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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Léonie Chao-Fong (now); Tom Ambrose, Amy Sedghi, Fran Singh and Martin Belam (earlier)

Israel-Gaza war: Netanyahu says all of Gaza will be under Israel’s control by end of offensive – as it happened

Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu speaks attends a press conference, in Jerusalem on Wednesday
Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu speaks attends a press conference, in Jerusalem on Wednesday Photograph: Ronen Zvulun/Reuters

Summary of the day so far

It’s 10pm in Tel Aviv and Gaza. Here’s a recap of the latest developments:

  • Palestinians in Gaza are still waiting for aid to arrive, UN officials said, two days after Israel said it had lifted an 11-week-old blockade that has brought the Palestinian territory to the brink of famine. A UN spokesperson said trucks were still in the loading area of the Kerem Shalom crossing, but sources told Reuters that at least 15 aid trucks left the crossing en route to World Food Program warehouses in central Gaza.

  • At least 82 Palestinians were killed in Israeli strike in Gaza on Wednesday, including several women and a week-old infant, according to Gaza’s health ministry and area hospitals. Israeli strikes targeted a bus station in the Daraj neighbourhood of Gaza City and blew up residential buildings east of Jabalia, Palestinian news agency Wafa reported.

  • Benjamin Netanyahu said Israeli forces “probably” killed Hamas leader Mohammed Sinwar, the younger brother of the former Hamas leader in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar. He said Israel has achieved “a lot” in its “clear and justified” goal of defeating Hamas, but he adds that “our work isn’t over yet”.

  • The Israeli leader said the entire of the Gaza Strip will be under Israeli security control by the end of its new offensive. Netanyahu said he is “prepared” to end the war “under clear conditions that ensure Israel’s security”, which would include the Palestinian territory being “completely disarmed” and Israel “making the most of the Trump plan”.

  • Israel acknowledged firing “warning shots” at a group of 25 diplomats visiting the occupied West Bank on Wednesday. The delegation comprised ambassadors and diplomats representing 31 countries, including Italy, Canada, Egypt, Jordan and the UK, who were on an official mission organised by the Palestinian Authority to observe the humanitarian situation there. The Israeli military said the visit had been approved but the delegation “deviated from the approved route”.

  • The UN secretary general, António Guterres, condemned Israel’s firing at diplomats which he said was “unacceptable”. Countries including the Netherlands, Turkey, Germany, Portugal, Spain, Ireland and France all condemned the incident. The British, French and other European ministers summoned the Israeli ambassadors in their respective capitals to explain the “unacceptable” incident.

  • Netanyahu said Israel’s government will appoint the next head of the domestic Shin Bet intelligence agency, despite Israel’s attorney general barring him from doing so. Israel’s supreme court ruled earlier on Wednesday that Netanyahu’s announcement that he was sacking Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar was “illegal and contrary to law”.

  • The UK will send £4m worth of aid to Gaza as it ramps up pressure on the Israeli government to lift a blockade on the region. The aid will include essential medicines, safe drinking water and food parcels. It comes after the UK on Tuesday suspended trade deal talks with Israel, sanctioned West Bank settlers and summoned the country’s ambassador.

UN chief says Israeli fire at diplomats in West Bank 'unacceptable'

The UN secretary general, António Guterres, has condemned Israel’s firing at a group of diplomats visiting the occupied West Bank on Wednesday.

Stéphane Dujarric, Guterres’ spokesperson, told reporters:

It is clear that diplomats who are doing their work should never be shot at, attacked in any way, shape or form. Their safety, their viability, must be respected at all times.

These diplomats, including UN personnel, were fired at, warning shots or whatever... which is unacceptable.

The Israeli military has admitted firing “warning shots” at a group of 25 diplomats who were visiting Jenin in the West Bank on an official mission organised by the Palestinian Authority.

It said it “regrets the inconvenience caused” by the shooting, which resulted in no injuries.

Dujarric added:

We urge the Israeli authorities to conduct a thorough investigation, to share those findings with us and to take any measures that would prevent any other such incident to take place.

Donald Trump has been meeting with South Africa’s president, Cyril Ramaphosa, at the White House on Wednesday.

Trump, speaking to reporters ahead of talks with Ramaphosa, said he does not “expect anything” to come of South Africa’s international court of justice (ICJ) case against Israel.

South Africa brought a case against Israel at the ICJ accusing it of committing genocide in its military campaign in Gaza. Israel has fiercely rejected the claim.

