November 4, 2023 Israel-Hamas war news | CNN

November 4, 2023 Israel-Hamas war news

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CNN embeds with Israeli forces inside Gaza
03:57 - Source: CNN

What we covered

  • US Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with key Middle Eastern leaders today at a summit in Jordan, where he rejected calls for a ceasefire in the war between Israel and Hamas and instead reiterated US support for “humanitarian pauses.”
  • Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said his government opposes any temporary ceasefire in Gaza unless Hamas frees all hostages.
  • Hamas is blocking foreign nationals from leaving Gaza until Israel guarantees that ambulances from the Palestinian enclave can reach the Rafah crossing to Egypt, a US official told CNN Saturday.
  • Israel on Friday claimed responsibility for an airstrike on an ambulance near the enclave’s largest hospital, which witnesses said killed and wounded dozens. Israel said it was targeting Hamas fighters using the vehicle, which the Hamas-controlled health ministry in Gaza has rejected.
  • As Israel intensifies its air and ground assault, up to a million people have fled northern Gaza to the south, according to a US special envoy — worsening the humanitarian situation, which is only expected to grow as more flee.
  • Here’s how to help humanitarian efforts in Israel and Gaza.
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Canada's Trudeau calls for release of hostages and humanitarian aid for Gaza in talks with Netanyahu

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks at a news conference in Montreal, Canada, on September 28.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau expressed his continued support for Israel’s right to defend itself in its war against Hamas when he spoke with his Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu on Saturday.

Trudeau also called for the immediate release of hostages held by Hamas and underlined the need to provide humanitarian aid to those in Gaza, according to a readout from his office.

The Canadian leader received assurances that “Canadians in Gaza will be able to leave in the coming days,” the readout said. 

There are currently 5,755 Canadians registered with the Registration of Canadians Abroad in Israel and 453 Canadians registered in the West Bank and Gaza, according to the latest update from Global Affairs Canada (GAC).

Canadian officials are in contact with 69 Canadians, permanent residents, and family members in the West Bank, 516 in Gaza and 51 in Israel, according to GAC.

Trudeau highlighted his deep concerns over the increasingly dire humanitarian crisis in Gaza, according to the readout, and reiterated Canada’s position on the immediate need to create conditions for urgent and necessary humanitarian aid to flow into the region. 

He also expressed “the importance of upholding international humanitarian law and making every effort to protect Palestinian civilians,” the readout said.

London police arrest 29 at massive pro-Palestinian rally

People gather as they carry Palestinian flags and banners to demonstrate solidarity with the Palestinians and demand an immediate ceasefire at Trafalgar Square in London, United Kingdom on November 4.

Police arrested 29 people in London during a massive pro-Palestinian rally Saturday, citing offenses including inciting racial hatred, racially motivated crimes, violence and assaulting a police officer.

Tens of thousands of demonstrators had gathered at Trafalgar Square for the protest, according to London’s Metropolitan Police Service, and most were demonstrating peacefully.

One man, suspected of making anti-Semitic comments during a speech, was arrested after being identified on social media using retrospective facial recognition technology, police said.

Two others were arrested “on suspicion of breaching section 12 of the Terrorism Act after they were seen displaying a banner appearing to support a proscribed organization,” police added.

Nine people were arrested on suspicion of public order offenses, including two that were allegedly racially aggravated, the statement added.

Pro-Palestinian protests have been held in London, and other cities globally, since the Israel-Hamas war began nearly a month ago, with demonstrators decrying the rising death toll and spiraling humanitarian crisis in Gaza amid Israeli bombardment.

IDF says it will allow four-hour window for civilians in Gaza to evacuate

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it will allow people in Gaza to move south on specified streets Sunday, despite its troops coming under fire on Saturday while trying to secure a safe corridor for civilians.

The main route for evacuation will be Salah Al-Deen Street, with a window between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. local time, according to Avichay Adraee, IDF spokesperson for the Arab media.

It was unclear how widely the message will be received on the ground, given the widespread electricity and internet outages, or how safe the passage will be.

According to Adraee, Hamas on Saturday fired mortar and anti-tank shells toward Israeli forces “who were keen to open the road from the north of the Gaza Strip towards its south.”

