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Egypt, France foreign ministers urge aid to Gaza through Rafah

By - Oct 16,2023 - Last updated at Oct 16,2023

A convoy of trucks carrying aid supplies for Gaza from Egypt waits on the main Ismailia desert road, about 300 km east of the Egyptian border with Gaza, on the way to the Rafah crossing on Monday (AFP photo)

CAIRO — Egypt and France's foreign ministers urged on Monday the delivery of humanitarian aid and the exit of foreign nationals from the bombarded Gaza Strip, on the tenth day of war between Israel and Hamas.

"Those who want to leave Gaza must be able to do so," France's Catherine Colonna said, urging the opening of crossing points.

Egypt controls the Rafah border crossing, the only passage in and out of the Gaza Strip not controlled by Israel.

A US official had told AFP on Saturday that Egypt and Israel had reached an agreement for American citizens to leave through Rafah.

But Cairo's top diplomat Sameh Shoukry told reporters on Monday that Egypt had "repeated its request to Israeli authorities for humanitarian aid to pass through".

Shoukry said there was "nothing new, which is a dangerous matter considering the new needs that the Palestinian people in Gaza are being exposed to".

By Monday afternoon, the crossing remained closed, locking convoys of aid on one side of the border, and fleeing Palestinians and foreigners on the other, according to AFP correspondents and witnesses.

AFP correspondents also reported that the area of the crossing was hit by another military strike on Monday.

The UN has repeatedly warned of the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza, where Israel has declared a "complete siege", cutting off basic supplies to the territory's 2.4 million people.

Collona announced that France "is going to mobilise 10 million euros [$10.5 million] for the people of Gaza".

As diplomatic overtures yield little success, she said Paris "welcomes Egypt's initiative" for an international summit on the conflict.

She said it would “show that there is a political horizon that can take into account Israel’s right to security and the Palestinians’ right to a state”.

Colonna said the “weight of the conflict must not fall on Egypt”, which has faced calls to accept refugees from Gaza.

Cairo has rejected such calls, warning of a fresh forced displacement of Palestinians and instead urging restraint and diplomatic efforts for de-escalation.

EU to launch humanitarian air corridor to Gaza — Von der Leyen

By - Oct 16,2023 - Last updated at Oct 16,2023

TIRANA — The European Union(EU) will launch a humanitarian air corridor to Gaza through Egypt with the first flights expected this week, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Monday.

"Palestinians in Gaza are in need of humanitarian help and aid. That is why... we are launching an EU humanitarian air bridge to Gaza through Egypt. The first two flights will start this week," von der Leyen told a press conference in the Albanian capital Tirana, where she attended a regional Balkan summit.

Earlier Monday, Egypt and France's foreign ministers urged the delivery of humanitarian aid and the exit of foreign nationals from the bombarded Gaza Strip, as the war between Israel and Hamas entered its tenth day.

Israel has vowed to destroy Hamas and responded with a heavy bombing campaign on Gaza that has killed around 2,750 people.

According to the United Nations, a million people have been displaced inside Gaza.

She reminded that the EU was tripling humanitarian aid to 75 million euros ($79 million) for the Gaza Strip.

 

Mass graves, ice-cream truck mortuary as bodies pile up in Gaza

By - Oct 16,2023 - Last updated at Oct 16,2023

A Palestinian is stretchered away after being pulled out from under the rubble of a building following an Israeli air strike in Rafah, in the southern of Gaza Strip, on Monday (AFP photo)

GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories — As Gaza's hospital morgues overflow with victims killed in Israel's bombardment, even an ice-cream truck has been used to hold corpses before their burial.

Israel's air strikes have claimed at least 2,750 lives in Gaza, where mortuaries with capacity only for dozens are filling up more quickly than relatives can claim them.

At the carpark of the hospital in central Gaza's Deir El Balah, a white truck covered with posters of ice-cream sticks is now packed with corpses wrapped in white body bags.

Among them are multiple members of Talaat Abu Lashine's family.

"Two shells fell on the house at dawn. Sixteen people were at home, including eight children who were sleeping peacefully," he said.

