The UN warns “civil order” is deteriorating in Gaza after weeks of siege and bombardment, with people breaking into warehouses to take survival essentials.
The UN Security Council will hold an emergency meeting Monday, where the United Arab Emirates will seek a resolution on a “humanitarian pause” in the fighting, sources tell CNN. The US has opposed previous calls for a ceasefire.
US has no intention of sending combat troops to Israel or Gaza, Harris says
From CNN's Kevin Liptak in Wilmington, Delaware
Kamala Harris speaks at the State Department in Washington, on October 26.
Nathan Howard/Reuters
Vice President Kamala Harris said in an interview that the US has “absolutely no intention” of sending American combat troops into Israel or Gaza amid fears over a wider regional conflict.
More children killed in Gaza than in global conflicts annually over past 4 years, Save the Children says
From CNN Staff
A man holds wounded children near livestock around heavily damaged buildings after Israeli attacks at Nuseirat Refugee Camp in Gaza City on Sunday, October 29.
Ashraf Amra/Anadolu/Getty Images
The number of children reported killed in Gaza during Israel’s military campaign over the past three weeks has surpassed the annual number of children killed in armed conflict globally in each of the past four years, according to Save the Children.
More than 3,000 children have been reported killed in Gaza since October 7 by the enclave’s Hamas-controlled health authorities.
A total of 2,985 children were killed across 24 countries in 2022, 2,515 were killed in 2021 and 2,674 in 2020, according to the United Nations secretary general’s annual report on children and armed conflict, cited by Save the Children.
In 2019, the UN reported 4,019 children were killed in conflicts around the world.
Save the Children has added its voice to those calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza.
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Jordan asks US for Patriot air defense system amid fears of regional escalation
From CNN’s Pierre Meilhan
Close US ally Jordan has asked Washington to deploy Patriot missiles to strengthen its air defenses at its borders, a Jordanian military spokesperson told state media on Sunday.
The request comes at a time of heightening tensions in the Middle East due to the war in Gaza as well as clashes on the Lebanon-Israel border between Hezbollah and Israeli forces.
Al-Hiyari said Jordan is facing ongoing threats, including ballistic missiles, from the north, east and west and the Patriot air defense system is “the best weapon to confront such a threat.”
Jordan is also requesting a system to combat drones that are used on drug smuggling, as they “have become a threat to all our fronts,” Al-Hiyari added.
CNN has reached out to US officials for comment.
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Israel strikes military infrastructure in Syria
From CNN's Hadas Gold
Israeli forces struck military infrastructure in Syrian territory following launches toward Israel from the country, Israel’s military said Monday.
Israeli warplanes regularly bomb targets in Syria, where the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights separates Israel from Iran-aligned fighters.
UN warns of "growing hunger and desperation" in Gaza. What to know as Israel's ground operation continues
From CNN staff
The UN warns “civil order” is deteriorating in Gaza after weeks of siege and bombardment, with people breaking into warehouses to take survival essentials.
Here are today’s top headlines:
More on the warehouse break-ins: The United Nations World Food Programme said some of its aid supplies were looted in Gaza and warned of “growing hunger and desperation” in a news release Sunday. The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East said earlier Sunday that “thousands” of people had broken into some of its warehouses and distribution centers in the central and southern areas of the strip, “taking wheat flour and other basic survival items like hygiene supplies.”
The UN Security Council will hold an emergency meeting Monday: The United Arab Emirates, the only Arab country with a seat in the UN Security Council at the moment, will seek a binding resolution from other Security Council members for an “immediate humanitarian pause” in the fighting, sources said. Earlier this month, the United States vetoed a draft resolution at the UNSC which called for a humanitarian pause.
Gaza’s second-largest hospital suffers extensive damage: Israeli airstrikes have “caused extensive damage to hospital departments and exposed residents and patients to suffocation” at the Al-Quds Hospital, the Palestinian Red Crescent Society said Sunday, accusing Israel of “deliberately” launching the airstrikes next to Gaza City’s second-largest hospital “with the aim of forcing the medical staff, displaced people, and patients to evacuate the hospital.” The organization said it has received a warning Sunday from Israel to immediately evacuate the hospital ahead of possible bombardment, which the World Health Organization has said would be “impossible” without endangering patients’ lives.
Israel appears to have advanced over two miles into Gaza: The troops in the video, taken on Saturday, are seen putting an Israeli flag on a Gaza resort hotel’s roof. CNN geolocated the video to an area just over two miles from the Gaza-Israeli border. The video is one of the first glimpses into where Israeli ground forces have been, and what they’ve been doing, during the expanded ground operations in Gaza. A communications blackout in Gaza has significantly hampered the flow of information out of it, though providers said service was gradually being restored Sunday.
Iran says Israel has “crossed the red lines” in Gaza: Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi said Sunday Israel’s actions “may force everyone to take action.” There are concerns that Israel’s fierce military campaign in Gaza will open up more fronts. There is already crossfire exchanges on northern Israel and southern Lebanon border — separate from Israel’s fighting with Hamas farther south, which is centered around Gaza. But an uptick in clashes with Hezbollah has raised fears that the powerful Lebanese paramilitary group could actively participate in the conflict. It comes as the US national security adviser warned of an “elevated risk” of the war expanding into a broader Middle East conflict.
Aid trucks cross from Egypt into Gaza: The Palestinian Red Crescent said it received 10 aid trucks via the Rafah border crossing, stating that the trucks contain “food supplies and medical necessities. The total number of received trucks so far has reached 94, while fuel has not been allowed to enter yet. Meanwhile, Doctors Without Borders said it has sent 26 tons of medical supplies on a plane to Egypt to support the emergency medical response in Gaza.
Gaza death toll rises further: The death toll in Gaza has risen to 7,960, the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Ramallah announced on Sunday, drawing the data from sources in the Hamas-controlled enclave. More than 20,000 have been injured, the ministry said. Nearly three-quarters — 73% — of those killed are from vulnerable populations, including children, women, and elderly individuals, according to the ministry report, which adds that the total number of dead includes 116 medical personnel.
Video shows destruction at mosque and houses in a Gaza refugee camp: Video, obtained by CNN from a Gaza-based journalist, shows the aftermath of the destruction of a mosque and adjacent houses in the Al-Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza on Sunday. There is a large amount of destruction at the site of an airstrike, with people searching through the rubble to look for survivors.
USpressured Israel to restore connectivity in Gaza: After phone and internet service was severed late last week, civilians, aid groups and journalists were left without any means of communicating with the outside world. Service appeared to be gradually restored on Sunday. “We do feel strongly that the restoration of that communications was a critical thing,” US national security adviser Jake Sullivan said. “Because aid workers need to be able to communicate, civilians need to be able to communicate, and of course, journalists need to be able to document what is happening in Gaza to report it to the wider world.”
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At least 10 injured as crowd storms Russian airport after flight arrives from Tel Aviv, officials say
From CNN's Josh Pennington, Pierre Meilhan, Maija Ehlinger and Hadas Gold
People crowd the tarmac at Makhachkala Uytash Airport in the southern Russian Republic of Dagestan on October 29.
From Telegram
At least 10 people are injured after a crowd stormed an airport in southern Russia following the arrival of a flight from Tel Aviv, according to a statement by the Dagestan health ministry late Sunday.
The Makhachkala Uytash Airport in the Republic of Dagestan has temporarily closed and flights have been diverted after “unknown persons” broke into the airport Sunday, according to a statement released by the Russian Federal Air Transport Agency.
Multiple videos posted on social media show a crowd of people inside the airport and on the airfield, some waving the Palestinian flag, others forcing their way through closed doors in the international terminal. The crowd entered the airport after a flight from Tel Aviv landed on Sunday, according to Russian state media TASS.
TASS reports that “those gathered oppose the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.”
The injured are a mix of police officers and civilians, according to the health ministry, which said two people are in “critical condition.”
