logo
Nine children among 20 reported dead after Israeli strike in eastern Gaza city

Nine children among 20 reported dead after Israeli strike in eastern Gaza city

The Nationala day ago

At least 20 Palestinians, including nine children, were killed and dozens more wounded when an Israeli air strike hit a group of people near a school in eastern Gaza city on Saturday night, Palestinian media reported.
The official Wafa news agency said civilians were struck close to Abdel Fattah Hammoud School in Al Tuffah neighbourhood of the city, citing its correspondent.
In a separate incident, two Palestinians were killed and others injured by Israeli shelling near the entrance to Al Bureij in central Gaza.
The latest violence comes as hopes run higher for a ceasefire after US President Donald Trump said an agreement could be reached within a week. Mediator Qatar has spoken of a window of opportunity.
The US, Qatar and Egypt have been trying to broker a new ceasefire between Israel and Hamas after a previous truce collapsed on March 18 when Israel resumed military operations.
'We think within the next week, we're going to get a ceasefire,' Mr Trump said on Friday, without elaborating.
In Doha, Foreign Ministry spokesman Majed Al Ansari said negotiators are engaging with Israel and Hamas to build on momentum from the Israel-Iran ceasefire to work towards a Gaza truce.
Trump predicts ceasefire in Gaza 'within the next week'
Sources familiar with the peace talks, which are taking place in Cairo, have told The National that negotiations have gathered pace in recent days, with US envoy Bishara Bahbah, a Palestinian-American, engaging in intense conversations with the Egyptian mediators and senior Hamas officials.
Mr Trump's Middle East special envoy Steve Witkoff is expected in the region in the coming days, when he will visit Egypt, Israel and Qatar, according to the sources.
A midlevel Israeli official was in Cairo last week and senior negotiators from Israel's Mossad spy agency and military were expected soon, the sources said. There has been no confirmation of this from the Israeli government.
Efforts to bring an end to the war in Gaza have been stalled for months. More than 56,000 people have been killed in the enclave since the conflict began in October 2023 with the Hamas-led attacks on southern Israeli communities, in which about 1,200 people died.
Israel's military offensive has reduced much of Gaza to rubble and led to a humanitarian crisis in the territory, with dire shortages of basic essentials and the UN warning of famine.
The US and Israel last month launched a new aid system under the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a private group, to address the humanitarian concerns. But the group has drawn intense criticism after scenes of chaos and bloodshed near its aid distribution sites.
Since late May, nearly 550 people have been killed near GHF aid centres while seeking food, according to local authorities.
The GHF has denied that deaths took place in the immediate vicinity of its aid points, but the UN and other aid organisations have refused to work with the group, calling its distribution system a 'death trap'.
Haaretz on Thursday published a report quoting unnamed soldiers saying they were ordered to deliberately fire live bullets at crowds near distribution centres to disperse them, even when they posed no threat.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Iran could restart enriching uranium in 'matter of months', UN nuclear chief says
Iran could restart enriching uranium in 'matter of months', UN nuclear chief says

Middle East Eye

time35 minutes ago

  • Middle East Eye

Iran could restart enriching uranium in 'matter of months', UN nuclear chief says

