of meetings with regional leaders over the past several days, traveling to Turkey, Greece, Jordan, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia. He was in Israel for key meetings with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other officials on Tuesday.

Why are the Houthis attacking ships in the Red Sea?

Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels are stepping up their strikes on ships in the Red Sea, which they say are revenge against Israel for its military campaign in Gaza.

The strikes have forced some of the world’s biggest shipping and oil companies to suspend their travel through the sea and has prompted the US and UK to supply warships to the region in an attempt to deter further attacks.

While — through a combination of geography and technology — the Houthis may lack the capabilities of Hamas and Hezbollah, their strikes on commercial vessels in the Red Sea may inflict a different sort of pain on Israel and its allies.

Ships transit the Suez Canal toward the Red Sea on January 10, in Ismailia, Egypt.

The global economy has been served a series of painful reminders of the importance of this narrow stretch of sea, which runs from the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait off the coast of Yemen to the Suez Canal in northern Egypt – and through which 12% of global trade flows, including 30% of global container traffic.

In 2021, a ship called the Ever Given ran aground in the Suez Canal, blocking the vital trade artery for nearly a week – holding up as much as $10 billion in cargo each day – and causing disruptions to global supply chains that lasted far longer.

There are fears that the Houthi drone and missile attacks against commercial vessels, which have occurred almost daily since December 9, could cause an even greater shock to the world economy.

The Houthis say they will only relent when Israel allows the entry of food and medicine into Gaza; its strikes could be intended to inflict economic pain on Israel’s allies in the hope they will pressure it to cease its bombardment of the enclave.

Fueling international tensions

Championing the Palestinian cause could also be an attempt to gain legitimacy at home and in the region as they seek to control northern Yemen, which they have dominated since the start of a bloody civil war almost a decade ago.

It could also give them an upper hand against their Arab adversaries, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, who they accuse of being lackeys of the US and Israel.

But, there is also concern that the attacks could draw more countries into the conflict.

In December, the US announced a multinational naval task force comprising the United Kingdom, Bahrain, Canada, France, Norway and others, to “tackle the challenge posed by this non-state actor” that “threatens the free flow of commerce, endangers innocent mariners, and violates international law.”

Read the full story.

Houthis say Red Sea assault was in response to US attack last week

The Iran-backed Houthis said the barrage of missiles and drones fired on the Red Sea on Tuesday was in response to a US attack on the group last week. 

The US sank three Houthi boats in the Red Sea, killing all those aboard, on December 31 after coming under fire.

It was the first time the US had targeted members of the Iranian-supported Houthi rebel group since the escalation of tensions in October.

In a statement, the Houthi military spokesperson Yahya Saree said Tuesday’s attack was a “coordinated offensive” targeting an American ship “aiding” Israel in the Red Sea. 

Saree said that the operation involved a “substantial deployment” of ballistic and naval missiles, along with drones in response to what he described as a “treacherous attack” by US forces on Houthi naval units on last week.

The group has reassured their “commitment to maintaining maritime traffic” in the Red Sea and Arabian Sea, with the sole exception of vessels connected to Israel, Saree said.  

Analysis: How the Red Sea crisis could impact the global economy

Attacks by Iran-backed militants in the Red Sea have effectively closed one of the world’s main trade routes to most container ships — vessels that carry everything from car parts to Crocs from one corner of the globe to another.

prolonged closure of the waterway, which connects with the Suez Canal, could snarl global supply chains and drive up the prices of manufactured goods at a crucial moment in the battle to defeat inflation. The Suez Canal accounts for 10-15% of world trade, which includes oil exports, and for 30% of global container shipping volumes.

Houthi militants, based in Yemen, say they are taking revenge for Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza. The US military and its allies have beefed up maritime security but the attacks continue, with 21 Houthi missiles and drones shot down late Tuesday.

As the crisis persists, the stakes for the global economy are rising. Retailers are already warning of delays, and the cost of shipping goods is increasing.

