Israeli strike kills nearly 100 in Gaza school refuge, civil defense officials say

Update Israeli strike kills nearly 100 in Gaza school refuge, civil defense officials say
Palestinians react at the site of an Israeli strike on a school sheltering displaced people, amid the Israel-Hamas conflict, in Gaza City, August 10, 2024. (Reuters)
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Updated 11 August 2024
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Israeli strike kills nearly 100 in Gaza school refuge, civil defense officials say

Israeli strike kills nearly 100 in Gaza school refuge, civil defense officials say
  • Civil defense said 11 children, six women among those killed at school shelter
  • Israel has killed more than 40,000 Palestinians and wounded more than 92,000 others, according to the Health Ministry
  • Arab countries condemn airstrike

CAIRO: An Israeli airstrike on a Gaza City school compound housing displaced Palestinian families killed around 100 people, the Gaza Civil Emergency Service said on Saturday, while Israel said the toll was inflated and 19 militants were among the dead.
Video from the site showed body parts scattered among rubble and more bodies being carried away and covered by blankets. Empty food tins lay in a puddle of blood, and burned mattresses and a child’s doll lay in the debris.
In another video, men prayed over a dozen body bags laid on the ground of the Tabeen school complex.
The Israeli strike drew condemnation from Arab states, Turkiye, France, Britain and the European Union and an expression of deep concern from the US, which has been working with partners to prevent the 10-month-old Gaza conflict from escalating into a regional war.
“Yet again far too many civilians have been killed,” US Vice President Kamala Harris, said during a campaign stop in Phoenix when asked for her reaction to the Gaza City strike.
Reiterating US calls, Harris, the Democratic presidential candidate running for election in November, told reporters: “We need a hostage deal and a ceasefire.”
Gaza’s Civil Emergency Service, which has a credible record in stating casualty numbers, and the Hamas-run government media office said in separate statements that the complex had been attacked while its occupants were performing dawn prayers.
“So far, there are more than 93 martyrs, including 11 children and six women. There are unidentified remains,” Palestinian civil defense spokesperson Mahmoud Bassal told a televised press conference.
Tens of thousands of displaced Palestinians have sought shelter in Gaza’s schools, most of which have been closed since Israel’s war against Hamas began.
Around 350 families had been sheltering at the compound, Bassal said — some of the hundreds of thousands of Palestinians displaced by Israel’s onslaught on Gaza.
The upper floor housing families and the lower floor, used as a mosque, were both hit, he said.
The Israeli military said the death toll was inflated.
“The strike was carried out using three precise munitions, which can not cause the amount of damage that is being reported,” the military said in a statement.
It added that no severe damage was caused to the compound, and provided aerial photos and videos which it said proved this.
The compound, and the mosque that was struck within it, served as an active Hamas and Islamic Jihad military facility,” Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani said on X, without providing evidence.
An Israeli army official said the part of the mosque that was struck was reserved for men.
Israel says Palestinian militants embed themselves among Gaza’s civilians, operating from within schools, hospitals and designated humanitarian zones — which Hamas and its allies deny.
Hamas said the strike was a horrific crime and a serious escalation. Izzat El-Reshiq of Hamas’ political office said the dead did not include a single combatant.
A separate strike on Saturday killed three Palestinians in Al-Nuseirat in central Gaza and another killed one person in nearby Deir Al-Balah, medics said.
Later in the day an Israeli strike killed three Palestinians in Rafah, near the border with Egypt, medics said.
Separately, the Israeli military said the head of general security in Hamas’ military wing, Walid Alsousi, had been killed in southern Gaza. There was no immediate Hamas comment.

