November 8, 2023 Israel-Hamas war | CNN

November 8, 2023 Israel-Hamas war

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Thousands of Palestinians flee south on foot as Israel steps up offensive in Gaza City
02:39 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • Despite mounting international pressure, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken reinforced US opposition to a ceasefire in Gaza. “Those calling for an immediate ceasefire have an obligation to explain how to address the unacceptable result that would likely bring,” he said.
  • Thousands of Palestinians fled northern Gaza on Wednesday, traveling miles on foot through the battered enclave in a growing exodus prompted by Israel’s intensified ground and air campaign.
  • UN Secretary-General António Guterres said the number of civilian deaths in Gaza means something is “clearly wrong” with the Israeli military operation.
  • A deal to secure the release of a large number of hostages in Gaza appears elusive, despite active negotiations involving the US, Israel, Qatar and Hamas. One Israeli official said Israel was “ready for a pause” if Hamas was “serious about releasing hostages.”
  • Here’s how to help humanitarian efforts in Israel and Gaza.
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IDF claims to have destroyed Hamas tunnel near UNRWA school

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) claims to have destroyed a Hamas tunnel near a United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) sponsored school in the Beit Hanoun area of northern Gaza.

The IDF made the claim in a statement released Wednesday and also shared a video allegedly showing the destruction “near the school” through a drone camera.

CNN cannot verify the IDF’s claims. CNN has also reached out to UNRWA for comment.

IDF claims it has destroyed 130 Hamas tunnel shafts in Gaza as ground operation continues

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) claimed it has destroyed 130 Hamas tunnel shafts since the start of the war, as Israel continues the “expansion” of its ground operation in Gaza. 

CNN cannot verify the IDF’s claims.

The IDF said it had destroyed 130 tunnel shafts since the start of the fighting and its soldiers were still working to expose and destroy more tunnels. 

It added that Hamas’ “preparation for a prolonged stay in the tunnels can be seen based on water and oxygen means found in the tunnels.”

US has told Iran it does not seek to escalate conflict, defense official says

The United States has taken “additional measures to communicate directly with Iran” that it does not seek to escalate conflict in the Middle East amid the Israel-Hamas war, a senior US defense official said Wednesday. 

It comes after the Pentagon announced an airstrike on a weapons storage facility in Syria used by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Corps Guard in response to near-daily attacks by Iranian-backed groups on US forces in the region.

Meanwhile, the US has put additional Patriot batteries at its bases in the Middle East as a result of the attacks by Iranian backed groups in Iraq and Syria, according to a senior defense official.

The Pentagon previously announced the deployment of an unknown number of Patriot batteries from the US to the Middle East, but has not disclosed where specifically they were sent. 

Palestinians say nowhere is safe as thousands flee northern Gaza. Here's what to know

Palestinians walk down a road as they flee Gaza City and other parts of northern Gaza towards the south, on November 8.

Tens of thousands of people have walked from northern Gaza to the southern regions of the enclave since the establishment of periodic evacuation “corridors” by the Israel Defense Forces on November 4, according to a United Nations agency for refugees.

Doctors say they are running out of medical supplies as the humanitarian situation continues to deteriorate, prompting more agencies and world leaders to advocate for a pause in fighting to let aid in.

Despite the pressure, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken escalated the US’ opposition to a ceasefire in Gaza.

Here’s what else to know:

