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An Israeli-linked cargo ship hijacked by the Iran-backed Houthi rebels has been spotted off the coast of Yemen in satellite images.
The Galaxy Leader commercial ship was 'illegally boarded by military personnel via a helicopter' on November 19, the vessel's owner said on Monday, and is now in the Hodeidah port area in Yemen, the images show.
The Houthis released dramatic footage on Monday showing heavily armed men dropping from a helicopter and seizing the cargo ship in the southern Red Sea.
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The European Commission has announced that a review of its development aid to Palestinians had found no evidence of funds going to the Hamas terror group and its programme would continue without delay.
'The review found no indications of EU money having directly or indirectly benefitted the terrorist organisation Hamas,' said Commission Executive Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the review had been necessary following the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel.
'This review has confirmed that the safeguards in place are effective. Work is now ongoing on the design of our future support to the Palestinians in view of the changing and still evolving situation,' she said.
The release of hostages seized by Hamas could be approved by the Israeli government within 'hours' of a hostage deal being agreed, a senior adviser to Benjamin Netanyahu has told the BBC.
'If an arrangement is made for the release of our hostages... it requires a decision by the Israeli government and that I think can be done very quickly... I think we are talking about hours,' Mark Regev told BBC Radio 4's the World at One.
Click the link below to read our full story on the potential deal:
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has accused Israel of war crimes and 'genocide' in Gaza, as he chaired an extraordinary summit of the BRICS group of nations today.
Pretoria is hosting a virtual meeting of BRICS - a group of major emerging economies that includes Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa - aimed at drawing up a common response to the Israel-Hamas conflict.
Ramaphosa said:
The collective punishment of Palestinian civilians through the unlawful use of force by Israel is a war crime. The deliberate denial of medicine, fuel, food and water to the residents of Gaza is tantamount to genocide.
Ramaphosa also called for an 'immediate and comprehensive ceasefire' and the deployment of a UN force 'to monitor the cessation of hostilities and protect civilians.'
He also urged all countries 'to desist from fuelling' the conflict and stop supplying weapons to the warring parties.
As individual countries, we have demonstrated our grave concern at the death and destruction in Gaza Let this meeting stand as a clarion call for us to combine our efforts and strengthen our actions to end this historical injustice.
Palestinian football fans have staged a protest against the ongoing conflict with Israel as their men's team took on Australia in a World Cup qualifier.
Click the link below to follow this story as it develops:
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office has announced that a meeting of Israel's War Cabinet will convene today 'in light of developments'.
The statement comes amid reports that Israel and Hamas are approaching a deal that could see hostages and prisoners exchanged and a multi-day pause to the on-going fighting in Gaza.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has hosted counterparts from the Arab League and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation to discuss the war.
Officials from eight Muslim countries and territories are visiting the five permanent members of the UN Security Council and other nations in an attempt to secure an immediate cease-fire in Gaza and ensure the delivery of humanitarian aid.
Speaking at the start of the talks in Moscow, Lavrov said Russia condemns any form of terrorism, but added that 'terrorism must be fought using methods that don't amount to collective punishment and don't contradict, or to put it bluntly, rudely violate the norms of international humanitarian law.'
Lavrov also stressed the need to engage the countries of the region in the search for a long-term Israeli-Palestinian settlement, adding that they 'understand better than anyone else how to reach a solution that will satisfy everyone.'
The group - made up of representatives of Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Indonesia, Nigeria, Qatar, Jordan and the Palestinian territories - has already visited China and travels to London and Paris on Wednesday.
He appeared to make no mention of the fact that Russia has been accused of committing several war crimes in its war in Ukraine, and that Vladimir Putin's invasion has resulted in the deaths of thousands of civilians.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said progress was being made on the release of hostages held by Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip.
'We are making progress. I don't think it's worth saying too much, not at even this moment, but I hope there will be good news soon,' he told reservists, according to a statement from his office.
Egypt's foreign ministry has said bombing or targeting displaced people in the south of territory has 'a clear objective' - to force residents to leave.
'Egypt has clearly declared its utter rejection of any enforced displacement attempt of Palestinians,' the ministry's spokesman posted on the social media messaging platform X, quoting the country's foreign minister Sameh Shoukry in a meeting with his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov.