In Gaza City a little further north, from where tens of thousands of inhabitants have heeded Israel's warning to flee south ahead of an expected ground invasion, many bodies were simply left behind in the mortuaries.

“Given the large number of martyrs lying unclaimed in the morgue of Al Shifa hospital, the deterioration of the corpses and the continued arrival” of dozens more, “a common grave has been prepared to bury around 100” of them, said Salama Maruf, head of the media bureau for the Hamas government that runs Gaza.

 

‘Lots of children’ 

 

Even body bags are now in short supply, said Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA).

“Every story coming out of Gaza is about survival, despair and loss,” he said.

“Sometimes we don’t even have time to write the names” of the deceased, because there are just too many of them, said Ihsan Al Natour, who works at a cemetery in southern Gaza’s Rafah.

“There are lots of children among the martyrs,” he said, adding that “we are burying three or four in each grave”.

Gaza’s Ministry of Religious affairs has recommended using common graves because of the large numbers of deaths and a shortage of burial space, as Muslim funeral rites also require burials to take place as quickly as possible.

Hamas, which has controlled the enclave since 2007, said on Monday that 1,000 bodies could be still under the rubble and warned of diseases spreading.

In Rafah, residents readied new graves, placing bricks and tiles around mounds of freshly dug earth.

In one of them, three bodies of children were stacked on top of each other. There wasn’t enough space to lay them to rest separately.

Lebanon must stay out of Israel-Hamas war — French FM

By - Oct 16,2023 - Last updated at Oct 16,2023

France’s Minister of Foreign Affaire Catherine Colonna (left) meets with Lebanon’s caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati in Beirut on Monday (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Lebanese authorities should take all necessary measures to avert a war with Israel, France’s foreign minister said in Beirut on Monday, following repeated exchanges of fire along the shared frontier.

Catherine Colonna spoke hours after Israel and Lebanon’s Hizbollah movement again traded cross-border fire, adding to tensions and fears of a wider war, 10 days into fighting between Gaza-based Hamas and Israel.

Tit-for-tat fire in recent days between Hizbollah and its allied Palestinian factions on the one side and Israel on the other have killed at least 11 people in southern Lebanon and two in Israel.

“Lebanese officials have a responsibility... to do everything possible to prevent Lebanon from being dragged into a spiral,” Catherine Colonna told a press conference, adding that, no group “should take advantage” of the situation.

The United Nations patrols the border between Lebanon and Israel, which remain technically at war.

We must “continue to avoid a conflagration which could threaten the entire region”, Colonna said following stops in Israel and Cairo.

Earlier on Monday, she met with Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati who said: “We are working for peace, but the decision to go to war is in Israel’s hands.”

Mikati leads a caretaker government in a country whose political paralysis has left it without a president for almost a year, during a four-year economic meltdown.

“There is no benefit to anyone... in opening a front with south Lebanon, because the Lebanese cannot cope with this,” Mikati said in a statement.

Lebanon’s army said Monday it found and dismantled “20 rocket launchers”, four of which were loaded, near the towns of Qlaileh and Shaaytiyeh, south of the coastal city of Tyre.

It provided no information on the origin of the launchers.

 

Aid for Gaza stuck in Egypt with Rafah crossing closed

By - Oct 16,2023 - Last updated at Oct 16,2023

A convoy of trucks loaded with aid supplies for Gaza provided by Egyptian NGOs waits for an agreement to cross through the Egypt-Gaza border in Arish City in north Sinai Peninsula on Sunday (AFP photo)

ISMAILIA, Egypt — Convoys of humanitarian aid stacked up near Egypt's border with the Gaza Strip on Sunday, unable to enter the Palestinian enclave being bombarded by Israel, witnesses told AFP.

The Rafah crossing — the only passage in and out of the Gaza Strip not controlled by Israel — has been closed since Tuesday, after three Israeli air strikes on the Palestinian border post within 24 hours.

On Saturday, an American official confirmed to AFP that Egypt and Israel had reached an agreement to allow American citizens to leave Gaza via Rafah.

However, Egypt has imposed conditions on the deal.

"The Egyptian stance is clear, which requires the aid to arrive in Gaza," the report added, as alarm grows over shortages of essential supplies in the blockaded territory.