  • Civilians flee as Israeli offensive continues: Thousands of Palestinians are evacuating northern Gaza as Israel continues its offensive in the war against Hamas. Some of them described an unbearable reality in Gaza City, with constant airstrikes and no water. A man who did not provide his name told CNN in southern Gaza that the war “left nothing safe – not churches, not mosques or anything.” Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant claimed Tuesday that IDF troops were operating in Gaza City, targeting Hamas infrastructure and commanders there.
  • Dire humanitarian situation: Doctors in Gaza are running out of medical supplies, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross’s chief surgeon, while all bakeries have been forced to close in northern Gaza due to a lack of fuel, water and wheat flour. The UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) said it was able to deliver medical supplies to the Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City Wednesday despite “relentless bombardments.”
  • Continued calls for a ceasefire: The president of the International Rescue Committee called for a humanitarian ceasefire for at least five days, emphasizing that it was the “absolute minimum” needed to allow aid agencies to relieve some of the suffering. Other world leaders have also called for a ceasefire or a “humanitarian pause” in recent days. Blinken, however, reiterated his opposition, saying, “Those calling for an immediate ceasefire have an obligation to explain how to address the unacceptable result that would likely bring.”
  • War crimes accusations: The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk said both Hamas and Israel have committed war crimes since the conflict erupted last month. Türk urged both sides to agree to a ceasefire on the basis of three human rights imperatives: the delivery of aid to Gaza, the release of hostages by Hamas as well and the implementation of “a durable end to the occupation.”
  • Hostage negotiations: A deal to secure the release of a large number of hostages that Hamas is holding in Gaza appears elusive for now, despite active negotiations involving the US, Israel, Qatar and Hamas. The multi-party talks have been ongoing for weeks and have so far produced many ideas, but any kind of proposal involving hostages in exchange for a pause in fighting is not on the table, a US official and other diplomatic sources involved in the talks said. IDF spokesman Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said that the military’s current count of hostages being held by Hamas is 239.
  • Rafah crossing latest: The crossing between Gaza and Egypt was closed on Wednesday due to a “security circumstance,” the US State Department said. A total of 637 foreign nationals were evacuated to Egypt on Tuesday, an Egyptian official said.
  • The future of Gaza: The United States believes that the Palestinian Authority “is the appropriate place to look for governance eventually” of the Gaza Strip, a State Department official said Wednesday. It is in line with Blinken’s comments that “Israel cannot occupy Gaza,” but “there may be a need for some transition period at the end of the conflict.” Netanyahu said earlier this week said Israel will have the “overall security responsibility” in Gaza for an “indefinite period” after the war ends.

UN rights chief says war crimes have been committed by both Israel and Hamas

The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said both Hamas and Israel have committed war crimes since the conflict erupted last month.

The UN rights chief delivered the remarks Wednesday after visiting the Rafah crossing, which he called a symbolic lifeline for the 2.3 million people in Gaza.

“The lifeline has been unjustly, outrageously thin,” he said as he called for more humanitarian aid to be delivered to the enclave.

Türk also urged both sides to agree to a ceasefire on the basis of three human rights imperatives: the delivery of aid to Gaza, the release of hostages by Hamas as well as the implementation of “a durable end to the occupation, based on the rights of both Palestinians and Israelis to self-determination and their legitimate security interests.”

“Even in the context of a 56-year-old occupation, the current situation is the most dangerous in decades, faced by people in Gaza, in Israel, in the West Bank but also regionally,” he said.

The Israeli military commented on accusations of war crimes saying:

Videos released by Hamas show clashes with IDF in Gaza City

Even though IDF forces have encircled Gaza City and spent more than a month targeting Hamas positions and tunnels, videotaped attacks recently released by Hamas and analyzed by CNN help illustrate how difficult it will be to stop the Islamist militants.

CNN has geolocated a number of the clashes seen in the Hamas videos to three main locations: the Al-Shati refugee camp, Atatra and Beit Hanoun. The videos were released after the Israeli ground invasion began.

The remaining fights CNN was unable to geolocate were either in incredibly dense city streets or very rural areas — mainly olive groves. 

The overall success of the Hamas attacks depicted — whether the bulk of their fighters survive and whether they are causing IDF personnel casualties or disabling equipment — is unclear from the videos, which are heavily edited and redacted propaganda. Hamas only touts its successful missions in its videos. 

However, Hamas publishing body camera footage of its fighters carrying out an ambush does indicate that at least one of their fighters survived and brought back footage. 

CNN military analyst and retired US Lt. General Mark Hertling reviewed the videos and said that Hamas was likely utilizing shape-charge rocket-propelled grenades, which have the potential to be specifically devastating to some military vehicles, like armored personnel carriers.  

An IDF spokesperson declined to comment on the number of military vehicles that have been disabled or destroyed during the ground invasion, citing “operational security considerations.” 

Clearing Hamas’ tunnels with weapons stockpiles and fighters inside will likely take months. Additionally, Hamas fighters can now also use the aftermath of the Israeli military strikes — the ruins of buildings — as cover to carry out their ambushes.

Hertling said that trying to stop these ambushes would be like “whack-a-mole” unless the IDF was able to knock out every single tunnel complex, tunnel opening or shaft.

“It’s going to take months to do that,” he said, noting that clearing operations can’t be done by vehicles.  

IDF soldiers will have to clear each building individually, which will expose them to rifle and sniper fire from Hamas and, in turn, risk a skyrocketing casualty rate.

 Hamas says the videos were taken on November 2, 3, 5, and 6. A CNN analysis could not independently confirm that time period, but the length and direction of the shadows in the videos also indicate many of the ambushes either occurred on different days or took place many hours apart.  

