Russian-Ukrainian man arrested following explosion near Paris in suspected terrorism conspiracy: Officials

Russian-Ukrainian man arrested following explosion near Paris in suspected terrorism conspiracy: Officials
Russian-Ukrainian man arrested following explosion near Paris in suspected terrorism conspiracy: Officials
Photography taken by Mario Gutiérrez./Getty Images

(RUSSIA) — A Russian-Ukrainian national suspected of being involved in a terrorist conspiracy was taken into custody after being injured in an explosion in France earlier this week, officials announced Wednesday.

The 26-year-old man was “picked up by firefighters in a hotel near Paris for severe burns following an explosion,” the French National Anti-Terrorist Prosecutor’s Office (PNAT) said in a statement.

He was taken into custody on Monday evening, the statement said.

Initial findings at the scene “led to the discovery of products and materials intended for the manufacture of explosive devices,” PNAT said. “One of these devices had exploded.”

The man is currently suspected of “participation” in a terrorist conspiracy and bomb plot, according to U.S. officials briefed on the incident.

PNAT has opened an investigation on suspicion of participation in a terrorist conspiracy.

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Israel-Gaza live updates: 18 arrests in Jerusalem Day chaos

Israel-Gaza live updates: 18 arrests in Jerusalem Day chaos
Israel-Gaza live updates: 18 arrests in Jerusalem Day chaos
Palestinians gather at the site of an Israeli strike on a camp for internally displaced people in Rafah on May 27, 2024, amid ongoing battles between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas militant group. (Photo by EYAD BABA/AFP via Getty Images)

(NEW YORK) — As the Israel-Hamas war crosses the seven-month mark, negotiations are apparently stalled to secure the release of hostages taken by the terrorist organization, and Israeli forces continue to launch incursions in the southern Gazan town of Rafah ahead of a possible large-scale invasion.

Here’s how the news is developing. All times Eastern:

Jun 05, 3:40 PM
18 arrested as Jerusalem Day flag march leaves trail of violence

At least 18 suspects were arrested on suspicion of “violent crimes, assault and threats and disorderly conduct at the annual march to mark Jerusalem Day,” according to Israeli Police.

The march of flags continues into the Old City and the Western Wall as thousands of Jerusalem District police officers, police reinforcements, MGB fighters and volunteers work in the various missions and sectors. The Israeli Police said it is working throughout Jerusalem to secure the tens of thousands of participants, maintain order and direct traffic on Jerusalem Day.

The march left a trail of violence as it kicked off in the early afternoon of Wednesday. Predominantly right-wing Israeli ultra-nationalists attended, many very young, marching through Muslim areas of Jerusalem’s Old City and attacking local business owners and journalists.

Among those arrested were suspects of different ages involved in “various incidents of violence in the Old City, possession of a knife and threats towards police officers,” police said.

Some of the roads that were blocked were opened to traffic and the police continue to work to maintain security and order.

Al-Asima journalist Saif Al Qawasmi said he was attacked on duty and beaten on his head and hand, video shows.

Hareetz journalist Nir Hasson also said he was attacked by a group of Israeli nationalist youths and posted videos showing the violent scenes.

These protesters were consistently chanting racist slurs throughout their march and attacking people as filmed by witnesses and reported by an ABC News team on the ground.

The massive group of far-right Israelis marched into Jerusalem’s old city chanting, “Death to Arabs!” “May your village burn!” and “The nation is alive!”

Tensions were already high for this event, which draws thousands of people and all Palestinian shops were closed by the Israeli police.

-ABC News’ Marcus Moore, Nasser Atta, Jordana Miller and Camila Alcini

Jun 05, 12:51 PM
70 dead, 300 wounded in 48 hours at Al-Aqsa hospital: Doctors Without Borders

Amid an escalation of fighting and bombing in Gaza, at least 70 are dead and over 300 wounded in the last 48 hours, according to Doctors Without Borders.

“We have seen hospitals being bombed. We have seen refugee camps being bombed. We have seen humanitarian warehouses being bombed. The situation is apocalyptic,” Karin Huster, a Doctors Without Borders nurse, said in a statement Wednesday.

“While the Rafah crossing point remains closed, these repeated mass casualties incidents are bringing the health system to the point of collapse,” Doctors Without Borders said in a statement.

Medical teams at Al-Aqsa hospital — one of the only remaining functional health facilities in central Gaza — have received a huge influx of patients, many of whom arrived with severe burns, shrapnel wounds, fractures and other traumatic injuries.

“The odor of blood in the hospital’s emergency room this morning was unbearable. There are people lying everywhere, on the floor, outside… bodies were being brought in plastic bags. The situation is overwhelming,” said Huster.

-ABC News’ Guy Davies

Jun 05, 9:07 AM
US says Hamas’s opposition to cease-fire proposal was not officially transmitted

The U.S. continues to push Hamas to agree to the cease-fire proposal President Joe Biden outlined Friday, saying Hamas’ stated opposition to the deal has yet to be officially transmitted.

“We’ve seen some public comments from Hamas officials, but we have not yet gotten an official response from Hamas to the Qataris, who are the mediator to whom Israel gave their proposal that was transmitted to Hamas,” White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told ABC’s George Stephanopoulos on “Good Morning America” Wednesday.

“The ball is in Hamas’s court,” Sullivan continued. “Israel has accepted the proposal. The world has endorsed the proposal. Now it’s time for Hamas to say yes to it.”

Sullivan argued the latest multi-phase proposal is key to ending the war, returning hostages, and increasing the flow of aid into Gaza, while ensuring Israel’s security and a better future for Palestinians.

“That’s what’s on offer,” Sullivan said. “That’s what Hamas needs to step up and take and we’re awaiting to get their official response.”

Asked whether Biden thinks Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was prolonging the war for political gain — which he suggested in a Time magazine interview out Tuesday — Sullivan pointed to Biden’s answer to a question Tuesday evening asking if Netanyahu was playing politics.

“I don’t think so. He’s trying to work out the serious problem he has,” Biden said Tuesday.

“And from our perspective, we’re not going to delve into Israeli politics,” Sullivan added. “What we’re going to do is focus on the fundamental task at hand, which is President Biden’s effort to end this war, get the hostages home, make sure Israel’s safe and make sure the Palestinian people have a decent future.”

-ABC News’ Fritz Farrow

Jun 04, 5:36 PM
Officials to meet in Qatar Wednesday to discuss cease-fire deal: Report

Security officials from Egypt, the United States and Qatar will meet in Doha on Wednesday to look at ways to revive the Gaza truce negotiations, a senior Egyptian official told Egyptian state media.

Hamas rejected the Israeli cease-fire plan endorsed by President Joe Biden on Tuesday, saying they won’t agree to anything until Israel commits to halting all military operations in Gaza.

Jun 04, 4:02 PM
World Central Kitchen serves 50 million meals to people in Gaza

World Central Kitchen has now served 50 million meals in Gaza, the organization announced during a press briefing Tuesday.

“I’d like to announce that we have just crossed the 50 million meal mark in Gaza. That is a huge accomplishment for us. We’re about 50,100,000 right now. As many of you know, we had to pause our work in Gaza after the Israeli attack on our personnel convoy on April 1, which killed seven of our colleagues,” World Central Kitchen Chief Communications Officer Linda Roth said during the press conference.

“Jose, our founder, says the decision to restart feeding in Gaza was both the hardest and the simplest one we could make,” Roth said.

Right now, the organization has two main World Central Kitchen kitchens operating in Gaza in Deir al Balah and Mawasi, and “another 65 community kitchens spread throughout the strip,” Roth said.

“We have about 400 Palestinian Response Corps members and hundreds and hundreds of more volunteers that are working to feed everyone in Gaza. It’s Palestinians feeding Palestinians,” Roth said.

Jun 04, 4:02 PM
IDF says things are at a breaking point in the north

The Israel Defense Forces say things have reached a breaking point along its border with Lebanon, where there has been an exchange of attacks between Israel and Hezbollah for months.

“We are approaching the point where a decision will have to be made, and the IDF is prepared and very ready for this decision. We have been striking here for eight months and Hezbollah is paying a very, very high price,” Herzi Halevi, a spokesperson for the IDF, said Tuesday.

“Hezbollah has increased its attacks in recent days and we are prepared after a very good process of training up to the level of a General Staff exercise to move to an offensive in the north. Strong defense, readiness for an offensive, we are approaching a decision point,” the IDF said.

Jun 04, 4:02 PM
Current cease-fire proposal has majority support in parliament, Israeli opposition leader says

The current cease-fire proposal has majority support in the Knesset, Israeli parliament, according to Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid.

“There is a large and clear majority in the government, the Knesset and the public in favor of a deal,” Lapid said.

Jun 04, 3:38 PM
Hezbollah responds to Ben Gvir’s call for war, saying it’s ready

Hezbollah has responded to far-right Israeli Minister Ben Gvir’s calls for war, with the group saying it’s ready.

“If ‘Israel’ wants to wage an all-out war, we are ready for it. Any Israeli expansion of the war on Lebanon will be met with devastation, destruction and displacement in Israel,” Deputy Secretary General of Hezbollah Sheikh Naeem Qassem told Al Jazeera Tuesday.

“Our decision is not to expand the war, but we will fight it if it is imposed on us,” he said.

He also claimed that President Joe Biden’s cease-fire proposal is a political move ahead of the election.

“There is no serious American decision to stop the ‘Israeli’ war on Gaza,” Qassem said.

Jun 04, 2:08 PM
Hamas says it won’t accept deal without permanent cease-fire, complete withdrawal from Gaza

Hamas will not accept a Gaza truce deal without clear commitment from Israel to a permanent cease-fire and a complete withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, Hamas official Osama Hamdan said Tuesday.

“We have communicated our position to the mediators that we cannot agree to a deal unless there is a clear position from the Israeli occupation it is committed to a permanent cease-fire and a comprehensive withdrawal from the Gaza Strip,” Hamdan said during a press conference in Beirut.

Hamdan said he does not believe Israel will commit to a cease-fire and called on Israel to submit a clear position of its readiness for a permanent cease-fire and complete withdrawal from Gaza.

“We cannot agree to a deal that does not secure, guarantee and confirm a permanent cease-fire, comprehensive withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and the completion of a serious and real exchange deal,” Hamdan said.

“We asked the mediators to obtain a clear position from the Israeli occupation regarding its commitment to a permanent cease-fire and a comprehensive withdrawal,” he added.

Jun 04, 12:36 PM
Hamas responds unfavorably to current cease-fire proposal

Hamas officials are not responding favorably to President Joe Biden’s speech Friday and what they call the current proposal on the table.

A Hamas leader said no Hamas delegation has gone to Cairo, and the group is not accepting the offer given to them by mediators, the leader told Al-Mayadeen, a Lebanese news channel.

“We do not want to start from scratch, and our basic condition now is official Israeli approval of the previous paper, otherwise there will be no rounds and discussions,” the leader said to Al-Mayadeen.

Separately, senior Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri said the group frowns upon Washington and the West’s calls for it to accept Biden’s proposal on Gaza “as if it is Hamas who is hampering the deal,” he said Tuesday.

Israel is not serious about reaching a deal in Gaza and is still maneuvering under the U.S.’s cover, Abu Zuhri said to Hamas media.

-ABC News’ Nasser Atta

Jun 04, 12:02 PM
Qatar says Israel and Hamas should have clear positions for Gaza cease-fire

Qatar’s foreign ministry said on Tuesday it was “too early” to reach a cease-fire deal and that there should be a clear position from both sides on the U.S. truce proposal.

“We are waiting for a clear Israeli position that represent the entire Israeli government,” Qatari foreign ministry spokesperson Majed Al-Ansari told reporters during a press briefing on Tuesday. “Any talk of reaching a deal needs a clear position from both sides towards ideas put on the table.”

The deal should offer a road map for a permanent cease-fire and an end to the war, he said.

“It is too early thus far. We do not have clear positions from both sides,” he said, adding that mediators remain hopeful as they push ahead with efforts to reach a deal but are “not always optimistic.”

-ABC News’ Ayat Al-Tawy

Jun 03, 6:15 PM
Netanyahu to address joint session of Congress

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will deliver an address before the two houses of the U.S. Congress, his office confirmed Monday.

A date has not been set yet, his office said.

Plans for Netanyahu’s address come after Congressional big four leaders invited Netanyahu in a joint letter sent Friday.

Jun 03, 4:10 PM
Four hostages confirmed dead

Israeli forces confirmed the deaths of four more hostages: Haim Peri, Yoram Metzger, Amiram Cooper and Nadav Popplewell.

IDF spokesman Daniel Hagari said the four hostages were “killed together” a “few months ago” while “IDF forces were operating” in Khan Younis in southern Gaza. Hagari said Israeli forces are “examining the circumstances” of their deaths.

Cooper, 85, was an economist and a poet, and a father of four and grandfather of 11, according to Kibbutz Nir Oz. His wife, Nurit Cooper, was also kidnapped and later released, the kibbutz said.

Metzger, 80, was a father of three and grandfather of seven. His wife, Tamar Metzger, was also abducted to Gaza and later released, the kibbutz said.

Popplewell, 51, was kidnapped with his mother, who has been released, the Hostages Families Forum said.

Peri, 80, was abducted while protecting his wife, the Hostages Families Forum said. He leaves behind his wife, five children and 13 grandchildren.

Peri’s family said he “heroically survived in the Hamas tunnels, under inhumane conditions, for around 4 months,” and he “survived with the hope and faith that the state of Israel will fulfill its moral duty to bring him home.”

“The government of Israel and its Prime Minister have no right to leave the hostages in captivity, dismantling Israel’s foundational principle of mutual responsibility,” Peri’s family said. “We call upon the government of Israel to strive for an immediate deal, save those still alive, and bring those who are not, to a proper burial.”