On Sunday, witnesses said concrete blocks installed by the Egyptians to fortify the border following Israel's bombings were still in place, suggesting that no passage was being considered in the immediate future.

Already, shipments of aid from Jordan, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates had arrived at El Arish airport — 50 kilometres west of Rafah — alongside enough medical supplies supplied by the World Health Organisation to meet the needs of 300,000 people.

Egypt itself has sent a convoy of 100 transport trucks carrying 1,000 tonnes of aid.

Israel, which controls the other two crossing points into Gaza, has declared a “complete siege” of the Palestinian coastal enclave, cutting off food, water, fuel and electricity supplies to the territory’s 2.4 million people.

On Friday, Israel ordered civilian residents of the northern Gaza Strip, numbering around 1.1 million, to move southwards to clear the way for an expected ground invasion.

 

Israel-Lebanon border fire stokes fears of wider war

By - Oct 16,2023 - Last updated at Oct 16,2023

A photo taken on Sunday, shows the damage following Israeli shelling on a special needs school in the southern Lebanese border village of Aita Al Shaab (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Israel's northern border with Lebanon is often tense, the legacy of past conflicts. But as Israel readies to invade Gaza, its army faces the threat of a two-front war.

Repeated fire in recent days has claimed lives on both sides of the UN-patrolled border between Lebanon and Israel, which remain technically at war.

If Israel does invade the Palestinian enclave of Gaza in its war on Hamas, Lebanon's Iran-backed Hizbollah movement has warned it may escalate its military involvement.

Hizbollah deputy chief Naim Qassem told a pro-Palestinian rally on Friday that it was "fully prepared and, when the time comes for action, we will take it".

The Shiite Muslim Hizbollah movement, Lebanon's only armed faction that did not disarm after the 1975-1990 civil war, last fought a major conflict with Israel in 2006.

That war left more than 1,200 dead in Lebanon, mostly civilians, and 160 in Israel, mostly soldiers, in a conflict that left deep scars and the border bristling with guns.

As tensions have again risen sharply, UNIFIL, the buffer between Israel and Lebanon since 1978, has warned that the situation could get "out of control".

Late Sunday the UN peacekeeping mission said "our headquarters in Naqoura was hit with a rocket and we are working to verify from where. Our peacekeepers were not in shelters at the time.

"Fortunately, no one was hurt."

'Escalation ladder' 

 

Over the years, cross-border strikes and incursions have been frequent but carefully calibrated, with both sides at pains to project strength but avoid escalation.

Tit-for-tat fire in recent days between Hizbollah and its allied Palestinian factions on the one side and Israel on the other have killed at least 11 people in southern Lebanon and two in Israel.

Most of the casualties in Lebanon have been Hizbollah and Hamas fighters, but three civilians, including a Reuters journalist, have also been killed.

Israel, which has massed tanks and troops in the north, on Sunday closed a 4 kilometre stretch along the border to civilians.

It took the measure after a civilian was killed, with Hizbollah claiming responsibility.

Both sides on the Lebanon-Israel border had so far adhered to “unwritten understandings about red lines neither should cross — to avoid an escalation”, said Heiko Wimmen, project director for Iraq, Syria, Lebanon at the Crisis Group, in a paper published on Saturday.

Sunday’s attack on Shtula was “one notch up on the escalation ladder”, Wimmen said in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

“A small notch, but on this, such details matter hugely.”

 

‘We are exhausted’ 

 

Analysts have said Hizbollah is more likely to scale up its involvement if Israel launches a ground offensive of Gaza.

Iran, which supports Hamas and Hizbollah, warned on Sunday that a ground offensive could expand the scope of the conflict elsewhere in the Middle East.

“No one can guarantee the control of the situation and the non-expansion of the conflicts,” said Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian.

He had told reporters in Beirut days ago that “Lebanon’s security and peace” was important for Tehran and warned that “any possibility is conceivable”.

The United States and other Western powers that support Israel have urged restraint and warned against a regional spillover of the conflict.

Many Lebanese — scarred by the civil war, Israeli occupation and the 2006 conflict — fear the consequences of renewed war.