At most of the sites, Hamas fighters are seen carrying out multiple ambushes, at different times throughout the day.  

UN agency delivers medical supplies to Gaza's largest medical facility despite "relentless bombardments"

The main United Nations agency operating in Gaza said Wednesday it was able to facilitate and deliver medical supplies and medicines to the largest medical facility in the enclave “despite huge risks to our staff and health partners due to relentless bombardments.”

The UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) said it was the second delivery of “lifesaving supplies” from the World Health Organization to Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City since the escalation of hostilities in Gaza began. 

The first WHO delivery was on October 24 “amid high insecurity,” UNRWA said, stating that Al-Shifa Hospital “has traditionally been the most important health facility in Gaza.”

UNRWA described disastrous conditions in the hospital and said there are about two patients for every available bed.

The UN agency stressed that “patients there cannot be denied the health care to which they are entitled and urgently need. Aid should reach the whole of Gaza.”

No fuel has been allowed into Gaza, including to Al-Shifa hospital, since the initial attack, and medical facilities are running out of supplies, UNRWA said.

Palestinian Authority would be appropriate governance for Gaza, US officials say

The United States believes that the Palestinian Authority “is the appropriate place to look for governance eventually” of the Gaza Strip, a State Department official said.

Leaf said that the State Department is “looking at all of these questions right now” and “would like to begin those discussions sooner rather than later.” 

The US has been urging Israel to avoid an occupation of Gaza if and when Hamas no longer governs the territory, but Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sparked concern among US officials when he said earlier this week that Israel would be responsible for Gaza’s security for an “indefinite period.” 

Leaf’s comments echo what Secretary of State Antony Blinken said during a press conference in Tokyo on Wednesday, which is that a sustained peace must include “Palestinian-led governance and Gaza unified with the West Bank under the Palestinian Authority.” 

Blinken added that peace must also include “a sustained mechanism for reconstruction in Gaza, and a pathway to Israelis and Palestinians living side by side in space of their own with equal measures of security, freedom, opportunity, and dignity.” 

The US’ Arab partners, including Jordan and Egypt, have expressed concerns over the possibility that Palestinians are forcibly displaced from Gaza, officials have said, and want to focus for now on reaching a ceasefire. 

“I would say our Arab partners are very focused on the here and now,” Leaf said. “They’re very focused on the issues of humanitarian crises and their focus on obtaining a ceasefire.” 

Blinken reassured those partners on Wednesday that the US believes “key elements” of a peace deal “should include no forcible displacement of Palestinians from Gaza. Not now; not after the war.”

Some background on Gaza’s governance: In 2006, Hamas won a landslide victory in Palestinian legislative elections – the last polls to be held in Gaza.

Hamas is an Islamist organization with a military wing that formed in 1987, emerging out of the Muslim Brotherhood, a Sunni Islamist group that was founded in the late 1920s in Egypt.

The group considers Israel to be an illegitimate state and an occupying power in Gaza. Unlike other Palestinian groups, such as the Palestinian Authority, Hamas refuses to engage with Israel.

40,000 people have trekked on foot to southern Gaza since November 4, UN says

Palestinians walk down a road as they flee Gaza City and other parts of northern Gaza towards the south, on November 8.

At least 40,000 people have trekked on foot from northern Gaza to southern regions since the establishment of periodic evacuation “corridors” by the Israel Defense Forces on November 4, according to a statement by the United Nations Agency for Palestinian Refugees published on Wednesday. 

The IDF has repeatedly called on civilians to move south of Wadi Gaza – a waterway bisecting the center of the enclave – as it intensifies its assault on Hamas in Gaza City and northern Gaza. The agency said that UN monitors and non-government organizations are providing water and biscuits to evacuees just south of the Wadi Gaza.

Almost 1.5 million people in the Gaza Strip have been displaced since Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, the agency said.

Hostage deal between Israel and Hamas appears elusive as negotiations continue 

A deal to secure the release of a large number of hostages that Hamas is holding in Gaza appears elusive for now, despite active negotiations involving the US, Israel, Qatar and Hamas. 

There is no prospect of Israel agreeing to a sustained pause in fighting without a substantial number of hostages being released, one senior US official told CNN. The multi-party talks – in which Qatar is playing a key mediating role – have been ongoing for weeks and have so far produced many ideas, including the release of around 10 to 15 hostages in exchange for a one- or two-day ceasefire, diplomatic sources close to the talks said. 

But as of Wednesday, such a proposal was not on the table, the US official said.