At least 15 aid trucks entered the Gaza Strip through the Kerem Shalom crossing en route to World Food Program warehouses in central Gaza, Reuters is reporting, citing two sources.

As we reported earlier, UN officials said no humanitarian aid has yet been distributed in Gaza despite Israel’s government saying that it had lifted an 11-week-old blockade.

Israel’s military said five aid trucks entered Gaza on Monday and 93 on Tuesday.

But none of this aid has made it to Gaza’s soup kitchens, bakeries, markets and hospitals, according to aid officials and local bakeries.

A UN spokesperson said trucks were still in the loading area of Kerem Shalom because access to the rest of Gaza was too insecure to allow safe distribution.

Updated

Netanyahu says government will appoint next Shin Bet chief despite supreme court ruling

Benjamin Netanyahu was asked about Israel’s attorney general, Gali Baharav-Miara, barring him from appointing a new head of the Shin Bet internal security service.

It comes after Israel’s supreme court ruled that Netanyahu’s announcement that he was sacking Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar was “illegal and contrary to law”.

In its ruling, the court determined that the dismissal was done in violation of the law, and that Netanyahu had a conflict of interest because of an investigation into the “Qatar-Gate” affair.

Netanyahu, speaking during his news conference on Wednesday said his government would appoint the next Shin Bet chief despite the latest judgement.

“Under my command, the government of Israel will appoint the next head of the Shin Bet” agency, he said.

Updated

Benjamin Netanyahu says he is “prepared” to finish the war in Gaza under conditions that will “ensure Israel’s security”, return the hostages, and with Hamas leadership exiled from the territory.

The Israeli leader says Gaza must be “completely disarmed” and Israel will be “making the most of the Trump plan”.

He says the Trump plan is “correct” and “revolutionary”, where residents of Gaza who want to leave can leave.

He says those who are calling on Israel to stop the fighting before its goals are achieved are “basically calling for keeping Hamas in control of Gaza”.

Benjamin Netanyahu says he has been hearing from Israel’s “greatest friends” who have told him that they will give him their full support and send weapons, but that they “cannot accept a situation where there’s a humanitarian crisis in Gaza”.

He says Israel has developed a new three-stage programme with the US to distribute basic food items to the civilian population in Gaza.

This plan includes bringing basic food items “to prevent a humanitarian crisis now”, opening food distribution points by American companies secured by Israeli forces, and creating a “sterile zone” in the south where Gaza’s civilians can get “full humanitarian assistance”, he says.

Benjamin Netanyahu says Iran is still a “major threat” to Israel.

Israel is working in “full coordination” with the US and hopes to achieve a deal that will prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear arms, he says.

In any case, the State of Israel retains the right to protect itself from a regime that’s ready to destroy it.

Netanyahu says all of Gaza will be under Israel's control by the end of its offensive

Benjamin Netanyahu says Israel is “prepared” for an opportunity for a temporary ceasefire and hostage release deal.

He says Israeli forces have “pounded” their enemy in the south and withstood “incredible” amounts of pressure to stop the war.

On the subject of Operation Gideon’s Chariots, the new Israeli ground offensive in Gaza, Netanyahu says three days ago he made the decision to begin the next stage of the war. He says:

At the end of this campaign, all of the territories of the Gaza Strip will be under Israel’s security control.

Updated

Netanyahu says Israel 'probably' killed Hamas leader Mohammed Sinwar

Benjamin Netanyahu has begun speaking at a press conference where he says Israel has achieved “a lot” in its “clear and justified” goal of defeating Hamas, but he adds that “our work isn’t over yet”.

The Israeli leader says his forces killed Yahya Sinwar, the Hamas leader who was the rincipal architect of the attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, and “probably” his brother Mohammed Sinwar.

Mohammed Sinwar was reportedly killed in an Israeli airstrike in Gaza last week, according to reports.

Updated

Caspar Veldkamp, the foreign minister of the Netherlands, has condemned the shooting and said he has “requested clarification from the Israeli authorities.”

The Netherlands is “considering further steps,” he wrote on X, adding:

Diplomats should be able to do their work and threatening them is unacceptable.

Our video team have produced this report of the Jenin shooting

UN says no aid yet distributed in Gaza due to insecure access

No humanitarian aid has yet been distributed in the Gaza Strip, the United Nations said on Wednesday, two days after Israel lifted an 11-week blockade and began allowing limited deliveries into the territory through the Kerem Shalom crossing.