Six of the 10 biggest container shipping companies — namely Maersk, MSC, Hapag-Lloyd, CMA CGM, ZIM and ONE — are largely or completely avoiding the Red Sea because of the threat from the Houthi militants.

The danger to crew, cargo and vessels has forced carriers to reroute ships around the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa, resulting in delays of up to three weeks.

This has already significantly increased shipping costs, which could ultimately show up in consumer prices.

If the Israel-Hamas war escalates into a wider regional conflict or the Houthis decide to redirect their attacks toward oil tankers and bulk carriers — which transport crucial raw materials such as iron ore, grain and timber — the consequences for the global economy would be altogether more severe.

Read more about how shipping costs could be affected.

UN Security Council to vote on US-led resolution condemning Houthi Red Sea attacks

The UN Security Council will vote on Wednesday morning on a US-led resolution condemning the spate of Houthi attacks in the Red Sea.

The resolution, a copy of which was obtained by CNN, “condemns in the strongest terms the at least two dozen Houthi attacks on merchant and commercial vessels since November 19, 2023, when the Houthis attacked and seized the Galaxy Leader and its crew.” 

Here’s what else is in the resolution:

  • Demands that the Houthis “immediately cease all such attacks, which impede global commerce and undermine navigational rights and freedoms as well as regional peace and security”
  • Demands that the Houthis immediately release the Galaxy Leader and its crew
  • Condemns any supply of arms and related materials to the Houthis
  • Calls for cooperation to prevent the Houthis from acquiring these arms and materials to carry out more attacks
  • Respect for “navigational rights and freedoms by merchant and commercial vessels, in accordance with international law”
  • Urges “caution and restraint to avoid further escalation of the situation in the Red Sea and the broader region” and diplomatic cooperation to that end.

The text does not name Iran for its support of the Houthis. No timings were immediately given.

Gaza lacks critical medical supplies, Canadian doctor says, as Israel continues striking targets. Catch up here

A Canadian surgeon who recently returned from Gaza painted a grim picture of the situation on the ground.

“We have a major lack of equipment, of the medical supplies, you know, CT scan machine, and things like that, let alone the lack of drugs (such as) … analgesia, antibiotics,” Anas Al-Kassem told CNN, adding that he had to perform stitches on patients without anesthetics so he could conserve it for major surgeries.

His comments come as the UN said that Israeli authorities denied a planned mission by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and the World Health Organization to deliver critical supplies into northern Gaza on January 8. It was Israel’s fifth denial of a mission to a drug store and hospital since December 26, OCHA said, leaving five hospitals in northern Gaza without access to medical supplies.

The death toll in Gaza has risen to 23,210, with nearly 60,000 people also injured since October 7, 2023, according to the Hamas-controlled health ministry.

CNN is unable to independently confirm the figures provided by the Gaza health ministry, due to restricted access to the region and the difficulty in verifying accurate numbers amid the ongoing conflict.

Here are the latest headlines:

