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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Tom Ambrose (now) and Caolán Magee (earlier)

Middle East crisis: Bezalel Smotrich outlines plan for 3,000 new housing units in controversial West Bank settlement, reports say – as it happened

Bezalel Smotrich stands in a crowd of people
Israeli finance minister Bezalel Smotrich in Jerusalem in May. Photograph: Ammar Awad/Reuters

The day so far

  • Israeli far-right finance minister Bezalel Smotrich said prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US president Donald Trump had agreed to revive the contentious E1 settlement scheme – although there was no immediate confirmation from either leader. It comes after we reported earlier that Smotrich announced plans to begin construction on a settlement that would divide the West Bank and cut it off from East Jerusalem.

  • Qatar, Iraq and Jordan have all issued strong condemnations of recent statements concerning the occupied West Bank. In a statement from Doha on Thursday, Qatar’s foreign ministry said it “strongly condemns” Israeli finance minister Bezalel Smotrich’s approval of plans to construct a settlement that would separate East Jerusalem from the occupied West Bank, calling it “a blatant violation of international legitimacy, particularly United Nations Security Council Resolution 2334”.

  • Israeli advocacy group Peace Now has condemned plans to expand settlements in the occupied West Bank, which are illegal under international law, the group said. The plans, announced by Israel’s far-right finance minister Bezalel Smotrich, approve tenders for more than 3,000 housing units in the controversial E1 settlement project between Jerusalem and Ma’ale Adumim in the West Bank.

  • In an act of international journalistic solidarity, the Swedish Union of Journalists (SJF) staged a demonstration in Stockholm, protesting the targeted killings of Palestinian journalists in Gaza. The demonstration follows am Israeli airstrike on Sunday that claimed the lives of four Al Jazeera journalists and two freelance media workers sheltering near a tent outside the Al-Shifa Hospital.

  • The Palestinian Ministry of Health in Gaza has just issued its daily death toll. It says 54 people have been killed and 831 injured in the past 24 hours, adding that some victims remain under the rubble or on roads that ambulance and civil defence crews are unable to reach.

  • Mossad spy chief David Barnea is visiting Qatar to revive Gaza peace talks, two Israeli officials told Reuters on Thursday. The visit follows a reported expression of eagerness by Hamas for a swift return to Gaza ceasefire negotiations during a meeting with Egypt’s intelligence chief in Cairo.

  • Italy’s defence ministry says it has completed the largest medical evacuation from Gaza since January last year, flying 31 children and 83 accompanying relatives to Ciampino, Milan and Pisa overnight. The patients and their families have been admitted to Italian hospitals for medical care and specialist treatment. With this mission, Italy says it has now taken in more than 180 children from Gaza, along with 580 people in total, for treatment.

  • Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has denied accusations that Israel is committing genocide or intentionally starving civilians in Gaza, saying such claims are “false”.

  • More than 100 international NGOs have accused Israel of using humanitarian aid as a weapon in Gaza, saying most major agencies have been unable to deliver a single truck of supplies since early March.

  • In a statement carried by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the World Health Organisation says medical supply entry into Gaza remains “difficult and ever changing” despite the delivery of 80 trucks of supplies since June 25, when a suspension of more than three months was lifted.

  • Riot police at Greece’s largest port, Piraeus, cordoned off an area around a cruise ship early Thursday to prevent several hundred protesters from approaching the vessel. The Crown Iris, carrying Israeli tourists, has faced demonstrations at Greek islands and mainland ports along its route, some of which have led to clashes with police.

  • Human Rights Watch has described as “abhorrent” reports that the Israeli government is in talks with five countries – Indonesia, Somaliland, Uganda, South Sudan and Libya – about taking displaced Palestinians from Gaza. Israeli broadcaster Channel 12 reported on Wednesday that such discussions were taking place.

  • The head of the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) says he is working to reinstate a documentary about the October 7 attacks after its removal from the schedule sparked a public outcry in Israel. Cameron Bailey, TIFF’s CEO, said the Canadian film The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue was initially withdrawn due to issues surrounding “legal clearance of all footage”.

Palestinians struggle to collect humanitarian aid airdropped by parachutes into Gaza City, northern Gaza Strip, on Thursday.

We are starting to see responses to Israeli far-right finance minister Bezalel Smotrich saying prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US president Donald Trump had agreed to revive the contentious E1 settlement scheme.

Eropean Commission spokesperson Anitta Hipper said during a press briefing:

The EU rejects any territorial change that is not part of a political agreement between involved parties.

So annexation of territory is illegal under international law.

Meanwhile, Norwegian foreign minister Espen Barth Eide said the move showed that Israel “seeks to appropriate land owned by Palestinians in order to prevent a two-state solution”.