“So far … none of the supplies have been able to leave the Kerem Shalom loading area,” said UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric, adding that it was because Israeli authorities had only allowed access within Gaza “that we felt was insecure” and where looting was likely due to the prolonged deprivation.

Jenin shooting: all you need to know so far

  • The Israeli military said that it fired near a diplomatic delegation which it said deviated from an approved route in the occupied West Bank on Wednesday.
    Diplomatic sources said European diplomats were part of the delegation to the West Bank city of Jenin.
    The military said “the delegation deviated from the approved route and entered an area where they were not authorised to be” and that soldiers fired “warning shots to distance them away.” No injuries or damage were reported, the military said.

  • An aid worker, who did not want to be named for fear of reprisal, said a delegation of about 20 diplomats was being briefed about the situation in Jenin by the Palestinian Authority. The group of regional, European and western diplomats were standing near the entrance of the Jenin refugee camp when they heard gunshots just before 2pm, though it was unclear where the shots came from, she said.

  • The Turkish foreign ministry said that some diplomats from its consulate in Jerusalem were present and were among those targeted in the incident, which it said“endangered the lives of diplomats”. Turkey condemned “in the strongest terms the opening of fire by Israeli soldiers”, and called for an investigation and accountability for those responsible.

  • Two Irish diplomats were among the European delegation that shots were fired in the vicinity of by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), Ireland’s government said. Ireland’s deputy premier Simon Harris condemned the incident “in the strongest terms” and said it was “completely unacceptable”. I am shocked and appalled at reports that the IDF fired shots in the vicinity of a visit to Jenin today by a group of diplomats, including two Irish diplomats based in Ramallah,” Harris said in a statement.

  • France’s foreign minister Jean-Noel Barrot said on Wednesday that he would summon the Israeli ambassador after diplomats came under fire by Israeli soldiers in the West Bank town of Jenin. Barrot, writing in a post on social media platform X, called the incident “unacceptable” and said the ambassador would be required to explain.

  • EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas has urged Israel to hold accountable those responsible for firing warning shots during foreign diplomats’ visit to the occupied West Bank on Wednesday. It took place near the city of Jenin, a stronghold of Palestinian armed groups and a frequent target of Israeli raids. The Palestinian foreign ministry accused Israel of having “deliberately targeted by live fire an accredited diplomatic delegation”.

  • Spain has said it “strongly condemns” Israeli army fire on a diplomatic delegation that was visiting the flashpoint city of Jenin in the occupied West Bank on Wednesday, foreign ministry sources told AFP. “There was a Spaniard in the group of diplomats who is well. We are in contact with other affected countries to jointly coordinate a response to what happened, which we strongly condemn,” the sources said.

Updated

Here is a little more reaction from the Turkish foreign ministry …

“This attack, which endangered the lives of diplomats, is yet another demonstration of Israel’s systematic disregard for international law and human rights,” the ministry said in a statement, adding a diplomat from its consulate in Jerusalem was part of the group.

“The targeting of diplomats constitutes a grave threat not only to individual safety but also to the mutual respect and trust that form the foundation of inter-state relations.”

There has been further reaction to the incident involving Israeli forces and a group of diplomats visiting the West Bank city of Jenin.

The Turkish foreign ministry said that some diplomats from its consulate in Jerusalem were present and were among those targeted in the incident, which it said“endangered the lives of diplomats”.

Turkey condemned “in the strongest terms the opening of fire by Israeli soldiers”, and called for an investigation and accountability for those responsible.

“We call on the international community to condemn this dangerous act in the strongest possible terms and to take concrete steps to bring an end to Israel’s impunity,” the ministry said.

Two Irish diplomats were among the European delegation that shots were fired in the vicinity of by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), Ireland’s government said.

Ireland’s deputy premier Simon Harris condemned the incident “in the strongest terms” and said it was “completely unacceptable”.

“I am shocked and appalled at reports that the IDF fired shots in the vicinity of a visit to Jenin today by a group of diplomats, including two Irish diplomats based in Ramallah,” Harris said in a statement.

“Fortunately, no one was hurt. This is completely unacceptable and I condemn it in the strongest terms.”

France to summon Israeli ambassador after troops fired near diplomats

France’s foreign minister Jean-Noel Barrot said on Wednesday that he would summon the Israeli ambassador after diplomats came under fire by Israeli soldiers in the West Bank town of Jenin.

Barrot, writing in a post on social media platform X, called the incident “unacceptable” and said the ambassador would be required to explain.