Lebanon, in the throes of a deep economic crisis, can ill afford it.

In southern Lebanon, hundreds have left to seek refuge with relatives living further from the tense border, but some could not afford to flee.

Kamleh Abu Khalil, 72, said she had packed her bag but was not certain she would make it out because her family doesn’t have a car.

“We are exhausted,” she said. “We are fatigued.”

 

Israel readies troops for invasion as Gaza civilians flee

By - Oct 16,2023 - Last updated at Oct 16,2023

A Palestinian youth reacts as he sits on the rubble of a destroyed home following an Israeli military strike on the Rafah refugee camp, in the southern of Gaza Strip on Sunday (AFP photo)

GAZA STRIP — Israel pressed on Sunday with preparations for a ground offensive in Gaza, after giving Palestinians a little more time to flee northern areas it has vowed to target.

 Israel has warned around 1.1 million Gazans living in the north of the Palestinian territory to flee to the south ahead of a ground incursion which the military has indicated will focus on Gaza City, the base of the leadership of the Hamas fighting group.

The military said Gaza City residents must not delay their departure but a spokesperson said late Saturday they still had time to leave ahead of the ground offensive.

Since Friday thousands of Gazans, who cannot leave the enclave as it is blockaded by both Israel and Egypt, have packed what belongings they can into bags and suitcases, to trudge through the rubble-strewn streets.

A stream of cars, trucks, three-wheeled vehicles and donkey-drawn carts joined the frantic mass movement south, all loaded with families and their belongings, mattresses, bedding and bags strapped onto the roofs of packed vehicles.

 

‘More is coming’ 

 

Israel pummelled northern Gaza with fresh air strikes on Saturday. AFP reporters near the southern Israeli city of Sderot saw troops fire at the densely populated enclave, sending huge plumes of black smoke into the sky.

Hamas earlier reported 22 hostages had been killed in Israeli bombardments.

 

Humanitarian crisis

 

Alarm has grown over the fate of Palestinian civilians in blockaded and besieged Gaza — one of the world’s most densely populated areas, home to 2.4 million — if it becomes the scene of intense urban combat and house-to-house fighting.

Aid agencies have said forcing Gazans to move is impossible while the war rages.

But with food, water, fuel and medical supplies running low because of an Israeli blockade, aid agencies are warning of a deepening humanitarian crisis.

“The situation is catastrophic,” said Jumaa Nasser, who travelled from Beit Lahia in northern Gaza with his wife, mother and seven children.

“We’ve had no food or sleep. We don’t know what to do. I’ve given my fate up to God,” he told AFP.

The World Health Organisation said on Saturday that forcing thousands of hospital patients to evacuate to already overflowing hospitals in the southern Gaza Strip could be “tantamount to a death sentence”.

Exiled Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh accused Israel on Saturday of committing “war crimes” in Gaza but he ruled out any “displacement” of Gazans, including to Egypt.

On the diplomatic front, Chinese Envoy Zhai Jun will visit the Middle East next week to push for a ceasefire and promote peace talks, state broadcaster CCTV reported on Sunday.

Saudi Arabia has also pressed for an “immediate ceasefire”. Russia said it had asked the UN Security Council to vote on Monday on its ceasefire resolution.

 

Biden calls 

 

In a call on Saturday, US President Joe Biden told Netanyahu the United States was working with the United Nations, Egypt, Jordan and others in the region “to ensure innocent civilians have access to water, food and medical care”.

Biden also spoke with Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas and pledged “full support” to the Palestinian Authority in its efforts to bring humanitarian assistance to Palestinians, “particularly in Gaza”, according to the White House.

Several people were reportedly killed in an Israeli bombardment while heading south on Saturday, according to Hamas officials and witnesses. 

AFP could not immediately confirm the report.

International aid agencies, including the UN and Red Cross, plus several foreign diplomats are concerned about the feasibility of the evacuation plan.

“We fear an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe,” said Ivan Karakashian, of the Norwegian Refugee Council.

More than 423,000 Palestinians have already left their homes, and 5,540 homes have been destroyed, according to the United Nations.