“The heartbreak that comes with this painful news should shake every citizen in the State of Israel and lead every leader to profound soul-searching,” the Hostages Families Forum said in a statement Monday. “The Israeli government must send out a negotiating delegation this evening and return all 124 hostages, both living and murdered. … We reiterate our demand to the Israeli government: approve the Netanyahu deal immediately!”

Jun 03, 4:05 PM
Biden says Israel ready to ‘move forward with the terms’ of deal, Hamas is ‘only obstacle’

President Joe Biden told the emir of Qatar on Monday that Israel is ready to “move forward with the terms” of the hostage and cease-fire deal, according to the White House readout of the call.

Biden said that “Hamas is now the only obstacle to a complete ceasefire,” and the president “urged [Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani] to use all appropriate measures to secure Hamas’ acceptance of the deal,” the White House said.

Jun 03, 3:20 PM
State Department: Hamas only party blocking deal

State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said the current cease-fire proposal is “nearly identical to what Hamas said it would accept just a few weeks ago,” and said the U.S. and other mediators had not yet received an official response to the proposal from the militant group.

“The world should know, the Palestinian people should know, that the only thing standing in the way of an immediate cease-fire today is Hamas,” Miller declared.

Miller said there were some gaps between the proposal Hamas said it would agree to in the past, but added that the U.S., Qatar and Egypt all felt that they could be easily reconciled.

Jun 03, 2:56 PM
Egypt, Qatar, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, UAE support cease-fire deal

The foreign ministers of Egypt, Qatar, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates released a joint statement Monday in support of the current cease-fire deal.

The ministers met virtually to discuss the proposal and mediation efforts to reach a deal and hostages-for-prisoners swap, as well as the sufficient entry of aid into Gaza, the statement said.

The G7 leaders also issued a statement in support of the current deal.

Jun 03, 1:27 PM
White House: Biden outlined Israel’s cease-fire offer accurately

President Joe Biden outlined Israel’s cease-fire proposal accurately in his Friday speech, the White House maintained Monday, pushing back on suggestions he miscommunicated the offer.

“The Israeli foreign minister himself acknowledged that this was the Israeli proposal … and we’re confident that it accurately reflects that proposal, a proposal that we worked with the Israelis on,” White House national security communications adviser John Kirby told reporters.

Kirby also argued that Biden “felt it was important” to reveal details from ongoing cease-fire negotiations for the first time, saying it was meant to apply pressure on Hamas, not to corner Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

“We don’t typically go through the details of these kinds of proposals,” Kirby said. “But in this case, given where we are, given how much longer the hostages have now been held, given the fact that Hamas has reneged on several past occasions, on proposals that were sent to them, and given the fact that the Israelis really did work hard to come up with this proposal, and did so in good faith, the president felt it was important for the first time to publicly lay that out.”

“This wasn’t about jamming the prime minister or the war cabinet,” Kirby added. “This was about laying bare for the public to see how well and how faithfully and how assertively the Israelis came up with a new proposal, how it shows how much they really want to get this done.”

Kirby said Biden delivered the speech on Friday afternoon because the deal was presented to Hamas the night before.

“We’re awaiting an official response by them now to take the deal,” Kirby said. “This gives them what they’ve been looking for, which is a cease-fire and over time, and through the phases, the potential withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza.”

-ABC News’ Fritz Farrow

Jun 03, 12:35 PM
Netanyahu: Israel must work to bring hostages home, dismantle Hamas at same time

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has released his first public statement since President Joe Biden’s Friday speech endorsing the original Israeli cease-fire deal.

“We are working in countless ways to return our abductees,” Netanyahu said in Hebrew on Monday. “That’s why we went a long way to bring them back, but in the process of this action we maintained the goals of the war, chief among them the elimination of Hamas.”

“We insist that we complete both this and that. It’s part of the outline, it’s not something I’m adding now, it’s not something I’m adding because I was pressured in the coalition, it’s something we unanimously agreed on in the war cabinet,” Netanyahu added.

-ABC News’ Bruno Nota and Dana Savir

Jun 03, 3:57 AM
1 million have fled Rafah, UNRWA says

More than 1 million people have fled Rafah in the weeks since Israel issued evacuation orders, the local U.N. agency said Monday.

“Thousands of families now shelter in damaged & destroyed facilities in Khan Younis, where UNRWA keeps providing essential services despite increasing challenges,” the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees said in a statement.

The agency added, “Conditions are unspeakable.”

-ABC News’ Kevin Shalvey

Jun 02, 10:52 PM
Sec. Blinken tells Israel onus is on Hamas to accept cease-fire deal

Sec. of State Anthony Blinken spoke to Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant on Sunday about the proposal for a ceasefire-hostage deal.

The deal would secure the release of the hostages and ensure a surge in humanitarian assistance throughout Gaza.

“The Secretary commended Israel’s readiness to conclude a deal and affirmed that the onus is on Hamas to accept,” according to a readout of the call.

During the call, Blinken also reaffirmed America’s commitment to Israel’s security.

Jun 01, 4:38 PM
US, Qatar and Egypt urge Israel and Hamas to accept deal

In a joint statement shared by the U.S. State Department on Saturday, mediators from the U.S., Egypt and Qatar said they’re working to secure a cease-fire in Gaza and the release of the hostages, and urged Hamas and Israel “to finalize the agreement” that President Joe Biden outlined on Friday.

“These principles brought the demands of all parties together in a deal that serves multiple interests and will bring immediate relief both to the long-suffering people of Gaza as well as the long-suffering hostages and their families,” the statement said. “This deal offers a roadmap for a permanent ceasefire and ending the crisis.”

Jun 01, 3:54 PM
Right-wing Israeli ministers against deal

Right-wing Israeli Ministers Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben Gvir spoke out on social media Saturday, both threatening to leave the government if the deal in its current form is accepted.

“I have now spoken with the Prime Minister and made it clear to him that I will not be part of a government that will agree to the proposed outline and end the war without destroying Hamas and returning all the abductees,” Smotrich wrote.

This comes after the Hostage Families group released a statement urging Israel’s parliament to embrace the deal.

Jun 01, 2:43 PM
Israeli government says it wasn’t told Biden would mention permanent cease-fire

An Israeli government official said the Israeli Prime Minister’s Office wasn’t informed that President Joe Biden’s Friday remarks would include a permanent end to the fighting.

“If you listen to what Biden said, you come to the impression that we agree to a permanent cease-fire without, or, without our conditions being met, and that’s not the case,” the official said.

The official said the Israeli Prime Minister’s Office, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, was informed 30 minutes before that Biden was giving a speech. The official said Netanyahu was told that the speech would focus on the hostages, with no mention of implementing a permanent cease-fire.

Biden presented on Friday what he said was an Israeli proposal to draw the war in Gaza to a close.

Biden said the deal had been transmitted to Israel and Hamas, through Qatar.

The president said the first phase would last for six weeks and include a “full and complete cease-fire, a withdrawal of Israeli forces from all populated areas of Gaza [and] release of a number of hostages.” Palestinians would also be able to return to their homes and 600 trucks of humanitarian aid would be delivered to Gaza every day.

The second phase would include a release of all remaining living hostages and the temporary cease-fire would become a permanent cease-fire with Israel withdrawing all forces from Gaza “as long as Hamas lives up to its commitments,” Biden said.

In phase three, there would be a major reconstruction of Gaza.

-ABC News’ Britt Clennett

Jun 01, 2:34 PM
Egypt, Israel to hold talks on Rafah crossing: Egyptian official

Egyptian and Israeli officials will hold talks in Cairo on Sunday to discuss the reopening the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt, an Egyptian security official confirmed to ABC News.

The crossing has been closed since Israeli forces took control of the Gaza side during their offensive toward Rafah in May. Egyptian officials have said they will not reopen the crossing as long as Israel controls the Gaza side.

Egypt has, however, agreed to send aid trucks from its side of the border to be processed from the Israeli border checkpoint of Kerem Shalom.

-ABC News’ Ayat Al-Tawy

Jun 01, 9:54 AM
Israel says ‘conditions for ending the war have not changed’

Although President Joe Biden on Friday outlined a multi-phase cease-fire proposal he said came from Israel, the Israeli Prime Minister’s Office said in a statement Saturday that “Israel’s conditions for ending the war have not changed: the destruction of Hamas’s military and governing capabilities, the freeing of all hostages and ensuring that Gaza no longer poses a threat to Israel.”

“Under the proposal, Israel will continue to insist these conditions are met before a permanent cease-fire is put in place,” the statement said. “The notion that Israel will agree to a permanent cease-fire before these conditions are fulfilled is a non-starter.”

Biden said Friday that Israelis should feel comfortable with a cease-fire because Hamas’s capabilities have deteriorated and can no longer repeat the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks.

Hamas in a statement reiterated its requirements for a deal. Hamas said it “affirms its position of readiness to deal positively and constructively with any proposal based on a permanent cease-fire, complete withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, reconstruction, the return of the displaced to all their places of residence, and the completion of a serious prisoner exchange deal.”

May 31, 5:15 PM
Congressional leaders formally invite Netanyahu to deliver joint address

The four leaders of the House of Representatives and Senate formally invited Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to deliver a joint address to Congress.

The letter sent on Friday by House Speaker Mike Johnson, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell did not provide a date with the address.

The congressional leaders asked Netanyahu to “share the Israeli government’s vision for defending democracy, combatting terror, and establishing a just and lasting peace in the region.”

“The existential challenges we face, including the growing partnership between Iran, Russia, and China, threaten the security, peace, and prosperity of our countries and of free people around the world,” the letter read.

Netanyahu last addressed Congress in 2015.

May 31, 4:03 PM
Israel ‘united’ in desire to return hostages, Netanyahu responds to Biden

Hours after President Joe Biden outlined a three-phase cease-fire deal to end the Israel-Hamas war and said it is time to bring the hostages home, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has responded, saying its government is “united in the desire to return abductees.”

“The Israeli government is united in the desire to return our abductees as soon as possible and is working to achieve this goal,” Netanyahu’s office said in a statement Friday.

“The Prime Minister authorized the negotiating team to present an outline for achieving this goal, while insisting that the war will not end until all of its goals are achieved, including the return of all our abductees and the elimination of Hamas’ military and governmental capabilities,” Netanyahu’s office added.

May 31, 2:07 PM
Biden pitches three-phase cease-fire deal to end Israel-Hamas war

President Joe Biden gave remarks from the White House on Friday, pitching a new plan to draw the war in Gaza to a close.

Biden said the deal had been transmitted to Israel and Hamas, through Qatar.

The president said the first phase would last for six weeks and include a “full and complete cease-fire, a withdrawal of Israeli forces from all populated areas of Gaza [and] release of a number of hostages.” Palestinians would also be able to return to their homes and 600 trucks of humanitarian aid would be delivered to Gaza every day.

The second phase would include a release of all remaining living hostages and the temporary cease-fire would become a permanent cease-fire with Israel withdrawing all forces from Gaza “as long as Hamas lives up to its commitments,” Biden said.

In phase three, there would be a major reconstruction of Gaza.

“At this point Hamas no longer is capable of carrying out another Oct. 7, which was one of the Israelis’ main objectives in this war, and, quite frankly, a righteous one,” Biden said.

Biden continued, “We can’t lose this moment. Indefinite war in pursuit of an unidentified notion of total victory … will only bog down Israel in Gaza — draining the economic, military and human resources and furthering Israel’s isolation in the world. That will not bring hostages home.”

May 31, 1:22 PM
Hamas releases audio from Israeli hostage Noa Argamani

Hamas has released a video containing audio from hostage Noa Argamani with images of her drawings over the audio.

Alongside her voice, in which she pleads to be saved, drawings are shown, which the family believes to be scribbles that Argamani has drawn.

Agramani was seen in a widely shared video being abducted from the Nova music festival on a motorbike.

The 26-year-old was last heard from in a video released by Hamas in January.

The Hostage Families Forum, which said the family approved release of the video, said in a statement, “125 men and women have been held hostage by Hamas for 238 days. The Israeli government must hear the call and act decisively, without the need for any propaganda video from Hamas, to swiftly reach a deal to bring the hostages home!”

-ABC News’ Anna Burd

May 31, 1:10 PM
Israeli forces operating in central Rafah, IDF says

The Israeli army is now operating in central Rafah, the IDF said Friday.

“The operation continues to gradually evolve, with forces focusing on uprooting Hamas terror infrastructure on the Philadelphi route as well as special forces that are conducted intelligence-based targeted-raids from the outskirts of Central Rafah,” the IDF said in a statement.

The IDF said it found dozens of Hamas tunnels and rocket launchers. Israel also said it “eliminated hundreds of terrorists along the Philadelphi route and the outskirts of the Urban areas of Rafah.”

May 30, 3:39 PM
Benny Gantz’s party proposes vote to dissolve Israeli parliament

Israeli war cabinet Minister Benny Gantz’s centrist party has proposed holding a parliamentary vote on dissolving the Knesset, but it is unclear whether he has enough support to bring about early elections.

The chairman of the Israel Beytenu party, Avigdor Lieberman (from the opposition), is holding a political dialogue with former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, aiming to create a political union that could serve as a “governing alternative” to the Likud and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

-ABC News’ Will Gretsky

May 30, 2:44 PM
Hamas says they will agree to cease-fire deal when Israel agrees to stop war in Gaza

Hamas released a new statement about the proposed cease-fire deal, saying if Israel agreed to “stop its war and aggression” in Gaza, they would “reach a complete agreement that includes a comprehensive exchange deal,” Hamas said in the statement.