The IDF has repeatedly called for civilians in Gaza to move south of Wadi Gaza as it has intensified its air and ground assault on Gaza City and Northern Gaza, including strikes on densely populated areas and civilian infrastructure that the IDF says is being used by Hamas militants. 

Flurry of rockets launched from Gaza into Israel

Israel's Iron Dome system intercepts rockets over the sky of Tel Aviv, Israel, on November 4.

A CNN team close to the Israel-Gaza border witnessed eight rockets fired from Gaza into Israel and shortly after, the IDF said it had intercepted six of the eight rockets. Israeli television channels aired live video of the rockets being brought down by the IDF’s Iron Dome defense system.

The Israeli police also released a statement saying it was “conducting extensive scans to locate possible rocket impact sites in the central region and Tel Aviv.” The statement noted there are no casualties “at this stage.”

Soon after, a barrage of new explosions was seen over Gaza City Saturday night, according to a CNN team close to the border.

The Israel Defense Forces have not yet commented on the new blast.

Palestinian health ministry in Ramallah warns of catastrophic lack of medical resources and fuel in Gaza

The Palestinian Ministry of Health in Ramallah warned Saturday of a “catastrophe within Gaza hospitals,” adding that wounded people are “taking their last breaths” due to the lack of medical resources and fuel. 

Palestinian Health Minister Dr. Mai al-Kaila also called on the international community to provide fuel to Gaza hospitals to prevent the shutdown of services. 

As of midday on Saturday, more than 150 health care professionals in Gaza have been killed, according to the health ministry in Ramallah. The ministry also said “16 hospitals and 32 primary healthcare centers have been taken out of service.”

Organizations outside of Gaza are also raising an alarm about the dire situation in the enclave’s hospitals. 

MedGlobal, a US-based organization that supports local health programs for vulnerable populations across the globe, issued an urgent appeal for fuel to power a generator at Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza.

MedGlobal President Dr. Zaher Sahloul said in a social media post Saturday that the organization’s lead pediatrician in northern Gaza sent him a message about the “catastrophic situation,” adding that a 2-year-old just died.

According to Sahloul, the pediatrician at Kamal Adwan Hospital, Dr. Husam Abu Safyia, added:

Earlier on Saturday, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres also highlighted the lack of medicine and other resources in Gaza, saying, “Fuel to power hospitals and water plants is running out.”

Israel’s stance: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Friday that his government opposes any temporary ceasefire in Gaza unless Hamas frees all the hostages it holds. He also said it would continue to block fuel from entering Gaza. The Israeli military has claimed there are fuel supplies in Gaza being held by Hamas.

Protesters in DC and London urge for ceasefire

Pro-Palestinian protesters rally at Freedom Plaza in Washington, DC, on November 4.

Thousands of protesters rallied in Washington, DC, and in major cities across Europe on Saturday, calling for a ceasefire in the hostilities between Israel and Hamas as the humanitarian situation in Gaza worsens.

In Washington, DC: A crowd of pro-Palestinian protesters packed into Freedom Plaza in the United States capital Saturday afternoon, as speakers called for a ceasefire in Gaza and an end to US aid to Israel.

Freedom Plaza, located near the National Mall and White House, has been nearly entirely filled with chanting demonstrators donning red, green, and black attire and waving Palestinian flags.

The event organizers said they expected thousands of protesters. 

The speakers slammed US President Joe Biden’s administration for its response to the crisis in Gaza, warning that they will not support the president in 2024 if he does not call for a ceasefire in the war.

The march comes after several weekends of pro-Palestinian rallies in Washington.

The crowd is expected to march to the White House and then back to Freedom Plaza later Saturday.

In London: Thousands of people gathered in the UK capital on Saturday to call for a ceasefire in Gaza as airstrikes and fighting on the ground continue.

Demonstrators at the rally, which took place in Trafalgar Square, waved Palestinian flags and banners calling for a “ceasefire now.” Some people held signs that read “Free Palestine” and called for the bombing to stop. 

People attend a rally at Trafalgar Square in London on November 4.

