Israel’s war on besieged Gaza — now in its 178th day — has killed at least 32,845 Palestinians and wounded 75,392 others as WHO chief urges Israel to urgently establish a humanitarian corridor.
Monday, April 1, 2024
1214 GMT –– Israel has committed atrocities during its raid on al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, Palestinian resistance group Hamas said.
The Israeli army withdrew from the facility early on Monday after a 14-day raid, leaving behind dozens of people dead and a massive trail of destruction, according to witnesses.
In a statement, Hamas said bodies of handcuffed people were buried alive, while others were trampled by tank tracks, without providing any further details.
Hamas held the US administration “fully responsible for the atrocities and deliberate destruction in the Gaza Strip.”
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1423 GMT –– Turkish foreign minister discusses Gaza, regional issues with Qatari, Russian counterparts
Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan has discussed the Gaza situation and regional developments with his Qatari and Russian counterparts.
According to Türkiye’s Foreign Ministry, Fidan and Qatari Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim al-Thani addressed the latest situation in the besieged Palestinian enclave and regional developments over the phone.
In a separate phone call, Fidan and his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov discussed regional issues and navigation security in the Black Sea, diplomatic sources said.
1401 GMT –– Settling Gaza to hand Israel ‘total victory,’ says Israeli minister
An Israeli minister has called for rebuilding settlements in Gaza, saying the move will represent a “total victory” in Israel’s ongoing war in the Palestinian enclave.
“A total victory means a return to settle there [in Gaza], that is punishment for what they did on October 7. If we don’t do that, our soldiers would have fallen for nothing,” Minister of the Negev and Galilee Yitzhak Wasserlauf told the local Radio North.
“We must force them into submission to reach total victory,” he said. “That includes invading Rafah and the dismantling of all Palestinian factions.”
1308 GMT –– Israel’s Netanyahu urges Knesset to pass bill to close Al Jazeera
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to shut down Al Jazeera television as soon as the Knesset (parliament) passes a law enabling the closure of the Qatari channel.
The Knesset (Israel’s parliament) is set to vote on the second and third readings of a bill to close down Al Jazeera television on Monday evening.
The first reading of the bill was passed on February 12.
Netanyahu met with coalition whip Ofir Katz and urged him to pass the bill on Monday, his Likud Party said in a statement.
1104 GMT –– Gaza death toll reaches 32,845: health ministry
At least 32,845 Palestinians have been killed since Israel began its war on Gaza in October last year, the enclave’s health ministry said.
The toll includes at least 63 deaths over the past 24 hours alone, a ministry statement said, adding that 75,392 others have been wounded.
1051 GMT –– Israeli army arrests 22 more Palestinians in fresh West Bank raids
Israeli forces rounded up 22 more Palestinians in fresh raids across the occupied West Bank late Sunday and early Monday, according to prisoners’ rights groups.
Four women were among the detainees, the Commission of Detainees’ Affairs and the Palestinian Prisoners Society said in a joint statement.
Most of the arrests took place in the cities of Ramallah, Jerusalem, Tulkarem, Jenin, Hebron and Bethlehem, the statement added.
With the latest figures, the total number of arrests since October 7 of last year rose to 7,920, according to the statement.
1008 GMT –– Under fire, US congressman tries to take back remarks that Gaza should be treated ‘like Hiroshima’
Facing a backlash, a US congressman has tried to walk back comments saying the besieged Gaza, home to over two million people, should be treated “like Nagasaki and Hiroshima.”
At a town meeting last week in southern Michigan, Tim Walberg, a Republican congressman, was asked by a resident of his district about the US building a pier off Gaza to deliver humanitarian aid to the people there, who the UN says face a dire risk of famine.
“We should not be spending a dime on humanitarian aid,” he said on video posted online last Thursday, adding: “Get it over quick. The same should be in Ukraine.”
“It should be like Hiroshima and Nagasaki,” said Walberg, a former pastor, mentioning the only two cities hit by nuclear weapons, where up to about 226,000 people, mostly civilians, died in 1945 after being bombed by the US.
On X on Sunday, facing criticism, Walberg tried to walk back his remarks, adding that his remarks had been unfairly edited.
0928 GMT –– Gaza Health Ministry urges reactivation of closed Nasser Hospital
The Gaza-based Health Ministry urged to reopen Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, southern Gaza, after it was taken out of service by the Israeli army.
In a statement, the ministry called on all international and humanitarian institutions to make efforts to reactivate the hospital and provide protection for healthcare institutions.
The closure of the facility is a blow to healthcare services, which have already been reduced to their lowest levels, depriving patients of access to medical services, the statement added.
The Israeli army took out of commission the hospital last February in a military raid inside it, resulting in destruction, casualties, injuries and detainees.
0852 GMT –– Gaza’s al-Shifa hospital devastated in two-week Israeli assault
Israeli forces have withdrawn from al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City after a two-week operation, the Israeli military said, leaving behind a wasteland of destroyed buildings and Palestinian bodies scattered in the dirt of the complex.
Hundreds of residents rushed to the area around Gaza’s largest hospital to check on damage to the surrounding residential districts after fighting between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas group that administers Gaza.
The Israeli military said it had killed and detained hundreds of gunmen in clashes in the area of the hospital, and seized weaponry and intelligence documents. Hamas and medical staff deny that Palestinian fighters have any armed presence in hospitals.
0700 GMT –– Israeli military says al-Shifa hospital operation ‘completed’
Israeli forces have ended their two-week raid in and around Gaza’s largest hospital, the al-Shifa complex in Gaza City, and pulled back from the area, the army said.
“Troops have completed precise operational activity in the area of the Shifa Hospital and exited the area of the hospital,” the military said.