One Israeli official said Israel was “ready for a pause” if there could be certainty that Hamas was “serious about releasing hostages.” What is not clear is how long of a pause Israel would be willing to agree to, and what would amount to an acceptable number of hostages released. 

Negotiations have also centered around exchanging hostages for Palestinian prisoners held by Israel, CNN has previously reported.

Only a handful of hostages – including two American citizens – have been released since the start of the war. After their successful exit, US President Joe Biden revealed that Israel had agreed to a brief ceasefire to secure their release. 

The Biden administration has continued to call on Israel to put in place additional “humanitarian pauses” to facilitate the release of more hostages. Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said Israel will not agree to a ceasefire without the release of hostages, a message he reiterated in a social media post Wednesday.

The weeks-long efforts to try to get a big group of hostages out have brought to light a myriad of complexities. The hostages, who are of various nationalities, are not believed to be in one location and it is not clear exactly how many of them are in Gaza; communication with Hamas is slow; and there are concerns about how to safely move any big group of civilians through Gaza when the strip is under constant bombardment. 

Officials have also stressed that Hamas is far from a typical – and by any means a trustworthy – negotiating partner. “Frankly, we’re dealing with Hamas,” a senior administration official said. “This is not something that anyone is expecting [to be conducted in] good faith.”

Head of aid group says "absolute minimum" of a 5-day ceasefire urgently needed in Gaza

David Miliband looks on during a Senate Foreign Relations Committee meeting in Washington, DC on March 15, 2017.

International Rescue Committee President David Miliband on Wednesday called for a humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza for “a period of at least five days,” emphasizing that’s the “absolute minimum” timeframe needed to allow aid agencies to relieve some of the humanitarian suffering.

Miliband oversees the IRC’s humanitarian relief operations in more than 40 war-affected countries, according to the aid organization.

On Wednesday, he said that any coordinated halt in the fighting in Gaza “needs to have sufficient duration if it’s really to relieve the humanitarian suffering and save lives,” adding that it is “desperately beyond time for the world community to get serious about what a humanitarian halt in the fighting” or a ceasefire or pause looks like in practice.

“The words matter much less to us as a humanitarian agency than the substance of the action that takes place,” Miliband said.

“There needs to be a flow of aid — at the moment, it’s a trickle of aid,” Miliband told CNN. “There needs to be a massive scale-up of the aid flows — that’s medicines, that’s non-food items, that is food, that is water, the basics of life and the fuel to get those goods around the Gaza Strip.”

“Second, you can’t deliver aid without aid workers,” he added, noting that it’s not safe for aid workers on the ground at the moment and scores of aid workers have died. “Thirdly — essential — we’ve got to be able to have safety for civilians who come to receive aid when they bring their kids when they bring their wounded, they’ve got to be able to be safe in a health center.”

Miliband also said it’s vital that injured people who require medical treatment are able to evacuate. 

“Our teams on the ground are saying that […] we’re on the verge of something much, much worse. Because the threat of communicable diseases, the threat of cholera, the threat of measles and typhoid, this is there,” he added, reiterating the IRC’s position that there is an urgent need for a ceasefire of at least five days. “We’re saying that the imperative of relieving the suffering in Gaza now is absolutely core to the humanitarian mission.”

In a social media post on Wednesday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reiterated “there will not be a ceasefire without the release of our hostages.”

Thousands from northern Gaza are seeking safety as Israel's offensive continues. Here are other top headlines

Thousands of Palestinians are fleeing northern Gaza as Israel continues its offensive in the war against Hamas.

It was the fifth consecutive day that the Israel Defense Forces opened an evacuation window, and numbers of people moving south have increased each day.

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant claimed Tuesday that IDF troops were at the “heart of Gaza City” and targeting Hamas infrastructure and commanders there. It is unclear where exactly Israel is fighting inside the city.

The number of civilian deaths in Gaza during the past month of war between Israel and Hamas means something is “clearly wrong” with the military operation that Israel launched in the wake of the deadly October 7 Hamas attacks, the United Nations secretary general said Wednesday.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Wednesday that “Israel cannot occupy Gaza,” but “there may be a need for some transition period at the end of the conflict” between Israel and Hamas. The top US diplomat’s remark came in response to comments from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who earlier this week said Israel will have the “overall security responsibility” in Gaza for an “indefinite period” after the war with Hamas ends.