“40,000 people packed into Trafalgar Square today to stand with Palestine,” the organizer of the event, the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, posted on social media. London’s Metropolitan Police has not released any figures for the size of the demonstration.

The event was the third consecutive pro-Palestinian weekend rally in London. Thousands of people have attended each rally, with the Met Police estimating a turnout of 100,000 for the first solidarity march.

Demonstrations also took place in other cities across the UK on Saturday, including Manchester, Oxford, Newcastle, and Liverpool.

Thousands also took to the streets in cities across Europe, with demonstrations taking place in capital cities including Paris and Berlin.

Israel police arrest 3 people at anti-government protests in Jerusalem

Israeli police say they have arrested three people at anti-government protests in Jerusalem on Saturday.

Hundreds of people gathered to protest Israel’s failure to prevent the October 7th Hamas attacks, police told CNN.

In videos shared by the police, protesters can be heard chanting, “Where were you in Kfar Azza?” (one of the communities most affected by the assault). Signs read, “Their blood is on your hands” and “The sleep of wisdom brings monsters to life,” and called for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s impeachment.

Families of hostages hold rally: Meanwhile, in Tel Aviv, hundreds of family members of hostages taken by Hamas on October 7 are holding a rally in front of the Kirya, the government’s military headquarters, “to demand greater actions by the government to release the hostages.”

In a statement released ahead of the event, organizers said it is “not an anti-government protest. This is a rally of families and community that would like to see more done to release the hostages.”

CNN’s Bex Wright contributed reporting to this post.

The top US diplomat met with Arab leaders today. Here's what else you should know on the Israel-Hamas war

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken meets with foreign ministers from Jordan, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Qatar, as well as the Secretary of the Executive Committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization November 4, in Amman, Jordan.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is on a multinational trip Saturday after visiting Israel for the third time since the October 7 Hamas attack.

Meanwhile, a US official told CNN that Hamas is blocking foreign nationals from leaving Gaza after an Israeli airstrike on an ambulance near a hospital Friday.

Here are some of the latest headlines:

Blinken meets with Arab leaders: The top US diplomat has reiterated his country’s rejection of a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, instead calling once again for “humanitarian pauses” to get aid into Gaza. Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said his government opposes any temporary ceasefire in Gaza unless Hamas frees all the hostages it holds, adding that it would continue to block fuel from entering the enclave.

Blinken met with foreign ministers from Jordan, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Qatar, as well as the Secretary of the Executive Committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization. The Egyptian and Jordanian leaders made remarks after the meetings strongly condemning Israel’s offensive. Blinken, who acknowledged differences with Arab leaders on their approaches to the conflict, will also travel to Turkey.

Hamas stopping foreigners from leaving, official says: Hamas is blocking foreign nationals from departing Gaza until Israel guarantees that ambulances from the Palestinian enclave can reach the Rafah crossing to Egypt, a US official familiar with situation told CNN Saturday.

The demand comes after Israel admitted on Friday that it attacked an ambulance outside Gaza City’s Al-Shifa Hospital, the largest medical facility in the enclave. The vehicle had been in a convoy headed for Rafah, which is the only remaining option for getting in and out of Gaza during Israel’s siege of the territory. Israel claimed the ambulance was being used by Hamas fighters, which the Hamas-controlled health ministry in Gaza has rejected.

More than 700 foreign nationals were expected to leave Gaza through the Rafah crossing Saturday, according to an official source on the Egyptian side of the crossing.

CNN reported Friday that initial efforts to secure safe passage for foreign nationals in Gaza were stymied in part by Hamas including its own members on a list of wounded Palestinians designated to pass through the Rafah crossing, according to a senior US official.

UN chief on Israel’s ambulance attack: United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres said in a statement he was “horrified” by the strike, while calling for a ceasefire and release of hostages.

Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations Gilad Erdan accused Guterres of rushing to comment “without even bothering to ask” about the context of the strike. “You completely ignore the fact that Hamas intentionally exploits ambulances for terror,” Erdan wrote on Saturday in post on X, formerly known as Twitter.