“Today, we informed the mediators of our clear position that if the occupation stops its war and aggression against our people in Gaza, our readiness to reach a complete agreement that includes a comprehensive exchange deal,” Hamas added.

Israel had said it submitted a cease-fire proposal to Hamas earlier this week and was awaiting the group’s review of the deal. Israel officials then said that they expect the war in Gaza to last until the end of this year.

-ABC News’ Diaa Ostaz

May 30, 2:44 PM
Egyptian source denies Israeli claim of tunnels in the Philadelphi corridor

A high-level Egyptian source denied Israeli reports about the existence of tunnels on the Egyptian border with Gaza, Egyptian state-run Al-Qahera News said.

The source dismissed the reports as “lies” promoted by Israel to “cover up its military failure.” It added that there were “no communications with the Israeli side” regarding the allegations.

There has been no official comment from Cairo since the announcement.

Egypt has over the past decade destroyed hundreds of smuggling tunnels along its eastern border with Gaza as part of its fight against Islamist militants in its border Sinai region.

Egyptian officials have said a potential Israeli takeover of Philadelphi, a largely demilitarized buffer zone along the Gaza-Egypt border, could violate the 1979 peace deal between Egypt and Israel.

-ABC News’ Ayat Al-Tawy

May 30, 12:24 PM
Gaza pier built by US Army expected to be working again within a week

The damaged components of the U.S. pier built to funnel aid into Gaza are back at the Port of Ashdod undergoing repairs, a U.S. official confirmed to ABC News.

The system is expected to be back in operation on Gaza’s coast within a week, the official said.

-ABC News’ Matt Seyler

May 29, 4:25 PM
Evidence indicates weapons used in deadly Rafah strike are US-made: Experts

Evidence indicates a weapon used by Israel in the Rafah strike — that killed 50 people and injured 249 others — on May 26 appears to be made by a U.S.-owned company, two weapons experts who reviewed photos and video of fragments at the site told ABC News.

Weapon fragments seen in video are consistent with a U.S.-made “small diameter bomb,” which includes the GBU-39/B, or B/B. These types of SDB/GBU-39 weapons can carry a 37 pound warhead, consistent with statements from the IDF about what weapons were used in the strike, Trevor Ball, a former U.S. Army explosive ordinance disposal specialist, said.

“We used two small rockets, 17 kg warhead, that were fired from aircraft to hit, precisely. We’ve used this kind of ammunition before,” Israel Defense Forces spokesman Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani told ABC News when asked about what weapons were used in the strike.

Ball identified a series of numbers beginning with “81873″ marked on one fragment seen in video reviewed by ABC News. This is the Commercial and Government Entity Code, or CAGE Code, assigned by the U.S. government to aerospace manufacturing company Woodward, based in Colorado, according to U.S. government records.

A second former U.S. military explosive ordinance disposal specialist confirmed the fragments were consistent with the GBU-39, but asked to not be named by ABC News.

All sales of GBU-39/B Small Diameter Bombs to foreign entities require the State Department’s approval, but a U.S. official says Israel may have also procured the munitions through direct commercial sales that don’t meet the value threshold — $25 million in Israel’s case — for congressional review and public notification.

In the days following the Oct. 7 attack, Israel rushed to back up its stockpiles, including its supply of the small diameter bombs by any available means, the official said. ABC News has not confirmed if the weapons Israel received after Oct. 7 were used in the May 26 Rafah strike.

When asked if the bombs used in the strike were provided by the U.S., deputy Pentagon press secretary Sabrina Singh said reporters needed to ask the Israelis during a briefing on May 28.

-ABC News’ Chris Looft, Helena Skinner, Britt Clennett, Sohel Uddin, Luis Martinez, Matt Seyler, Shannon Crawford, Ellie Kaufman and Camilla Alcini

May 29, 3:50 PM
World Central Kitchen suspends operations in Rafah over safety

World Central Kitchen has suspended its humanitarian efforts in Rafah due to safety concerns. Jose Andre’s aid group had restarted their relief efforts in Gaza after seven aid workers were killed by an Israeli strike, sparking international outrage over the protection of civilians in Gaza.

The group will continue to operate elsewhere in Gaza.

“In the face of Israeli operations in Rafah, countless families are being forced to flee once again. Ongoing attacks have forced us to pause work at our main kitchen in Rafah and relocate many of our community kitchens further north. The situation is dire but WCK’s Palestinian team—all directly impacted by the war—is showing up every day to support neighbors in need,” WCK said in a statement Wednesday.

“Yesterday we provided almost 100,000 meals and will increase capacity this week as 58 of our aid trucks have entered Gaza since Sunday,” WCK said.

-ABC News’ Will Gretsky

May 29, 3:48 PM
War expected to last through end of year, Israeli official says

Israel expects that the war in Gaza will likely be long, lasting for at least seven more months of fighting against Hamas, a senior Israeli official said Wednesday.

“We expect another seven months of combat in order to shore up our achievement and realize what we define as the destruction of Hamas and Islamic Jihad’s military and governing capabilities,” Tzachi Hanegbi, the head of the Israeli national security council, said in a radio interview to Kann News.

-ABC News’ Dana Savir

May 29, 2:21 PM
Israel has ‘tactical control’ over Philadelphi corridor in Gaza: IDF

Israeli Defense Forces have “tactical control over the Philadelphi corridor” in Gaza, an IDF official told reporters Wednesday.

“IDF has tactical control over the Philadelphi corridor, which does mean it doesn’t mean that we have boots on the ground across all of the corridor, but it means that we can control and we have the ability to cut off the oxygen line that Hamas has used for replenishing and movement in and around that area,” the IDF official said.

-ABC News’ Bruno Nota

May 29, 2:18 PM
Kirby says he hopes for end to war ‘as soon as possible’

After comments from Israeli officials predicted the war in Gaza would last through the end of the year, White House national security communications adviser John Kirby expressed a desire to reach an end much sooner than that — “as soon as possible,” he said.

“I’ll let the defense minister speak for his own views and opinions. Our view, in our opinion, is we gotta get this hostage deal now. The time is now to do it — to get that temporary cease-fire and to end this conflict as soon as possible,” Kirby said.

“I can tell you that President Biden is committed to seeing that we find a way to end this conflict. And to end as soon as practicable.”

Kirby confirmed that there is a “fresh” proposal on the table that the Israels are “fully supportive of,” but it is too “fresh” to provide details on. He emphasized that the Biden administration still believes there is a path for a cease-fire deal that could “lead to something more sustainable” and a “potential end of the conflict.”

Kirby also said the fighting “could end tomorrow if Mr. Sinwar did the right thing and agreed to this deal,” referring to the Hamas leader.

-ABC News’ Cheyenne Haslett

May 29, 1:30 PM
Blinken reacts to ‘horrific’ Rafah strike, questions whether Israeli gains are worth consequences

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke about the catastrophic strike over the weekend in Rafah — becoming the first top-level U.S. official to publicly respond to the attack in detail.

“The incident a couple days ago was horrific,” he said. “I don’t think anyone who has seen the images cannot be deeply affected by them, just on a basic human level.”

Blinken was also asked about reports indicating that the U.S. supplied the weapons used in the strike; he said he couldn’t yet say where they came from, but if Israel’s claims that it used small diameter munitions were true, the incident illustrated how even precision attacks could cause immense damage to civilians in Rafah.

“I think we also see that even limited, focused, targeted attacks, designed to deal with terrorists who’ve killed innocent civilians that are plotting to kill more — even those kinds of operations can have terrible, horrific, unintended consequences,” he said.

Blinken then said it was “very important in this moment after Israel has had real success in helping to destroy Hamas’ capacity to repeat October 7th” that Israel “has to ask whether, and especially in the absence of a plan for the day after in Gaza, further incremental gains against Hamas, but gains that may not be durable in terms of Hamas’ defeat in the absence of a plan–how that stacks up against some of the, again, unintended, but horrific consequences of military action in a place where the people you’re going after are so closely embedded with civilians.”

-ABC News’ Shannon Crawford

May 28, 5:15 PM
Newly released video shows Israeli hostage in captivity

A video showing Israeli hostage Alexsander Trufanov, who was captured by Hamas on Oct. 7, was publicly released by the Hostage Families Forum on Tuesday.

“The proof of life from Alexsander (Sasha) Trufanov is additional evidence that the Israeli government must give a significant mandate to the negotiating team, which will be able to lead to a deal for the return of all the hostages – the living to rehabilitation and the murdered to burial,” the Hostage Families Forum said in the release with the video.

Israel submitted a new cease-fire proposal to negotiators in Egypt on Monday. They are now awaiting a response from Hamas, according to an Egyptian security source who spoke with ABC News.

-ABC News’ Dorit Long and Marwa Mouaki

May 28, 5:07 PM
21 killed as explosions continue in Rafah following Sunday’s deadly strike

At least 21 people were killed in an attack near the International Medical Corps American hospital as explosions continue in Rafah on Monday night and Tuesday, according to Palestinians on the ground and local authorities.

Of the 21 people killed, 14 of them were female, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health said Tuesday. Their ages have not yet been released.

These bombings were not in the exact same location as the strike on May 26 that killed 50 people and injured at least 249 others.

-ABC News’ Diaa Ostaz

May 28, 4:42 PM
Nikki Haley signs artillery shells in Israel: ‘Finish them! America loves Israel!’

Former U.S. presidential candidate and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley visited the northern Israeli border on Tuesday, meeting with Israeli soldiers and Israelis.

During her visit, Haley visited an Israel Defense Forces post with soldiers serving on the northern border.

Haley stopped and signed artillery shells, writing, “Finish them! America loves Israel!” on some of them.

-ABC News’ Ellie Kaufman

May 28, 3:51 PM
1 million Palestinians have now fled Rafah: UNRWA

One million Palestinians have been forced to flee Rafah over the last three weeks in search of safety, according to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East.

Heavy bombardment continued in Gaza overnight, including in Tal Al Sultan, where the U.N. main offices in Gaza are located, according to UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini.

Most of the UNRWA staff could not make it to work as they are packing up and moving. The UNRWA is also running out of medical supplies and basic human medicines, according to Lazzarini.

Just over 200 trucks with humanitarian supplies were picked up in southern Gaza in the last three weeks as needs continue to increase exponentially, Lazzarini said.

-ABC News’ Will Gretsky

May 28, 3:46 PM
UN secretary-general condemns Rafah strike, says ICJ ruling is ‘binding’

The United Nations secretary-general has condemned the deadly strike on Rafah “in the strongest terms,” saying Antonio Guterres is “heartbroken by the images of the killed and injured,” his spokesman, Stephane Dujarric, said in a statement Tuesday.

“The Secretary-General reiterates his demand for an immediate ceasefire and the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages. He recalls the recent orders of the International Court of Justice, which are binding and must be complied with,” Dujarric said.

“The humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza is now compounded by the unconscionable prospect of a man-made famine,” Dujarric said.

-ABC News’ Ellie Kaufman

May 28, 3:45 PM
Sunday’s Rafah strike ‘shouldn’t have happened,’ IDF says

Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani admitted to a “mishap” in Sunday’s Rafah strike that killed 50 Palestinians and injured at least 249 others, saying it was a “tragic incident that shouldn’t have happened.”

“The outcome is not the outcome we had in mind when this operation started. That’s why we’re investigating it. It’s a tragic event and it’s not the way we operate. We are fighting with Hamas terrorists. We are trying to kill them specifically in a very precise way, intelligence based. And that’s why we look at this as a tragic incident that shouldn’t have happened,” Shoshani said.

Over 36,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since Oct. 7.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the strike a “tragic mishap” on Monday.

“The mishap was the fire that carried out after the targeted attack, and we are looking into why this fire caught on,” Shoshani said. “The attack, per se, was according to procedure, with surveillance before the attack, a very precise attack based on intelligence.”

-ABC News’ Britt Clennett

May 28, 3:27 PM
Barely any medical facilities functioning, Palestinian Ministry of Health says

There are barely any functioning medical facilities in Rafah as the Israel Defense Forces continue its operations, the Palestinian Ministry of Health said Tuesday.

“Both the Indonesian field hospital and the Tal Al-Sultan Clinic in Rafah Governorate have ceased service, leaving only the Tal Al-Sultan Maternity Hospital struggling to survive and continue providing service to patients in Rafah,” according to the ministry.

-ABC News’ Will Gretsky

May 28, 3:18 PM
Israel makes new cease-fire proposal, now awaiting Hamas response

Israel put forward a new cease-fire proposal and hostage release deal on Monday, which has now been passed on to Hamas, an Egyptian security source told ABC News.

Mediators are awaiting a response from Hamas within 24 hours, the source said.

This is the first time Israel has taken the first move to submit a draft proposal since the war began, according to the source. Previous proposals have been initiated by Egyptian and Qatari mediators.

The source said talks could resume soon, without providing an exact timeline.

-ABC News’ Ayat Al-Tawy

May 28, 3:12 PM
‘Tragic doesn’t even begin to describe it,’ Harris says of IDF strike in Rafah

Vice President Kamala Harris weighed in on the IDF strike in Rafah that killed 50 civilians and injured 249 more, saying, “The word ‘tragic’ doesn’t even begin to describe it.”

She did not comment when asked if this crosses a red line for the administration. President Joe Biden has yet to weigh in.

May 28, 10:31 AM
‘No justice in the world’: Palestinian man’s wife killed in Rafah strike

Days after a deadly strike on Rafah killed 50 Palestinians and injured at least 249 others, a father of five who lost his wife told ABC News his family fled from Beit Lahia to Deir al-Balah — in the south of Gaza — before heading to Rafah for safety.

“One of my disabled sons had his leg amputated and my wife was killed. What injustice is this?” Murid Saadi Agha told ABC News. “There is no justice in the world. Israel is above all the law.”