  • Blinken meets PA president: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken discussed “ongoing efforts to minimize civilian harm” and increase the delivery of humanitarian assistance in Gaza during a meeting with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, the US State Department said. He also urged Israel to pass on a tax they take from Palestinian imports to the PA, in accordance with their agreement. Abbas also called for the immediate end to hostilities and rejected any attempt to relocate Palestinians from Gaza in the meeting in Ramallah, according to a readout of the meeting reported by the official Palestinian news agency WAFA.
  • Israel rejects Slovenia claim: Israel has pushed back at a Slovenian claim that its forces in Gaza had committed “violations of international humanitarian law,” with the prime minister’s office saying “all civilian casualties” were Hamas’s fault. 
  • Blinken in Bahrain: The US Secretary of State is making a surprise visit to the country as a part of his Middle East trip to try to ease regional tensions.
  • UK warship in Red Sea: The United Kingdom deployed the HMS Diamond guided missile destroyer to support United States warships shooting down more than a dozen Houthi missiles and drones over the Red Sea. The Iran-backed Houthis have said their barrage of drones and missiles are showing solidarity with the Palestinian people.
  • Targets struck: The IDF says it shot down more than 150 “terror targets” across Gaza over the past day. The military said “dozens of terrorist operatives” were killed by Israeli forces in the southern city of Khan Younis. 
  • “Fauda” star injured: A top Israeli actor, best known for his role as a special forces soldier in hit Netflix series “Fauda,” was badly wounded in Gaza while fighting for Israel’s military against Hamas, according to his family and the hospital where he is being treated.
  • Sharp increase in US antisemitic incidents: Antisemitism has “skyrocketed” across the United States since the October 7 Hamas attacks on Israel, according to new data released Wednesday by the Anti-Defamation League. The ADL has tracked a total of 3,283 antisemitic incidents between October 7 and January 7, the group said. This marks a 361% increase in reported antisemitic incidents when compared to the 712 incidents the organization said were reported during the same period the year before.

Abbas rejects any proposals to relocate Palestinians from Gaza during meeting with Blinken

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, left, meets with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in the Muqata'a, Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on January 10.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas called for the immediate end to hostilities and rejected any attempt to relocate Palestinians from Gaza in a meeting with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Ramallah, according to a readout of the meeting reported by the official Palestinian news agency WAFA.

Abbas discussed the importance of efforts to “stop the Israeli aggression” against Palestinians in Gaza, the West Bank and Jerusalem, and the importance of “accelerating the entry of humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip,” according to the report.

He also highlighted statements made by Israeli ministers and officials that “call for the expulsion of the Palestinian people from their land,” and stressed his government’s “complete rejection of the displacement of any Palestinian citizen” in Gaza or the West Bank. 

Far-right Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has advocated for Palestinians leaving Gaza – saying after criticism of his comment that it should be “voluntary” – while Israeli President Isaac Herzog Sunday told NBC that the resettlement of Palestinians out of Gaza is “outright, officially and unequivocally” not Israel’s position.

Abbas told Blinken that any plans by the Israeli government to separate or divide the Gaza Strip would be unacceptable. He said that the conflict needs to end in order for an internationally legitimate political solution, including the creation of a Palestinian state, to be implemented, according to the statement.

Blinken, in meetings with Israeli government leaders Tuesday, had said the Israeli government must move toward a two-state solution if it wants the help of Arab partners in the region with lasting security. He also stressed that Palestinians must be allowed to return to their homes in Gaza “as soon as conditions allow” and must not be displaced from the enclave,

5-year-old girl dies of wounds after MSF shelter shelled in Khan Younis

A 5-year-old girl was killed after a Médecins San Frontières (MSF) shelter in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis was hit by a “suspected tank shell,” MSF said in a statement Tuesday.

MSF says that they cannot confirm the origin of the shell, however “it appears to be similar to those used by Israeli tanks.” 

The child, who is a family member of MSF staff, underwent surgery after she was critically injured by the shell and died of her wounds the following day, MSF said.

Three others received minor injuries after the shell broke through the walls of the shelter, which is housing more than a hundred MSF staff and their families, according to MSF.

MSF said they did not receive evacuation orders to leave the shelter, despite informing the Israeli army of their location. 

“Prior to the incident, MSF notified Israeli forces that the shelter near Gaza European Hospital was housing MSF staff and their families,” the statement said. 

MSF has contacted Israeli authorities for further explanation, the group said. 

When asked about the incident, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) told CNN on Tuesday that it is “operating to dismantle Hamas military and administrative capabilities,” and that the IDF “follows international law and takes feasible precautions to mitigate civilian harm.” 

Four members of MSF’s staff have been killed since the beginning of the war in addition to multiple family members, MSF said. 

At least 23,210 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza, including more than 10,000 children, since October 7, the Hamas-run Ministry of Health in Gaza said on Tuesday.