Strikes near hospital and school shelter: Israeli airstrikes have damaged a building located in front of the emergency entrance of Al-Quds Hospital in Gaza City, injuring 21 people, the Palestine Red Crescent Society said Saturday.

A UN-run school serving as a shelter in a refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip was also struck Saturday, according to the main UN agency assisting Palestinian refugees in Gaza.

Humanitarian situation: The number of people who have fled from north of Wadi Gaza to the southern part of the enclave is estimated to be 800,000 “to perhaps a million,” the US special envoy for Middle East humanitarian issues, David Satterfield, said Saturday. There has been no new fuel into Gaza since the war began, he said.

The US is looking at the prospect of establishing field hospitals in south Gaza, Satterfield said, and Israel is engaging with countries about putting hospital ships offshore of Gaza.

IDF says Hamas fired on safe route: The Israeli military accused Hamas of using an announcement telling Gaza residents to move safely south as an opportunity to fire on soldiers from the Israel Defense Forces.

The IDF had called on Gaza residents via its Arabic account on X, formerly known as Twitter, to use the main Salah-al-Din Road to move south for a three-hour period from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. local time. It’s unclear how many Gaza residents had access to internet to see the message.

Turkey latest to recall ambassador: Turkey has recalled its ambassador to Israel for “consultations” due to the “unfolding humanitarian tragedy in Gaza” and continuing Israeli airstrikes, the Turkish foreign ministry said in a statement Saturday. Several other countries, including Honduras, Colombia, Chile, and Bahrain, have also withdrawn their ambassadors.

Blinken and Qatari counterpart discussed civilian protection and aid during meeting, US says

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, left, meets with Qatari Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani at a hotel during a day of meeting, in Amman, Jordan, on Saturday, November 4.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with Qatari Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani in Amman, Jordan.

Neither spoke during a brief photo spray at the beginning of their meeting on Saturday, but the US State Department released a statement later.

They discussed “the vital importance of protecting civilians, providing increased and sustained humanitarian assistance for the Palestinian people, and ensuring Palestinians are not forcibly displaced outside of Gaza,” according to a readout from spokesperson Matt Miller.

Blinken also “reiterated his thanks to the Qatari government for its work to secure the exit of U.S. citizens and foreign nationals from Gaza, the release of hostages held by Hamas, including two U.S. citizens, and continued efforts to prevent the conflict from spreading.”

Qatar has served as a key negotiator in discussions with Hamas amid the conflict in Israel and Gaza. The US has credited the Gulf nation for its help in securing the release of four hostages held by the group, as well as for the eventual opening of the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt.

More Palestinians from Gaza arrive in Egypt for medical treatment, Egyptian official says

A total of 84 Palestinians needing urgent medical treatment have entered Egypt through the Rafah border crossing so far as of Saturday, an Egyptian government official told CNN. 

The injured Palestinians all had injuries sustained from airstrikes, according to the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity since they are not authorized to speak to the media.

Most are currently receiving treatment in hospitals across the country, and more are expected to arrive in the coming days, the official added. 

According to an Egyptian border official, more Palestinians were expected to arrive in ambulances on Saturday, but the border was shut for a few hours out of caution following an Israeli airstrike that targeted an ambulance on Friday. Israel claimed the ambulance was being used by Hamas fighters, which the Hamas-controlled health ministry in Gaza has denied.

More on the Rafah crossing: Located in Egypt’s north Sinai, the Rafah crossing is the sole border crossing between Gaza and Egypt.

It falls along an 8-mile (12.8-kilometer) fence that separates Gaza from the Sinai desert.

IDF claims it didn't target Gaza school with airstrike, but says it may have been hit by Israeli fire nearby

The Israel Defense Forces says it “did not target” a United Nations-sponsored school in Gaza that was hit in an airstrike on Thursday, but said the explosion may have been a result of Israeli fire aimed at another target nearby.

More than 20 people sheltering at the UN-run Jabalya Elementary School were killed by an Israeli strike Thursday, according to the head of the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), which is the primary UN relief agency in the strip.

Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the UNRWA, told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour on Thursday that three of the agency’s other schools were also hit by strikes.

In response to questions about those strikes, the IDF told CNN, “Based on an initial review the IDF is not aware of any military activity conducted by our forces in the vicinity of the location provided.”