“I hold America and Israel responsible. We are innocent,” he said.

Three of Agha’s children have already lost limbs in the war.

“After sunset, my wife and I were sitting here outside the shelter with our neighbors, and my disabled son was feeding his other disabled brother, who is older than him. Even the Indomie that he was eating was still here,” he said, describing the aftermath of the deadly Rafah strike.

“There was a very intense explosion. My wife declared once that the shrapnel entered her chest and killed her. I went to my sons and found that one of them had an amputated foot, as the shrapnel entered from the top and from the side. There were many martyrs here. It was a massacre,” he said.

May 28, 9:21 AM
Israel continues Rafah strikes as Palestinian death toll surpasses 36,000

Strikes on Rafah have continued, barely 48 hours since an Israeli airstrike near a camp of displaced people killed 50 and injured 249 others. The continued offensive comes as at least 36,050 Palestinians have been killed since Oct. 7 and 81,026 others have been injured.

The Israel Defense Forces said their ongoing Rafah operation is “precise.”

The Israeli military’s deadly airstrike in Rafah on Sunday night hit an area about 650 feet away from the boundary of an IDF-designated “humanitarian area,” according to an ABC News analysis of geolocated images and the IDF’s statements and maps.

The U.N. Security Council will hold an emergency meeting later Tuesday to discuss Sunday’s strike on Rafah.

At least one million people have fled Rafah in the past three weeks, according to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East.

May 27, 4:30 PM
Kuwait Specialized hospital in Rafah out of service

The Kuwait Specialized Hospital in Rafah, one of its largest, announced that the hospital had been out of service due to the expansion of the Israeli military operation on the city and the repeated and deliberate targeting of the hospital’s vicinity, hospital’s director Suhaib Al-Hams said Sunday.

The Israeli occupation repeatedly targeted the hospital, the most recent of which was targeting the hospital gate, which led to the death of two of the staff working there, as well as the injury of five members of the medical staff in a previous targeting, Al-Hams said in a press statement received by Sanad News Agency.

“We announce that the Kuwait Specialized Hospital has been out of service and the working medical teams have been transferred to the field hospital that is being prepared in the Al-Mawasi area,” Al-Hams said.

May 27, 3:39 PM
Israel strike hits fuel tank, causing large fire: US official

The U.S. received information from the Israelis overnight that they believe shrapnel or something else from the strike ignited a fuel tank 100 meters away, which engulfed a tent, creating a massive fire, according to a U.S. official.

The U.S. does not have information to confirm or dispute that information. The U.S. is in the process of understanding what has happened, waiting for Israel to conduct its own investigation and determining what action to take next, according to the official.

The U.S. maintains that while they’ve warned about a major ground offensive in Rafah, that’s not what’s happening, according to the official.

May 27, 3:37 PM
Hamas leader says Rafah strike shows Israel is defying international law

Commenting on the Rafah strike that killed 50 people, Hamas released a statement saying Israel’s attack on Rafah is like “the announcement of Netanyahu’s government’s defiance of international justice decisions,” referring to the International Court of Justice’s decision last week ordering Israel to stop its operation in Rafah.

“The massacre committed in the areas where its considered safe area,” Hamas leader Osama Hamdan said. “The timing of these murders during the last two days is like the announcement of Netanyahu’s government’s defiance of international justice decisions.”

May 27, 6:17 PM
Netanyahu calls strike on Rafah a ‘tragic mishap’

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the strike on Rafah which killed at least 50 Palestinians Sunday, a “tragic mishap,” in a speech to Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, Monday.

“We are fighting with force in the north of the Gaza Strip, in its center, its south and in Rafah. In Rafah we have already evacuated about a million uninvolved residents and despite our best efforts not to harm the un-involved, unfortunately a tragic mishap happened last night. We are investigating the case and will draw the conclusions because this is our policy,” Netanyahu said.

May 27, 2:45 PM
Death toll from Israeli strike rises to 50

At least 50 people have been confirmed dead in Israel’s strike on Rafah, with a number of victims still under the rubble, the Gaza Health Ministry said in a statement Monday. Ambulance and civil defense crews cannot reach them the victims, the statement noted.

Since Oct. 7, 36,050 people have been killed in Gaza and 81,026 others have been injured.

“Never before in history has such a large number of mass killing tools been amassed and employed together in front of the world as is happening now in Gaza, where the population is deprived of water, food, medicine, electricity, and fuel, crushing the infrastructure, destroying all institutions, disrupting sanitation, spreading epidemics, crushing the health system, implementing the siege, closing crossings, and preventing the entry of medical supplies and delegations,” the Gaza Health Ministry said.

May 27, 2:15 PM
Egyptian border guard killed in shooting at Rafah border

An Egyptian border guard was killed in a shooting in the Rafah border area with Gaza, Egypt’s military spokesman said in a statement on Monday.

“The Egyptian armed forces, through the competent authorities, are investigating a shooting incident in the Rafah border area which led to the martyrdom of one of the security personnel on duty,” the statement said.

The Israeli military had earlier reported an exchange of fire on the Egyptian border and said it was discussing the incident with Egypt.

“A few hours ago (Monday), a shooting incident occurred on the Egyptian border. The incident is under review and discussions are being held with the Egyptians,” the IDF said.

Initial investigations into an incident that killed an Egyptian border guard indicate the incident occurred while there was an exchange of fire between Israeli forces and “the Palestinian resistance,” an Egyptian security source told Egypt’s state-affiliated Al Qahera News TV on Monday.

In October 2023, weeks after the war started, Israel said one of its military tanks mistakenly fired at an Egyptian position near the border with Gaza. Egypt said at the time that several army personnel were slightly injured.

Tensions between Egypt and Israel have escalated after Israeli forces earlier this month seized control of the Rafah border crossing, a key entry point for humanitarian aid. Egypt said it would not reopen its side of the crossing unless it is operated by Palestinians and accused Israel of preventing aid deliveries.

May 27, 1:52 PM
UNRWA commissioner general calls scenes of Rafah after strike ‘hell on earth’

The images that have emerged after the Israeli strike on Rafah are a “testament to how Rafah has turned into hell on earth,” Philippe Lazzarini, commissioner general of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, said in a post on X.

“Children and women living in tented plastic makeshift shelters are among the killed. Many were injured. Others were reportedly burnt to death. The images from last night are testament to how Rafah has turned into hell on earth,” Lazzarini said went on.

Some UNRWA staff are unaccounted for and it’s very hard to establish contact with UNRWA teams in Rafah, Lazzarini said, adding that the UNRWA is doing its best to bring aid to people in need in Gaza.

“UNRWA is doing everything possible not to interrupt the delivery of humanitarian assistance. But with every day passing, providing assistance & protection becomes nearly impossible,” he said.

-ABC News’ Ellie Kaufman

May 27, 1:02 PM
White House says images out of Rafah are ‘heartbreaking’ but maintains Israel has ‘a right’ to go after Hamas

The “devastating images” coming out of Rafah are “heartbreaking,” a White House National Security Council spokesperson said in a statement Monday, adding that even though Israel “has a right to go after” Hamas, the country also has to protect civilians.

“Israel has a right to go after Hamas, and we understand this strike killed two senior Hamas terrorists who are responsible for attacks against Israeli civilians,” the spokesperson said. “But as we’ve been clear, Israel must take every precaution possible to protect civilians.”

The spokesperson also said that the U.S. is engaging with the Israeli authorities to figure out “what happened” in addition to the IDF investigation.

-ABC News’ Michelle Stoddart

May 27, 12:18 PM
‘Outraged’: Macron calls for immediate cease-fire after Rafah attack

French President Emmanuel Macron condemned Israel’s attack on Rafah that left at least 45 people dead, saying he was “outraged” and called for “respect for international law” and an “immediate cease-fire.”

“Outraged by the Israeli strikes which caused numerous victims among the displaced in Rafah. These operations must stop. There are no safe areas in Rafah for Palestinian civilians. I call for full respect for international law and an immediate ceasefire,” Macron said in a post on X.

The Israel Defense Forces claimed it took several measures to protect civilians. The strike is now under investigation.

“The General Staff’s Fact-Finding and Assessment Mechanism is investigating the circumstances of the deaths of civilians in the area of the strike. The IDF regrets any harm to uninvolved civilians during combat,” the IDF said in a statement.

The White House has not commented on the attack yet, and the Israeli prime minister’s office has not released a statement.

-ABC News’ Ellie Kaufman

May 27, 7:58 AM
Dozens killed, hundreds injured in Sunday Rafah strike, Gaza ministry says

Forty-five people were killed and 249 were injured in an IDF strike on Rafah on Sunday, the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry said Monday.

Action Aid UK had on Sunday placed the death toll higher, saying at least 50 people were killed.

IDF officials said the strike had targeted “significant Hamas terrorists” who were operating in a Hamas compound.

“The IDF is aware of reports indicating that as a result of the strike and fire that was ignited several civilians in the area were harmed,” IDF officials said on social media. “The incident is under review.”

-ABC News’ Joe Simonetti and Kevin Shalvey

May 26, 6:44 PM
IDF claims 2 top Hamas officials killed in Rafah airstrike

The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) claimed two top Hamas officials were killed in the deadly airstrike in western Rafah Sunday night.

The IDF said Hamas’ Chief of Staff in the Judea and Samaria wing, Yassin Rabia, and an additional senior Hamas official, Khaled Nagar, were both killed.

“Hamas’ Judea and Samaria wing is responsible for the planning, funding, and carrying out of terror attacks throughout Judea and Samaria and within Israel,” the IDF said in a statement Sunday.

The IDF claimed Rabia was responsible for “numerous murderous terror attacks, including in 2001 and 2002, in which IDF soldiers were killed.”

The IDF also claimed Nagar “directed shooting attacks and other terrorist activities in Judea and Samaria, and transferred funds intended for Hamas’ terrorist activities in the Gaza Strip.”

“Previously, Khaled Nagar carried out several deadly terror attacks between 2001-2003 which led to the deaths of several Israeli civilians and the injury and death of several Israeli soldiers,” the IDF claimed.

The airstrike in Rafah on Sunday also resulted in the deaths of at least 50 individuals, including civilians, according to Action Aid UK.

May 26, 6:18 PM
Death toll in Rafah airstrike rises to 50: Action Aid UK

The death toll in the IDF airstrike that hit western Rafah Sunday night has risen to at least 50 individuals, including civilians, according to Action Aid UK.

The organization said Israeli fighter jets launched eight missiles at makeshift shelters housing internally displaced persons next to UNRWA warehouses stocking vital aid.

“We are outraged and heartbroken by the recent attacks in West Rafah,” Action Aid UK said in a statement Sunday.

“These shelters were supposed to be safe havens for innocent civilians, yet they became targets of brutal violence,” the organization continued. “Children, women, and men are being burned alive under their tents and shelters.”

Action Aid UK expects the number of casualties to rise.

-ABC News’ Victoria Beaule

May 26, 5:49 PM
At least 35 killed, including civilians, in airstrike on Rafah: Gaza Ministry of Health

A deadly airstrike has killed at least 35 people inside western Rafah, near the UNRWA logistics base in Tal Al-Sultan, according to officials at the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health.

Numerous individuals remain stuck in a fire that resulted from the airstrike and in the tents destroyed by the bombardment.

The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) confirmed the airstrike to ABC News in a statement on Sunday and acknowledged that civilians were harmed as a result of the strike.

“A short while ago, an IDF aircraft struck a Hamas compound in Rafah in which significant Hamas terrorists were operating. The strike was carried out against legitimate targets under international law, using through the use of precise munitions and on the basis of precise intelligence that indicated Hamas’ use of the area,” the IDF said.

“The IDF is aware of reports indicating that as a result of the strike and fire that was ignited several civilians in the area were harmed,” the IDF continued, adding, “The incident is under review.”

-ABC News’ William Gretsky

Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Russian cosmonaut becomes 1st person to spend 1,000 cumulative days in space

Russian cosmonaut becomes 1st person to spend 1,000 cumulative days in space
Russian cosmonaut becomes 1st person to spend 1,000 cumulative days in space
Dawam Syah / 500px/Getty Images

(RUSSIA) — A Russian cosmonaut became the first person to spend a cumulative 1,000 days in space, Russia’s space agency Roscosmos announced Wednesday.

Oleg Kononenko, 59, reached the record while on his current mission aboard the International Space Station (ISS).

Kononenko’s current mission to the ISS began Sept. 15, 2023, and is planned to end Sept. 23, 2024, which will bring in his total number of days spent in orbit to 1,110.

Kononenko cumulated the days in space over several missions. His first was Expedition 17 to the ISS, which launched in April 2008. In total, Kononenko has been on five separate missions to the ISS.

This is not the first record set by Kononenko. In February 2024, he surpassed the record of 878 days set by his colleague Gennady Padalka for longest amount of time in space.

“I fly into space to do what I love, not to set records. I’ve dreamt of and aspired to become a cosmonaut since I was a child,” Kononenko told TASS at the time. “That interest — the opportunity to fly into space, to live and work in orbit — motivates me to continue flying.”

Unlike the Roscosmos cosmonauts, NASA astronauts typically spend no longer than six months aboard the ISS before they’re rotated out for a new crew. One notable exception was Frank Rubio, who spent 371 days in space before returning to Earth last September after his original six-month mission at the ISS was extended by an additional six months.

Experts have previously told ABC News that spending a prolonged period in space comes with many changes to human physiology and psychology and that astronauts are often extensively monitored upon their return after long missions.