The Red Wing Airlines flight from Tel Aviv arrived Sunday at 7:17 p.m. local time (12:17 p.m. ET), according to Flight Aware.
Officials react: The Israeli prime minister’s office and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs released a joint statement, saying Israel’s government is monitoring developments at the airport.
“Israel expects the Russian legal authorities to safeguard the well-being of all Israeli citizens and Jews wherever they are and to take strong action against the rioters and against the wild incitement being directed against Jews and Israelis,” the statement added.
The United States also called on Russia to protect Israelis and Jews.
In a post on the social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter, the Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Antisemitism, Amb. Deborah E. Lipstadt, condemned the incident.
“We condemn the violent protests that have been reported in Russia threatening Israelis and Jews. We call on Russian authorities to ensure their safety,” Lipstadt said.
Sergey Melikov, head of the Dagestan Republic, also denounced the unrest in a message on Telegram.
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Netanyahu deletes social media post accusing security chiefs of failing to warn about October 7 attack
From CNN's Lucas Lilieholm, Tamar Michaelis, Maija Ehlinger and Laura Paddison
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends a press conference at the Kirya military base in Tel Aviv on Saturday.
Abir Sultan/Pool/AFP/Getty Images
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu received sharp criticism after he accused security chiefs in a now-deleted social media post of failing to warn him about the impending Hamas attack prior to October 7.
Amid a chorus of disapproval from opponents and allies, Netanyahu deleted the post on Sunday morning, issuing a rare apology and stating Israel’s security heads had his “full backing.”
But the incident has done little to quell increasing frustration and anger directed at Israel’s leader for failing to anticipate the brutal Hamas attacks, which saw the group kill at least 1,400 people and take more than 200 hostages, according to the Israel Defense Forces.
Netanyahu’s tweet comes at a time when he is also under increasing pressure from the families of hostages for a “comprehensive deal” to ensure their release. These calls are becoming more urgent amid concerns for what Israel’s expanding ground operations could mean for the safety of hostages trapped in Gaza.
In the now-deleted post on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, Netanyahu said, “At no point was a warning given to Prime Minister Netanyahu on Hamas’s intention to start a war. On the contrary, all the defense officials, including the heads of the Intelligence Directorate and the Shin Bet, assessed that Hamas was deterred.”
An outpouring of criticism swiftly followed Netanyahu’s post, following which, the prime minister deleted the post on Sunday morning and issued an apology. “I was wrong. Things I said following the press conference should not have been said and I apologize for that,” he wrote on X. Israel’s security chiefs had his “full backing,” he added.
But even in this apology, Netanyahu made no mention of his own responsibility for the failure to anticipate the deadliest attack in Israel’s history. By contrast, security chiefs Ronen Bar and Maj. Gen. Aharon Haliva, as well as chief of staff of the IDF Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, have all taken responsibility to some extent for failures that led to the attacks.
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International Criminal Court prosecutor says strikes on civilian infrastructure always have to be justified
From CNN's Melissa Bell and Chris Liakos in Cairo, and Catherine Nicholls and Jessie Gretener in London
The International Criminal Court prosecutor Karim Khan told CNN on Sunday that anyone who targets civilian infrastructure in the Israel-Gaza conflict will need to “justify every strike.”
“What I can say, clearly, is the willful killing and hostage-taking are great breeches of the Geneva Conventions,” Khan said. “In all circumstances, human objects have to be protected, unless you can establish that they’ve lost their protection,” he continued.
Khan said civilian targets, such as a “house or school or hospital or a church or a mosque,” are required to be protected under international law unless they become military objectives.
He said to determine whether those targets are military objectives is “complex” and will require analysis and information.
“You’ve got to prove that — you can’t assume it. And the burden of proof is on the person that is firing at, or targeting the dwelling house, or the school or the hospital or the church or the mosque,” Khan outlined.
The prosecutor also warned that denying humanitarian assistance to civilians is a crime.
“I think that’s, again, a matter that needs urgent consideration by Israel — to make sure that food and medicine go to children and women and men,” Khan said.
He suggested that, even if a child were to survive an attack initially, a subsequent lack of medical care may mean dire consequences.
“What kind of hope does a baby have, does a child have, to medical care if there’s no anesthetic? If there’s no morphine? If there’s no medicine?” he asked.
“Whether a child is born Jewish in Israel or is a Christian or Muslim in Gaza — they’re children and we should have that sense of humanity — that legal, ethical, moral responsibility to do right by them,” Khan stated.
More background: The ICC is an independent organization based in The Hague in the Netherlands and is not part of the United Nations system. Under Article 5 of the Rome Statute, the ICC has jurisdiction over genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes.
However, the ICC can only exercise jurisdiction over crimes if they were committed on the territory of a country that is a member — or by one of its nationals.
Israel is not party to the Rome Statute.
There have been some case-by-case exceptions. A state that is not party to the ICC can make a declaration to accept the jurisdiction of the ICC, and the United Nations Security Council can refer situation to the ICC even if the UN member state is not party to the statute.
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UAE will seek resolution for "immediate humanitarian pause" at UN Security Council meeting, sources say
From CNN’s Becky Anderson in Doha and Richard Roth in New York
Members of the United Nations Security Council vote during a meeting at the UN headquarters in New York on October 25.
David 'Dee' Delgado/Reuters
The United Nations Security Council will hold an emergency meeting Monday regarding Israel’s ground invasion of Gaza, diplomatic sources confirmed.
The United Arab Emirates will seek a binding resolution from other Security Council members for an “immediate humanitarian pause” in the fighting, the sources said.
The emergency meeting comes after 120 countries voted for a United Nations resolution on Friday, introduced by Jordan, that called for a “sustained humanitarian truce” in Gaza. The United States was one of 14 countries that voted against the resolution, with 45 countries abstaining.
The sources saidthe draft text of the Security Council resolution calls for “an immediate humanitarian truce” and further “humanitarian pauses.”
Earlier this month, the United States vetoed a draft resolution at the UNSC which called for a humanitarian pause.
The UAE is the only Arab country currently a member of the UNSC.
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US worked to restore connectivity in Gaza, official says
From CNN’s Kevin Liptak
The US applied pressure on Israel to restore connectivity in Gaza after phone and internet service was severed late last week, according to a senior US official.
The blackout — which left civilians, aid groups and journalists without any means of communicating with the outside world — came amid heavy Israeli bombardment of the enclave. Service appeared to be gradually restored on Sunday.
The official said the US made clear to Israel the importance of restoring service in Gaza.
Speaking in an interview Sunday, US national security adviser Jake Sullivan underscored the importance of communications networks in Gaza.
“That was something that we cared about, worked on, and we are glad to see that restoration,” he said.
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"Fabric of society is starting to break down" in Gaza, UN agency says
From CNN's Helena Geers, Rosanne Roobeek, Anna Gorzkowska, and Jessie Gretener in London
Palestinians check damage at the site of Israeli strikes on houses in Khan Younis on Sunday.
Mohammed Salem/Reuters
The “fabric of society” in Gaza is starting to break down, an official from the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) told CNN — echoing warnings Sunday of a breakdown in civil order.
Thomas White, director of Affairs for Gaza for UNRWA, spoke about how people were looting logistic and aid warehouses in Gaza.
White said he was concerned for the people of Gaza but also for the UNRWA’s ability to maintain operations there. He called for a humanitarian ceasefire, citing the urgent need “get the assistance that people need and stabilize society in Gaza.”
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UN secretary-general calls for leaders to "step back from the brink." Here's the latest diplomatic news
From CNN Staff
United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres said he urged “all those with responsibility to step back from the brink” while speaking about the Israel-Gaza conflict on Sunday.
Guterres said he will “continue to insist on the immediate and unconditional release of all the hostages in Gaza,” and reiterated his “appeal for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire.”