NEW ROUND OF CEASEFIRE TALKS
With regional tensions high after the July 31 assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran, US President Joe Biden urged Iran not to attack Israel. Iran, which supports Hamas, has blamed Israel and vowed to “punish” it. Israel has not confirmed or denied responsibility.
When a reporter asked on Saturday for his message to Iran, Biden mouthed the word “don’t.”
The Iranian-backed Hezbollah armed group in Lebanon said it launched a drone attack against military positions in northern Israel. Israel’s military said unspecified damage was reported but no casualties and that it struck several Hezbollah military structures in southern Lebanon.
The White House said it was “deeply concerned” about the Gaza school compound strike and asked Israeli officials for further details.
The European Union’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said on X that he was horrified by the images from the school.
A spokesperson for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Nabil Abu Rudeineh, urged Israel’s ally Washington to end “blind support that leads to the killing of thousands of innocent civilians, including children, women, and the elderly.”
A Hamas official told Reuters the group was studying a new ceasefire proposal for discussion but did not elaborate.
Speaking to Al-Jazeera television, Khalil Al-Hayya, the head of the Hamas team for the indirect ceasefire talks with Israel, said statements of condemnation were no longer sufficient.
“Dismiss (Israeli) ambassadors, close down embassies and sever ties with the occupation,” he said.
Egypt, the United States and Qatar have scheduled a new round of ceasefire negotiations for Thursday, as fears grow of a broader conflict involving Iran and Hezbollah.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has said he will not end the war until Hamas no longer poses a threat to Israelis, said he would send a delegation.
Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich pushed back against the White House’s accusation on Friday that he was “dead wrong” in asserting that the ceasefire deal on the table would be a surrender to Hamas.
In a post on X, Smotrich, one of Netanyahu’s far-right coalition partners, thanked the US for its support for Israel but insisted it “will not submit to any external pressure that would harm Israel’s security.”
Israel launched its assault on Gaza after Hamas fighters stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and capturing more than 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.
Since then, nearly 40,000 Palestinians have been killed in the Israeli offensive in Gaza, according to the health ministry.
Gaza health officials say most of the fatalities have been civilians but Israel says at least a third are fighters. Israel says it has lost 329 soldiers in Gaza.

 


Israel agrees ‘humanitarian pauses’ in Gaza to allow polio vaccinations

Palestinian boy Abdul Rahman Abu Al-Jidyan is the first person to contract polio in Gaza in 25 years.
Palestinian boy Abdul Rahman Abu Al-Jidyan is the first person to contract polio in Gaza in 25 years.
Updated 41 min 40 sec ago
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Israel agrees ‘humanitarian pauses’ in Gaza to allow polio vaccinations

Palestinian boy Abdul Rahman Abu Al-Jidyan is the first person to contract polio in Gaza in 25 years.
  • The vaccination campaign is due to start on Sunday, said Rik Peeperkorn, the World Health Organization’s senior official for the region

GAZA: Israel has agreed to a series of three-day “humanitarian pauses” in Gaza to allow UN health officials to administer polio vaccinations in the territory, the World Health Organization said Thursday.
“The way we discussed and agreed, the campaign will start on the first of September, in central Gaza, for three days, and there will be a humanitarian pause during the vaccination,” said Rik Peeperkorn, the agency’s representative for Palestinian territories.
The vaccination rollout will also cover southern and northern Gaza, which will each get their own three-day pauses, Peeperkorn told reporters, adding that Israel had agreed to allow an additional day if required.
Israeli authorities did not immediately respond to AFP’s request for comment, but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday night the new measures were “not a ceasefire.”
Hamas said it supports the “UN humanitarian truce.”
The United States and European Union have both voiced concern over polio in Gaza, after the first case there in 25 years was confirmed this month in an unvaccinated 10-month-old baby.
UN agencies have said they plan to provide oral vaccines against type-2 poliovirus (cVDPV2) to more than 640,000 children in the territory.
Poliovirus is highly infectious and most often spread through sewage and contaminated water — an increasingly common problem in Gaza with much of the territory’s infrastructure destroyed by Israel in its war against Hamas.
The disease mainly affects children under the age of five. It can cause deformities and paralysis, and is potentially fatal.


Arab League, Egypt condemn Israeli military raids on northern West Bank

Arab League, Egypt condemn Israeli military raids on northern West Bank
Updated 29 August 2024
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Arab League, Egypt condemn Israeli military raids on northern West Bank

Arab League, Egypt condemn Israeli military raids on northern West Bank
  • Egypt also condemned Israeli raids against a number of cities in the northern West Bank, namely Jenin, Tulkarm, and Tubas

CAIRO: Israel’s large-scale military operation against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank has drawn widespread condemnation.

Arab League Secretary-General Ahmed Aboul Gheit denounced what he termed as the aggressive military operation in the West Bank, which has claimed the lives of more than 11 Palestinians. Israel has also imposed a sweeping siege on major cities and several large areas.

Gamal Roshdy, spokesperson for the secretary-general, said the “raids, brutal assaults and killings perpetrated by Israel in the cities of the northern West Bank, coupled with the destruction of infrastructure and the siege of hospitals, represent a dangerous escalation aimed at subjugating the Palestinian people, dismantling the remnants of existing agreements, and re-annexing Palestinian territories in pursuit of the extreme right’s agenda.”

He added the alarming development could not “be dissociated from the dangerous — and wholly unacceptable — statements made by extremist ministers within the Israeli government concerning the Al-Aqsa Mosque.”