The European Union is facing growing animosity across the Muslim world and beyond due to accusations of pro-Israel bias and double standards over the war in Gaza, the bloc's foreign policy chief has warned today.
Josep Borrell said he feared such acrimony could undermine diplomatic support for Ukraine in the Global South and the EU's ability to insist on human rights clauses in international agreements.
He said the EU had to show 'more empathy' for the loss of Palestinian civilian lives in Israel's war against Hamas, launched in response to the deadly October 7 cross-border assault by the Palestinian militant group.
An Israeli strike on a car in southern Lebanon has killed four people near the southern city of Tyre in the second deadly incident near the Israel-Lebanon border, Lebanese state news agency NNA reported.
The strike took place about five miles south of Tyre and seven miles north of the border with Israel, NNA reported.
It comes after Lebanese media reported three people - including two journalists - were killed in a cross-border attack earlier today.
The chief of Indonesia's Medical Emergency Rescue Committee (MER-C) has written to US president Joe Biden following reports yesterday of attacks on the Indonesian Hospital in the Gaza strip, which the group funds.
Reports said 12 people were killed in the attacks, and that the medical complex was surrounded by IDF tanks and other heavy armour.
Sarbini Abdul Murad said in the letter to Biden that it was 'very unfortunate' that the US was 'siding with Israel' in the on-going conflict.
'This is not about religion, ethnicity or race, but about humanity. A truly real humanitarian crisis is occurring in Palestine. All life is precious,' Sarbini wrote in the strongly-worded letter. 'Your action clearly contradicts various international treaties and agreements that are apply to the existence of Palestine.
'You have destroyed the international rules of the game, insulted the authority of the UN, torn apart the sense of justice, and hurt human values, and tarnished the face of human civilisation,' he added.
A Qatar-mediated agreement between Israel and Hamas is in its 'final stages' and is 'closer than it has ever been,' a source briefed on the talks has told Reuters.
The deal is for a multi-day pause in hostilities, the release of around 50 civilian hostages by Hamas and the release of Palestinian women and children from Israeli custody, the source briefed on the talks said.
The Times of Israel, meanwhile, reports Qatar's foreign ministry spokesperson Majed Al-Ansari as saying the same as the Reuters source.
'We are at the closest point we ever had been in reaching an agreement' he is reported to have said, adding negotiations are at a 'critical and final stage.'
You can read our full story on the potential deal here:
The Pan-Arab Al-Mayadeen TV - politically allied with the Lebanese terror group Hezbollah - has accused Israel of directly targeting two of its journalists who it says were killed in a strike today.
Earlier, the station identified the journalists as correspondent Farah Omar and cameraman Rabih Maamari.
It said they were 'martyred by treacherous Israeli targeting' in an air strike.
'It was direct targeting. It was not a coincidence,' said Ghassan bin Jiddo, director of the TV channel, holding back his tears in a live broadcast.
They join 'the martyrs of Gaza', he said.
Two premature babies being cared for at the Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza died before the evacuation of 31 others, the UN said Tuesday, adding that most of those who reached Egypt were 'unaccompanied'.
The WHO helped evacuate 31 premature babies from the Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City on Sunday, lamenting that the hospital had become 'a death zone'.
A World Health Organization spokesperson has said three hospitals in Israeli-besieged Gaza have requested help with evacuating patients.
Plans to evacuate them are underway, the WHO said.
WHO spokesperson Christian Lindmeier said that the three hospitals were Al Shifa, from which a group of babies has already been rescued, Indonesian Hospital and Al Ahli Hospital. He said such an event was a last resort.
'It's robbing the entire population of the north of the means to seek health (care),' he told a Geneva press briefing.
A protest to draw attention to the number of children killed in Gaza has taken place in Turkey today.
Children's shoes have been placed in Istanbul's Üsküdar Square, along with pictures of children who have been killed in Israel's on-going bombardment.
Health officials, including those from Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry as well as UNICEF, have said more than 5,000 children have died in the conflict so far.
In Germany, authorities have raided the homes of 17 people in the state of Bavaria accused of spreading antisemitic hate speech and threats targeting Jews online.
Israeli police confirmed Tuesday they had arrested two Gazans, one a Hamas militant, found hiding in southern Israel after infiltrating the area during the October 7 attacks.
We now have more details about the two journalists who were reportedly killed near Lebanon's border with Israel (see update at 10:06).