Updated

Sacking of Shin Bet head 'illegal and contrary to law'

Israel’s supreme court ruled that a government decision to sack the head of the domestic intelligence service Shin Bet was “illegal and contrary to law”, Israeli media reported on Wednesday.

In March, prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu decided to sack Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar, a move that sparked protests nationwide, with critics arguing that the government was undermining key state institutions and endangering the foundations of Israeli democracy.

Updated

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu will give a press conference this evening at 8.15pm local time (5.15pm GMT), according to reports.

The press conference, his first since December, will be held at the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem, his office confirmed to the The Times of Israel.

Updated

Israeli protesters have gathered near the Kerem Shalom border crossing in an attempt to block trucks carrying humanitarian aid into Gaza as international experts warn of looming famine.

Here is a Guardian video report on it:

EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas has urged Israel to hold accountable those responsible for firing warning shots during foreign diplomats’ visit to the occupied West Bank on Wednesday. It took place near the city of Jenin, a stronghold of Palestinian armed groups and a frequent target of Israeli raids.

The Palestinian foreign ministry accused Israel of having “deliberately targeted by live fire an accredited diplomatic delegation”.

The Israeli military said “the delegation deviated from the approved route”, prompting troops to fire “warning shoots” to keep them away from “an area where they were not authorised to be”.

In a statement, the military said it “regrets the inconvenience caused” by the shooting, which resulted in no injuries, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP).

Updated

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu will hold a press conference on Wednesday night, Haaretz is reporting. No other details have been shared. We will update with more information when it comes in.

Death toll from latest Israeli strikes on Gaza reaches 82

Israeli strikes have continued to pound the Gaza Strip on Wednesday, despite international anger at Israel’s widening offensive.

The attacks killed at least 82 people, including several women and a week-old infant, according to the Gaza’s health ministry and area hospitals. Earlier, the death toll had been put at 45 (see 10.59am BST).

Scotland’s first minister John Swinney has welcomed international condemnation of Israel’s military offensive in the Gaza Strip.

On Tuesday, UK foreign secretary David Lammy hit out at the new offensive and Israel’s restrictions on aid, saying the situation is “monstrous”. Ambassador Tzipi Hotovely was called in to the Foreign Office and the UK suspended negotiations on a trade deal with Israel. Middle East minister Hamish Falconer said the UK was also opposed to “rising violence and intimidation” by Israeli settlers in the West Bank.

According to the PA news agency, Swinney said:

I welcome calls from the UK, France, Canada and many other countries condemning Israel’s intensified military operation in Gaza and blocking access for humanitarian aid. Israel’s actions and rhetoric are deeply troubling.

The Scottish government has been consistent and forthright in calling for an immediate and sustained ceasefire, release of hostages, unimpeded access for humanitarian aid, compliance with international court rulings, and an end to licensed arms exports to Israel. And of course, a two-state solution, recognising the state of Palestine, so Israelis and Palestinians can live in peace alongside each other.

History will judge harshly those who prevent food and medicine reaching those most in need.

UK pledges £4M in humanitarian aid to Gaza

More on the UK’s pledge in humanitarian aid to Gaza via Reuters.

“The Israeli government’s failure to allow full humanitarian access to aid workers is abhorrent. Far too few trucks are crossing into Gaza,” the UK minister for development, Jenny Chapman said.

She added:

The UK is clear – Israel will not achieve security through prolonging the suffering of the Palestinian people.

The UK on Tuesday paused free trade talks with Israel over its new offensive in Gaza, with foreign minister David Lammy calling for an end to the blockade of aid.

The British Red Cross will receive the new aid package and deliver it through the Palestinian Red Crescent Society, the UK said.

Updated

The UK pledged on Tuesday £4m ($5.37m) in humanitarian aid to Gaza, the government said, as the minister for development, Jenny Chapman, visited Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories.

Spain has said it “strongly condemns” Israeli army fire on a diplomatic delegation that was visiting the flashpoint city of Jenin in the occupied West Bank on Wednesday, foreign ministry sources told AFP.

“There was a Spaniard in the group of diplomats who is well. We are in contact with other affected countries to jointly coordinate a response to what happened, which we strongly condemn,” the sources said.

German chancellor Friedrich Merz is very concerned about the humanitarian situation in Gaza and is in close contact with other European nations to convey his worries to the Israeli government, his spokesperson Stefan Kornelius said on Wednesday.