“I repeat my utter condemnation of the appalling attacks perpetrated by Hamas,” Guterres echoed. “There is no justification, ever, for the killing, injuring and abduction of civilians.”
Guterres continued by saying the situation in Gaza was “growing more desperate by the hours” and called for all parties to respect their obligations under international humanitarian law.
“I regret that instead of a critically needed humanitarian pause supported by the international community, Israel has intensified its military operations,” he said.
Here’s what else top diplomats and world leaders are doing on the diplomatic front Sunday:
French President Emmanuel Macron said 17 metric tonnes of humanitarian freight arrived in Egypt from France on Sunday.
“We are continuing our efforts by air and sea. Together, in solidarity, alongside Egypt and the Red Crescent,” Macron posted on X, formerly Twitter.
He also reiterated a call for a humanitarian truce for Gaza.
Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre said he believes Israel has crossed the line regarding international law while speaking to Norwegian state broadcaster NRK on Sunday.
Støre said he was specifically referring to Israeli “attacks coming from the air against civilian areas where people have nowhere to hide.”
US President Joe Biden spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi Sunday about the need for the continued flow of aid into Gaza and stressed the importance of protecting civilians lives, according to the White House.
In the call with Netanyahu, Biden reiterated his support for Israel to defend itself but said Israel needs to do so “in a manner consistent with international humanitarian law that prioritizes the protection of civilians.” He also called for significantly increasing the flow of humanitarian assistance into Gaza and discussed ongoing efforts to locate hostages still held by Hamas.
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US Marine rapid response force moves toward eastern Mediterranean, sources say
From CNN’s Oren Liebermann
A US Marine rapid response force is moving toward the eastern Mediterranean Sea, according to two officials — amid concerns over the war in Gaza broadening into a regional conflict.
The 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit, aboard the USS Bataan amphibious assault ship, was operating in the waters of the Middle East in recent weeks, but it began making its way toward the Suez Canal late last week, the officials said.
The Bataan is currently in the Red Sea and is expected to pass into the eastern Mediterranean soon, one official said.
The move will place the Marine unit closer to Lebanon and Israel as the US is warning citizens to leave Lebanon. One of the typical roles of a Marine Expeditionary Unit is to help civilians evacuate.
CNN has reached out to the US Defense Department for comment.
On Tuesday, the White House said it would be “imprudent and irresponsible” not to plan for a possible evacuation of American citizens from the Middle East, including Israel and Lebanon. But at the time, National Security Council strategic communications coordinator John Kirby said, “We’re not at a point of execution right now.”
But on Friday, as Israel expanded its ground campaign in Gaza, the US embassy in Beirut once again urged Americans to “leave now,” warning that the best time to leave a country is “before a crisis.”
Earlier this month, the US State Department raised the travel advisory level for Lebanon last week to Level 4: Do Not Travel.
More background: The US has warned there is an “elevated risk” of the war between Israel and Hamas spilling over into a broader regional conflict, despite the efforts of the Biden administration to keep the fighting contained to Gaza.
One of the highest risks comes from Israel’s northern border with Lebanon, where there is an ongoing, if still low-level, exchange of hostilities with Hezbollah, a powerful Iranian proxy.
In 2006 during the last war between Israel and Hezbollah, the State Department ordered a non-combatant evacuation for American citizens in Lebanon, ultimately evacuating approximately 15,000 Americans in about two weeks.
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Video shows Hamas launching weaponized drone from Gaza residential building during October 7 attack
From CNN's Paul P. Murphy
Hamas launched at least one of its weaponized drones in the October 7 terror attack from a residential building in southern Gaza, video circulating social media shows.
CNN geolocated the takeoff site in the video to a residential building on the eastern outskirts of Khuza’a, in southern Gaza.
It’s the latest video to come to light from captured Hamas weaponry and body cameras that sheds new insight into how Hamas conducted its surprise assault on Israel.
The drone is seen rising in the video from the building, away from Khuza’a and toward the Gaza-Israel border. A second video, taken near an Israeli military outpost just east of Nir Oz, shows the drone flying.
It is suddenly heard losing propulsion and is then seen hitting the ground. It’s unclear what caused the drone to crash, and it’s unclear whether it dropped munitions before crashing.
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Cousin of Israeli held hostage in Gaza: "You must avoid any action that could hurt hostages"
From CNN’s Abby Baggini
Boaz Atzili, the cousin of Israeli hostage Aviv Atzili, spoke to a crowd calling for the release of the hostages held by Hamas at a Sunday rally in Washington, DC.
Aviv and his Israeli-American wife, Liat Beinin Atzili, are believed to have been taken hostage by Hamas after the group attacked their home in Kibbutz Nir Oz on October 7, according to Boaz.
He said the family’s home was found empty and burned, but that their cell phone later pinged inside Gaza, leading the Atzili family to believe that Hamas is holding the couple.
Liat’s father, Yehuda Beinin, previously told CNN that his daughter and son-in-law’s official status has been updated to “probably abducted.”
“They are a wonderful couple,” Boaz said of Aviv and Liat, both 49 and parents to three adult children.
Boaz, who teaches international politics, called for an end to military action in Gaza, fearing that it could harm the hostages and perpetuate a cycle of violence.
“Our family wants to see Aviv and Liat hugging their children again, please,” he concluded.
The demonstrators, who gathered in front of the Red Cross National Headquarters, plan to hold a rally every Sunday until the hostages are released.
Family members of the hostages spoke with members of Congress on Thursday and participated in the Empty Shabbat Table event at the Lincoln Memorial Friday afternoon.
In Israel, families of hostages say they told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a meeting Saturday that they would only accept an “everyone in return for everyone” deal, which would secure the immediate release of all hostages.h
The number of hostages believed to be held by Hamas in Gaza is up to 239, Israeli military spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said Sunday. Officials have said the exact number of captives held by the group and other militants in Gaza has been difficult to precisely assess.
CNN’s Tamar Michaelis contributed reporting to this post.
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Civilians say they can't find a safe place to stay as they flee Israel's offensive in northern Gaza
From CNN Staff
People take the bodies out of the mortuary of Al Aqsa Martyrs Hospital to bury them in Deir al-Balah, Gaza, on Saturday.
Ashraf Amra/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
The Israel Defense Forces have told civilians in Gaza to leave the northern part of the enclave, as it continues to strike what it says are Hamas targets in the north. But many of the people who followed that evacuation order are finding it impossible to find a safe place to stay.
Hala Bin Naeem is from Beit Hanoun, a city in the northeastern corner of the Gaza Strip. She and her family fled their home when Hamas launched its attacks on Israel on October 7, and have been sheltering in the Deir al-Balah refugee camp.
The camp lies south of Wadi Gaza, within the area that the IDF instructed people to evacuate to. But they couldn’t escape the danger. Bin Naeem said two of her sisters-in-law were killed in a strike on October 11. Her niece and sister were wounded.
Eyewitnesses have told CNN that the area of Deir al-Balah was bombed Friday night, alongside other locations in central Gaza.
“We also went to the schools, and the situation has become dangerous, and it becomes more dangerous day in, day out. We are really very frightened and are subjected to a lot of danger. So I hope the war ends and we live normal life and we win victory. That’s it,” Bin Naeem said.
The situation at the camp is dire, the 13-year-old said.
On the ground: Fighting continues during Israel’s expanded ground operations in the Gaza Strip.
Israeli soldiers killed and wounded several “terrorists” Sunday who emerged from a tunnel near the Erez crossing in northern Gaza, the Israel Defense Forces said Sunday.
Meanwhile Israeli aircraft, with support from ground troops, struck what the IDF described as “two staging grounds” and killed several “terrorists.”
CNN’s Ivana Kottasová and Pierre Meilhan contributed reporting to this post.
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What to know about Iran's role in the fears surrounding a broader Middle East conflict
From CNN's Nadeen Ebrahim
Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi welcomes the Saudi Ambassador to Iran in Tehran on October 24.