The pair were working for Lebanon-based TV channel Al Mayadeen TV, the Lebanese state news agency reported. The agency said the incident took place near the town of Tir Harfa, about a mile from the Israeli frontier.
Al Mayadeen TV accused Israel of carrying out the attack and deliberately targeted the journalists. It said its 'correspondent Farah Omar and cameraman Rabih Maamari were killed by an Israeli attack'.
Israel's military did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Reuters news agency, which said it had reached out.
Violence across the border has escalated, raising Western fears of a widening war in the Middle East that could draw in both the United States and Iran.
A hip-hop war anthem has topped the music charts in Israel in the wake of Hamas's October 7 attack and the subsequent IDF operation into Gaza.
'Charbu Darbu,' which into English translates as 'Swords and Strikes' is described by The Times of Israel as 'an angry anthem' from the duo 'Ness Ve Stilla,' real names Nesia Levy and Dor Soroker.
The song is militaristic while also evoking scenes from the Hebrew bible.
At one point, Stilla raps: 'Left, right, left, how is it that the whole country is in uniform from Galilee to Eilat… We've brought the entire army against you and we swear there won't be forgiveness, sons of Amalek.'
The chorus then references some of the IDF's combat units, saying: 'Golani, Givati, Air Force, Navy, Commandos!' and ends with the line: 'All the IDF units are coming to 'Charbu Darbu' on your heads, oy oy.'
'Lyrically [...] the piece encapsulates a feeling of righteous fury that has been prevalent in Israel since the October 7 atrocities,' the Times of Israel writes.
Since its release around a week ago, it has become the number-one song in Israel on YouTube, Spotify and other streaming platforms.
You can listen to the song and watch the music video on YouTube:
The UN has also warned today that fuel shortages and the worsening sanitation situation in the Gaza Strip is shaping up to be the perfect storm for tragedy through the spread of disease.
'Without enough fuel, we will see the collapse of sanitation services,' UNICEF spokesman James Elder told a press briefing in Geneva.
'So we have then, on top of the mortars and the bombs, a perfect storm for the spread of disease. It's a perfect storm for tragedy.'
The World Health Organization warned yesterday that health services in Gaza had suffered 'catastrophic' damage, with most hospitals no longer functioning.
'We now have 1.7 million people displaced so we have twice or three times the population (in the south of Gaza), using one third of the hospital beds in less than a third of the hospitals available,' Michael Ryan, executive director of WHO's Health Emergencies Programme, said at a UN briefing.
Ryan said medical services in the territory were already unable to provide care for more complex cases - including most cancer and kidney dialysis patients - and would likely be overwhelmed by some 5,500 births expected in the next month.
Plans by the Israeli military to push further south would worsen health conditions even further, he said.
'The hospital situation - the primary health care system situation - in Gaza is catastrophic and it is the worst you can imagine (in the) north,' Ryan said.
Reuters has sent a brief snap over the wires saying that two journalists have been killed near the Israel-Lebanon border, along with a third person.
The report cites Lebanon's state news agency, which said the incident took place near the town of Tir Harfa, about a mile from the Israeli frontier.
It gave no further details.
At 09:35, we reported a statement from the IDF saying there had been clashes across Israel's northern border, with the Israeli military saying in its update: 'IDF fighter jets struck a number of Hezbollah terror targets.'
We will bring you more information when we can.
The war between Israel and Hamas has already produced the deadliest month for journalists since records began three decades ago, The Guardian reports.
According to Reporters Without Borders, 41 journalists - more than one every day - were killed in first month of the Israel-Palestine war.
Last night, we reported that horrifying new footage captured during the Nova festival massacre has demonstrated how Hamas terrorists gunned down two women as they tried to flee, during the horrific assault on October 7.
The footage was captured from security cameras at Kibbutz Alumim, which is located just to the east of where the festival was held.
To read our full story, follow the link below:
An award-winning Palestinian poet in Gaza has been arrested by Israeli troops and his whereabouts are unknown, his brother has said.
Mosab Abu Toha has been contributing pieces to Western media since the start of the Israel-Hamas war, painting a dire image of its toll on civilians.
His brother, Hamza Abu Toha, posted on X, formerly Twitter, on Monday that Mosab was arrested while evacuating to southern Gaza, following IDF orders.