Iran could restart producing enriched uranium in a few months, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Rafael Grossi, said on Sunday, raising questions about US President Donald Trump's assertion that Iran's nuclear programme was 'blown up to Kingdom come'. Grossi told CBS News that Iran still retained the 'capacities' to enrich. 'They can have, you know, in a matter of months, I would say, a few cascades of centrifuges spinning and producing enriched uranium, or less than that." "But as I said, frankly speaking, one cannot claim that everything has disappeared and there is nothing there,' he told CBS, according to a transcript of his interview released ahead of his interview. 'It is clear that there has been severe damage, but it's not total damage…Iran has the capacities there, industrial and technological capacities. So if they so wish, they will be able to start doing this again.' New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Iran has lashed out at the IAEA. President Masoud Pezeshkian told his French counterpart, Emmanuel Macron, that Tehran had halted cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog due to what he called the agency chief's "destructive" behaviour towards the Islamic Republic, his office said on Monday. Iranian lawmakers last week voted in favour of a bill to suspend cooperation with the IAEA, citing Israel's 13 June attack on Iran and later strikes by the United States on nuclear facilities. "The action taken by parliament members... is a natural response to the unjustified, unconstructive, and destructive conduct of the Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency," Pezeshkian told Macron in a phone call late Sunday, according to a presidency statement. The fate of Iran's nuclear programme after US strikes on Iran's Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan nuclear facilities has been hotly debated. An Arab official previously told Middle East Eye that Iran had received advance warning of the US strikes on its Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan nuclear facilities. Amwaj Media first reported that Tehran was notified before the US attacked. 'Vindicated': Unscathed by war, Gulf states look to capitalise on Israel and Iran's losses Read More » Trump has insisted that US strikes 'obliterated' Iran's programme. The White House pushed back aggressively on a leaked Department of Defence intelligence document, first reported by CNN, which assessed that US strikes only set Iran's programme back a few months. Later, the White House shared a statement from the CIA disputing the leaked assessment. Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei said last week that the country's nuclear facilities had been 'badly damaged'. But Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, downplayed any lasting impact last week, saying Iran scored a "victory" over Israel in the war. 'The American president exaggerated events in unusual ways," he added, insisting the strikes had done "nothing significant" to Iran's nuclear infrastructure. Trump said last week the US was going to meet with Iran. He signalled that he might consider sanctions relief on Iran, saying that China could continue buying Iranian oil. However, on Monday, he took a hard line. "I am not offering Iran ANYTHING, unlike Obama," Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform. "Nor am I even talking to them since we totally OBLITERATED their Nuclear Facilities.' The statement comes as Iran's deputy foreign minister told the BBC that talks between Washington and Tehran cannot resume unless the US rules out further strikes on Iran. Majid Takht-Ravanchi told the British broadcaster that the US had signalled it wants to return to the negotiating table, a week after it struck three Iranian nuclear facilities. "We have not agreed to any date, we have not agreed to the modality," said Takht-Ravanchi.

Israel's Knesset votes to advance impeachment of Arab lawmaker Ayman Odeh
Israel's Knesset votes to advance impeachment of Arab lawmaker Ayman Odeh