Experts say that while Iran is wary of being dragged into the Israel-Hamas war, it may not be in full control if the militias it backs in the region — like the Lebanese paramilitary group Hezbollah — independently intervene as Hamas suffers heavy blows and the death toll in Gaza continues to mount.
“What connects all these groups to Iran is their anti-Israel policies,” said Sima Shine, head of the Iran program at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv, noting that while Iran has varying levels of influence over the groups, it doesn’t dictate all their actions.
Raisi’s comments were not the first warning from an Iranian official of the potential for a broader conflict.
Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian has also warned that Israel’s bombardment of Gaza could have far-reaching consequences, saying that if Israel does not halt its airstrikes, “it is highly probable that many other fronts will be opened.”
“This option is not ruled out and this is becoming increasingly more probable,” he told Al Jazeera in a recent interview.
Last Monday, Abdollahian said the US has sent Iran two messages regarding escalation in the region.
“The first message said that the United States is not interested in expanding the war, and the second message asked Iran to have self-restraint and insisted that Iran should also ask other countries and other sides to have self-restraint,” Abdollahian said during a news conference in Tehran, without saying how and when the messages were delivered.
He added that while the US says it wants to de-escalate, it has contradicted itself by continuing to support Israel.
Trita Parsi, vice president of the Quincy Institute in Washington, DC, said there is no appetite or desire from either Iran, the US or Israel for a wider war, but that Washington’s failure to restrain Israel may inadvertently drive the region toward escalation.
US President Joe Biden has pledged continued support for Israel, which has hardened Arab sentiment across the region and translated to mass protests against Israeli and American policies.
“The only actor that has a clear interest in (a wider conflict) is Hamas, given that an enlargement of the war could change the dynamics in a favorable way for them,” Parsi said. In the absence of US efforts to rein in Israel, “many (regional) actors are going to feel compelled to step in… because of their own strategic calculations.”
“When Israel is mobilizing 300,000 (troops), it is not likely that Hezbollah is going to sit there and assume that this is done only to go after Hamas,” he said, adding that it will factor in the risk of Israel going after the Lebanese group as well.
Doctors Without Borders transfers 26 tons of medical supplies to Egypt for Gaza
From CNN’s Zeena Saifi in Tel Aviv and David Wilkinson in London
Médecins Sans Frontières — also known as Doctors Without Borders — has sent 26 tons of medical supplies on a World Health Organization plane to Egypt to support the emergency medical response in Gaza, it said in a statement on Sunday.
The supply transfer will be coordinated with the Egyptian Red Crescent. Doctors Without Borders said the medical supplies can cover the needs for 800 surgical interventions and are destined for healthcare facilities in Gaza in collaboration with local health authorities.
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Israeli airstrikes have caused extensive damage to Gaza hospital, aid organization says
From CNN’s Abeer Salman and Jessie Gretener
Israeli airstrikes have “caused extensive damage to hospital departments and exposed residents and patients to suffocation” at the Al-Quds Hospital, the Palestinian Red Crescent Society said Sunday.
The aid organization accused Israel of “deliberately” launching the airstrikes “directly next to Al-Quds Hospital, with the aim of forcing the medical staff, displaced people, and patients to evacuate the hospital.”
Videos from the Palestinian Red Crescent show dust clouding up hallways in the hospital, with some people trying to put on face masks. Other video obtained by CNN appears to show the aftermath of a strike, with a cloud of dust rising next to the hospital.
The director of Al-Quds Hospital, Dr. Bashar Mourad, told CNN the vicinity of the hospital had been targeted three times by Israeli airstrikes Sunday as of 4:45 p.m. local time (10:45 a.m. ET).
CNN has asked the Israel Defense Forces about the aid organization’s reports that theAl-Quds Hospital was specifically targeted by airstrikes.
Some background: Al-Quds Hospital is treating hundreds of patients, including wounded people, patients in intensive care and children in incubators, the Palestinian Red Crescent said. In addition, approximately 12,000 internally displaced civilians are currently sheltering at the hospital.
The hospital is located in the Tal Al Hawa neighborhood in Gaza City, north of Wadi Gaza — the line south of which Israel has urged people in Gaza to flee.
Earlier Sunday, the Palestinian Red Crescent had said it received a warning to immediately evacuate the hospital. The World Health Organization has said the order is impossible without endangering the lives of patients.
In response to questions about the evacuation warning and medical workers’ response, Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Maj. Nir Dinar told CNN, “They received much more than two (warnings) for the last three weeks.”
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UN food program says aid warehouse break-ins show "growing hunger and desperation" in Gaza
From CNN's Zeena Saifi in Tel Aviv and Chris Liakos in Cairo
Palestinians storm a UN-run aid supply center in Deir al-Balah on Saturday.
Mohammed Abed/AFP/Getty Images
The United Nations World Food Programme said some of its aid supplies were looted in Gaza and warned of “growing hunger and desperation” in a news release Sunday.
The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East said earlier Sunday that “thousands” of people had broken into some of its warehouses and distribution centers in the central and southern areas of the strip, “taking wheat flour and other basic survival items like hygiene supplies.”
The food program said one of the warehouses was storing some of its food commodities, and supplies from humanitarian deliveries through Egypt.
The food program pointed to the “harrowing 24-hour communication blackout” and “persistent access challenges” that brought all of its operations to a halt as a result of Israel’s extensive airstrikes Saturday.
“WFP plans to provide food lifeline to over one million people who are going hungry now and needs a steady supply of food with at least 40 WFP trucks to cross daily into Gaza to be able to meet the escalating needs,” the statement said. “So far emergency food and cash assistance has reached over 635,200 people in both Gaza and the West Bank.”
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Israeli fighter jets strike Hezbollah military infrastructure, IDF says
From CNN Pierre Meilhan
The Israeli military said its fighter jets struck Hezbollah infrastructure in southern Lebanon Sunday in response to shelling toward northern Israel from a “terrorist cell.”
The strike took place in the Har Dov area, and Israeli aircraft destroyed weapons that could have been used for further shelling, the Israel Defense Forces said via Telegram.
Of the three launches from that area in southern Lebanon, the Israeli military said it intercepted two, and the third landed in an open area.
In addition, several launches were fired toward the Malkia area in northern Israel, but two of them were intercepted and there were no injuries, according to the IDF.
Remember: This fighting is centered on northern Israel and southern Lebanon — separate from Israel’s fighting with Hamas farther south, which is centered around Gaza. But an uptick in clashes with Hezbollah has raised fears that the powerful Lebanese paramilitary group could actively participate in the conflict.
Hezbollah has unambiguously supported the Palestinian militants and roundly condemned Israel’s offensive in Gaza, but it has not intervened on behalf of Hamas so far.
The group has explicitly linked its attacks on Israel to the IDF’s strikes in Lebanese territory, and the fighting remains limited to this border region for now.
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US communicating with Israel at "the highest levels" about protecting Gaza civilians, official says
National security adviser Jake Sullivan said US President Joe Biden would speak later Sunday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — their first known conversation since Israel expanded its ground operations in Gaza — and would reiterate the importance of distinguishing “between terrorists and civilians” as Israel conducts its operation.
The assault on Gaza has left thousands of Palestinian civilians dead and worsened the humanitarian crisis in the enclave. Aid has been slow to enter and civilians, including hundreds of Americans, have been unable to leave. While some aid has made its way to Gaza, humanitarian workers say it is a fraction of what’s required for the 2.2 million people crammed into Gaza under a blockade imposed by Israel and Egypt.
More than 200 hundred hostages also remain held by Hamas on the strip, according to officials, and securing their release could be complicated by the expanded operation.
Sullivan said Israel was solely responsible for its military operations. “They’re the ones making decisions, they’re the ones conducting the operations,” he said, declining to openly criticize any aspect of the new military effort.