Hamza said his brother's wife and children were allowed to continue south, but 'the military detained my brother.'
Mosab Abu Toha last posted on X on November 15, writing 'Alive. Thanks for your prayers.' His last tweet is shared below.
The literary and free expression organization PEN said it was concerned about the arrest and demanded to know Abu Toha's whereabouts and the reason for his arrest.
The New Yorker magazine, to which Abu Toha has contributed multiple articles, called for his safe return.
The Israeli military said it was looking into the reports.
Israeli politicians clashed with the families of hostages trapped in Gaza last night in a fierce debate over proposals to expand the death penalty for October 7 perpetrators.
Hen Avigdori, whose wife and daughter were among some 240 kidnapped by Hamas last month, urged lawmakers during a National Security Committee meeting to 'stop talking about killing Arabs and start talking about saving Jews.'
The families have concerns that the implementation of the death penalty could have repercussions for their relatives still in Gaza.
Follow the link below to read the full story:
The UN's World Food Programme has made an urgent plea for food to be sent to Gaza, warning that the strip's food systems are collapsing.
Under the deal that is reportedly being discussed between Israel, Hamas and Qatari mediators, part of the agreement would allow for up to 300 trucks of food and medical aid to enter Gaza.
Aid groups say a bare minimum of 100 trucks need to be entering Gaza every day in order to sustain the population. Far fewer than that have been entering the territory on average since the start of the conflict.
The IDF has reported more clashes across Israel's border with Lebanon in a statement on the Telegram messaging app.
Since the start of the conflict, Israeli forces have clashed with militants fighting for the Hezbollah terror group, who support Hamas and are backed by Iran.
'A short while ago, IDF aircraft identified and struck three armed terrorist cells in the area of the border with Lebanon,' the statement said.
'In addition, IDF fighter jets struck a number of Hezbollah terror targets, including military infrastructure and structures used for directing terrorist activity.
'A short while ago, terrorists fired mortar shells at an IDF post in northern Israel. No injuries were reported. IDF artillery is currently striking the source of the fire.'
Pictures across the border today showed smoke rising in the hills, thus appearing to confirm that fighting has taken place in the region.
Russia's Vladimir Putin will discuss the Palestinian-Israeli conflict with the leaders of the BRICS bloc in a video conference today, the Kremlin says.
The group is then expected to issue a joint statement.
The voice of the BRICS (an intergovernmental organisation comprising Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) needed to be heard in the world, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
The Russian president has called for the conflict in Gaza to end on a number of occasions since the fighting broke out, without acknowledging the death and destruction his invasion of Ukraine in Feb. 2022 has caused.
The oil market is 'on edge' over the latest crisis in the Middle East, the head of the International Energy Agency (IEA) Fatih Birol has told an energy conference in Norway today.
The war in Gaza between Israel and militant Palestinian group Hamas has not currently had a significantly effect on market prices, he added.
However, 'if one or more of the oil producing countries in the region is directly involved in the conflict, we may see the implications of that,' Birol said.
Almost 50 percent of all buildings in north Gaza have been damaged in Israeli airstrikes, according to Evan Hill, a reporter at the Washington Post.
He cites a report from the publication that has mapped the damage to the northern region of Gaza, with the damage largely centred around Gaza City.
The report says satellite imagery shows 'places of worship, hospitals, schools and residential areas have also been damaged or destroyed.'
Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu last night vowed there would be no letup in the army's offensive in Gaza, again pledging to crush Hamas and ensure the hostages are released. His comments came before the new reports of a potential truce.
'We will not stop fighting until we bring our hostages home,' Netanyahu declared on Monday after meeting relatives of those abducted.
But families expressed frustration after the meeting.
'We wanted to hear about a deal and that return of the abductees is a priority among the war objectives. We didn't hear that,' said Udi Goren, whose cousin Tal Haimi is among the roughly 240 hostages being held inside Gaza.
Here are some of the latest pictures sent to us over the wires showing the situation on the ground today and yesterday.
Smoke continues to rise over Gaza today amid talks of a truce deal being close.
Meanwhile, pictures released by the IDF show Israeli tanks and troops operating inside the Gaza Strip as they continue with their mission to eliminate Hamas
Israel's National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir has issued a statement warning against the hostage deal that is reportedly set to take place.