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6 arrested in connection with shooting near US Embassy in Beirut: Lebanese Army Command

6 arrested in connection with shooting near US Embassy in Beirut: Lebanese Army Command
6 arrested in connection with shooting near US Embassy in Beirut: Lebanese Army Command
Getty Images – STOCK

(LONDON) — Six people, including the alleged gunman, have been arrested in connection with a shooting Wednesday morning near the entrance to the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, that injured a Lebanese guard, authorities said.

Shots from “small arms” were heard at about 8:34 a.m. local time, the embassy said.

The alleged gunman was shot by the Lebanese Army and suffered non-life-threatening injuries, local authorities said. The suspect, a Syrian national, was arrested and taken to a hospital for treatment, the Lebanese Army said in Arabic on its official social media account.

The Lebanese Army Command said it has also since arrested five more people in connection with the shooting. They include three members of the alleged shooter’s family, as well as a Syrian citizen and a Lebanese citizen who are suspected of having a relationship with him, it said.

“The army continues its raid operations in parallel with its follow-up of investigations under the supervision of the competent judiciary,” the Lebanese Army Command said in the statement.

A motivation in the shooting is unknown at this time.

Following the incident, Jake Sullivan, the White House national security adviser, said on “Good Morning America” Wednesday that all American personnel in Lebanon “are safe and accounted for.”

“One of our Lebanese local guard staff was wounded. He is receiving care,” he said.

The embassy was to remain closed to the public on Wednesday, but was expected to reopen on Thursday, U.S. officials said in a security alert.

“Investigations are underway and we are in close contact with host country law enforcement,” embassy officials said on social media.

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Climate officials mark World Environment Day by announcing 12 months of record high temperatures

Climate officials mark World Environment Day by announcing 12 months of record high temperatures
Climate officials mark World Environment Day by announcing 12 months of record high temperatures
the_burtons/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — This year’s World Environment Day comes with a sobering reminder about the severity of global warming, according to climate experts.

New climate warnings were announced Wednesday, including that the planet is experiencing its warmest May on record – in turn bringing the tally to twelve consecutive months of record-breaking globally, according to a report by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO).

Places like Southeast Asia and India saw record early-summer high temperatures in the month of May.

The WMO report includes more evidence that the planet is very close to failing to meet the Paris Agreement climate targets, which aim to limit the average global temperature increase to 1.5 Celsius since the Industrial Revolution on the moderate emissions scenario, and a 2-degree Celsius rise in the worst-case scenario.

There also is an increasing likelihood that the world will temporarily surpass the 1.5 Celsius target of additional warming more often, which has already happened several times this year, according to the report.

And the heat is not expected to relent. There is an 86% likelihood that at least one of the next five years, between 2024 and 2028, will surpass 2023 to become the warmest on record, the WMO report found. There is also an 80% chance that at least one of those years will temporarily exceed the 1.5-degree Celsius threshold, according to the report.

The global average annual temperature for each year between 2024 and 2028 is predicted to be between 1.1 Celsius and 1.9 Celsius higher than the average temperature during the years of the pre-industrial reference period, from 1850 to 1900, also according to the report.

This relentless stretch of new global temperature records was driven by a strong El Niño event in the equatorial eastern Pacific and amplified by human-caused climate change due to greenhouse gas emissions, scientists found.

The data show that the world is in trouble, United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres emphasized during remarks at the Natural History Museum in New York City on Wednesday morning.

Guterres urged world leaders, especially those in G20 countries, to do more to meet climate goals by reducing greenhouse gas emissions and helping people adapt to climate events, describing the present as “climate crunch time.”

“The battle for 1.5 degrees will be won or lost in the 2020s,” Guterres said, adding that current world leaders need to be the ones to take action.

Guterres called for 33 specific actions, broken into four categories: slashing emissions, protecting people from harm from climate events, boosting climate finance, and clamping down on the fossil fuel industry.

Those goals include cutting global production and consumption of fossil fuels 30% by 2030, which aligns with the recommendations of the U.N. climate reports.

Additionally, Guterres for the first time called for countries to regulate fossil fuel advertising in a manner similar to the tobacco industry, labeling it as harmful to human health. He also called on the public relations industry to stop representing fossil fuel clients and for news media and tech companies to stop accepting their advertising.

“We are playing Russian roulette with our planet,” he said. “We need an exit ramp off the highway to climate hell. And the truth is … we have control of the wheel.”

Stronger, more specific national climate plans are due at next year’s climate summit – COP30 – in Brazil, Guterres said.

World Environment Day is celebrated annually on June 5 to spotlight current environmental challenges. Saudi Arabia is this year’s host.

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‘Serious breaches’ of international law committed in Tigray War, watchdog says

‘Serious breaches’ of international law committed in Tigray War, watchdog says
‘Serious breaches’ of international law committed in Tigray War, watchdog says
omersukrugoksu/Getty Images

(LONDON) — There were “serious breaches” of international law and crimes against humanity were committed during the two-year Tigray War, according to a report released by U.S think tank New Lines Institute.

The report said it found “reasonable basis” that all parties in the conflict committed war crimes and “serious” breaches of international law. Ethiopia’s Defence Force and allied forces also appeared to have committed “crimes against humanity” and “acts of genocide” against Tigrayans as an ethnic group, the report said.

“These acts of genocide include killings, the infliction of serious bodily and mental harm, intentional measures to prevent births, and the deliberate infliction of conditions of life calculated to bring about the destruction of Tigrayans,” said Dr. Azeem Ibrahim, senior director of the New Lines Institute.

The report published Monday is intended to relate “multiple and widespread” reports of atrocities committed during the conflict to the U.N.’s Genocide Convention.

“These findings, drawn from a critical mass of evidence, underscore our collective legal responsibility as signatory states to the Geneva Conventions and the Genocide Convention to prevent further atrocities in the region,” said former U.S. Ambassador at Large for War Crimes Issues David Scheffer, who wrote the report’s afterward.

Among the evidence laid out in the report is a speech by Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s social affairs advisor, Daniel Kibret, which was found to openly advocate genocide against Tigrayans.

“We can only erase it,” Kibret said in reference to Tigray, in a speech widely criticized as dangerous, including by the U.S. government.

The report also cites testimony from a senior envoy to the European Union, Pekka Haavisto, who revealed to the media that he was told Ethiopia was planning to “wipe out the Tigrayans for 100 years” in a closed-door meeting attended by Ahmed, the prime minister.

“Victims will carry with them scarring and abuse from a conflict that, despite an apparent cessation of hostilities in 2022, did not result in a stable peace,” Ibrahim said.

The report also said it found “reasonable basis” that starvation was used as a weapon of warfare by Ethiopia’s government, a claim Addis Ababa has denied.

The two-year Tigray War, which ended in November 2022, has been described as one of the deadliest conflicts of the 21st century; the conflict erupting just a year after Ahmed won a Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to resolve the border conflict with neighboring Eritrea.

Fighting broke out in November 2020 after Ahmed ordered a military offensive in the northern Tigray region after months of tensions, accusing the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) of attacking a federal army base just outside Tigray.

The conflict — fought between forces allied to the Ethiopian Federal Government against TPLF and allied militias — soon spilt to neighboring regions. Researchers from Ghent University told ABC News the conflict was estimated to have killed up to 378,000 people.

“Tigray was a terrible, terrible time, and we haven’t talked about it recently, and yet there is speculation about famine there again,” said U.N. Relief Chief Martin Griffiths at a press conference on Tuesday. At least 21.4 million people are estimated to need humanitarian assistance this year.

ABC News has reached out to Ethiopia’s Federal Government for comment.

Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Shots fired near US Embassy in Beirut, injuring Lebanese guard, White House adviser says

Shots fired near US Embassy in Beirut, injuring Lebanese guard, White House adviser says
Shots fired near US Embassy in Beirut, injuring Lebanese guard, White House adviser says
avid_creative/Getty Images

(LONDON) — Gunfire was heard Wednesday morning near the entrance to the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, officials said, adding that “our team are safe.”

“All American personnel in Lebanon are safe and accounted for,” Jake Sullivan, the White House national security adviser, said on ABC News’ Good Morning America on Wednesday. “One of our Lebanese local guard staff was wounded. He is receiving care.”

Shots from “small arms” were heard at about 8:34 a.m. local time, the embassy said.

The person who allegedly opened fire was wounded and was taken to a hospital for treatment, the Lebanese Army said in Arabic on its official social media account. The person is a Syrian national, the army said.

“Investigations are underway and we are in close contact with host country law enforcement,” embassy officials said on social media.

The embassy was to remained closed to the public on Wednesday, but was expected to reopen on Thursday, U.S. officials said in a security alert.

Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Amanda Knox re-convicted of slander in Italian court

Amanda Knox re-convicted of slander in Italian court
Amanda Knox re-convicted of slander in Italian court
Amanda Knox arrives with her husband Christopher Robinson at the courthouse in Florence, on June 5, 2024 before a hearing in a slander case, related to her jailing and later acquittal for the murder of her British roommate in 2007. (Tiziana Fabi/AFP via Getty Images)

(FLORENCE, Italy and LONDON) — An Italian court on Wednesday re-convicted Amanda Knox of slander, upholding the only conviction still standing in association with the brutal murder of her roommate in 2007.

The Florence court on Wednesday sentenced Knox to three years for slandering Patrick Lumumba, a Congolese bar owner, in a written statement following the murder of Meredith Kercher. Knox is not expected to serve the time, since she served about four years before her murder conviction was overturned.

The European Court of Human Rights had ruled in 2019 that Italian law enforcement violated Knox’s rights during questioning, which led to Italy throwing out her slander conviction. The country’s supreme court then asked the Florence court to begin a new trial to decide whether there had been slander in the note.

Knox arrived in court in Florence Wednesday morning, with her hearing set to begin at 9:30 a.m. local time. She was accompanied by her husband, Christopher Robinson, with whom she shares two children.

Knox made an about 10-minute declaration before the court. Speaking in Italian with a voice that at times trembled, she spoke of why she wrote the note naming Lumumba.

She said she didn’t intend to hurt him, who was “not only her employer,” but also a friend who consoled her after her roommate’s death. She named him while she was exhausted and confused during an extensive police interrogation, she said.

The hearing had been scheduled for the “very same courtroom where I was reconvicted of a crime I didn’t commit,” Knox said on Monday. This time, she would be here to “defend myself yet again,” she added.

“I hope to clear my name once and for all of the false charges against me,” Knox said on social media. “Wish me luck.”

Knox and her then-boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, were initially convicted of murder in 2009, a ruling that was overturned in 2011.

After her initial conviction was overturned, courts in Italy again convicted Knox of murder in 2014. The country’s highest court definitively acquitted her and Sollecito of murder in 2015.

Rudy Hermann Guede was convicted and served 13 years for the murder. He was released in 2021.

On social media on Monday, Knox had added a short postscript to her statement, saying, “Crepi il lupo!” The Italian idiom roughly translates to “May the wolf die,” a common way of saying “Good luck.”

Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Shots fired near US Embassy in Beirut

Shots fired near US Embassy in Beirut, injuring Lebanese guard, White House adviser says
Shots fired near US Embassy in Beirut, injuring Lebanese guard, White House adviser says
avid_creative/Getty Images

(LONDON) — Gunfire was heard Wednesday morning near the entrance to the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, officials said, adding that “our team are safe.”

“Investigations are underway and we are in close contact with host country law enforcement,” embassy officials said on social media.

Shots from “small arms” were heard at about 8:34 a.m. local time, the embassy said.

The person who allegedly opened fire was wounded and was taken to a hospital for treatment, the Lebanese Army said in Arabic on its official social media account. The person is a Syrian national, the army said.

Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Israel-Gaza live updates: Hamas responds unfavorably to cease-fire proposal

Israel-Gaza live updates: 18 arrests in Jerusalem Day chaos
Israel-Gaza live updates: 18 arrests in Jerusalem Day chaos
Palestinians gather at the site of an Israeli strike on a camp for internally displaced people in Rafah on May 27, 2024, amid ongoing battles between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas militant group. (Photo by EYAD BABA/AFP via Getty Images)

(NEW YORK) — As the Israel-Hamas war crosses the seven-month mark, negotiations are apparently stalled to secure the release of hostages taken by the terrorist organization, and Israeli forces continue to launch incursions in the southern Gazan town of Rafah ahead of a possible large-scale invasion.

Here’s how the news is developing. All times Eastern:

Jun 04, 12:36 PM
Hamas responds unfavorably to current cease-fire proposal

Hamas officials are not responding favorably to President Joe Biden’s speech Friday and what they call the current proposal on the table.

A Hamas leader said no Hamas delegation has gone to Cairo, and the group is not accepting the offer given to them by mediators, the leader told Al-Mayadeen, a Lebanese news channel.

“We do not want to start from scratch, and our basic condition now is official Israeli approval of the previous paper, otherwise there will be no rounds and discussions,” the leader said to Al-Mayadeen.

Separately, senior Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri said the group frowns upon Washington and the West’s calls for it to accept Biden’s proposal on Gaza “as if it is Hamas who is hampering the deal,” he said Tuesday.

Israel is not serious about reaching a deal in Gaza and is still maneuvering under the U.S.’s cover, Abu Zuhri said to Hamas media.

-ABC News’ Nasser Atta

Jun 04, 12:02 PM
Qatar says Israel and Hamas should have clear positions for Gaza cease-fire

Qatar’s foreign ministry said on Tuesday it was “too early” to reach a cease-fire deal and that there should be a clear position from both sides on the U.S. truce proposal.

“We are waiting for a clear Israeli position that represent the entire Israeli government,” Qatari foreign ministry spokesperson Majed Al-Ansari told reporters during a press briefing on Tuesday. “Any talk of reaching a deal needs a clear position from both sides towards ideas put on the table.”

The deal should offer a road map for a permanent cease-fire and an end to the war, he said.