Egypt's foreign minister says Israel's actions in Gaza can't be justified as "legitimate self-defense"

Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry speaks during a press conference in Amman, Jordan, on November 4.

Egypt cannot accept Israel’s actions in Gaza as “legitimate self-defense,” the country’s Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry said Saturday during a news conference alongside US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi.

Shoukry said earlier this week that a leaked Israeli intelligence ministry document that proposed the relocation of millions of Palestinians to the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt was a “ludicrous proposition.” 

The foreign minister accused Israel of violating international laws of war, and reiterated calls for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza without conditions.

He went on to say that “Egypt is exerting all its efforts to guarantee that aid is delivered to Gaza,” as a humanitarian crisis continues to unfold there.

The Egyptian leader also said it was premature to discuss the future of Gaza at this time. 

“We have to concentrate on the subject at hand, whether it be the cessation of hostilities, addressing the humanitarian needs of the people of Gaza, addressing the issues of displacement and the provision of safety for the civilians, and addressing the overall context of the conflict,” Shoukry added.

More from the summit: Shoukry and Safadi were among the Arab leaders meeting with Blinken on Saturday at a summit in Jordan.

The Jordanian foreign minister also slammed Israel after the meetings, saying Israel’s “war crimes must stop and its immunity from international law must end.”

He too called for “an immediate ceasefire” and said Jordan does not accept Israel’s actions as self-defense.

Safadi went on to say his priority is to stop the war, saying the U.S. has a leading role to play in those efforts.

Israel makes rare use of Arrow defense system to intercept fire from Gaza

The Israel military said Saturday that it used an Arrow Aerial Defense System for the second-known time since the war with Hamas began to intercept a launch from the Gaza Strip headed toward the Arava region.

The Arrow defense system is designed to intercept high-altitude and long-range missiles. It is not typically used to intercept missiles fired from Gaza.

Earlier use: Israel announced earlier this week that it had used the system to intercept a surface-to-surface missile that was fired from the area of the Red Sea, a launch that the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen claimed credit for.

The use of the Arrow defense system indicates the Houthis used a more advanced, long-range missile in the attempted attack.

In a statement aired on the Houthi-owned Al-Masirah TV, Brig. Gen. Yahya Saree, a spokesperson for Houthi forces, announced the launch of ballistic missiles and drones by Yemeni Armed Forces against targets in Israel.

Saree said it was the third operation in support of the Palestinian people with plans for more strikes until the “Israeli aggression” ceases.

The presence of Iran-backed groups opposed to Israel, like the Houthis and Hezbollah, has raised fears that the current conflict could broaden into a wider war in the Middle East.

Blinken doubles down on US opposition to a ceasefire in Gaza, repeating call for "humanitarian pauses"

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken attends a meeting in Amman, Jordan, on November 4.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken doubled down on the United States’ opposition to a ceasefire in Gaza as he met with key Middle Eastern leaders Saturday, saying it was the US’ view that a ceasefire now would leave Hamas able to regroup and attack Israel again.

The US resistance to calls for a ceasefire has put it at odds with its Arab partners, including those with whom he met in Amman, Jordan.

Instead, the top US diplomat again stressed the US support for “humanitarian pauses” – a concept that has been rejected by Israeli officials.

Fears of an expanded conflict: Blinken said he and his counterparts “all agreed on the importance of using our respective influence and capabilities to deter any state or non-state actor from opening another front in this conflict.”

“Throughout this conflict, countries across the Middle East and beyond have played an essential role in preventing its spread,” Blinken said at a news conference in Amman.

The US has repeatedly warned other foes of Israel — including Hezbollah, which has voiced support for Hamas and exchanged fire with Israeli troops across the border with Lebanon but not directly intervened on Hamas’ behalf — not to broaden the conflict into a wider war in the Middle East.

The US and its Arab partners share “the same fundamental interests and objectives” to end the Israel-Hamas war “in a way that ensures lasting peace and security in the region,” Blinken said following the summit, while acknowledging “we may have different views and positions” on how to achieve that end.