'I'm very concerned because there is talk of some deal… we are being kept out [of the details], and we're not being told the truth,' the far-right hardliner said, according to the Times of Israel.
'The rumors are that Israel is again going to make a major mistake in similar vein to the [2011] Shalit deal.'
He expressed his concerns that 'a deal might bring disaster', citing the possibility of releasing Palestinian protesters and allowing fuel into Gaza.
Israel has recalled its ambassador to South Africa, Eliav Belotserkovsky, back to Jerusalem 'for consultations' ahead of a parliamentary vote in the African country to decide the fate of the Israeli embassy today.
'Following the latest South African statements, the Ambassador of Israel to Pretoria has been recalled to Jerusalem for consultations,' Israel's ministry of foreign affairs posted late last night on X, formerly Twitter.
This came ahead of a vote in South Africa's parliament on a motion to shut down the Israeli embassy and cut all ties with Israel until a cease-fire is implemented.
The motion tabled by the leftist opposition party Economic Freedom Fighters has the backing of the ruling African National Congress and other smaller parties.
Below, pro-Palestinian supporters are seen demonstrating outside the entrance to the Israeli embassy in South Africa.
Israeli troops battled Palestinian militants in a dense, urban refugee camp on Tuesday as the army expanded operations across northern Gaza.
In its daily update on the conflict on Monday, the US-based Institute for the Study of War said Israeli forced had advanced to the Indonesian Hospital in Beit Lahiya.
The hospital borders the densely populated Jabalia refugee camp. The ISW said the IDF clashed with Palestinian terrorists on the camp's western border.
Clashes were also reported in the middle of the Gaza strip, where the think tank said 'Palestinian militia fighters attacked the IDF behind the Israeli forward line of advance in the Zaytoun area.' It said this was consistent with clearing operations.
The organisation also reported fighting in the West Bank, where it said Palestinian fighters clashed with Israeli forces in eight places.
Catherine Russell, UNICEF's Executive Director, has said that the reported number of children in Gaza has risen past 5,000.
In a post on X (formerly Twitter), she called for the conflict to end.
Russell visited the Gaza Strip last week, saying: 'The parties to the conflict are committing grave violations against children; these include killing, maiming, abductions, attacks on schools and hospitals, and the denial of humanitarian access – all of which UNICEF condemns.'
More than 13,000 people have since been killed in Israel's aerial bombardment and ground operations in the Gaza Strip, the territory's Hamas-run health ministry says.
Yesterday, we brought you the news that 28 premature babies were evacuated from Gaza's al-Shifa hospital.
The tiny newborns, with bright blue woolly hats placed on their small heads, were carefully placed on stretchers before being put in an ambulance heading away from the bombs and carnage of Gaza.
You can read the story below:
The IDF have released footage on social media of Israeli soldiers advancing through Gaza's Jabalia refugee camp.
The Israeli military said its Division 162 - also known as the Steel Formation - 'completed the encirclement of Jabalia tonight'.
Before the war, Jabalia had a population of more than 170,000. It has been the target of multiple Israeli air strikes since the outbreak of the conflict.
Watch below:
In Scotland, First Minister Humza Yousaf will lead a debate on a ceasefire in Gaza today, amid mounting pressure in the UK on officials over the war.
Mr Yousaf tabled a motion on Monday which will be debated in Holyrood, calling for an 'immediate ceasefire' in the conflict.
It will also condemn the 'barbaric and unjustifiable' Hamas attacks of October 7 and demand the release of all hostages taken.
Here is our main story this morning, that brings you the news that Hamas has claimed it is close to agreeing a truce with Israel.
Ismail Haniyeh said in a statement issued this morning that the terror gorup has delivered its response to Qatari mediators.
Qatar is understood to be working on the agreement.
Click the link below to read the full report:
Good morning and welcome to MailOnline's liveblog covering the 45th day of the on-going war between Israel and Hamas.
The war was sparked on October 7 when Hamas gunmen killed around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, in shocking cross-border raids into Israel.
Since then, the Hamas-run health ministry says more than 13,000 people have been killed inside Gaza by Israel's relentless bombardment and siege.
Amid reports that the two enemies are nearing a truce agreement that could see hostages released, and as IDF troops close in around another hospital, here's what you need to know about the conflict on November 21, 2023:
Update includes reporting from AFP news agency