Here’s what else to know:

  • “Nothing is left” in Gaza, Palestinians say: Palestinians fleeing south in Gaza through an IDF evacuation corridor on Wednesday described an unbearable reality in Gaza City, with constant airstrikes and no water. A man who did not provide his name told CNN in southern Gaza that he and his neighbors had lived through “horrifying days.” He added, “This war left nothing safe – not churches, not mosques or anything. Today, they dropped the leaflet ordering us to leave to the alleged safe area. Now we are beyond this area of Wadi Gaza, and we are still hearing bombardments. There is no safe place in Gaza.”
  • Lack of fuel and supplies: The Al-Quds Hospital in Gaza City is scaling back most of its operations amid a fuel shortage to ensure minimal services over the next few days, the Palestine Red Crescent Society said in a statement Wednesday. The hospital’s main generator has been turned off, PRCS added, and the hospital is operating on a small generator instead. Doctors in Gaza are running out of medical supplies, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross’s chief surgeon, while all bakeries have been forced to close in northern Gaza due to a lack of fuel, water and wheat flour.
  • Hamas still holding 239 hostages, IDF says: Israel Defense Forces spokesman Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said Wednesday that the military’s current count of hostages being held by Hamas is 239. The IDF has previously said that the number can fluctuate based on updated intelligence. Hagari also said that 351 IDF soldiers have died since October 7.
  • Nearly 100 UN workers killed: The death toll among employees working in Gaza for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) has risen to 99, according to the spokesperson for the United Nations secretary general. The latest death toll came just hours after UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini mourned the dozens of his employees killed in Gaza since the October 7 attacks on Israel by Hamas.
  • Border latest: A total of 637 foreign nationals were evacuated from Gaza to Egypt through the Rafah border crossing on Tuesday, an Egyptian official said. The crossing was closed on Wednesday due to a “security circumstance,” the US State Department said.
  • Gaza death toll: About 74% of the 10,515 people killed in Gaza since October 7 are children, women, and the elderly, the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Ramallah said in a report Wednesday, drawing from sources in the Hamas-controlled enclave. It’s unclear how many combatants are included in the total. UNICEF spokesperson James Elder has defended the accuracy of the death toll numbers being reported out of Gaza, saying the organization’s numbers closely align with that of the Hamas-controlled Ministry of Health in the enclave.

IDF claims it destroyed 130 Hamas tunnel shafts in Gaza as ground operation continues

The Israel Defense Forces on Wednesday claimed it has destroyed 130 Hamas tunnel shafts since the start of the war, as Israel continues the “expansion” of its ground operation in Gaza. 

“As part of the ground forces’ activity in the Gaza Strip, IDF soldiers are currently working to expose and destroy Hamas’ tunnels,” the statement said. “Since the beginning of the fighting, 130 tunnel shafts have been destroyed.” 

The IDF added that Hamas’ “preparation for a prolonged stay in the tunnels can be seen based on water and oxygen means found in the tunnels.” 

CNN cannot verify the IDF’s claims.

This post has been updated with additional information.

"Nothing is left": Palestinians fleeing south in Gaza describe unbearable situation in Gaza City

Palestinians flee to the south on Salah al-Din Street in Bureij, Gaza, on November 8.

Palestinians fleeing south in Gaza through an Israel Defense Forces (IDF) evacuation corridor on Wednesday described an unbearable reality in Gaza City, with constant airstrikes and no water.

One teenage girl said that it felt like the “Nakba,” or catastrophe, of 2023 – the Arabic term for the expulsion of Palestinians from their towns during the founding of Israel.

A man who did not provide his name told a CNN stringer in southern Gaza that he and his neighbors had lived through “horrifying days.” He said that they had left their home in northern Gaza and moved several times, but that it was impossible to escape the airstrikes.

“This war left nothing safe – not churches, not mosques or anything. Today, they dropped the leaflet ordering us to leave to the alleged safe area. Now we are beyond this area of Wadi Gaza, and we are still hearing bombardments. There is no safe place in Gaza.”

The journalist said that the flow of people on Salah Al-Deen Street fleeing northern Gaza was much larger on Wednesday than on Tuesday. The UN estimates that on Tuesday, “up to 15,000 people may have passed” through the corridor. The IDF on Wednesday extended a four-hour ceasefire by one hour because, it said, of the large number of people fleeing south.

Read more about Palestinians fleeing northern Gaza here.

99 United Nations workers have been killed in Gaza, UN spokesperson says

The death toll among employees working in Gaza for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) has risen to 99, United Nations secretary general spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said at a news briefing on Wednesday.