“It is always important for the German government to keep its lines of communication open with the Israeli government and to be able to make its points directly,” he added at a regular government press conference.

A group of diplomats came under fire while visiting Jenin, a city in the Israel-occupied West Bank, according to the Palestinian Authority.

The diplomats were on official mission to observe the humanitarian situation in Jenin when shots rang out.

There were no immediate reports if anyone was hurt and the Israeli military did not immediately comment on the shooting, AP reported.

An aid worker, who did not want to be named for fear of reprisal, said a delegation of about 20 diplomats was being briefed about the situation in Jenin by the Palestinian Authority.

The group of regional, European and western diplomats were standing near the entrance of the Jenin refugee camp when they heard gunshots just before 2pm, though it was unclear where the shots came from, she said.

Jenin has been the site of Israel’s widespread crackdown against West Bank militants since earlier this year.

Fine Gael’s four MEPs, who urged the EU to immediately suspend its trade and cooperation agreement with Israel in response to the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza, have called for the EU to use its “full diplomatic weight” to push for an immediate ceasefire and an end to the aid blockade.

Seán Kelly, Regina Doherty, Maria Walsh and Nina Carberry said this week’s decision to review the agreement was the right one, but it was long overdue and more could be done:

We, along with our Fine Gael party, have long called for a full review of the EU’s trade and cooperation with Israel due to the country’s disproportionate action in Palestine. In view of war crimes such as forced starvation of ordinary people in Gaza, we are calling for the suspension of the EU-Israel association agreement immediately.

Food cannot be used as a weapon of war. Children, women and men are starving in Gaza. Gaza is now home to the largest number of child amputees in the world. Aid supplies must reach those in need immediately.

We fully condemn the actions of the terrorist group Hamas, and urge the safe return of all hostages still held, but ordinary Palestinians should not suffer a collective punishment for the crimes of a terrorist group.

This week again, we have seen protests by brave Palestinians calling for Hamas to relinquish control of Gaza. For too long innocent people have been caught in the crossfire, suffered unimaginable pain, hardship and loss. This should be acceptable to no one.

Ireland stood almost alone when we first demanded action on Gaza, now the EU is finally catching up. This review of the Israel association agreement didn’t happen by accident. It happened because we pushed, persisted, and led.

The review announced by the EU this week is a welcome step in the right direction. However, the EU’s full diplomatic weight should be used to push for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire and end to the aid blockade. Sustainable peace will only be possible in the region when human rights and international law are respected.

Three ministers responsible for arms exports to Israel have been summoned by parliament’s committee overseeing UK exports to explain possible loopholes in the rules.

Liam Byrne, the chair of the business select committee has ordered the trade minister, Douglas Alexander, and the relevant ministers from the Foreign Office and Ministry of Defence and to offer urgent explanations.

MPs are concerned that arms companies may be using the partial nature of the arms export ban imposed last September by the UK to send weaponry to Israel for use in Gaza, in breach of an undertaking by ministers.

In his letter, Byrne raises concerns about statistics published on Friday that showed that in the fourth quarter of 2024 – after Labour’s partial arms export ban to Israel was imposed – the UK government nevertheless approved licences for £127.6m of military equipment to Israel. This is greater than the combined total for 2020-23, according to Campaign against the Arms Trade.

Challenged on these figures by the independent Labour MP Zarah Sultana in the Commons on Tuesday, the foreign secretary, David Lammy, said he did not recognise the number and accused her of sensationalising the issue. He assured MPs “arms are not getting to Israel that could be used in Gaza”.

However, the latest figures show the government authorised more than £61m in single-issue licences for military goods with an end user in Israel. This included licences for goods categories covering targeting systems, munitions and military aircraft parts.

In his letter, Byrne points out that ministers assured MPs that the ban covered “equipment that we assess is for use in the current conflict in Gaza, such as important components that go into military aircraft, including fighter aircraft, helicopters and drones, as well as items that facilitate ground targeting”.

Here are some of the latest images coming in via the newswires today:

SOS Children’s Villages, a charity focused on supporting children and young people who do not have, or are at risk of losing, parental care, has just shared this update from its staff who are caring for children in a temporary camp in al-Mawasi.

“We are seeing levels of food insecurity that are truly alarming,” says Reem Alreqeb, Gaza programme director for SOS Children’s Villages in Palestine. Alreqeb added:

Our own food reserves have been depleted, and with major humanitarian providers like the WFP (World Food Program) and WCK (World Central Kitchen) unable to operate, families are left hungry and hopeless.