“It is too early thus far. We do not have clear positions from both sides,” he said, adding that mediators remain hopeful as they push ahead with efforts to reach a deal but are “not always optimistic.”

-ABC News’ Ayat Al-Tawy

Jun 03, 6:15 PM
Netanyahu to address joint session of Congress

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will deliver an address before the two houses of the U.S. Congress, his office confirmed Monday.

A date has not been set yet, his office said.

Plans for Netanyahu’s address come after Congressional big four leaders invited Netanyahu in a joint letter sent Friday.

Jun 03, 4:10 PM
Four hostages confirmed dead

Israeli forces confirmed the deaths of four more hostages: Haim Peri, Yoram Metzger, Amiram Cooper and Nadav Popplewell.

IDF spokesman Daniel Hagari said the four hostages were “killed together” a “few months ago” while “IDF forces were operating” in Khan Younis in southern Gaza. Hagari said Israeli forces are “examining the circumstances” of their deaths.

Cooper, 85, was an economist and a poet, and a father of four and grandfather of 11, according to Kibbutz Nir Oz. His wife, Nurit Cooper, was also kidnapped and later released, the kibbutz said.

Metzger, 80, was a father of three and grandfather of seven. His wife, Tamar Metzger, was also abducted to Gaza and later released, the kibbutz said.

Popplewell, 51, was kidnapped with his mother, who has been released, the Hostages Families Forum said.

Peri, 80, was abducted while protecting his wife, the Hostages Families Forum said. He leaves behind his wife, five children and 13 grandchildren.

Peri’s family said he “heroically survived in the Hamas tunnels, under inhumane conditions, for around 4 months,” and he “survived with the hope and faith that the state of Israel will fulfill its moral duty to bring him home.”

“The government of Israel and its Prime Minister have no right to leave the hostages in captivity, dismantling Israel’s foundational principle of mutual responsibility,” Peri’s family said. “We call upon the government of Israel to strive for an immediate deal, save those still alive, and bring those who are not, to a proper burial.”

“The heartbreak that comes with this painful news should shake every citizen in the State of Israel and lead every leader to profound soul-searching,” the Hostages Families Forum said in a statement Monday. “The Israeli government must send out a negotiating delegation this evening and return all 124 hostages, both living and murdered. … We reiterate our demand to the Israeli government: approve the Netanyahu deal immediately!”

Jun 03, 4:05 PM
Biden says Israel ready to ‘move forward with the terms’ of deal, Hamas is ‘only obstacle’

President Joe Biden told the emir of Qatar on Monday that Israel is ready to “move forward with the terms” of the hostage and cease-fire deal, according to the White House readout of the call.

Biden said that “Hamas is now the only obstacle to a complete ceasefire,” and the president “urged [Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani] to use all appropriate measures to secure Hamas’ acceptance of the deal,” the White House said.

Jun 03, 3:20 PM
State Department: Hamas only party blocking deal

State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said the current cease-fire proposal is “nearly identical to what Hamas said it would accept just a few weeks ago,” and said the U.S. and other mediators had not yet received an official response to the proposal from the militant group.

“The world should know, the Palestinian people should know, that the only thing standing in the way of an immediate cease-fire today is Hamas,” Miller declared.

Miller said there were some gaps between the proposal Hamas said it would agree to in the past, but added that the U.S., Qatar and Egypt all felt that they could be easily reconciled.

Jun 03, 2:56 PM
Egypt, Qatar, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, UAE support cease-fire deal

The foreign ministers of Egypt, Qatar, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates released a joint statement Monday in support of the current cease-fire deal.

The ministers met virtually to discuss the proposal and mediation efforts to reach a deal and hostages-for-prisoners swap, as well as the sufficient entry of aid into Gaza, the statement said.

The G7 leaders also issued a statement in support of the current deal.

Jun 03, 1:27 PM
White House: Biden outlined Israel’s cease-fire offer accurately

President Joe Biden outlined Israel’s cease-fire proposal accurately in his Friday speech, the White House maintained Monday, pushing back on suggestions he miscommunicated the offer.

“The Israeli foreign minister himself acknowledged that this was the Israeli proposal … and we’re confident that it accurately reflects that proposal, a proposal that we worked with the Israelis on,” White House national security communications adviser John Kirby told reporters.

Kirby also argued that Biden “felt it was important” to reveal details from ongoing cease-fire negotiations for the first time, saying it was meant to apply pressure on Hamas, not to corner Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

“We don’t typically go through the details of these kinds of proposals,” Kirby said. “But in this case, given where we are, given how much longer the hostages have now been held, given the fact that Hamas has reneged on several past occasions, on proposals that were sent to them, and given the fact that the Israelis really did work hard to come up with this proposal, and did so in good faith, the president felt it was important for the first time to publicly lay that out.”

“This wasn’t about jamming the prime minister or the war cabinet,” Kirby added. “This was about laying bare for the public to see how well and how faithfully and how assertively the Israelis came up with a new proposal, how it shows how much they really want to get this done.”

Kirby said Biden delivered the speech on Friday afternoon because the deal was presented to Hamas the night before.

“We’re awaiting an official response by them now to take the deal,” Kirby said. “This gives them what they’ve been looking for, which is a cease-fire and over time, and through the phases, the potential withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza.”

-ABC News’ Fritz Farrow

Jun 03, 12:35 PM
Netanyahu: Israel must work to bring hostages home, dismantle Hamas at same time

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has released his first public statement since President Joe Biden’s Friday speech endorsing the original Israeli cease-fire deal.

“We are working in countless ways to return our abductees,” Netanyahu said in Hebrew on Monday. “That’s why we went a long way to bring them back, but in the process of this action we maintained the goals of the war, chief among them the elimination of Hamas.”

“We insist that we complete both this and that. It’s part of the outline, it’s not something I’m adding now, it’s not something I’m adding because I was pressured in the coalition, it’s something we unanimously agreed on in the war cabinet,” Netanyahu added.

-ABC News’ Bruno Nota and Dana Savir

Jun 03, 3:57 AM
1 million have fled Rafah, UNRWA says

More than 1 million people have fled Rafah in the weeks since Israel issued evacuation orders, the local U.N. agency said Monday.

“Thousands of families now shelter in damaged & destroyed facilities in Khan Younis, where UNRWA keeps providing essential services despite increasing challenges,” the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees said in a statement.

The agency added, “Conditions are unspeakable.”

-ABC News’ Kevin Shalvey

Jun 02, 10:52 PM
Sec. Blinken tells Israel onus is on Hamas to accept cease-fire deal

Sec. of State Anthony Blinken spoke to Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant on Sunday about the proposal for a ceasefire-hostage deal.

The deal would secure the release of the hostages and ensure a surge in humanitarian assistance throughout Gaza.

“The Secretary commended Israel’s readiness to conclude a deal and affirmed that the onus is on Hamas to accept,” according to a readout of the call.

During the call, Blinken also reaffirmed America’s commitment to Israel’s security.

Jun 01, 4:38 PM
US, Qatar and Egypt urge Israel and Hamas to accept deal

In a joint statement shared by the U.S. State Department on Saturday, mediators from the U.S., Egypt and Qatar said they’re working to secure a cease-fire in Gaza and the release of the hostages, and urged Hamas and Israel “to finalize the agreement” that President Joe Biden outlined on Friday.

“These principles brought the demands of all parties together in a deal that serves multiple interests and will bring immediate relief both to the long-suffering people of Gaza as well as the long-suffering hostages and their families,” the statement said. “This deal offers a roadmap for a permanent ceasefire and ending the crisis.”

Jun 01, 3:54 PM
Right-wing Israeli ministers against deal

Right-wing Israeli Ministers Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben Gvir spoke out on social media Saturday, both threatening to leave the government if the deal in its current form is accepted.

“I have now spoken with the Prime Minister and made it clear to him that I will not be part of a government that will agree to the proposed outline and end the war without destroying Hamas and returning all the abductees,” Smotrich wrote.

This comes after the Hostage Families group released a statement urging Israel’s parliament to embrace the deal.

Jun 01, 2:43 PM
Israeli government says it wasn’t told Biden would mention permanent cease-fire

An Israeli government official said the Israeli Prime Minister’s Office wasn’t informed that President Joe Biden’s Friday remarks would include a permanent end to the fighting.

“If you listen to what Biden said, you come to the impression that we agree to a permanent cease-fire without, or, without our conditions being met, and that’s not the case,” the official said.

The official said the Israeli Prime Minister’s Office, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, was informed 30 minutes before that Biden was giving a speech. The official said Netanyahu was told that the speech would focus on the hostages, with no mention of implementing a permanent cease-fire.

Biden presented on Friday what he said was an Israeli proposal to draw the war in Gaza to a close.

Biden said the deal had been transmitted to Israel and Hamas, through Qatar.

The president said the first phase would last for six weeks and include a “full and complete cease-fire, a withdrawal of Israeli forces from all populated areas of Gaza [and] release of a number of hostages.” Palestinians would also be able to return to their homes and 600 trucks of humanitarian aid would be delivered to Gaza every day.

The second phase would include a release of all remaining living hostages and the temporary cease-fire would become a permanent cease-fire with Israel withdrawing all forces from Gaza “as long as Hamas lives up to its commitments,” Biden said.

In phase three, there would be a major reconstruction of Gaza.

-ABC News’ Britt Clennett

Jun 01, 2:34 PM
Egypt, Israel to hold talks on Rafah crossing: Egyptian official

Egyptian and Israeli officials will hold talks in Cairo on Sunday to discuss the reopening the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt, an Egyptian security official confirmed to ABC News.

The crossing has been closed since Israeli forces took control of the Gaza side during their offensive toward Rafah in May. Egyptian officials have said they will not reopen the crossing as long as Israel controls the Gaza side.

Egypt has, however, agreed to send aid trucks from its side of the border to be processed from the Israeli border checkpoint of Kerem Shalom.

-ABC News’ Ayat Al-Tawy

Jun 01, 9:54 AM
Israel says ‘conditions for ending the war have not changed’

Although President Joe Biden on Friday outlined a multi-phase cease-fire proposal he said came from Israel, the Israeli Prime Minister’s Office said in a statement Saturday that “Israel’s conditions for ending the war have not changed: the destruction of Hamas’s military and governing capabilities, the freeing of all hostages and ensuring that Gaza no longer poses a threat to Israel.”

“Under the proposal, Israel will continue to insist these conditions are met before a permanent cease-fire is put in place,” the statement said. “The notion that Israel will agree to a permanent cease-fire before these conditions are fulfilled is a non-starter.”

Biden said Friday that Israelis should feel comfortable with a cease-fire because Hamas’s capabilities have deteriorated and can no longer repeat the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks.

Hamas in a statement reiterated its requirements for a deal. Hamas said it “affirms its position of readiness to deal positively and constructively with any proposal based on a permanent cease-fire, complete withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, reconstruction, the return of the displaced to all their places of residence, and the completion of a serious prisoner exchange deal.”

May 31, 5:15 PM
Congressional leaders formally invite Netanyahu to deliver joint address

The four leaders of the House of Representatives and Senate formally invited Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to deliver a joint address to Congress.

The letter sent on Friday by House Speaker Mike Johnson, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell did not provide a date with the address.

The congressional leaders asked Netanyahu to “share the Israeli government’s vision for defending democracy, combatting terror, and establishing a just and lasting peace in the region.”

“The existential challenges we face, including the growing partnership between Iran, Russia, and China, threaten the security, peace, and prosperity of our countries and of free people around the world,” the letter read.

Netanyahu last addressed Congress in 2015.

May 31, 4:03 PM
Israel ‘united’ in desire to return hostages, Netanyahu responds to Biden

Hours after President Joe Biden outlined a three-phase cease-fire deal to end the Israel-Hamas war and said it is time to bring the hostages home, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has responded, saying its government is “united in the desire to return abductees.”

“The Israeli government is united in the desire to return our abductees as soon as possible and is working to achieve this goal,” Netanyahu’s office said in a statement Friday.

“The Prime Minister authorized the negotiating team to present an outline for achieving this goal, while insisting that the war will not end until all of its goals are achieved, including the return of all our abductees and the elimination of Hamas’ military and governmental capabilities,” Netanyahu’s office added.

May 31, 2:07 PM
Biden pitches three-phase cease-fire deal to end Israel-Hamas war

President Joe Biden gave remarks from the White House on Friday, pitching a new plan to draw the war in Gaza to a close.

Biden said the deal had been transmitted to Israel and Hamas, through Qatar.

The president said the first phase would last for six weeks and include a “full and complete cease-fire, a withdrawal of Israeli forces from all populated areas of Gaza [and] release of a number of hostages.” Palestinians would also be able to return to their homes and 600 trucks of humanitarian aid would be delivered to Gaza every day.

The second phase would include a release of all remaining living hostages and the temporary cease-fire would become a permanent cease-fire with Israel withdrawing all forces from Gaza “as long as Hamas lives up to its commitments,” Biden said.

In phase three, there would be a major reconstruction of Gaza.

“At this point Hamas no longer is capable of carrying out another Oct. 7, which was one of the Israelis’ main objectives in this war, and, quite frankly, a righteous one,” Biden said.

Biden continued, “We can’t lose this moment. Indefinite war in pursuit of an unidentified notion of total victory … will only bog down Israel in Gaza — draining the economic, military and human resources and furthering Israel’s isolation in the world. That will not bring hostages home.”

May 31, 1:22 PM
Hamas releases audio from Israeli hostage Noa Argamani

Hamas has released a video containing audio from hostage Noa Argamani with images of her drawings over the audio.

Alongside her voice, in which she pleads to be saved, drawings are shown, which the family believes to be scribbles that Argamani has drawn.