Qatar, which has mediated between Hamas and Israel in efforts to secure a ceasefire in Gaza, condemned Smotrich’s actions as a “blatant violation of international law”.

Human Rights Watch has described as “abhorrent” reports that the Israeli government is in talks with five countries – Indonesia, Somaliland, Uganda, South Sudan and Libya – about taking displaced Palestinians from Gaza.

Israeli broadcaster Channel 12 reported on Wednesday that such discussions were taking place.

Milena Ansari, Israel and Palestine assistant researcher at Human Rights Watch, told the Guardian:

Hearing Israeli officials flaunt abhorrent plans to escalate forced displacement and ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in Gaza should trigger outrage in the international community.

Instead of standing beside a government whose Prime Minister is wanted for atrocity crimes by the International Criminal Court, states should make clear their categorical opposition to such actions and take concrete actions to prevent the extermination of Palestinians.

Anything less will only magnify the possibility they could be held complicit in Israel’s crimes of forced displacement.

The report came a day after the Associated Press said Israel had discussed sending Palestinians to South Sudan.

The Israeli government has previously called for the “voluntary migration” of Palestinians from Gaza amid the ongoing war.

Updated

Riot police at Greece’s largest port, Piraeus, cordoned off an area around a cruise ship early Thursday to prevent several hundred protesters from approaching the vessel.

The Crown Iris, carrying Israeli tourists, has faced demonstrations at Greek islands and mainland ports along its route, some of which have led to clashes with police.

At Piraeus, near Athens, demonstrators held flares and waved Palestinian flags behind a cordon formed with riot police buses.

Protest organisers, citing online posts from travellers, claimed off-duty Israeli soldiers were among the passengers.

“They are unwanted here and have no business being here,” protest organiser Markos Bekris said. “The blood of innocent people is on their hands, and we should not welcome them.”

Greece remains a popular holiday destination for Israelis, but the ongoing war on Gaza, and global attention on the widespread destruction and severe food shortages, has sparked hundreds of anti-Israel protests in Athens and other Greek cities and towns.

Opposition parties have called on the conservative government to halt commercial and military cooperation with Israel.

In an act of international journalistic solidarity, the Swedish Union of Journalists (SJF) staged a demonstration in Stockholm, protesting the targeted killings of Palestinian journalists in Gaza.

The demonstration follows am Israeli airstrike on Sunday that claimed the lives of four Al Jazeera journalists and two freelance media workers sheltering near a tent outside the Al-Shifa Hospital.

According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, at least 192 journalists and media workers have been killed since the onset of the war in late 2023.

In a statement shared on social media, SJF decried the ongoing violence against press freedoms as “unacceptable and must come to an end,” adding: “the message is simple – stop killing our colleagues”.

Qatar, Iraq and Jordan have all issued strong condemnations of recent statements concerning the occupied West Bank.

In a statement from Doha on Thursday, Qatar’s foreign ministry said it “strongly condemns” Israeli finance minister Bezalel Smotrich’s approval of plans to construct a settlement that would separate East Jerusalem from the occupied West Bank, calling it “a blatant violation of international legitimacy, particularly United Nations Security Council Resolution 2334”.

Iraq’s foreign ministry also “strongly condemns” remarks by prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier this week in which he said he felt “very attached” to the vision of a so-called “Greater Israel”. The ministry described the comments as “a blatant provocation and a clear violation of the sovereignty of states, a breach of international law, and the charter of the United Nations”.

Jordan’s foreign ministry criticised Smotrich’s announcement that he intends to approve tenders to build more than 3,000 homes in the E1 area settlement project linking Jerusalem to Maale Adumim. Its spokesperson, ambassador Sufyan Qudah, said the plan and other “illegal Israeli measures” were “a blatant violation of international law”.

My colleague Peter Beaumont his written a fuller report on an earlier blog post on Aid groups saying that Israel’s new registration rules “are weaponising aid”:

More than 100 aid organisations working in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank have accused Israel of dangerously “weaponising aid” in its application of new rules for registering groups involved in delivering humanitarian assistance.

The letter represents the latest broadside from the international aid community against Israel after the EU, Britain and Japan on Tuesday called for urgent action to stop “famine” spreading in the Gaza Strip.

Updated

Mossad spy chief David Barnea is visiting Qatar to revive Gaza peace talks, two Israeli officials told Reuters on Thursday.

The visit follows a reported expression of eagerness by Hamas for a swift return to Gaza ceasefire negotiations during a meeting with Egypt’s intelligence chief in Cairo.

Updated

Israeli far-right minister says Netanyahu and Trump agreed to West Bank settlement plan

Israeli far-right finance minister Bezalel Smotrich said prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US president Donald Trump had agreed to revive the contentious E1 settlement scheme – although there was no immediate confirmation from either leader.