We moved to al-Mawasi because it was one of the only remaining areas considered relatively safe.

Now, thousands more people are arriving here under pressure, and conditions are worsening by the day.

SOS Children’s Villages said its staff have reported that water scarcity has compounded the crisis. Drinking water is delivered to camps just once a week, while domestic water is pumped from a single well using dwindling fuel supplies, they said.

“Hygiene and sanitation conditions in the camps are deteriorating fast, raising the risk of disease outbreaks. Fuel, already in short supply, is now also used for cooking, lighting, and transporting essential staff and supplies,” said SOS Children’s Villages, which has been operating in Gaza and the West Bank since 1968.

A statement released on Wednesday on Emirati state media said the United Arab Emirates (UAE) had reached an agreement with Israel to allow the delivery of “urgent humanitarian aid” to Gaza.

“The aid will address the food needs of approximately 15,000 civilians in the Gaza Strip in the initial phase,” it said, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).

It was not immediately clear when the UAE’s aid would be sent to Gaza. AFP has asked Israeli authorities for comment.

Israel allowing 'ridiculously inadequate' amount of aid into Gaza: Doctors Without Borders (MSF)

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said the volume of aid Israel had started to allow into Gaza was not nearly enough for the population of 2.4 million, describing it as “a smokescreen to pretend the siege is over”, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP).

“The Israeli authorities’ decision to allow a ridiculously inadequate amount of aid into Gaza after months of an air-tight siege signals their intention to avoid the accusation of starving people in Gaza, while in fact keeping them barely surviving,” said MSF’s emergency coordinator in the south Gaza city of Khan Younis, Pascale Coissard.

Mahmoud Abbas, the chair of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) and the president of the Palestinian Authority, on Wednesday hailed international rejection of Israel’s “blockade” and “starvation” of Gaza, after the European Union ordered a review of its cooperation deal with Israel, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP).

Abbas said in a statement:

We reiterate our welcome for the joint statement issued by the leaders of Britain, France, and Canada, as well as for the positions of the European Union countries, the joint statement of the donor countries and the statement of the Arab-Islamic ministerial committee on this matter.

They all rejected the policies of blockade, starvation, displacement and land seizure.

The IDF has issued a statement claiming to have killed a participant in the 7 October 2023 surprise Hamas attack inside southern Israel, who it named as Mohammad Shahin from Hamas’ East Jabaliya Battalion.

Israeli forces claim that over the past 24 hours they have “struck over 115 terror targets throughout the Gaza Strip” which they claim included “launchers, military structures, tunnels, terrorist cells, and additional terrorist infrastructure sites.”

The statement, on the IDF’s official Telegram channel, said the Israeli navy had also been involved in “strikes on terror targets in northern Gaza”.

20 Palestinians detained by Israeli security forces in occupied West Bank

Al Jazeera reports that Israeli security forces have detained 20 people in raids throughout the Israeli-occupied West Bank since last night. It cited the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society. Al Jazeera has been banned from operating inside Israel by Benjamin Netanyahu’s government.

Week-old infant among 45 killed by latest Israeli strikes on Gaza

Hospitals in Gaza say Israeli strikes overnight and into Wednesday killed at least 45 people, including several women and a week-old infant, Associated Press reports.

Palestinian news agency Wafa reported “the deaths of at least eight civilians and the injury of dozens more in an Israeli airstrike on the Jabalia bus station in the Daraj neighbourhood of Gaza City.”

It reported Israeli forces “blew up residential buildings east of Jabalia.”

Here are some of the latest images from Gaza, where hospitals in Gaza City and Khan Younis have been receiving the bodies of Palestinians killed by Israel’s latest airstrikes on the territory.

Pope Leo XIV: Gaza situation 'yet more worrying and saddening'

Pope Leo XIV on Wednesday appealed for Israel to resume allowing humanitarian aid to enter the Gaza Strip after weeks of a blockade, calling the situation in the Palestinian territory “yet more worrying and saddening.”

“I renew my appeal to allow for the entry of fair humanitarian help and to bring to an end the hostilities, the high price of which is paid by children, the elderly and the sick,” the recently elected pope said during his weekly general audience in St Peter’s Square.