The top US diplomat said all parties reaffirmed their commitment to working together on the issue.

West Bank attacks: Blinken said he also spoke with the Arab leaders about the need to protect Palestinian civilians amid increasing attacks by Israeli settlers in the West Bank.

He updated his counterparts on his talks with Israeli officials yesterday, where he said he “underscored that incitement and extremist violence must be stopped and perpetrators must be held accountable.”

Israel accuses Hamas of firing on IDF soldiers operating planned humanitarian route for Gaza residents

The Israeli military accused Hamas of using an announcement telling Gaza residents to move safely south as an opportunity to fire on soldiers from the Israel Defense Forces.

“The Hamas terrorist organization exploited the humanitarian window that the IDF provided to residents of the Gaza Strip to move southwards,” the IDF said in a statement. “The terrorists fired mortars and anti-tank missiles at IDF troops who arrived and operated to open the route.”

Earlier Saturday, the IDF had called on Gaza residents via its Arabic account on X, formerly known as Twitter, to use the main Salah-al-Din Road to move south for a three-hour period from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. local time. It’s unclear how many Gaza residents have access to internet to see the message.

The IDF said no soldiers were hurt in the incident, but that it served as proof that Hamas “exploits the Gazan population and prevents them from acting in the interest of their own safety.”

In its statement, the IDF provided links to a video, photos and audio it claimed showed Hamas opening fire toward the route during the window. 

CNN is unable to verify the authenticity of the material.

More context: The IDF has repeatedly called for civilians in Gaza to move south of Wadi Gaza as it has intensified its air and ground assault on Gaza City and northern Gaza, including strikes on densely populated areas and civilian infrastructure that the IDF has said is being used by Hamas militants. 

International aid and rights groups have been critical of Israel’s calls for residents to evacuate the north without a pause in fighting, as transportation infrastructure has also been damaged. It has also recently struck several targets in the southern strip.

Up to a million people have fled to southern Gaza, placing stress on humanitarian response, US envoy says

People ride with their belongings after evacuating their home in Rafah, Gaza, on November 1.

The number of people who have fled from north of Wadi Gaza to the southern part of the enclave is estimated to be 800,000 “to perhaps a million,” the US special envoy for Middle East humanitarian issues said Saturday — a mass relocation that has exacerbated humanitarian issues, which are only expected to grow as more people flee.

The envoy, David Satterfield, said there needs to be the “secure, sustained movement” of aid not only from the Rafah crossing in Egypt to Gaza, but “into points of need in the south.”

“And those points of need are growing as individuals come increasingly to the south,” he added.

The ability to move assistance has scaled up exponentially, particularly in the last week, from “pretty much zero in terms of ability to move humanitarian assistance through the Rafah corridor into Gaza,” Satterfield said, but reiterated that even the current number of aid trucks getting through the crossing per day is not sufficient.

Although the US believes the current daily flow of trucks into Gaza is sustainable, “it’s challenged by the environment on the ground in south Gaza,” Satterfield said, noting United Nations warehouses with basic supplies and food had been broken into early in the week.

Shelter is also a problem, he added.

Israeli’s military has called for civilians in Gaza to move south as it intensifies its air and ground assault on Gaza City and northern Gaza. International aid and rights groups have criticized Israel’s calls for residents to evacuate the north without a pause in fighting and while roads and other infrastructure are badly damaged.

Possible field hospitals and ships: The US is looking at the prospect of establishing field hospitals in south Gaza, Satterfield said Saturday, and Israel is engaging with countries about putting hospital ships offshore of Gaza.

Satterfield said the US is speaking with agencies like the International Committee of the Red Cross and Doctors Without Borders to set up tented field hospitals.

“Now bringing in staff — which we all see in the realm of the ‘very doable’ — will require an assurance that staff, international staff, not only can come in but can exit,” he said. “And that of course lies with what we refer to as the de-facto authorities.”

Israeli officials are speaking with allies like the United Kingdom and France about large hospital ships, he said, while also taking security and safety into account.

No new fuel has entered Gaza since start of war, US envoy says

Palestinians use alternative forms of transportation amid fuel shortages in Khan Younis, Gaza, on October 28.