 

Air strikes

 

Israel, which has likened last week’s attacks to those on September 11, 2001 in the United States, has fired thousands of missiles at northern Gaza.

One air strike killed Ali Qadi, described as “a company commander of the Hamas ‘Nukhba’ commando force” involved in the unprecedented attack, the army said. 

The Hamas surprise attack and the war it sparked — Gaza’s fifth in 15 years — have upended Middle Eastern politics, prompting fears that the violence will spread across the volatile region.

Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh accused Israel of “genocide” in Gaza, while clashes in the occupied West Bank have killed 53 Palestinians in the past week. 

Angry protests condemning Israel and supporting the Palestinians in Gaza took place across the Arab world on Friday.

Western capitals, including London and Washington, also saw pro-Palestinian marches.

 

Northern threat

 

Israel faces the threat of a separate confrontation on its northern border with Lebanon and artillery exchanges have taken place with the Iran-backed Hizbollah group in recent days. 

On Friday, a Reuters video journalist was killed and six other reporters, from AFP, Reuters and Al Jazeera, were wounded in shelling that Lebanon blamed on Israeli forces. 

Two Lebanese civilians were killed in Israeli shelling of a southern village on Saturday, its mayor told AFP. Hezbollah said one of its fighters was killed by Israeli fire.

Six months into war, Sudanese seek refuge outside chaotic capital

By - Oct 16,2023 - Last updated at Oct 16,2023

PORT SUDAN — Six months after tensions between rival Sudanese generals ignited a devastating war, thousands lie dead, millions are displaced, and the once-thriving capital, Khartoum, is a shadow of its past glory.

When the first bombs fell on April 15, the capital’s residents looked on in terror as entire neighbourhoods were razed and essential services were paralysed, exacerbating their misery.

Those who could escape the bloodshed and destruction rushed to the Red Sea coast about 1,000 kilometres to the east.

Port Sudan, now home to Sudan’s only functioning airport, became a sanctuary for fleeing civilians and a transit hub for foreigners leaving the northeast African country.

Its rows of white colonial buildings were quickly filled with those who left Khartoum, including United Nations staff and government officials setting up makeshift offices.

In late August, they were joined by army chief Abdel Fattah Al Burhan, whose fighters are pitted against those of his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, commander of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in the conflict.

Burhan, the de facto leader of Sudan since leading a 2021 coup, had spent over four months stuck inside the army headquarters in Khartoum, besieged by Daglo’s men.

But even though he has left Khartoum, there has been no let-up in fighting for the capital, as well as the western region of Darfur, where allegations of ethnically motivated attacks by the RSF have led to an international war crimes investigation.

The United Nations’ Human Rights Council voted Wednesday to set up an independent fact-finding mission to probe the accusations.

 

‘Life doesn’t stop’ 

 

Despite the exodus, millions of people have had little choice but to stay in Khartoum, where their bullet-scarred homes are shaken by daily blasts.

A constant plume of smoke now defines the capital’s skyline, while businesses and warehouses lie abandoned, ransacked and charred.

Before the war, the capital’s three districts — Khartoum, Omdurman and Khartoum North — were the centre of power, infrastructure and industry in the country of 48 million people.

“The war has shown just how much Khartoum had monopolised everything, [and] that’s why the banks, the companies and all government stopped working,” said urban planner Tarek Ahmed.

But economic analyst Omaima Khaled said that did not mean life had come to a halt.

With no end to the war in sight, “there had to be somewhere else where people’s affairs could be managed”, she said, and the obvious choice was Port Sudan — a safe and well-connected city.

“It’s first of all geographically far from the war,” said Khaled, with fighting mainly taking place in the capital and the western region of Darfur.

It also has a long history of being “Sudan’s second largest commercial centre”, she said, which could “very well make it an economic capital”.

But Port Sudan has one crucial flaw: “It’s 3,000 kilometres from the country’s western border and 2,500 kilometres from its south, in a country that severely lacks an efficient transport network,” said the economist.

Sudan’s dilapidated road network is as highly centralised as the economy. Avoiding the war-torn capital requires massive circuitous routes around a country three times the size of France.