Israeli activists attempt to block any aid trucks crossing into Gaza at Kerem Shalom

Israeli police have detained at least one person at a demonstration attempting to prevent humanitarian aid being delivered at the Kerem Shalom crossing. Eden Solomon reports for Haaretz that the activists belong to Tsav 9, a pro-settler group

Reuters has spoken to Mahmoud al-Haw at one of the soup kitchens in Gaza. The father-of-four says he has been regularly waiting in crowds for up to six hours to obtain food, and sometimes returns empty-handed.

“I have a sick daughter. I can’t provide her with anything. There is no bread, there is nothing,” the 39-year-old told the news agency.

“I’m here since eight in the morning, just to get one plate for six people while it is not enough for one person.”

Israeli media reports that an IDF attack helicopter has launched missile that landed inside southern Israel near Gaza border. The IDF said the incident was under investigation.

MSF accuses Israel of using 'ridiculously inadequate' aid supply as a 'smokescreen' to claim Gaza seige is lifted

The amount of aid Israel has started to allow into the Gaza Strip is not nearly enough and is “a smokescreen to pretend the siege is over,” the MSF aid group said on Wednesday.

AFP reports that Pascale Coissard, Médecins Sans Frontières emergency coordinator in Gaza’s Khan Younis said “The Israeli authorities’ decision to allow a ridiculously inadequate amount of aid into Gaza after months of an air-tight siege signals their intention to avoid the accusation of starving people in Gaza, while in fact keeping them barely surviving.”

Overnight the state news agency in the UAW said in a phone call between UAE and Israeli officials, Israel had agreed to let in humanitarian aid that would supply 15,000 people. The population of Gaza was estimated to be about two million before Israel’s military campaign began.

Al Jazeera is reporting, citing local medical sources, that 38 Palestinians have been killed since dawn by Israeli strikes on Gaza. Benjamin Netanyahu’s government has banned Al Jazeera from operating inside Israel.

Here are some of the latest images sent to us over the news wires from Gaza.

Israel strikes car in Lebanon with drone attack

A car has been struck by an Israeli drone in southern Lebanon near Tyre according to reports. Lebanon’s National News Agency said the attack happened on the Al-Hawsh-Ain Baal road. Israeli news service Kan reported that one person had been killed.

Former Israeli PM Ehud Olmert: Israel's actions in Gaza 'very close to a war crime'

The former Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert has said that what Israel “is doing now in Gaza, is very close to a war crime” during an interview with the BBC.

Olmert, who was prime minister from 2006 to 2009, told the BBC that Benjamin Netanyahu’s government were waging “a war without a purpose – a war without a chance of achieving anything that can save the lives of the hostages.”

He said that the “obvious appearance” of the campaign was that Israel was killing many Palestinians, and that “from every point of view, this is obnoxious and outrageous.”

He said that the Israeli government had to be more clear that it was “fighting the killers of Hamas, we are not fighting innocent civilians.”

Israel announced overnight that a member of service personnel was killed in combat in southern Gaza on 20 May. The IDF lists 858 service personnel who have been killed since 7 October 2023.

Overnight the chief of staff of the Israeli forces, Eyal Zamir, issued a statement about the renewed military offensive in Gaza. Describing the months-long bombardment of Gaza, which, according to Palestinian medical services has cost over 50,000 lives, Zamir said “We are acting in self-defense.”

In a passage directed to the Palestinian people, he said:

I wish to address the residents of Gaza: We are not the ones who brought this destruction upon you. We are not the ones who started this war. We are not the ones who have deprived you of food, shelter, and money. We do not hide in hospitals or schools. We do not live in luxury hotels while you live in hardship. This is your leadership – the ones holding our hostages. Hamas is responsible for starting the war. It is responsible for the difficult situation of the civilian population – it brought destruction, and it will not be the one to rebuild.

Zamir also claimed that it was “baseless” to accuse the Israeli forces of acting in any way other than in accordance with international law. Israel has imposed a near total blockade on humanitarian aid entering the Gaza Strip for nearly all of March so far, leading to starvation warnings. Zamir said:

The IDF operates at all times in accordance with IDF values, Israeli law, and international law, while maintaining an uncompromising commitment to the security of the State of Israel and its civilians. Any statement that casts doubt on the integrity of our actions or the morality of our soldiers is baseless.

Zamir also attempted to offer reassurance to the families of the remaining hostages in Gaza, who have been held by Hamas captive since 7 October 2023, and many of whom are thought to have been killed. Zamir said:

I am fully aware of the concern and anguish experienced by the families of the hostages, and of the questions raised by the combination of these objectives. It is a complex challenge, but we possess the tools, wisdom, and responsibility to meet it. I, along with every soldier in the IDF, will continue to act tirelessly until all our hostages are brought home.