The latest death toll came just hours after UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini mourned the dozens of his employees killed in Gaza since the October 7 attacks on Israel by Hamas.

Human Rights Watch calls for investigating attack on ambulance outside Gaza hospital as "possible war crime"

Palestinians pull an ambulance after an Israeli strike outside al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, on November 3.

The nongovernmental organization Human Rights Watch is calling for an investigation into the Israeli military’s attack on an ambulance outside Gaza’s biggest hospital last week as a “possible war crime.” 

“The Israeli military’s strike on a marked ambulance just outside of Gaza City’s al-Shifa hospital on November 3, 2023, was apparently unlawful and should be investigated as a possible war crime,” according to a HRW statement released on Tuesday. 

The group, which reports on and investigates human rights abuses around the world, has further called on the investigation to be conducted by the United Nations Human Rights Council’s Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and Israel.

The Israel Defense Forces said it had targeted the ambulance because it was being used by Hamas. “An IDF aircraft struck an ambulance that was identified by forces as being used by a Hamas terrorist cell in close proximity to their position in the battle zone,” the IDF said.

HRW, however, says it did not find evidence that the ambulance was used for military purposes after interviewing witnesses and verifying visuals of the damaged ambulance and its surrounding area. 

CNN has reached out to the Israeli military for comment and has not immediately heard back. In previous statements, the Israeli military has maintained it is following international law and only striking legitimate military targets in the strip.

The attack on the ambulance, which was part of a medical convoy, killed at least 15 and wounded 60 others, according to the Hamas-controlled Ministry of Health in Gaza.

Footage from the scene showed at least a dozen bloodied people strewn across the ground near an ambulance.

CNN’s Andrew Carey contributed reporting to this post.

US State Department says Rafah border crossing is closed Wednesday due to "security circumstance"

A truck with humanitarian aid enters Gaza through the Rafah border crossing on November 2.

The Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt was closed on Wednesday due to a “security circumstance,” US State Department deputy spokesperson Vedant Patel said.

Patel did not indicate what the issue is and noted that it is a fluid situation on the border. The crossing is expected to reopen when the issue is resolved so aid can enter Gaza and foreign nationals can continue to evacuate, Patel said.

UN relief chief says situation in West Bank "is getting increasingly dire," citing rising death toll

The United Nations emergency relief chief on Wednesday said “the situation is getting increasingly dire in the West Bank” as the number of dead and displaced people rises there.

“Again, enough is enough,” UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator Martin Griffiths wrote on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, listing the numbers of dead, wounded and displaced.  

Some context: Tensions in the West Bank – already high prior to the October 7 Hamas attacks and the ensuing war with Israel — have been mounting further, with the number of Palestinians killed in confrontations with Israeli forces and settlers continuing to grow.

At least 159 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank in the last month, according to a statement Monday from the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Ramallah.

More than 1,000 people have been displaced, Griffiths wrote on X Wednesday, including 424 children.

A Spaniard killed in Hamas October 7 attack has been identified, Israeli officials say

Israeli officials said Wednesday a Spanish man has been identified as being killed by Hamas in the attack on October 7, after he had been listed as missing for a month.

Israel’s Ambassador to Spain, Rodica Radian-Gordon, said in a Wednesday post on social media, “Our hearts are broken by the news of the brutal murder of Iván Illarramendi. He has been identified a month after the terrorist massacre committed by Hamas in Israel.”

An Israeli embassy spokesperson told CNN, “He was found in Israel. He was murdered on October 7. He was listed as missing. He was identified yesterday” on November 7, a month after the attacks.

Acting Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez posted on social media that he was “heartbroken” by Illarramendi’s death, adding that “the Spanish government reiterates its condemnation of the terrorist attacks by Hamas on October 7.”

Sanchez had publicly identified Illarramendi on October 17, during a news conference in Madrid, when he called “for the immediate release, without conditions, of all of the hostages, under Hamas’s control, including our compatriot Ivan Illarramendi.” Illarramendi was still considered missing at the time. 

Spain’s Foreign Ministry on Wednesday declined to describe the circumstances of his death or provide other details, citing privacy restrictions.

Spanish media reported that Illarramendi had been living in an Israeli agricultural community at the time of the Hamas attack.

Dive deeper:

‘Not in our name’: Jewish peace activists across the US call for immediate ceasefire and justice for Palestinians
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Dive deeper:

‘Not in our name’: Jewish peace activists across the US call for immediate ceasefire and justice for Palestinians
Starbucks disagrees with union over its ‘solidarity with Palestine’ post