But the problems do not stop there, according to Port Sudan resident Hend Saleh.

“There’s a shortage of drinking water and electricity,” she told AFP, with the coastal town’s already fragile infrastructure now catering to tens of thousands more.

Port Sudan — founded in 1905 by British rulers to replace the historic port of Suakin, 60 kilometres away — “is newer than other Sudanese cities and has a better urban plan and a better service network”, according to engineer Fathi Yassin.

But it is burdened by the same shortfalls as the rest of Sudan, where decades of dilapidated infrastructure are adding to the immense impact of war.

Sudan’s rainy season, which begins in June, has wreaked havoc on vast swathes of the country, with hundreds dying of cholera and dengue fever while 70 per cent of hospitals remain out of service, the United Nations has said.

 

War spreading south 

 

Unlike other Sudanese cities that draw water from the Nile, Port Sudan relies almost entirely on increasingly unpredictable rainfall.

Its residents have long demanded a connection to the river, which would require 500 kilometres of pipes — an expense Sudan, already one of the poorest countries in the world before the war, has never been able to afford.

Closer to the Nile, the city of Wad Madani — 200 kilometres south of Khartoum — has also emerged as a potential capital.

Wad Madani, the capital Al Jazira state in the fertile heartland south of Khartoum, was the first destination for fleeing Khartoum families in the early weeks of the war.

The state now hosts more than 366,000 displaced people, in a thin string of villages between Khartoum and Wad Madani, as well as the state capital itself.

Interim Governor Ismail Awadallah said the city also looked set to absorb more of the economy, with “17 large companies discussing their relocation and even expansion in Wad Madani”.

But Wad Madani’s economic potential might remain unfulfilled, as the fighting in Khartoum encroaches south.

Authorities on Wednesday announced paramilitaries had taken control of large areas of the Gezira agricultural scheme, only around 35 kilometres northwest of Wad Madani.

 

Israel readies troops for invasion as Gaza civilians flee

By - Oct 15,2023 - Last updated at Oct 15,2023

A Palestinian man carries an injured a girl following an Israeli strike, in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on Saturday (AFP photo)

GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories — Israel pummelled northern Gaza with fresh air strikes on Saturday, as it urged Palestinians to flee the area before an expected ground offensive against Hamas commanders.

AFP reporters near the southern Israeli city of Sderot saw troops fire at the densely populated enclave, sending huge plumes of black smoke into the sky.

On the Gazan side, health officials said more than 2,200 people had been killed.

But with food, water, fuel and medical supplies running low because of an Israeli blockade, aid agencies are warning of an impending humanitarian crisis.

On the diplomatic front, Saudi Arabia pressed for an "immediate ceasefire", while the United States called on China to use its regional influence to push for calm.

One air strike killed Ali Qadi, described as "a company commander of the Hamas 'Nukhba' commando force" involved in the surprise attack, the AFP said.

Some 1.1 million people — nearly half the population of 2.4 million — live in the north of Gaza, and aid agencies have said forcing them to move is an impossibility as the war rages.

Exiled Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh accused Israel on Saturday of committing "war crimes" in Gaza and blocking the supply of much-needed aid.

In a letter to United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, posted on the Hamas’ website, he called Israel's cutting off of electricity, water and fuel supplies "barbaric".

But he ruled out any "displacement" of Gazans, including to Egypt.

 

Gazans, who cannot leave the enclave, have packed what belongings they can into bags and suitcases, to trudge through the rubble-strewn streets.

A stream of cars, trucks, three-wheeled vehicles and donkey-drawn carts joined the frantic mass movement south, all loaded with families and their belongings, mattresses, bedding and bags strapped onto the roofs of packed vehicles.

Roads in the 40 kilometre long territory were jammed. But putting distance between people and the bombings had not dispelled fear.

“We wake up to the killing and death under the bombs,” said Mohamed Abu Ali, who lives in Gaza.

“We don’t know where to go, where is safe. We have no food, water or electricity,” he added.

International aid agencies, including the UN and Red Cross, plus several foreign diplomats have voiced concern about the feasibility of the evacuation plan.

“We fear an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe,” said Ivan Karakashian, of the Norwegian Refugee Council.