Agramani was seen in a widely shared video being abducted from the Nova music festival on a motorbike.

The 26-year-old was last heard from in a video released by Hamas in January.

The Hostage Families Forum, which said the family approved release of the video, said in a statement, “125 men and women have been held hostage by Hamas for 238 days. The Israeli government must hear the call and act decisively, without the need for any propaganda video from Hamas, to swiftly reach a deal to bring the hostages home!”

-ABC News’ Anna Burd

May 31, 1:10 PM
Israeli forces operating in central Rafah, IDF says

The Israeli army is now operating in central Rafah, the IDF said Friday.

“The operation continues to gradually evolve, with forces focusing on uprooting Hamas terror infrastructure on the Philadelphi route as well as special forces that are conducted intelligence-based targeted-raids from the outskirts of Central Rafah,” the IDF said in a statement.

The IDF said it found dozens of Hamas tunnels and rocket launchers. Israel also said it “eliminated hundreds of terrorists along the Philadelphi route and the outskirts of the Urban areas of Rafah.”

May 30, 3:39 PM
Benny Gantz’s party proposes vote to dissolve Israeli parliament

Israeli war cabinet Minister Benny Gantz’s centrist party has proposed holding a parliamentary vote on dissolving the Knesset, but it is unclear whether he has enough support to bring about early elections.

The chairman of the Israel Beytenu party, Avigdor Lieberman (from the opposition), is holding a political dialogue with former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, aiming to create a political union that could serve as a “governing alternative” to the Likud and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

-ABC News’ Will Gretsky

May 30, 2:44 PM
Hamas says they will agree to cease-fire deal when Israel agrees to stop war in Gaza

Hamas released a new statement about the proposed cease-fire deal, saying if Israel agreed to “stop its war and aggression” in Gaza, they would “reach a complete agreement that includes a comprehensive exchange deal,” Hamas said in the statement.

“Today, we informed the mediators of our clear position that if the occupation stops its war and aggression against our people in Gaza, our readiness to reach a complete agreement that includes a comprehensive exchange deal,” Hamas added.

Israel had said it submitted a cease-fire proposal to Hamas earlier this week and was awaiting the group’s review of the deal. Israel officials then said that they expect the war in Gaza to last until the end of this year.

-ABC News’ Diaa Ostaz

May 30, 2:44 PM
Egyptian source denies Israeli claim of tunnels in the Philadelphi corridor

A high-level Egyptian source denied Israeli reports about the existence of tunnels on the Egyptian border with Gaza, Egyptian state-run Al-Qahera News said.

The source dismissed the reports as “lies” promoted by Israel to “cover up its military failure.” It added that there were “no communications with the Israeli side” regarding the allegations.

There has been no official comment from Cairo since the announcement.

Egypt has over the past decade destroyed hundreds of smuggling tunnels along its eastern border with Gaza as part of its fight against Islamist militants in its border Sinai region.

Egyptian officials have said a potential Israeli takeover of Philadelphi, a largely demilitarized buffer zone along the Gaza-Egypt border, could violate the 1979 peace deal between Egypt and Israel.

-ABC News’ Ayat Al-Tawy

May 30, 12:24 PM
Gaza pier built by US Army expected to be working again within a week

The damaged components of the U.S. pier built to funnel aid into Gaza are back at the Port of Ashdod undergoing repairs, a U.S. official confirmed to ABC News.

The system is expected to be back in operation on Gaza’s coast within a week, the official said.

-ABC News’ Matt Seyler

May 29, 4:25 PM
Evidence indicates weapons used in deadly Rafah strike are US-made: Experts

Evidence indicates a weapon used by Israel in the Rafah strike — that killed 50 people and injured 249 others — on May 26 appears to be made by a U.S.-owned company, two weapons experts who reviewed photos and video of fragments at the site told ABC News.

Weapon fragments seen in video are consistent with a U.S.-made “small diameter bomb,” which includes the GBU-39/B, or B/B. These types of SDB/GBU-39 weapons can carry a 37 pound warhead, consistent with statements from the IDF about what weapons were used in the strike, Trevor Ball, a former U.S. Army explosive ordinance disposal specialist, said.

“We used two small rockets, 17 kg warhead, that were fired from aircraft to hit, precisely. We’ve used this kind of ammunition before,” Israel Defense Forces spokesman Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani told ABC News when asked about what weapons were used in the strike.

Ball identified a series of numbers beginning with “81873″ marked on one fragment seen in video reviewed by ABC News. This is the Commercial and Government Entity Code, or CAGE Code, assigned by the U.S. government to aerospace manufacturing company Woodward, based in Colorado, according to U.S. government records.

A second former U.S. military explosive ordinance disposal specialist confirmed the fragments were consistent with the GBU-39, but asked to not be named by ABC News.

All sales of GBU-39/B Small Diameter Bombs to foreign entities require the State Department’s approval, but a U.S. official says Israel may have also procured the munitions through direct commercial sales that don’t meet the value threshold — $25 million in Israel’s case — for congressional review and public notification.

In the days following the Oct. 7 attack, Israel rushed to back up its stockpiles, including its supply of the small diameter bombs by any available means, the official said. ABC News has not confirmed if the weapons Israel received after Oct. 7 were used in the May 26 Rafah strike.

When asked if the bombs used in the strike were provided by the U.S., deputy Pentagon press secretary Sabrina Singh said reporters needed to ask the Israelis during a briefing on May 28.

-ABC News’ Chris Looft, Helena Skinner, Britt Clennett, Sohel Uddin, Luis Martinez, Matt Seyler, Shannon Crawford, Ellie Kaufman and Camilla Alcini

May 29, 3:50 PM
World Central Kitchen suspends operations in Rafah over safety

World Central Kitchen has suspended its humanitarian efforts in Rafah due to safety concerns. Jose Andre’s aid group had restarted their relief efforts in Gaza after seven aid workers were killed by an Israeli strike, sparking international outrage over the protection of civilians in Gaza.

The group will continue to operate elsewhere in Gaza.

“In the face of Israeli operations in Rafah, countless families are being forced to flee once again. Ongoing attacks have forced us to pause work at our main kitchen in Rafah and relocate many of our community kitchens further north. The situation is dire but WCK’s Palestinian team—all directly impacted by the war—is showing up every day to support neighbors in need,” WCK said in a statement Wednesday.

“Yesterday we provided almost 100,000 meals and will increase capacity this week as 58 of our aid trucks have entered Gaza since Sunday,” WCK said.

-ABC News’ Will Gretsky

May 29, 3:48 PM
War expected to last through end of year, Israeli official says

Israel expects that the war in Gaza will likely be long, lasting for at least seven more months of fighting against Hamas, a senior Israeli official said Wednesday.

“We expect another seven months of combat in order to shore up our achievement and realize what we define as the destruction of Hamas and Islamic Jihad’s military and governing capabilities,” Tzachi Hanegbi, the head of the Israeli national security council, said in a radio interview to Kann News.

-ABC News’ Dana Savir

May 29, 2:21 PM
Israel has ‘tactical control’ over Philadelphi corridor in Gaza: IDF

Israeli Defense Forces have “tactical control over the Philadelphi corridor” in Gaza, an IDF official told reporters Wednesday.

“IDF has tactical control over the Philadelphi corridor, which does mean it doesn’t mean that we have boots on the ground across all of the corridor, but it means that we can control and we have the ability to cut off the oxygen line that Hamas has used for replenishing and movement in and around that area,” the IDF official said.

-ABC News’ Bruno Nota

May 29, 2:18 PM
Kirby says he hopes for end to war ‘as soon as possible’

After comments from Israeli officials predicted the war in Gaza would last through the end of the year, White House national security communications adviser John Kirby expressed a desire to reach an end much sooner than that — “as soon as possible,” he said.

“I’ll let the defense minister speak for his own views and opinions. Our view, in our opinion, is we gotta get this hostage deal now. The time is now to do it — to get that temporary cease-fire and to end this conflict as soon as possible,” Kirby said.

“I can tell you that President Biden is committed to seeing that we find a way to end this conflict. And to end as soon as practicable.”

Kirby confirmed that there is a “fresh” proposal on the table that the Israels are “fully supportive of,” but it is too “fresh” to provide details on. He emphasized that the Biden administration still believes there is a path for a cease-fire deal that could “lead to something more sustainable” and a “potential end of the conflict.”

Kirby also said the fighting “could end tomorrow if Mr. Sinwar did the right thing and agreed to this deal,” referring to the Hamas leader.

-ABC News’ Cheyenne Haslett

May 29, 1:30 PM
Blinken reacts to ‘horrific’ Rafah strike, questions whether Israeli gains are worth consequences

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke about the catastrophic strike over the weekend in Rafah — becoming the first top-level U.S. official to publicly respond to the attack in detail.

“The incident a couple days ago was horrific,” he said. “I don’t think anyone who has seen the images cannot be deeply affected by them, just on a basic human level.”

Blinken was also asked about reports indicating that the U.S. supplied the weapons used in the strike; he said he couldn’t yet say where they came from, but if Israel’s claims that it used small diameter munitions were true, the incident illustrated how even precision attacks could cause immense damage to civilians in Rafah.

“I think we also see that even limited, focused, targeted attacks, designed to deal with terrorists who’ve killed innocent civilians that are plotting to kill more — even those kinds of operations can have terrible, horrific, unintended consequences,” he said.

Blinken then said it was “very important in this moment after Israel has had real success in helping to destroy Hamas’ capacity to repeat October 7th” that Israel “has to ask whether, and especially in the absence of a plan for the day after in Gaza, further incremental gains against Hamas, but gains that may not be durable in terms of Hamas’ defeat in the absence of a plan–how that stacks up against some of the, again, unintended, but horrific consequences of military action in a place where the people you’re going after are so closely embedded with civilians.”

-ABC News’ Shannon Crawford

May 28, 5:15 PM
Newly released video shows Israeli hostage in captivity

A video showing Israeli hostage Alexsander Trufanov, who was captured by Hamas on Oct. 7, was publicly released by the Hostage Families Forum on Tuesday.

“The proof of life from Alexsander (Sasha) Trufanov is additional evidence that the Israeli government must give a significant mandate to the negotiating team, which will be able to lead to a deal for the return of all the hostages – the living to rehabilitation and the murdered to burial,” the Hostage Families Forum said in the release with the video.

Israel submitted a new cease-fire proposal to negotiators in Egypt on Monday. They are now awaiting a response from Hamas, according to an Egyptian security source who spoke with ABC News.

-ABC News’ Dorit Long and Marwa Mouaki

May 28, 5:07 PM
21 killed as explosions continue in Rafah following Sunday’s deadly strike

At least 21 people were killed in an attack near the International Medical Corps American hospital as explosions continue in Rafah on Monday night and Tuesday, according to Palestinians on the ground and local authorities.

Of the 21 people killed, 14 of them were female, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health said Tuesday. Their ages have not yet been released.

These bombings were not in the exact same location as the strike on May 26 that killed 50 people and injured at least 249 others.

-ABC News’ Diaa Ostaz

May 28, 4:42 PM
Nikki Haley signs artillery shells in Israel: ‘Finish them! America loves Israel!’

Former U.S. presidential candidate and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley visited the northern Israeli border on Tuesday, meeting with Israeli soldiers and Israelis.

During her visit, Haley visited an Israel Defense Forces post with soldiers serving on the northern border.

Haley stopped and signed artillery shells, writing, “Finish them! America loves Israel!” on some of them.

-ABC News’ Ellie Kaufman

May 28, 3:51 PM
1 million Palestinians have now fled Rafah: UNRWA

One million Palestinians have been forced to flee Rafah over the last three weeks in search of safety, according to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East.

Heavy bombardment continued in Gaza overnight, including in Tal Al Sultan, where the U.N. main offices in Gaza are located, according to UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini.

Most of the UNRWA staff could not make it to work as they are packing up and moving. The UNRWA is also running out of medical supplies and basic human medicines, according to Lazzarini.

Just over 200 trucks with humanitarian supplies were picked up in southern Gaza in the last three weeks as needs continue to increase exponentially, Lazzarini said.

-ABC News’ Will Gretsky

May 28, 3:46 PM
UN secretary-general condemns Rafah strike, says ICJ ruling is ‘binding’

The United Nations secretary-general has condemned the deadly strike on Rafah “in the strongest terms,” saying Antonio Guterres is “heartbroken by the images of the killed and injured,” his spokesman, Stephane Dujarric, said in a statement Tuesday.

“The Secretary-General reiterates his demand for an immediate ceasefire and the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages. He recalls the recent orders of the International Court of Justice, which are binding and must be complied with,” Dujarric said.

“The humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza is now compounded by the unconscionable prospect of a man-made famine,” Dujarric said.

-ABC News’ Ellie Kaufman

May 28, 3:45 PM
Sunday’s Rafah strike ‘shouldn’t have happened,’ IDF says

Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani admitted to a “mishap” in Sunday’s Rafah strike that killed 50 Palestinians and injured at least 249 others, saying it was a “tragic incident that shouldn’t have happened.”

“The outcome is not the outcome we had in mind when this operation started. That’s why we’re investigating it. It’s a tragic event and it’s not the way we operate. We are fighting with Hamas terrorists. We are trying to kill them specifically in a very precise way, intelligence based. And that’s why we look at this as a tragic incident that shouldn’t have happened,” Shoshani said.

Over 36,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since Oct. 7.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the strike a “tragic mishap” on Monday.

“The mishap was the fire that carried out after the targeted attack, and we are looking into why this fire caught on,” Shoshani said. “The attack, per se, was according to procedure, with surveillance before the attack, a very precise attack based on intelligence.”