It comes after we reported earlier that Smotrich announced plans to begin construction on a settlement that would divide the West Bank and cut it off from East Jerusalem.

Standing at the site in Ma’ale Adumim, Smotrich said:

Whoever in the world is trying to recognise a Palestinian state today will receive our answer on the ground. Not with documents nor with decisions or statements, but with facts. Facts of houses, facts of neighbourhoods.

Smotrich told Reuters the plan would go into effect on Wednesday, without specifying what would happen that day.

Most of the international community considers all settlements illegal under international law, a position backed by multiple UN Security Council resolutions calling on Israel to halt settlement activity.

In June, Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand imposed sanctions on Smotrich and another far-right minister who advocates settlement expansion, accusing them of repeatedly inciting violence against Palestinians in the West Bank.

Updated

Palestinians mourn loved ones killed in Israeli attacks across Gaza

At least four killed in Idlib explosion, Syria’s state media says

Earlier we reported that Syria’s official Ekhbariya TV said an explosion had been heard in Idlib, in the north-west of the country.

Syria’s state news agency is now reporting that at least four people were killed and five injured in an explosion on the outskirts of Idlib city on Thursday.

An Iranian government spokesperson has compared Israel’s war in Gaza to the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

In a post on X, Esmaeil Baqaei, head of Iran’s Centre for Public Diplomacy, said:

As the world marks the 80th anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, UN human rights experts have noted that Israel’s genocidal attacks evoke painful parallels with the nuclear attacks on Japan.

Quoting a statement published by the UN human rights council, Baqaei added: “Of particular concern is Israel’s perpetration of these genocidal attacks, while it remains as the sole nuclear power in the Middle East, continuing to threaten regional stability with attacks against most of its neighbouring states, including attacks against nuclear facilities in Iran.”

Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Sharren Haskel has just provided some insight into the country’s post-war plans for Gaza.

She said a non-Israeli, peaceful civilian administration for Gaza was among the government’s five key principles for ending the war.

The other principles include the release of hostages still held in Gaza, the surrender of weapons by Hamas, the full demilitarization of Gaza, and Israel retaining overriding security controls, she added.

Gaza health ministry says 54 killed, 831 injured in past 24 hours

The Palestinian Ministry of Health in Gaza has just issued its daily death toll.

It says 54 people have been killed and 831 injured in the past 24 hours, adding that some victims remain under the rubble or on roads that ambulance and civil defence crews are unable to reach.

According to the ministry, the death toll from Israeli military action since 7 October 2023 has risen to 61,776, with 154,906 injured.

Since 18 March 2025 when the ceasefire ended, it says 10,251 people have been killed and 42,865 injured.

The ministry said 22 of those killed in the past day died in incidents involving aid convoys, along with 269 injuries, bringing the total number of what it calls “aid victims” to 1,881 dead and more than 13,863 injured since the start of the war.

Earlier, the ministry also reported four deaths from famine and malnutrition in the past 24 hours, bringing the total to 239, including 106 children.

Italy’s defence ministry says it has completed the largest medical evacuation from Gaza since January last year, flying 31 children and 83 accompanying relatives to Ciampino, Milan and Pisa overnight. The patients and their families have been admitted to Italian hospitals for medical care and specialist treatment.

With this mission, Italy says it has now taken in more than 180 children from Gaza, along with 580 people in total, for treatment.

The ministry said Italy is the fourth country in the world, and the first among Western nations, for the evacuation and transfer of Palestinian patients to specialised hospitals.

“In dramatic contexts like that of the Gaza Strip, solidarity is expressed through concrete actions rather than words,” defence minister Guido Crosetto said.

“Today’s medical transport is a further sign of Italy’s commitment alongside the civilian population affected by a severe humanitarian emergency. Giving hope, saving a life, especially that of suffering children, means affirming the fundamental values we identify with.”

Crosetto thanked the defence, foreign and interior ministries, Italy’s civil protection department, and the healthcare personnel caring for the young patients.

Palestinian foreign ministry condemns new Israeli settlement plans

Earlier we reported that Israeli far-right finance minister Bezalel Smotrich announced plans to advance tenders for more than 3,000 housing units in the E1 settlement project between Jerusalem and Ma’ale Adumim – in what advocacy groups criticised as illegal under international law.

The Palestinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates has just issued a strong rebuke of the measures, calling the tenders as being linked to “the notion of ‘Greater Israel’” and part of a wider plan to “undermine the opportunity to establish the Palestinian state on its homeland”.

It considers the colonial construction in the E1 area a continuation of the occupation’s plans to undermine the opportunity to establish the Palestinian state on its homeland, weaken its geographical and demographic unity, entrench the division of the West Bank into isolated areas surrounded by a sea of settlements, and facilitate the completion of their annexation.

The Ministry views these tenders as an extension of the crimes of genocide, displacement, and annexation, and as an echo of Netanyahu’s statements regarding what he called ‘Greater Israel’.