According to the UN, more than 1,300 buildings in Gaza have been destroyed, while local hospitals and their exhausted staff have become overwhelmed with growing numbers of dead and injured.

“What does the world want from us?” asked one Palestinian resident, Mohamed Khaled, 43. “I am a refugee in Gaza and they want to displace me yet again?”

US President Joe Biden told US television on Friday that his administration was doing “everything” it could to locate 14 missing Americans.

Egypt and Israel have agreed to let US citizens leave the Gaza Strip through the Rafah crossing, a US official accompanying Secretary of State Antony Blinken on a regional tour told reporters.

But it was not immediately clear when the plan would be implemented.

Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh accused Israel of “genocide” in Gaza, while clashes in the occupied West Bank have killed 53 Palestinians in the past week.

Angry protests condemning Israel and supporting the Palestinians in Gaza took place across the Arab world on Friday.

More took place in New York on Friday night, and London on Saturday, where protesters waved Palestinian flags and placards with slogans such as “Freedom for Palestine” and “End the massacre”.

Antony Blinken is seeking Beijing’s help in restoring calm, State Department spokesman Matthew Miller told reporters.

In Beijing, Wang said China wanted urgent peace talks to resolve the situation, a read-out from the foreign ministry said.

After a meeting with Blinken, Riyadh said it was calling for “an immediate ceasefire in Gaza” and the surrounding area, and for the siege to be lifted, to allow aid to get in.

 

Lebanon says Israel launched strike that killed, wounded journalists

By - Oct 15,2023 - Last updated at Oct 15,2023

Mourners carry the casket of Lebanese Reuters video journalist Issam Abdallah, killed on Friday by Israeli shelling at Alma Al Shaab border village with Israel while covering cross border shelling, during his funeral in the village of El Khiam on Saturday (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Lebanon said on Saturday that Israel was behind cross-border fire that killed a Reuters journalist and wounded six others near the border the previous day.

Israel's military said it was looking into the circumstances of the fatal strike on Friday which also injured journalists from AFP, Reuters and Al Jazeera.

The Lebanese army said in a statement that "the Israeli enemy fired a rocket shell that hit a civilian car belonging to a media team, leading to the death of Issam Abdallah".

Lebanon's foreign ministry also blamed Israel and labelled the strike a "deliberate killing" and a "crime against freedom of speech and journalism".

The group of journalists from different media, wearing press vests and helmets, was near the village of Alma Al Shaab, close to the border with Israel, when they came under "direct" fire, according to two eyewitnesses.

Israel has massed forces and tanks along the northern border with Lebanon, a country with which it remains technically at war, and where the Iran-backed militant group Hizbollah has a heavy presence. 

AFP photographer Christina Assi and AFP video journalist Dylan Collins were among the six journalists wounded. 

Collins said there had been no outgoing fire from their location prior to the strike launched from the Israeli side of the border.

“We were filming smoke billowing from Israeli artillery fire targeting a distant hill in front of us,” Collins said.

“There was no military activity in our direct vicinity and no artillery fire near us.”

The journalists were standing in an open area when they heard small arms fire from a different direction further west, along the border with Israel, according to Collins, who spoke from the hospital.

“When we turned our cameras to look closer, we were hit directly by what seemed to be a rocket strike from the Israeli side,” Collins said.

Shortly after, he said, “we were hit again, directly, in the same place and from the same area. Two direct strikes on the same area”.

 

Running for shelter 

 

Al Jazeera accused Israel of carrying out the strike, and Reuters said journalists were struck by “missiles fired from the direction of Israel”, citing one of its reporters at the scene. 

Al Jazeera reporter Carmen Joukhadar, also among those wounded, said that “Israel directly targeted us”. 

Joukhadar and fellow reporters were filming footage on a hill “in an open-air area, without any military sites near us”, she said.

When the first strike hit the area, she ran to her car for shelter, she added.

“Then I thought I shouldn’t be close to the car, so I ran and the second strike hit” the vehicle, she said.

UN chief Antonio Guterres has expressed his “deepest condolences” to the family of Abdallah and other journalists killed in the line of duty.

 

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