“I’m not going to react to every strike, every move that they make,” he said.
Israel’s intentions in Gaza: Sullivan did indicate that tougher conversations were being held behind the scenes between senior US and Israeli officials — including Biden and Netanyahu — about the scope and intent of Israel’s going into Gaza.
“We’ve asked them hard questions, the same hard questions that we would ask ourselves if we were seeking to conduct an operation to take out a terrorist threat,” Sullivan said. “We’ve pressed them on questions like objectives and matching means to objectives, about both tactical and strategic issues associated with this operation.”
Sullivan said Hamas was “making life extremely difficult for Israel” by using civilians as human shields and placing its rocket infrastructure among civilian populations.
The risk of expanding Middle East conflict is real, US national security adviser says
From CNN’s Kevin Liptak and Avery Lotz
An explosion as seen from the Israeli border with Gaza on Sunday.
Fadel Senna/AFP/Getty Images
The US sees an “elevated risk” of a spillover conflict in the Middle East as Iranian proxies continue targeting American troops stationed in the region.
“We are vigilant, because we are seeing elevated threats against our forces throughout the region and an elevated risk of this conflict spreading to other parts of the region. We are doing everything in our power to deter and prevent that,” US national security adviser Jake Sullivan said on CBS’ “Face the Nation” Sunday.
The airstrikes against the facilities linked to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and affiliated groups did not result in any casualties, the US assessed.
Asked about US strikes on Iranian proxies in the region, Sullivan said on ABC, “If attacks continue, we will respond, and I think the Iranians understand our message.”
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Israel's military describes fighting with Hamas on the ground in northern Gaza Strip
From CNN's Amir Tal
The Israeli military is continuing ground operations in the northern Gaza Strip, the Israel Defense Forces said in a statement Sunday.
Israeli “aircraft, guided by IDF troops, struck Hamas military structures, some of which contained Hamas terrorists,” the military said. “In addition, anti-tank missile launching posts, observation posts and military infrastructure were struck.”
“Terrorists who shot at the soldiers were killed, as well as terrorists who were identified on the coastline in the Gaza Strip near the area of Zikim,” the IDF said.
Israeli troops have advanced over two miles into northern Gaza, video suggests
From CNN's Paul P. Murphy
Israeli troops appear to have advanced over two miles into Gaza, according to a CNN analysis of video published by an Israeli media outlet.
The troops in the video, taken on Saturday, are seen putting an Israeli flag on a Gaza resort hotel’s roof. CNN geolocated the video to an area just over two miles from the Gaza-Israeli border.
“Soldiers of the 52 Battalion of the 401 Brigade are waving the Israeli flag in the heart of Gaza, by the beach,” a soldier is heard saying in the video, taken several miles north of central Gaza City. “We will not forgive nor forget, and we’ll not stop until the victory.”
The video is one of the first glimpses into where Israeli ground forces have been, and what they’ve been doing, during the expanded ground operations in Gaza.
A communications blackout in Gaza has significantly hampered the flow of information out of it, though providers said service was gradually being restored Sunday.
The video was published by Israeli newspaper Israel Hayom. CNN has asked the Israel Defense Forces for comment on the video, and why soldiers are installing an Israeli flag on the hotel roof.
On the ground: A CNN team in the Israeli city of Sderot, near the Gaza Strip perimeter, heard machine gun fire at regular intervals Sunday.
The gunfire was heard from the northern part of the enclave, close to the border, while the Israel Defense Forces continued to fire artillery rounds and mortars from outside the border further south.
Earlier on Sunday, IDF tanks and armored personnel vehicles were seen approaching the border while helicopters, drones and fighter jets flew overhead.
A large column of vehicles was seen north of the strip. Staging grounds further away from the border that were full of tanks and armored vehicles just a few days ago are now nearly empty, suggesting the troops have moved closer to the perimeter.
CNN’s Ivana Kottasová contributed reporting to this post from Sderot, Israel.
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Israel has "crossed the red lines" in Gaza, Iranian President Raisi says
From CNN's Radina Gigova
Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi speaks to the crowds gathered to protest in Tehran in support of Palestinians in Gaza on October 18.
Atta Kenare/AFP/Getty Images
Israel has “crossed the red lines” in Gaza, which “may force everyone to take action,” Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi said Sunday.
“Zionist regime’s crimes have crossed the red lines, which may force everyone to take action. Washington asks us to not do anything, but they keep giving widespread support to Israel,” Raisi said in a post on social media.
“The US sent messages to the Axis of Resistance but received a clear response on the battlefield,” Raisi said.
Some context: Israel’s fierce military campaign in Gaza has raised concerns that more fronts will open up. Iran is allied to Hamas as well as Hezbollah, the Lebanese militant group that has been involved in tit-for-tat exchanges of fire with Israel in recent weeks.
Experts say that while Iran is wary of being dragged into the Israel-Hamas war, it may not be in full control if the militias it backs in the region independently intervene as Hamas suffers heavy blows and the death toll in Gaza continues to mount.
In the early days after the October 7 attacks by Hamas in Israel, questions were raised about Iran’s potential involvement in the killings. Tehran at the time commended the operation but was quick to deny any hand in it.
Initial US intelligence also suggested that Iranian officials were surprised by Hamas’ attack, and that Tehran was not directly involved in its planning, resourcing or approval, CNN has reported.
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10 aid trucks pass from Egypt into Gaza through key border crossing
From CNN's Asmaa Khalil in Rafah, Egypt, and Abeer Salman in Jerusalem
Ten aid trucks passed inspection procedures at the Rafah border crossing and were received by the Palestinian Red Crescent on the Gazan side on Sunday, according to a CNN freelance journalist on the ground on the Egyptian side.
“Today we received 10 trucks from our brothers at the Egyptian Red Crescent through the Rafah crossing, containing food supplies and medical necessities. The total number of received trucks so far has reached 94, while fuel has not been allowed to enter yet,” the Palestinian Red Crescent said in an updated statement on Sunday afternoon.
The journalist on the ground saw a total of 40 trucks from Egypt’s National Alliance for Civil Development Work arrive on the Egyptian side of the crossing between Saturday and Sunday morning — most of which are waiting to undergo security checks before entering Gaza.
The Israeli military said Sunday it expects more aid trucks to begin entering Gaza soon.
CNN also spotted the International Criminal Court’s chief prosecutor Karim Khan at the Rafah crossing.
A key link: The Rafah crossing is the only entry point to Gaza not controlled by Israel, which has implemented a “complete siege” on the Hamas-run enclave and the more than 2 million Palestinians living there.
Some aid trucks have been able to enter Gaza through Egypt since the crisis began, as seen by CNN’s team on the Palestinian side of the border, but the main United Nations agency working in Gaza has warned the limited shipments have done little to address humanitarian needs — and that more aid is desperately needed.
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Second-largest hospital in Gaza City warned to evacuate ahead of possible bombardment, humanitarian group says
From CNN's Abeer Salman, Richard Allen Greene, Radina Gigova and Muhammad Darwish
The Palestine Red Crescent Society said it has received a warning Sunday from the Israeli military to immediately evacuate Al-Quds Hospital, the second-largest in Gaza City, ahead of possible bombardment.
The hospital is located in the Tal Al Hawa neighborhood, in Gaza City, north of Wadi Gaza – the line south of which the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has urged people in Gaza to flee.
The hospital is located in the Tal Al Hawa neighbourhood, in Gaza city, north of Wadi Gaza – the line south of which the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has urged people in Gaza to flee.
World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus described the evacuation threat as “deeply concerning.”
“We reiterate - it’s impossible to evacuate hospitals full of patients without endangering their lives,” he added in a post on social media Sunday.
In response to questions about the Palestinian Red Crescent statement, Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Maj. Nir Dinar told CNN on Sunday, “They received much more than two (warnings) for the last three weeks.”