Roshdy quoted Aboul Gheit as stating that Israel was “committing genocide against Palestinians everywhere.”

The Israeli operation in the West Bank is entirely unrelated to the events of Oct. 7, he added.

He said: “(Israel’s) true aim is to render Palestinian lives unbearable, whether in the West Bank or the occupied Gaza Strip, through ongoing intimidation, bloodshed and the implementation of displacement plans, effectively seeking to liquidate the Palestinian cause.”

Aboul Gheit emphasized that the international community could not afford to stand idly by in the face of this escalation, which is pushing the region to the brink of catastrophe and could lead to a widespread explosion of violence.

He said the US had failed to exert the necessary pressure on Israel, succumbing to the procrastination of its leaders who, he added, had no real intention of reaching an agreement to end the conflict. 

Aboul Gheit held Washington responsible for “enabling this escalating Israeli arrogance in the region and demanded that it take a clear stance on the recent Israeli military operation in the West Bank.”

Egypt also condemned Israeli raids against a number of cities in the northern West Bank, namely Jenin, Tulkarm, and Tubas.

A statement issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Emigration and Egyptian Expatriates warned of the dangers of ongoing Israeli operations and the deliberate targeting of more Palestinian civilians,

This activity, along with the continued attacks on the Gaza Strip and the violation of holy sites in East Jerusalem, further complicated the situation and indicated Israeli insistence on escalation rather than the desire for de-escalation, the ministry statement said.

Egypt said Israeli aggression against Palestinian civilians in the West Bank cities was “an entrenchment of the systematic violation of international law, international humanitarian law, and the four Geneva Conventions on the protection of the rights of peoples under occupation, and intransigence regarding the policy of escalation and expanding the scope of confrontations within the Palestinian territories.”


Iran’s uranium enrichment rolls on, key issues stalled, IAEA reports show

Iran’s production of highly enriched uranium continues and it has not improved cooperation with the IAEA, reports showed.
Iran’s production of highly enriched uranium continues and it has not improved cooperation with the IAEA, reports showed.
Updated 29 August 2024
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Iran’s uranium enrichment rolls on, key issues stalled, IAEA reports show

Iran’s production of highly enriched uranium continues and it has not improved cooperation with the IAEA, reports showed.
  • There has been no progress in the past quarter on several issues that have soured relations between the IAEA and Tehran, reports showed

VIENNA: Iran’s production of highly enriched uranium continues and it has not improved cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog despite a resolution demanding this at the agency’s last board meeting, watchdog reports seen by Reuters showed on Thursday.
Despite the resolution passed at the last quarterly meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency’s 35-nation Board of Governors in June, nuclear diplomacy has largely been on hold with the election last month of Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian and the US presidential election due in November.
“The (IAEA) Director General (Rafael Grossi) expresses the hope that his initial exchange with President Pezeshkian will be followed by an early visit to Iran and the establishment of a fluid, constructive dialogue that swiftly leads to concrete results,” said one of the two confidential, quarterly IAEA reports sent to member states on Thursday.
There has been no progress in the past quarter on several long-standing issues that have soured relations between the IAEA and Tehran, including Iran’s barring of IAEA inspectors specialized in enrichment and Iran’s failure to explain uranium traces at undeclared sites, the reports showed.
At the same time, the Islamic Republic has added cascades, or clusters, of centrifuges, machines that refine uranium, at its main enrichment sites in Natanz and Fordow.
It has installed eight more cascades of advanced IR-6 centrifuges at Fordow, a site dug into a mountain, bringing the total there to 10, although the new ones had not yet been brought online, meaning they are not yet enriching uranium hexafluoride (UF6) gas, one report showed.
Iran’s stock of uranium in UF6 form enriched to up to 60 percent purity, close to the roughly 90 percent of weapons grade, grew by an estimated 22.6 kg to 164.7 kg, one of the reports said.
According to an IAEA yardstick, that is 2 kg short of being enough, in theory, if enriched further, for four nuclear bombs.
By the same measure Iran now has enough uranium enriched to up to 20 percent purity, if enriched further, for six bombs.