No new fuel has entered Gaza since the beginning of the Israel-Hamas war in early October, US Special Envoy for Middle East Humanitarian Issues David Satterfield said Saturday.

The US expects that additional fuel will be brought in once that fuel runs out, and there is an agreed mechanism in place for that, the envoy said. This fuel would only be going to south Gaza, he noted.

Israel has accused Hamas of hoarding and diverting fuel, and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Friday that “Israel has raised appropriate concerns, concerns that we share, about Hamas’s hoarding and syphoning of fuel in northern Gaza.”

“Again, its cynicism knows no bounds, denying fuel itself that it has to hospitals and other places that desperately need it. In meetings with regional partners, I’ll continue conversations about getting assistance to flow, including with help from the United Nations,” Blinken said Friday during a visit to Israel.

US officials are not aware Hamas diverting any humanitarian assistance that has entered Gaza in the past weeks since trucks began entering via the Rafah crossing, Satterfield said Saturday.

Aid workers in the field have not reported “interdiction of or seizure of goods by Hamas,” he said.

CNN cannot independently verify the amount of fuel in the enclave.

Deteriorating conditions in hospitals: Gaza’s hospitals and staff are overwhelmed as the facilities are housing both patients and the countless displaced who have nowhere else to go.

Gaza’s leading cancer hospital, the Turkish-Palestinian Friendship hospital, has stopped operating due to Israeli bombardment and fuel shortages, the Hamas-controlled Ministry of Health said in a statement Wednesday.

A doctor at Gaza City’s Al-Shifa hospital Friday said that low fuel stocks have plunged wards into darkness and cut off major, basic functions like oxygen generation.

US official: Hamas is blocking foreigners from leaving Gaza until Israel allows ambulances to reach border

Hamas is blocking foreign nationals from departing Gaza until Israel guarantees that ambulances from the Palestinian enclave can reach the Rafah crossing to Egypt, a US official familiar with situation told CNN Saturday.

The demand comes after Israel admitted on Friday that it attacked an ambulance outside Gaza City’s Al-Shifa Hospital, the largest medical facility in the enclave. The vehicle had been in a convoy headed for Rafah, which is the only remaining option for getting in and out of Gaza during Israel’s siege of the territory.

Israel claimed the ambulance was being used by Hamas fighters.

The International Committee of the Red Cross confirmed it had been notified about the convoy, but did not have any of its own ambulances present at the time of the strike.

“Even if we were not present, this is still medical convoy, and any violence towards medical personnel is unacceptable,” the ICRC said Saturday.

More than 700 foreign nationals were expected to leave Gaza through the Rafah crossing Saturday, according to an official source on the Egyptian side of the crossing.

CNN reported Friday that initial efforts to secure safe passage for foreign nationals in Gaza were stymied in part by Hamas including its own members on a list of wounded Palestinians designated to pass through the Rafah crossing, according to a senior US official.

CNN’s Donald Judd contributed reporting to this post.

Number of people killed in Gaza rises further, Palestinian health ministry says

People mourn for Palestinians killed in Israeli attacks on November 3, in Khan Younis, Gaza.

A total of 9,425 people have been killed in Israeli attacks on Gaza since October 7, according to figures released Saturday by the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Ramallah.

An additional 24,000 others have been injured, the ministry said.

The figures are drawn from sources inside the Hamas-controlled enclave.

According to the ministry’s report, nearly 73% of the fatalities are from among vulnerable groups, including children, women and the elderly. 

The number of deaths reported Saturday is 270 higher than that reported by the Ministry on Friday, with the number injured about 1,000 higher.

The Israeli military continues to encircle and pound the Gaza Strip with airstrikes in response to a cross-border terror attack launched by Hamas militants on October 7.

Calls for a ceasefire by Hamas, aid organizations, and much of the global community have been rejected by Israel’s government, which has vowed to wipe out Hamas after the brutal attack last month, which killed more than 1,400 Israelis, most of them civilians.

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US aid group destroyed in Israeli airstrike vows to rebuild in Gaza and continue helping children
Thai deaths in Hamas massacre spotlight poor agricultural workers from Asia who toil in Israel’s fields