Al-Quds Hospital is treating hundreds of patients, including wounded people, patients in intensive care and children in incubators, the Palestinian Red Crescent said. In addition, approximately 12,000 internally displaced civilians are currently sheltering at the hospital.
The aid organization’s management and operations teams, which are helping civilians staying in the northern Gaza Strip, are also stationed in the hospital, the organization said.
Repeated warnings: In a statement released on October 14, the World Health Organization strongly condemned “Israel’s repeated orders” for the evacuation of 22 hospitals in northern Gaza, and said those evacuation orders are “a death sentence for the sick and injured.”
“Hospital directors and health workers are now facing an agonizing choice: abandon critically ill patients amid a bombing campaign, put their own lives at risk while remaining on site to treat patients, or endanger their patients’ lives while attempting to transport them to facilities that have no capacity to receive them,” WHO said.
“Overwhelmingly, caregivers have chosen to stay behind, and honor their oaths as health professionals to ‘do no harm,’ rather than risk moving their critically ill patients during evacuations,” WHO said. “Health workers should never have to make such impossible choices,” it added.
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Death toll in Gaza rises to 7,950
From CNN’s Abeer Salman and Eyad Kourdi
The father of a young boy from the al-Aqad family, reacts as he touches the body of his child, killed in an Israeli strike on Khan Younis, southern Gaza, before his burial on October 29.
Mahmud Hams/AFP/Getty Images
The death toll in Gaza has risen to 7,960, the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Ramallah announced on Sunday, drawing the data from sources in the Hamas-controlled enclave.
The enclave has been pummelled by Israeli strikes since October 7, which has also resulted in over 20,000 injured, the ministry said.
Nearly three-quarters – 73% – of those killed are from vulnerable populations, including children, women, and elderly individuals, according to the ministry report.
The ministry added that the total number of dead includes 116 medical personnel. Additionally, 24 hospitals, which together have a capacity of 2,000 beds, have been instructed to evacuate in the northern part of Gaza.
Video shows aftermath of destruction at mosque and houses in Gaza's Al-Nuseirat refugee camp
From CNN's Kareem Khadder in Jerusalem
Video from the ground in central Gaza shows the aftermath of the destruction of a mosque and adjacent houses in the Al-Nuseirat refugee camp on Sunday.
The video, obtained by CNN from a Gaza-based journalist, shows a large amount of destruction at the site of an airstrike at Bilal Bin Rabbah mosque and people searching through the rubble to look for survivors.
According to medical sources at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in the nearby city of Deir Al-Balah, Gaza, an Israeli strike hit the mosque, killing 13 people and leaving “dozens” of other people injured.
CNN cannot independently verify the number of casualties.
Medical sources added that the victims were from several families who were taking shelter in houses around the site of the mosque after they were displaced from northern Gaza. The mosque in Al-Nuseirat is south of Wadi Gaza.
Additional footage that CNN obtained from the journalist on the ground shows people praying over several bodies that are wrapped in shrouds outside of Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, as well as some of the victims’ funerals.
Another survivor, Mohammad Ahmad, said in an interview that people from at least three families staying next to the mosque in “Block C” of the camp were killed.
CNN has reached out to the IDF for comment.
In a statement earlier on Sunday, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it struck more than 450 targets in the past day, including command centers, observation posts, and missile launch sites, as Israel continues to expand its ground incursion into Gaza.
One video segment the IDF released along with its statement appears to show a missile hitting a building next to a mosque. It is not clear if that is the Bilal Ben Rabbah mosque.
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It's afternoon in Israel and Gaza. Here's what you need to know
From CNN staff
The United Nations has warned that civil order is starting to break down in the besieged Gaza Strip, with thousands breaking into warehouses to take basic supplies including wheat flour and hygiene products.
“People are scared, frustrated and desperate,” said Thomas White, director of the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) affairs in the Gaza Strip.
Below are the latest developments…
New phase of war: In a statement on Saturday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared that a second phase of the war had begun, with the goals of destroying Hamas and returning the hostages the militant group took on October 7 and still holds in Gaza. Netanyahu also warned that the war in Gaza is “going to be long.”
Communications partially restored: Communications in Gaza were partially restored on Sunday morning, according to two service providers and a monitoring group. Palestine Telecommunications (Paltel) announced in a post on its Facebook page that land line, cellular and internet connectivity were gradually being restored after being severely disrupted on Friday evening. The Jawwal Telecommunication Company also announced Sunday that its telecommunication services were “gradually being restored.”
450 targets hit: The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) struck more than 450 targets over the past day, including command centers, observation posts and missile launch sites, as Israel steps up its operation in Gaza, according to a statement Sunday. “As part of the expansion of ground activities, combined combat forces struck terrorist cells that attempted to attack the forces and terrorist cells that planned to carry out anti-tank missile launches,” the statement said.
More aid trucks expected: The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) Representative and Country Director for Palestine Samer Abdeljaber told CNN that 40 more aid trucks are expected to enter Gaza on Sunday amid a worsening humanitarian situation. “We hope today we will be able to allow more trucks into Gaza – 40 trucks are expected to be crossing. However, we have to also note that that’s not enough compared to the soaring needs… at the moment in Gaza, we need more than that,” Abdeljaber said.
Warehouses broken into: The main UN agency in Gaza has said that “thousands” of people have broken into some of its warehouses, “taking wheat flour and other basic survival items like hygiene supplies.” One of the warehouses in the city of Deir al-Balah, in central Gaza, is where UNRWA stores supplies from humanitarian convoys coming from Egypt, the agency said in a statement.
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Israeli military says more aid trucks to enter Gaza and denies shortages in the Strip
From CNN’s Richard Allen Greene and Manveena Suri
The Israeli military said Sunday it expects more aid trucks to begin entering Gaza soon, and denied that there were shortages of food, water or medicine, despite the complete closure Israel imposed on the territory in response to the October 7 Hamas attack.
Israel has set up a joint mechanism with the United Nations, the United States and Egypt to “facilitate the access of humanitarian assistance from Egypt to Gaza,” said Colonel Elad Goren, head of the Civil Affairs Department for COGAT (Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories), at a press briefing on Sunday.
Despite a growing chorus of aid agencies that have released dire warnings about shortages of food, water and medical supplies, Goren stated there was “no food shortage in Gaza,” and insisted there was also enough water and medicine.
A US official who spoke on background regarding private conversations with Israeli officials questioned those assertions.
The main UN agency in Gaza reported Sunday that “thousands” of people had broken into some of its warehouses, “taking wheat flour and other basic survival items like hygiene supplies.”
Director Thomas White warned that “civil order is starting to break down” as people are “scared, frustrated and desperate.”
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Three Palestinian men killed in West Bank overnight, say officials, totaling 114 since October 7
From CNN’s Kareem Khadder
Three Palestinian men were killed in Israeli military incursions into the West Bank overnight, the Palestinian Ministry of Health said Sunday.
That brings the number of Palestinians killed in the territory since October 7 to 114. The Ministry announced the deaths of three men in a short post on its Facebook page.
Some context: Tensions, which were already high before the Hamas attack, have been boiling over in the occupied West Bank, where residents previously told CNN they are fearful of a wave of violence from the Israeli military and security forces, as well as revenge attacks by the estimated 700,000 Israeli settlers living in the area.
Violence has been particularly acute this year, with the number of Palestinians – militants and civilians – killed in the occupied West Bank by Israeli forces since the year began at its highest in nearly two decades.
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UN warns "civil order" starting to break down as Gazans break into warehouses to take basic survival items
From CNN's Radina Gigova
Palestinians storm a UN-run aid supply center, that distributes food to displaced families following Israel's call for more than one million residents in northern Gaza to move south for their safety, in Deir al-Balah, Gaza, on October 28.