Middle East Eye

time35 minutes ago

  • Middle East Eye

Israel's Knesset votes to advance impeachment of Arab lawmaker Ayman Odeh

Israel's Knesset House Committee voted to advance the impeachment of prominent Arab lawmaker Ayman Odeh on Monday, over comments he made earlier this year which were perceived as being pro-Palestinian and against the war on Gaza. Lawmakers from both the ruling coalition and opposition Yesh Atid and National Unity parties voted 14-2 in favour of impeachment, while two Knesset members from the Palestinian Ra'am and Ta'al parties opposed the move. Odeh had earned the scorn of several Israeli lawmakers earlier this year when he welcomed a long-awaited ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas. "I am happy about the release of the hostages and prisoners. From here, both peoples must be freed from the yoke of the occupation. We were all born free," Odeh wrote on 19 January after Hamas released three Israeli women after 471 days in captivity. Then last month, Odeh drew further criticism after a speech he gave during an anti-war demonstration in Haifa. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters "After more than 600 days, there is a majority among the two people that says: 'I wish these days hadn't happened'," he said. "This is a historic loss for the right-wing ideology that was defeated in Gaza. Gaza won, and Gaza will win," Odeh added. Following Monday's vote, Odeh, who also serves as the head of the Hadash-Ta'al party, accused the Israeli opposition of crossing a "red line" by joining ranks with coalition government members and voting for his impeachment. 'There is a clear campaign of incitement against Ayman Odeh. It was a field trial, and unfortunately, members of the opposition joined in' - Aida Touma-Sliman, Hadash-Ta'al "Instead of fighting the Kahanist government, it [the opposition] collaborated with it in crushing the democratic space. Some of them hate us more than they love democracy," Odeh said. "They want to subdue the judicial system, silence critical voices, and turn Israel into a messianic dictatorship. Today it's me - tomorrow it's you. Anyone who dares to oppose will be next in line," Odeh added, as he called on the opposition to "wake up". Aida Touma-Sliman, an Arab politician from the Hadash-Ta'al party, also condemned the opposition for backing impeachment, telling Middle East Eye that "everyone who was present at the debate understood where the wind was blowing". "There is a clear campaign of incitement against Ayman Odeh. It was a field trial, and unfortunately, members of the opposition joined in," she said. "I can't understand the logic. If you want to present yourself as a visionary opposition, why do you support impeachment? "If the opposition has any real hope for a change, it's the partnership with us. We can't make a change alone, but without us a change can't be made," she added. The final decision now rests with the Knesset Plenum, where a majority of 90 lawmakers are required to vote in favour of removing Odeh from parliament. 'Odeh is our eighth front' Speaking to reporters after the vote, Avigdor Lieberman, an opposition lawmaker who nearly a decade ago said there were "no innocent people" in Gaza, said he hoped all 90 lawmakers would vote to impeach Odeh. "He [Odeh] can sit in the Hamas parliament in Gaza, or with the Houthis, but he has nothing to do in the Israeli Knesset," Lieberman said. His position was echoed by Ofir Katz, a member of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party and chairman of the committee, who accused Odeh of being the eighth front in Israel's war. "While the soldiers are fighting on seven fronts, we have to clear the eighth front, and Ayman Odeh is our eighth front," Katz said in the debate. Since the 7 October attacks on southern Israel, the Israeli government has repeatedly claimed that it is fighting a war on seven fronts, having to combat Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, Palestinians in the West Bank, the Houthi movement in Yemen, Syria's new leaders, Shia militias in Iraq, and the Iranian government and its religious establishment. Meanwhile last week, Likud lawmaker Osher Shekalim, who has repeatedly advocated for the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians from Gaza, said that in any other country Odeh would have faced a "firing squad". Trump calls Netanyahu's corruption trial 'witch hunt' as he eyes progress on Gaza ceasefire Read More » Speaking to reporters, Sagit Ofek, the Knesset's legal adviser, also condemned Odeh but said that it was "doubtful" whether his remarks met the threshold of expressing "support for an armed struggle by a terrorist organisation". Still, Hassan Jabareen, an attorney who represented Odeh before the committee, derided the vote saying it was "not a legal process but a campaign of political persecution." 'This is part of a broader fascist and racist campaign targeting Arab political parties and their representatives," Jabreen said. "This process signals what is likely to come in the upcoming elections: a fierce right-wing assault on all Arab political parties and their representatives," Jabareen added. Meanwhile, Touma-Sliman said that the attempts to silence criticial Palestinian voices in Israel was part of Israel's long-standing aim of crushing Palestinian activism "Every time they try to silence us, we get stronger," she said. "The campaign of dehumanisation and delegitimisation of the Palestinians does not end at the Green Line," she said referring to the demarcation line which is supposed to separate Israel from the occupied West Bank. "The attempt to define us as an enemy is part of their attempt to have fewer Palestinians here." Palestinian citizens of Israel comprise about 20 percent of the country's 9.7 million population. They are the descendants of the native population, which was violently displaced by Zionist militias during the creation of Israel in 1948. For decades, they have suffered under discriminatory laws and practices imposed by the Israeli state.

PKK's Abdullah Ocalan: 'No Israeli dominance through Kurds'
PKK's Abdullah Ocalan: 'No Israeli dominance through Kurds'

Middle East Eye

time2 hours ago

  • Middle East Eye

PKK's Abdullah Ocalan: 'No Israeli dominance through Kurds'