-ABC News’ Britt Clennett

May 28, 3:27 PM
Barely any medical facilities functioning, Palestinian Ministry of Health says

There are barely any functioning medical facilities in Rafah as the Israel Defense Forces continue its operations, the Palestinian Ministry of Health said Tuesday.

“Both the Indonesian field hospital and the Tal Al-Sultan Clinic in Rafah Governorate have ceased service, leaving only the Tal Al-Sultan Maternity Hospital struggling to survive and continue providing service to patients in Rafah,” according to the ministry.

-ABC News’ Will Gretsky

May 28, 3:18 PM
Israel makes new cease-fire proposal, now awaiting Hamas response

Israel put forward a new cease-fire proposal and hostage release deal on Monday, which has now been passed on to Hamas, an Egyptian security source told ABC News.

Mediators are awaiting a response from Hamas within 24 hours, the source said.

This is the first time Israel has taken the first move to submit a draft proposal since the war began, according to the source. Previous proposals have been initiated by Egyptian and Qatari mediators.

The source said talks could resume soon, without providing an exact timeline.

-ABC News’ Ayat Al-Tawy

May 28, 3:12 PM
‘Tragic doesn’t even begin to describe it,’ Harris says of IDF strike in Rafah

Vice President Kamala Harris weighed in on the IDF strike in Rafah that killed 50 civilians and injured 249 more, saying, “The word ‘tragic’ doesn’t even begin to describe it.”

She did not comment when asked if this crosses a red line for the administration. President Joe Biden has yet to weigh in.

May 28, 10:31 AM
‘No justice in the world’: Palestinian man’s wife killed in Rafah strike

Days after a deadly strike on Rafah killed 50 Palestinians and injured at least 249 others, a father of five who lost his wife told ABC News his family fled from Beit Lahia to Deir al-Balah — in the south of Gaza — before heading to Rafah for safety.

“One of my disabled sons had his leg amputated and my wife was killed. What injustice is this?” Murid Saadi Agha told ABC News. “There is no justice in the world. Israel is above all the law.”

“I hold America and Israel responsible. We are innocent,” he said.

Three of Agha’s children have already lost limbs in the war.

“After sunset, my wife and I were sitting here outside the shelter with our neighbors, and my disabled son was feeding his other disabled brother, who is older than him. Even the Indomie that he was eating was still here,” he said, describing the aftermath of the deadly Rafah strike.

“There was a very intense explosion. My wife declared once that the shrapnel entered her chest and killed her. I went to my sons and found that one of them had an amputated foot, as the shrapnel entered from the top and from the side. There were many martyrs here. It was a massacre,” he said.

May 28, 9:21 AM
Israel continues Rafah strikes as Palestinian death toll surpasses 36,000

Strikes on Rafah have continued, barely 48 hours since an Israeli airstrike near a camp of displaced people killed 50 and injured 249 others. The continued offensive comes as at least 36,050 Palestinians have been killed since Oct. 7 and 81,026 others have been injured.

The Israel Defense Forces said their ongoing Rafah operation is “precise.”

The Israeli military’s deadly airstrike in Rafah on Sunday night hit an area about 650 feet away from the boundary of an IDF-designated “humanitarian area,” according to an ABC News analysis of geolocated images and the IDF’s statements and maps.

The U.N. Security Council will hold an emergency meeting later Tuesday to discuss Sunday’s strike on Rafah.

At least one million people have fled Rafah in the past three weeks, according to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East.

May 27, 4:30 PM
Kuwait Specialized hospital in Rafah out of service

The Kuwait Specialized Hospital in Rafah, one of its largest, announced that the hospital had been out of service due to the expansion of the Israeli military operation on the city and the repeated and deliberate targeting of the hospital’s vicinity, hospital’s director Suhaib Al-Hams said Sunday.

The Israeli occupation repeatedly targeted the hospital, the most recent of which was targeting the hospital gate, which led to the death of two of the staff working there, as well as the injury of five members of the medical staff in a previous targeting, Al-Hams said in a press statement received by Sanad News Agency.

“We announce that the Kuwait Specialized Hospital has been out of service and the working medical teams have been transferred to the field hospital that is being prepared in the Al-Mawasi area,” Al-Hams said.

May 27, 3:39 PM
Israel strike hits fuel tank, causing large fire: US official

The U.S. received information from the Israelis overnight that they believe shrapnel or something else from the strike ignited a fuel tank 100 meters away, which engulfed a tent, creating a massive fire, according to a U.S. official.

The U.S. does not have information to confirm or dispute that information. The U.S. is in the process of understanding what has happened, waiting for Israel to conduct its own investigation and determining what action to take next, according to the official.

The U.S. maintains that while they’ve warned about a major ground offensive in Rafah, that’s not what’s happening, according to the official.

May 27, 3:37 PM
Hamas leader says Rafah strike shows Israel is defying international law

Commenting on the Rafah strike that killed 50 people, Hamas released a statement saying Israel’s attack on Rafah is like “the announcement of Netanyahu’s government’s defiance of international justice decisions,” referring to the International Court of Justice’s decision last week ordering Israel to stop its operation in Rafah.

“The massacre committed in the areas where its considered safe area,” Hamas leader Osama Hamdan said. “The timing of these murders during the last two days is like the announcement of Netanyahu’s government’s defiance of international justice decisions.”

May 27, 6:17 PM
Netanyahu calls strike on Rafah a ‘tragic mishap’

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the strike on Rafah which killed at least 50 Palestinians Sunday, a “tragic mishap,” in a speech to Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, Monday.

“We are fighting with force in the north of the Gaza Strip, in its center, its south and in Rafah. In Rafah we have already evacuated about a million uninvolved residents and despite our best efforts not to harm the un-involved, unfortunately a tragic mishap happened last night. We are investigating the case and will draw the conclusions because this is our policy,” Netanyahu said.

May 27, 2:45 PM
Death toll from Israeli strike rises to 50

At least 50 people have been confirmed dead in Israel’s strike on Rafah, with a number of victims still under the rubble, the Gaza Health Ministry said in a statement Monday. Ambulance and civil defense crews cannot reach them the victims, the statement noted.

Since Oct. 7, 36,050 people have been killed in Gaza and 81,026 others have been injured.

“Never before in history has such a large number of mass killing tools been amassed and employed together in front of the world as is happening now in Gaza, where the population is deprived of water, food, medicine, electricity, and fuel, crushing the infrastructure, destroying all institutions, disrupting sanitation, spreading epidemics, crushing the health system, implementing the siege, closing crossings, and preventing the entry of medical supplies and delegations,” the Gaza Health Ministry said.

May 27, 2:15 PM
Egyptian border guard killed in shooting at Rafah border

An Egyptian border guard was killed in a shooting in the Rafah border area with Gaza, Egypt’s military spokesman said in a statement on Monday.

“The Egyptian armed forces, through the competent authorities, are investigating a shooting incident in the Rafah border area which led to the martyrdom of one of the security personnel on duty,” the statement said.

The Israeli military had earlier reported an exchange of fire on the Egyptian border and said it was discussing the incident with Egypt.

“A few hours ago (Monday), a shooting incident occurred on the Egyptian border. The incident is under review and discussions are being held with the Egyptians,” the IDF said.

Initial investigations into an incident that killed an Egyptian border guard indicate the incident occurred while there was an exchange of fire between Israeli forces and “the Palestinian resistance,” an Egyptian security source told Egypt’s state-affiliated Al Qahera News TV on Monday.

In October 2023, weeks after the war started, Israel said one of its military tanks mistakenly fired at an Egyptian position near the border with Gaza. Egypt said at the time that several army personnel were slightly injured.

Tensions between Egypt and Israel have escalated after Israeli forces earlier this month seized control of the Rafah border crossing, a key entry point for humanitarian aid. Egypt said it would not reopen its side of the crossing unless it is operated by Palestinians and accused Israel of preventing aid deliveries.

May 27, 1:52 PM
UNRWA commissioner general calls scenes of Rafah after strike ‘hell on earth’

The images that have emerged after the Israeli strike on Rafah are a “testament to how Rafah has turned into hell on earth,” Philippe Lazzarini, commissioner general of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, said in a post on X.

“Children and women living in tented plastic makeshift shelters are among the killed. Many were injured. Others were reportedly burnt to death. The images from last night are testament to how Rafah has turned into hell on earth,” Lazzarini said went on.

Some UNRWA staff are unaccounted for and it’s very hard to establish contact with UNRWA teams in Rafah, Lazzarini said, adding that the UNRWA is doing its best to bring aid to people in need in Gaza.

“UNRWA is doing everything possible not to interrupt the delivery of humanitarian assistance. But with every day passing, providing assistance & protection becomes nearly impossible,” he said.

-ABC News’ Ellie Kaufman

May 27, 1:02 PM
White House says images out of Rafah are ‘heartbreaking’ but maintains Israel has ‘a right’ to go after Hamas

The “devastating images” coming out of Rafah are “heartbreaking,” a White House National Security Council spokesperson said in a statement Monday, adding that even though Israel “has a right to go after” Hamas, the country also has to protect civilians.

“Israel has a right to go after Hamas, and we understand this strike killed two senior Hamas terrorists who are responsible for attacks against Israeli civilians,” the spokesperson said. “But as we’ve been clear, Israel must take every precaution possible to protect civilians.”

The spokesperson also said that the U.S. is engaging with the Israeli authorities to figure out “what happened” in addition to the IDF investigation.

-ABC News’ Michelle Stoddart

May 27, 12:18 PM
‘Outraged’: Macron calls for immediate cease-fire after Rafah attack

French President Emmanuel Macron condemned Israel’s attack on Rafah that left at least 45 people dead, saying he was “outraged” and called for “respect for international law” and an “immediate cease-fire.”

“Outraged by the Israeli strikes which caused numerous victims among the displaced in Rafah. These operations must stop. There are no safe areas in Rafah for Palestinian civilians. I call for full respect for international law and an immediate ceasefire,” Macron said in a post on X.

The Israel Defense Forces claimed it took several measures to protect civilians. The strike is now under investigation.

“The General Staff’s Fact-Finding and Assessment Mechanism is investigating the circumstances of the deaths of civilians in the area of the strike. The IDF regrets any harm to uninvolved civilians during combat,” the IDF said in a statement.

The White House has not commented on the attack yet, and the Israeli prime minister’s office has not released a statement.

-ABC News’ Ellie Kaufman

May 27, 7:58 AM
Dozens killed, hundreds injured in Sunday Rafah strike, Gaza ministry says

Forty-five people were killed and 249 were injured in an IDF strike on Rafah on Sunday, the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry said Monday.

Action Aid UK had on Sunday placed the death toll higher, saying at least 50 people were killed.

IDF officials said the strike had targeted “significant Hamas terrorists” who were operating in a Hamas compound.

“The IDF is aware of reports indicating that as a result of the strike and fire that was ignited several civilians in the area were harmed,” IDF officials said on social media. “The incident is under review.”

-ABC News’ Joe Simonetti and Kevin Shalvey

May 26, 6:44 PM
IDF claims 2 top Hamas officials killed in Rafah airstrike

The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) claimed two top Hamas officials were killed in the deadly airstrike in western Rafah Sunday night.

The IDF said Hamas’ Chief of Staff in the Judea and Samaria wing, Yassin Rabia, and an additional senior Hamas official, Khaled Nagar, were both killed.

“Hamas’ Judea and Samaria wing is responsible for the planning, funding, and carrying out of terror attacks throughout Judea and Samaria and within Israel,” the IDF said in a statement Sunday.

The IDF claimed Rabia was responsible for “numerous murderous terror attacks, including in 2001 and 2002, in which IDF soldiers were killed.”

The IDF also claimed Nagar “directed shooting attacks and other terrorist activities in Judea and Samaria, and transferred funds intended for Hamas’ terrorist activities in the Gaza Strip.”

“Previously, Khaled Nagar carried out several deadly terror attacks between 2001-2003 which led to the deaths of several Israeli civilians and the injury and death of several Israeli soldiers,” the IDF claimed.

The airstrike in Rafah on Sunday also resulted in the deaths of at least 50 individuals, including civilians, according to Action Aid UK.

May 26, 6:18 PM
Death toll in Rafah airstrike rises to 50: Action Aid UK

The death toll in the IDF airstrike that hit western Rafah Sunday night has risen to at least 50 individuals, including civilians, according to Action Aid UK.

The organization said Israeli fighter jets launched eight missiles at makeshift shelters housing internally displaced persons next to UNRWA warehouses stocking vital aid.

“We are outraged and heartbroken by the recent attacks in West Rafah,” Action Aid UK said in a statement Sunday.

“These shelters were supposed to be safe havens for innocent civilians, yet they became targets of brutal violence,” the organization continued. “Children, women, and men are being burned alive under their tents and shelters.”

Action Aid UK expects the number of casualties to rise.

-ABC News’ Victoria Beaule

May 26, 5:49 PM
At least 35 killed, including civilians, in airstrike on Rafah: Gaza Ministry of Health

A deadly airstrike has killed at least 35 people inside western Rafah, near the UNRWA logistics base in Tal Al-Sultan, according to officials at the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health.

Numerous individuals remain stuck in a fire that resulted from the airstrike and in the tents destroyed by the bombardment.

The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) confirmed the airstrike to ABC News in a statement on Sunday and acknowledged that civilians were harmed as a result of the strike.

“A short while ago, an IDF aircraft struck a Hamas compound in Rafah in which significant Hamas terrorists were operating. The strike was carried out against legitimate targets under international law, using through the use of precise munitions and on the basis of precise intelligence that indicated Hamas’ use of the area,” the IDF said.

“The IDF is aware of reports indicating that as a result of the strike and fire that was ignited several civilians in the area were harmed,” the IDF continued, adding, “The incident is under review.”

-ABC News’ William Gretsky

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