Mohammed Abed/AFP/Getty Images
The main United Nations agency in Gaza has warned civil order is breaking down, saying “thousands” of people have broken into some of its warehouses “taking wheat flour and other basic survival items like hygiene supplies.”
One of the warehouses in the city of Deir al-Balah, in central Gaza, is where the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) stores supplies from humanitarian convoys coming from Egypt, the agency said in a statement.
“Tensions and fear are made worse by the cuts in the phones and internet communication lines. They feel that they are on their own, cut off from their families inside Gaza and the rest of the world,” White added.
The “massive” displacement of people from northern Gaza to the south “has placed enormous pressure on those communities, adding further burden on crumbling public services,” the agency said. Some families have received as many as 50 relatives who are taking shelter in one household, it said.
Just over 80 trucks of aid have crossed into Gaza in one week so far, and on Saturday there was no convoy due to the blackout in communications, the agency said.
“The current system of convoys is geared to fail. Very few trucks, slow processes, strict inspections, supplies that do not match the requirements of UNRWA and the other aid organizations, and mostly the ongoing ban on fuel, are all a recipe for a failed system,” White said.
Following the restoration of internet services, UNRWA teams in Gaza “will reassess the situation with the aim of resuming convoys and distribution of assistance,” the agency said.
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CNN team near Gaza hears constant explosions as IDF continues heavy bombing of strip on Sunday
From CNN's Ivana Kottasová and Adi Kopelwitz in Sderot and Sa’ad, near Gaza
Israel Defense Forces continued their campaign of heavy bombing against the Gaza Strip on Sunday morning, combining artillery strikes with air power and tanks.
A CNN team on the ground on the edge of the closed military zone, about a kilometer from the border, heard constant explosions and sporadic machine gunfire on Sunday morning.
The IDF was firing artillery rounds and mortars from outside the border to the east, while machine gunfire was heard from within the Gaza Strip.
Drones, helicopters and F-16 fighter jets were seen flying overhead.
The IDF said that helicopters, under the direction of IDF tanks, were striking Hamas targets in the north of the Gaza Strip.
The CNN team also saw a column of military vehicles, tanks and armored personnel carriers moving towards the northern border of the enclave.
Artificial smoke has been seen billowing from near the perimeter, likely intended to obscure the visibility from across the border.
IDF soldiers stationed by an artillery position about three kilometers east of the Gaza Strip told CNN there has been regular incoming fire coming from Gaza towards Israel as Hamas continues to launch rockets even after three weeks of continuous IDF strikes against its infrastructure in the enclave.
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World Food Programme says 40 more aid trucks expected to enter Gaza but it "needs more"
From CNN’s Eve Brennan
The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) Representative and Country Director for Palestine Samer Abdeljaber told CNN that 40 more aid trucks are expected to enter Gaza on Sunday amid a worsening humanitarian situation.
“We hope today we will be able to allow more trucks into Gaza – 40 trucks are expected to be crossing. However, we have to also note that that’s not enough compared to the soaring needs… at the moment in Gaza, we need more than that,” Abdeljaber said.
The trucks going into the strip include food, water and medical supplies, but not fuel, according to Abdeljaber.
Abdeljaber went on to say that the blackout that happened with telecommunication over the weekend presented a “major challenge” for the World Food Programme.
“We couldn’t coordinate on the ground to facilitate for the trucks to go in,” he said.
Communications in the enclave – including cellular and internet connectivity – were partially restored on Sunday morning, according to two service providers and a monitoring group.
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IDF says it struck more than 450 targets over past day
From CNN’s Amir Tal
Smoke rises as Israeli forces on the border shell many parts of Gaza on October 28.
Mostafa Alkharouf/Anadolu/Getty Images
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) struck more than 450 targets over the past day, including command centers, observation posts, and missile launch sites, as Israel steps up its operation in Gaza, according to a statement Sunday.
Additionally, the IDF said an officer was severely injured by a mortar shell in the northern Gaza Strip and was evacuated for medical treatment.
Some context: Gazans described Friday night’s intense bombardment as the most intense round of airstrikes since Israel began its retaliation of the October 7 Hamas attack.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared Saturday that the second phase of the war had begun, as his forces aim to “destroy” Hamas, in what will be a “long” war.
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Communications in Gaza partially restored
From CNN’s Jomana Karadsheh, Abeer Salman, Paul Murphy and Lucas Lilieholm
Communications in Gaza were partially restored on Sunday morning, according to two service providers and a monitoring group.
Palestine Telecommunications (Paltel) announced in a post on its Facebook page that land line, cellular and internet connectivity were gradually being restored after being severely disrupted on Friday evening.
The Jawwal Telecommunication Company also announced Sunday that its telecommunication services were “gradually being restored.”
In a separate update posted on X (formerly Twitter), the internet monitoring organization NetBlocks said that internet traffic was being restored in Gaza.
Qatari-owned telecommunications company Ooredoo, which also provides cellular service in Gaza, did not provide an update on any resumption of service.
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It's early morning in Israel and Gaza. Catch up on the latest developments in the war
From CNN's Amarachi Orie, Zahid Mahmood, Ivana Kottasová, Kareem Khadder and Lauren Said-Moorhouse
Destruction in northern Gaza after Israeli airstrikes is pictured on October 28.
The expanded operation has left families of the more than 200 hostages taken to Gaza fearful for their loved ones. A group lobbying for the families of Israeli hostages spoke of “the most terrible of all nights” as emotions spiked with the Israel Defense Forces’ (IDF) expansion of its ground operation.
Israel’s goals in this stage: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned Saturday the war in Gaza is “going to be long.” He said the goals of this stage of the war are to destroy Hamas and return the hostages the militant group took on October 7 and still holds in Gaza. Netanyahu confirmed he spoke with family members of the hostages and said he vowed to them that he would exhaust all options to return their loved ones home.
Meanwhile, Israel’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said in a statement his country had entered “a new phase in the war.” The official said Israel “attacked above ground and below ground. We attacked terrorist operatives at all levels, in all places. The instructions to our forces are clear: the operation will continue until a new order is given.”
Details on the expanded ground operation: Israeli forces “went into the Gaza Strip and expanded the ground operation where infantry, armor and engineer units and artillery with heavy fire are taking part,” IDF spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said Saturday morning. “The forces are in the field and continue the fighting,” he added, without giving further details.
Hagari’s words confirm the military operation has undergone a significant expansion after what it had earlier described as two “targeted raids,” which took place on Wednesday night and Thursday night. Both those raids saw ground forces withdraw after a few hours. However, it does not appear as though any major ground offensive aimed at seizing and holding significant amounts of the territory is yet underway. In a fresh call for Gazans to move south, the IDF spoke of an “impending” operation.
Mourning in Gaza: Gazans mourned the loss of their loved ones on Saturday following a night of intense Israeli airstrikes, with many gathering at Al Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al Balah in central Gaza. Video captured by CNN shows multiple bodies, including those of children, covered in white shrouds or thick blankets, placed on the ground in the hospital yard. Another video showed a young man lying on the floor of the hospital as doctors operated on him.
More than 2 million people live in the enclave, and for weeks people in the territory have faced Israeli airstrikes and a growing humanitarian situation, with shortages of water, food and fuel. The IDF said Gazans who had moved south of Wadi Gaza, a waterway bisecting the center of the strip, were in a “protected space,” and would receive more food, water and medicine today, but did not give any details.
Aid agencies lose contact: Communications in the enclave have been severely disrupted, leaving aid agencies out of touch with their staff on the ground and emergency services struggling to reach those in need. The World Health Organization’s (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, on Saturday morning that reports of the intense bombardment are “extremely distressing.” He added: “We are still out of touch with our staff and health facilities. I’m worried about their safety.” Several United Nations agencies have also reported losing contact with their local staff in Gaza.