Algeria opposition figure released under judicial supervision

Algeria opposition figure released under judicial supervision
Updated 29 August 2024
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Algeria opposition figure released under judicial supervision

Algeria opposition figure released under judicial supervision
  • Ghares, a secular leftist opposition figure, was charged with “insulting the president of the republic”

ALGIERS: An Algerian court on Thursday released opposition figure Fethi Ghares and his wife under judicial supervision pending an investigation into the alleged insulting of President Abdelmadjid Tebboune and other charges, his lawyer said.
Ghares, a secular leftist opposition figure, was charged with “insulting the president of the republic” and “spreading false news and hate speech through posts on social media,” Abdelghani Badi, his lawyer, told AFP.
Messaouda Cheballah, Ghares’s wife who is also a political activist, was charged with “partaking” in the main defendant’s alleged wrongdoing, Badi added.
Badi said the couple are required to “report to the court every 15 days” pending a trial date.
The couple were also banned from posting information on social media or speaking to the media, said the lawyer, ahead of elections on September 7.
Fethi Ghares, 49, a former coordinator of the now-banned leftist Democratic and Social Movement party, was arrested on Tuesday by plain-clothes police at his home in the capital Algiers.
In a video posted on Facebook and titled “Where’s Fethi Ghares?,” his wife had said police asked her husband to follow them for what they said was “an interrogation” and that he had had no summons order.
Ghares, 49, was previously arrested in 2021 and later sentenced to prison — also on charges including insulting President Tebboune.
In January 2022, he was sentenced to two years behind bars for “harming the person of the president of the republic” and “spreading information that could harm national unity” and public order.
He was released in March 2022 after his sentence was reduced on appeal.
A figure from Algeria’s secular leftist opposition, Ghares in 2019 joined the pro-democracy Hirak movement — mass protests that swept veteran president Abdelaziz Bouteflika from power.
His Democratic and Social Movement party — a successor of the Algerian Communist Party — had all its activities indefinitely frozen by the authorities in February 2023.


Relatives of Israeli hostages try to cross into Gaza

Relatives of Israeli hostage Edan Alexander speak during a demonstration near Kibbutz Nirim in southern Israel.
Relatives of Israeli hostage Edan Alexander speak during a demonstration near Kibbutz Nirim in southern Israel.
Updated 29 August 2024
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Relatives of Israeli hostages try to cross into Gaza

Relatives of Israeli hostage Edan Alexander speak during a demonstration near Kibbutz Nirim in southern Israel.
  • At one point a few dozen protesters broke off and rushed toward the Gaza border in the distance
  • They were stopped before reaching the border by Israeli police, who warned that standing in the open field made them easy targets for Palestinian militants

KIBBUTZ NIRIM: Families of Israeli hostages being held in the Gaza Strip protested near the border on Thursday, demanding a deal to secure their release and at one point made a dash to try to cross into the coastal enclave.
Relatives of some of the 107 hostages still held by Palestinian militants in Gaza, carrying photographs and wearing shirts marked with red paint, gathered at kibbutz Nirim in southern Israel, roughly 2 km (1.2 miles) from the border.
They began by shouting messages of love and support through a stack of speakers pointed toward the Gaza frontier.
“Hersh, it’s dada,” yelled Jon Polin, whose son Hersh Goldberg-Polin was taken hostage from a music festival.
“What you need to know, and all 107 of you need to know, is not only are the families here today and 9 million people of this country, but people all over the world are fighting for you,” he said.
His mother, Rachel Goldberg, raised her hand to the sky as she spoke into the microphone: “We love you. Stay strong. Survive.”
Nirim was one of a string of Israeli communities around the Gaza Strip targeted in a cross-border rampage by Hamas on Oct. 7 that sparked the war in Gaza.
Hamas-led gunmen killed some 1,200 Israelis and foreigners and abducted around 250 hostages on Oct. 7, according to Israeli tallies. Since then, Israel’s military has levelled Gaza, driving nearly all of its inhabitants from their homes and killing at least 40,000, according to Palestinian health authorities. Israel says it has killed some 17,000 militants.
International efforts to reach a ceasefire and hostage release deal have failed to end the fighting.
At one point a few dozen protesters broke off and rushed toward the Gaza border in the distance.
“We are coming to get them back to Israel where they belong, where they are supposed to be,” said Eyal Kalderon, short of breath during the dash, whose cousin Ofer is a hostage.
They were stopped before reaching the border by Israeli police, who warned that standing in the open field made them easy targets for Palestinian militants.
“We were trying to get into Gaza to get the hostages back. Our family members. Our military stopped us, they are trying to defend and protect us. But the hostages aren’t protected there,” said Gil Dickmann. His cousin Carmel Gat is also in captivity.
“We have to sign a deal now and get all the hostages back. And we’re calling our prime minister — if you can’t do this, we’ll get inside and we’ll bring them back ourselves. Bring them home now.”