Since the Israel-Iran conflict erupted last year, Turkey has found an unexpected ally: Abdullah Ocalan, the imprisoned leader of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK). For months, insiders in Ankara have credited the Turkish government's outreach to the PKK and other Kurdish parties as part of its strategy to prevent the armed group from becoming a proxy or leverage against Turkey amid the regional rivalry between Iran and Israel. Turkey has long been concerned about Iranian attempts to use the PKK against Ankara, but Israel's growing influence in the region and increasingly tense relations also raised fears that the PKK could find yet another partner on the ground. However, a leaked meeting document reviewed by Middle East Eye indicates that Ocalan, who led an armed struggle against Turkey for nearly 40 years, is strongly opposed to any potential regional dominance by Israel. The minutes, which detail a meeting between Ocalan and a delegation from the pro-Kurdish Dem Party on 21 April, record the PKK leader's concerns about the possible "Gaza-ization" of the region, a term he uses to describe Israel's willingness to attack neighbouring countries at will, potentially leading to the partition of those states. "Israel has been at this for 30 years. For three decades, Israel has been secretly promising us a state," Ocalan said during the meeting, according to the document. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters He added that Israel was using the media to encourage Kurds to establish an independent state. "Whoever aligns the Kurds with themselves will gain dominance in the Middle East," he said. "They realized this before I did." 'Gaza-ization' of region Ocalan's anti-Israel stance is well-known, as his group was based in the Bekaa Valley in the 1980s, cooperating with the leftist Palestinian liberation groups. In the document, Ocalan presents himself as the leader who could stop Israel from becoming a hegemonic power in the Middle East. "The Netanyahu-Trump comings and goings are all about this. It is a five-stage strategy. The first three - Gaza, Lebanon, Syria - are done. Only two remain: Iran and Turkey," he said. "The goal is to build Israel up as the dominant force shaping Middle Eastern strategy." Ocalan added that the Kurds are an essential part of this strategy, and he is the only person who could prevent the PKK's Syrian offshoot, the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), or its headquarters from falling under the influence of Iran or Israel. 'A plan is in motion to turn the region from Sulaymaniyahto Afrin into another Gaza' - recording of Abdullah Ocalan, PKK leader He also described an exchange of messages with then-Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir in 1982, when Ocalan was based in Damascus under the protection of Syrian President Hafez al-Assad. "They told me to leave Damascus, that they would give me whatever I wanted," he said, according to the document. "They said I was a major threat to Israel's security. Was it the foreign minister then, Shamir - Yitzhak Shamir? - back in 1982, he asked, 'What do you want from us? Why are you using these young people against us?'" A series of Israeli governments lent political and military support to Turkey in the 1990s, establishing a close alliance with secularist generals at that time. But under Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the relationship has deteriorated, and Ankara has occasionally accused Israel of indirectly supporting the PKK. Dividing Syria The relationship reached a low point following the war in Gaza, and official Israeli statements regarding "the Kurds," particularly concerning PKK-linked groups in Syria, have since shifted. In November, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar openly called for closer relations between Israel and Kurdish communities, saying that his country should reach out to Kurds and other regional minorities that are "natural" allies. Ocalan said the Israeli intelligence agency Mossad also contacted him in Moscow, where he was seeking refuge from Turkish authorities in 1998, telling him they could hide him even in Russia. 'It is a five-stage strategy. The first three - Gaza, Lebanon, Syria - are done. Only two remain: Iran and Turkey' - Abdullah Ocalan "A plan is in motion to turn the region from Sulaymaniyah to Afrin into another Gaza," Ocalan said. "Israel has prepared all the groundwork for this." After Assad's fall in December, Israeli public news outlet Kann reported several engagements between Israel and the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a US-backed armed group led by PKK offshoots. MEE reported in December that Israel had been planning to divide Syria into four regions, including ones for the Druze and the Kurds, to keep its neighbour weak and divided. The plan has infuriated Turkey. Ocalan added that Israel's war on Gaza was already over, and now, he claimed, Israel was seeking to draw the Kurds into a full-blown conflict against Turkey - "into this Gaza-ization process," he said. In February, Ocalan called for the PKK to disband itself. The PKK leadership, after holding a congress in May, said they would disband and end the armed struggle. However, Ankara has yet to see any evidence indicating that the PKK is actually in the process of disbanding. Ocalan, however, says Turkey is entering a major democratisation process through its negotiations with the Kurdish political movement. "Strategic advantage is shifting to Turkey; only a child would fail to understand this," he said. "Should we hand that advantage to Israel?"

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store