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Humanitarian situation in Gaza a "catastrophic failing," Red Cross committee president says
From CNN’s Lucas Lilieholm
People mourn Palestinians killed in Israeli airstrikes in Khan Younis, Gaza, on October 28.
Ahmad Hasaballah/Getty Images
The International Committee of the Red Cross has called for an immediate de-escalation of hostilities in Gaza and delivery of humanitarian aid.
Spoljaric added that the “immediate imperative must be to save lives” by ensuring healthcare services, water, and electricity are restored in Gaza.
“Under international humanitarian law, the parties are obligated to spare civilians from the effects of military operations at all times, to distinguish between civilians and military targets, and to never use human shields to prevent military objectives from being attacked,” Spoljaric said.
The ICRC also called for the “immediate release of all hostages” and reiterated the organization’s previous offer to facilitate any future hostage release operation.
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"The war inside Gaza is going to be long," Israeli prime minister warns
From CNN's Kyle Blaine
Israeli tanks and troops move near the border with Gaza in Sderot, Israel, on October 28.
Dan Kitwood/Getty Images
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Saturday drew a connection between the conflict with Hamas and the Arab-Israeli War between 1947 and 1949, which occurred as Israel declared its independence.
“The war inside Gaza is going to be long. This is our second independence war. We’re going to save our country,” Netanyahu said.
Netanyahu said the second stage of the war against Hamas has begun, with the goal of destroying the group’s armed wing and government, and returning hostages held in Gaza home.
Netanyahu also confirmed he spoke with the family of hostages held by Hamas and vowed to them that he would exhaust all options to return their loved ones.
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Families of hostages meet with Netanyahu to call for "comprehensive deal" to return all hostages
From CNN’s Tamar Michaelis in Jerusalem and Maija Ehlinger in Atlanta
Families of hostages held in Gaza say they told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu they would only accept an “everyone in return for everyone” deal, which would secure the immediate release of all hostages.
The families held a news conference shortly after meeting Netanyahu in Tel Aviv on Saturday, just before the prime minister held his own media briefing, where he announced the launch of the second stage of the war in Gaza.
An “everyone for everyone” deal would involve the release of the over 200 hostages in Gaza in exchange for Palestinians currently held in Israeli prisons, which the nongovernmental organization Palestinian Prisoners Club estimates to be 6,630 people.
Hamas released a statement Saturday claiming the group was willing to engage in such a trade, though any such deal would be hugely controversial in Israel.
Speaking Saturday, Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari characterized Hamas’ most recent hostage exchange overture a form of “psychological terror aimed to manipulate Israeli civilians.”
Netanyahu was asked about such a deal at his Saturday news conference, and acknowledged he discussed the option with the families.
“I think that elaborating on this will not help achieve our goal. In the meeting with the families, I felt emotionally helpless,” Netanyahu said.
As the efforts to free the hostages drag on, loved ones have also expressed alarm at the possibility Hamas’ captives will be harmed in Israel’s intensifying bombardment of Gaza.
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Israel says it will fight Elon Musk's pledge to provide aid organizations in Gaza with satellite service
From CNN's Eyad Kourdi, Celine Alkhaldi, Zahid Mahmood and Kyle Blaine
Elon Musk, billionaire and chief executive officer of Tesla, at the Viva Tech fair in Paris, France, on June 16.
Nathan Laine/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Israel vowed to fight Elon Musk’s pledge to provide aid organizations in Gaza with Starlink satellite service as the besieged strip struggles with internet connectivity.
Israeli Minister of Communications Shlomo Karhi said on X, formerly known as Twitter, that Hamas “will use it for terrorist activities.”
“Perhaps Musk would be willing to condition it with the release of our abducted babies, sons, daughters, elderly people. All of them! By then, my office will cut any ties with starlink,” Karhi posted.
Musk made the announcement on X, which he owns, after US Democratic Rep.Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said that “cutting off all communication to a population of 2.2 million is unacceptable.”
In another post replying to another X account, Musk said, “No terminals from Gaza have attempted to communicate with our constellation.”
Communications in the Gaza Strip have been severely disrupted as Israel intensifies its air and ground assault on the region. Aid groups say they have been unable to communicate with teams in the area.
Earlier, the World Health Organization said they are “out of touch” with its staff in Gaza and the commissioner general of the UN Relief Works Agency for Palestine Refugees wrote to staff on Saturday saying that the organization is “deeply worried” about them amid the blackout.
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Israeli military chief says war with Hamas requires ground operation
From CNN's Kyle Blaine, Tamar Michaelis and Jo Shelley
Israel’s military chief said today marks a new stage in the country’s war against Hamas, and that it requires a ground offensive.
“This is a war with multiple stages. Today, we move to the next one,” Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi, chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces, said in a video released by the IDF. “Our forces are currently operating on the ground in the Gaza Strip. These activities are being supported by precise and heavy fire, all in service of the war’s objectives: dismantling Hamas, securing our borders and the supreme effort to return the hostages home.”
More context: A ground offensive in Gaza has been widely expected following the October 7 attacks in Israel by Hamas, but it does not appear as though any major operation aimed at seizing and holding significant amounts of the territory is yet underway.
On the ground: Israel Defense Forces announced Saturday that it had struck several Hamas targets in Gaza as part of its expanded ground operation in the strip.
“Since early Friday evening, combined combat forces of armor, combat engineers and infantry have been operating on the ground in the northern Gaza Strip. As part of the operation, IDF soldiers identified terrorist cells attempting to launch anti-tank missiles and mortar shells and struck them. IDF soldiers also identified and destroyed a booby-trapped structure,” the IDF said in a release.
The IDF said that helicopters, under the direction of IDF tanks, struck a building being used by Hamas as an operational meeting point.
The military also said that Israeli soldiers “neutralized” several terrorist cells that attempted to fire anti-tank missiles at them. Forces also struck Hamas members who were located in what was described as a “booby-trapped structure.”
Communications blackout leaves medics struggling to reach wounded Gazans and families unable to talk
From CNN’s Zahid Mahmoud and Livvy Doherty in London, and Abeer Salmaan and Kareem Khadder in Jerusalem
Settlements and workplaces are heavily damaged as Israeli attacks continue on Gaza on October 28.
Ali Jadallah/Anadolu/Getty Images
A near total communications blackout has impacted the work of medical staff in Gaza, with paramedics unable to reach the injured and hospitals unable to contact each other.
Dr. Mohamad Al-Rayan, a physician at Al Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in central Gaza, said medics have faced delays in getting to people injured by Israeli airstrikes overnight.
He told CNN that hospitals in Gaza had also lost contact with one another, making the transfer of patients needing specialist surgery between hospitals even harder.
A journalist in central Gaza told CNN that Israeli artillery shelling “did not stop” on Saturday. Video filmed by Hassan Eslayeh showed ambulances and cars arriving at the Al Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, with crowds of people waiting outside the hospital entrance. Another video showed a young man lying on the floor of the hospital as doctors operated on him.
Eslayeh said the injured and dead being brought to the hospital were casualties of artillery shelling rather than airstrikes.
Families unable to speak: CNN’s producer in Gaza, Ibrahim Dahman, said he is struggling to contact relatives in the enclave in the face of the blackout.
“I cannot reach them, and I don’t know anything about them,” Dahman said in one of several short voice recordings sent to CNN colleagues on Saturday using a phone with a foreign SIM card, which allows him intermittent connection via WhatsApp.
Since fleeing Gaza City with his wife and children on October 9, Dahman has been using WhatsApp to communicate with friends, family and colleagues.
Now he says “there is no internet throughout the whole of the Gaza Strip” – another cause for concern for him and the other families he is sheltering alongside in the southern city of Khan Younis.
“Everybody is gloomy, everybody is scared. … This is a big, big shock to everyone,” Dahman said.
Jawwal and Ooredoo, two mobile phone companies operating in Gaza, and Paltel, a fixed-line operator, said in separate statements Saturday that their services in the strip remained down.