Welcome and summary

Hello and welcome to the Guardian’s continuing coverage of the crisis in the Middle East.

Israel has rejected EU and UK criticism of its intensified campaign in Gaza, where rescuers said fresh attacks on Tuesday including strikes on a family home and a school-turned-shelter had killed scores of people, among them many children.

Israel said that 93 trucks of aid – a fraction of what is needed – had entered Gaza from Israel on Tuesday but the UN said none of that aid had actually reached Palestinians. UN spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said that although the aid had entered Gaza, aid workers were not able to bring it to distribution points where it is most needed, after the Israeli military forced them to reload the supplies on to separate trucks and workers ran out of time.

The UN announced on Monday that it had been cleared to send in aid for the first time since Israel imposed a total blockade on 2 March, sparking severe shortages of food and medicine. UN-backed experts said last week Gaza was at “a critical risk of famine”.

The humanitarian crisis caused by Israel has prompted international anger, with the European Union saying it would review its trade cooperation deal with Israel over the blockade, while the UK suspended free-trade negotiations with Israel, summoned the Israeli ambassador and said it was imposing sanctions on settlers in the occupied West Bank in its toughest actions so far against Israel’s conduct of the war.

The EU action “reflects a total misunderstanding of the complex reality Israel is facing,” Israeli foreign ministry spokesperson Oren Marmorstein said. Responding to Britain, Marmorstein said “external pressure will not divert Israel from its path in defending its existence and security.”

  • The UK suspended trade negotiations with Israel over its Gaza blockade, the UK foreign secretary, David Lammy, told parliament on Tuesday. He said the Israeli ambassador had been summoned. The UK’s prime minister, Keir Starmer, described the situation in Gaza as “horrific” and “utterly intolerable”. It comes after the UK, France and Canada on Monday issued their strongest condemnation yet of the way Israel is conducting its war on Gaza and repeated calls for a ceasefire.

  • The European Union has agreed to review its trade agreement with Israel over alleged human rights abuses in Gaza, the EU’s top diplomat, Kaja Kallas, said on Tuesday. The decision comes almost 15 months after Irish and Spanish leaders called on the European Commission’s chief, Ursula von der Leyen, to make such a move. The change comes after a proposal from the Netherlands last week gained widespread support amid growing alarm about the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza and the West Bank.

  • The former Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert has said that what Israel “is doing now in Gaza, is very close to a war crime” during an interview with the BBC.

  • No humanitarian aid has been distributed yet in the Gaza Strip on Tuesday, according to a spokesperson for the United Nations, Stéphane Dujarric. Separately, Cogat, the Israeli defence ministry body that oversees civil affairs in the Palestinian territories, claimed 93 UN aid trucks entered Gaza on Tuesday.

  • At least 87 Palestinians were killed and more than 290 injured by Israeli attacks in Gaza over the past 24 hours, Gaza’s health ministry said on Tuesday. At least 53,573 Palestinian people have been killed and 121,688 injured in Israeli attacks on Gaza since 7 October 2023, the ministry said. Gaza City, Deir el-Balah, the Nuseirat refugee camp, the Jabalia refugee camp and the Bureij refugee camp were among the places targeted in deadly Israeli strikes on Tuesday, according to reports.

  • Benjamin Netanyahu ordered part of his country’s delegation negotiating a ceasefire and hostage release deal in Doha to return to Israel, according to Israeli media reports. Separately, Qatar’s prime minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al-Thani said Israel’s continuing assault on Gaza had undermined peace efforts. “This irresponsible, aggressive behaviour undermines any potential chance for peace,” the Qatari leader said.

  • The US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, said Washington has not discussed the deportation of Palestinians from Gaza to Libya, but he said Washington had asked other countries in the region if they would be open to accepting Palestinians who want to move voluntarily. Rubio was testifying before the Senate foreign relations committee on Tuesday on Tuesday, when a pro-Palestine protester disrupted the hearing.

  • Australia joined 22 other nations in condemning Israel over its decision to only allow limited aid into Gaza. 23 countries, including the UK, Canada, New Zealand and Australia, urged Israel not to politicise humanitarian aid for the starving population.

  • The Lebanese health ministry said an Israeli airstrike injured nine people in a drone attack on the coastal Tyre district in the south of the country. Three people are now in “critical condition”, the ministry said, adding that two children were among the injured.

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