0512 GMT –– Israeli army withdraws from al-Shifa: Gaza health ministry
The Palestinian health ministry in Gaza said the Israeli military had withdrawn tanks and vehicles from the complex housing the besieged territory’s main hospital, al-Shifa, days after the launch of a major operation on the site.
The ministry said dozens of bodies had been found at the complex, where an AFP journalist and eyewitnesses saw tanks and vehicles pulling out.
The Israeli military did not immediately confirm any pullout.
Eyewitnesses said dozens of air strikes and shells had hit the area around the complex.
The government media office in Gaza said the Israeli air strikes had provided cover for the withdrawing vehicles.
0443 GMT –– Israeli army says 600 soldiers killed since October 7
The Israeli military announced the death of a soldier in fighting in Gaza, bringing the total number of troops killed since the October 7 Hamas attacks on Israel to 600.
The military announced the death of a soldier, Nadav Cohen, and updated its overall toll to 600 killed since the attacks that triggered the war.
0058 GMT –– Pope overcomes health concerns to preside over Easter Mass and appeal for peace in Gaza and Ukraine
Pope Francis rallied from a winter-long bout of respiratory problems to lead some 60,000 people in Easter celebrations Sunday, making a strong appeal for a ceasefire in Gaza and a prisoner swap between Russia and Ukraine.
Francis presided over Easter Sunday Mass in a flower-decked St Peter’s Square and then delivered a heartfelt prayer for peace in his annual roundup of global crises.
Gaza’s people, including the small Christian community there, have been a source of constant concern for Francis and Easter in the Holy Land overall was a somber affair this year given the war.
0030 GMT — Iraq’s Islamic Resistance claims responsibility for drone attack on Israel
The Islamic Resistance in Iraq claimed responsibility for a one-way suicide drone attack on the southern Israeli port city of Eilat.
“The mujahideen of the Islamic Resistance in Iraq bombed a vital target in our occupied lands Monday morning with appropriate weapons,” the group said in a statement.
The statement said the attack was conducted in solidarity with the people of Gaza and as a reaction to “the massacres committed by the usurping entity” against Palestinian civilians.
“The Islamic Resistance confirms its continuation in destroying enemy strongholds,” the statement added.
0013 GMT — US, Israel to discuss Rafah invasion in virtual meeting: report
The US and Israel are set to convene for a virtual meeting on Monday, aiming to discuss alternative proposals from the Biden administration regarding a potential Israeli military invasion of Rafah, as confirmed by four Israeli and US officials speaking to Axios.
Originally scheduled for last week, the meeting has become a source of contention between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Biden.
Tensions escalated after the US refrained from vetoing a UN Security Council resolution last week, which called for a ceasefire in Gaza and the release of all hostages.
In response, Netanyahu announced the cancellation of the meeting in protest against the perceived lack of support from the US.
2230 GMT — WHO urges Israel to enable access to al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza
World Health Organization (WHO) Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus urged Israel to urgently enable access to al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza and establish a humanitarian corridor.
“We urge Israel to urgently facilitate access and a humanitarian corridor so WHO and partners can carry out the lifesaving transfer of patients,” Tedros said on X.
He said 21 patients have died since al-Shifa Hospital came under siege on March 18, with hostilities continuing in its vicinity according to updates from a health worker at the facility.
2200 GMT — Israeli forces admit most Gaza killings are civilians
Israeli officers and soldiers have admitted that most of the fatalities classified by the army as “terrorists” during its war on Gaza are actually civilians, a report has said.
The Israeli newspaper Haaretz collected testimonies from officers and soldiers who have fought in Gaza during the war, which has been ongoing since October 7, 2023.
“The Israeli army says 9,000 terrorists have been killed since the Gaza war began,” the report said.
Israeli officials and soldiers, however, told Haaretz that “these are often civilians whose only crime was to cross an invisible line drawn by the Israeli army.”
“We were explicitly told that even if a suspect runs into a building with people in it, we should fire at the building and kill the terrorist, even if other people are hurt,” one soldier told the newspaper.
2130 GMT — Clashes erupt among Israelis over conscription of ultra-Orthodox Jews
Clashes erupted in Jerusalem among Israelis demanding the mandatory conscription of ultra-Orthodox Jews into military service and those opposing it, the Israeli Broadcasting Authority reported.
The official media outlet reported that police dispersed protesters after clashes erupted between hundreds of Israelis demanding Haredim conscription and those opposing it during a demonstration outside the Mea Shearim neighbourhood in Jerusalem.
It added that the demonstration outside a religious Jewish neighbourhood was organised by the “Brothers in Arms,” a movement that advocates for religious and non-religious Israelis to be treated equally in mandatory military conscription.
2100 GMT — Israelis gather in front of Knesset, demand hostage swap deal
Thousands of Israelis began gathering in front of the parliament or Knesset building in Jerusalem to demand a hostage swap deal with Hamas and early elections, an Israeli media outlet said.
The Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper reported that thousands of Israelis from all over the country began to gather in front of the Knesset building in Jerusalem to demand a hostage swap deal and early elections.
1908 GMT — New Palestinian government sworn in
A new Palestinian government that includes both residents of Gaza and four women was sworn in but was already facing scepticism from its own people.
The Palestinian Authority led by Mahmoud Abbas is under pressure from Washington to prepare to step into the breach in the aftermath of the Gaza war and undertake reforms.
Newly appointed Prime Minister Mohammed Mustafa said his government’s “top national priority” was ending the war as he named his new team.
He said his cabinet “will work on formulating visions to reunify the institutions, including assuming responsibility for Gaza.”