It called for “genuine international intervention” and sanctions to halt the plans, end the “genocide, displacement, and annexation”.

Updated

Human Rights Watch (HRW) says Israeli airstrikes on Tehran’s Evin prison in June killed scores of detainees, visitors and staff in what it has described as an “apparent war crime”.

The rights group says survivors have since been subjected to abuse, enforced disappearances and inhumane detention conditions by Iranian authorities.

The investigation, based on satellite imagery, videos and witness accounts, found the 23 June strikes destroyed visitation halls, prison wards, the central kitchen, the medical clinic and administrative offices.

HRW said it found no evidence of military targets in the facility, which held more than 1,500 prisoners at the time, many jailed for peaceful activism.

Turning briefly to Syria, a UN investigation has found that war crimes were likely committed by both members of the interim government forces and fighters loyal to the country’s former rulers during an outbreak of sectarian violence in the coastal region in March.

The UN Syria Commission of Inquiry says around 1,400 people – mainly civilians from Alawi communities – were killed in the violence, which included torture, killings and inhumane treatment of the dead.

The coastal incidents were the worst violence to hit Syria since the fall of President Bashar al-Assad last year.

Meanwhile, fighting elsewhere in the country continues. An explosion was reported in Idlib on Thursday, with authorities working to verify its cause.

Turkey has also just signed a military cooperation accord with Syria, pledging weapons systems, logistical support and training.

The Turkish defence ministry said the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) – the Kurdish-led force allied with the US in the fight against ISIS – have yet to meet conditions for integration into Syria’s state apparatus under a March agreement, and urged compliance.

Despite the deal, skirmishes have continued. Syria’s state news agency SANA reported a government soldier was killed earlier this week in clashes with the SDF in Aleppo province.

Updated

In a surviving upstairs room at Gaza College, its walls pocked with shrapnel and windows blown out, a boy sits for a guitar class.

His teacher, Mohammed Abu Mahadi, 32, says music can help heal the psychological wounds left by bombardment, loss and shortages.

“What I do here is make children happy from music because it is one of the best ways for expressing feelings,” he said.

The students were attending an Edward Said National Conservatory of Music lesson on 4 August, held in displacement camps and damaged buildings since Israeli strikes forced the school from its main base.

“When I play I feel like I’m flying away,” said Rifan al-Qassas, 15, who began learning the oud at nine. “Music gives me hope and eases my fear.”

Founded in the West Bank, the conservatory opened its Gaza branch 13 years ago.

But after 22 months of war, some students are now dead, including 14-year-old violinist Lubna Alyaan.

The old school building now lies in ruins, its walls collapsed and rooms littered with debris. A grand piano is gone. For many, music is now the last place of refuge.

Four more deaths from starvation recorded in Gaza, health ministry says

The health ministry in Gaza has just issued a statement, saying four more people have died from famine and malnutrition in the past 24 hours.

This brings the total to 239 since the start of the war, including 106 children, according to the health ministry.

It warned that shortages of food and clean water, combined with the collapse of health services, are driving a worsening hunger crisis across the territory.

The head of the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) says he is working to reinstate a documentary about the October 7 attacks after its removal from the schedule sparked a public outcry in Israel.

Cameron Bailey, TIFF’s CEO, said the Canadian film The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue was initially withdrawn due to issues surrounding “legal clearance of all footage”.

However, in a statement published on X last night, Bailey said his “intention was to screen” the film and described it as “an important story” that adds to the festival’s “rich tapestry of perspectives”.

Bailey rejected claims of censorship as “unequivocally false” and urged “patience and understanding”.

The documentary follows Noam Tibon, who set out to rescue his son, journalist Amir Tibon, and his family during the attack on Kibbutz Nahal Oz.

Its removal drew protests from Israel’s foreign ministry and the Canadian Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs.

Eight Palestinians have been killed in Israeli strikes in central Gaza and northwest of Gaza City, according to medical sources, cited by Wafa news agency.

Staff at Al-Aqsa hospital said three people died when an Israeli drone fired a missile at a group of civilians in the al-Hakr area, south of Deir al-Balah.

The Palestinian news agency also reported that Israeli drones also targeted a group of people northwest of Gaza City, killing five and injuring others.

Updated

Netanyahu rejects 'genocide' and starvation accusations

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has denied accusations that Israel is committing genocide or intentionally starving civilians in Gaza, saying such claims are “false”.

In a video posted to the Israeli prime minister’s YouTube channel, speaking at the US Independence Day reception hosted by Newsmax in Jerusalem , Netanyahu said:

The first false accusation is genocide. The second false accusation is starvation. From the first second day of the war, we said there has to be another separation between civilians and combatants and that is that we supply humanitarian aid.

If we had a starvation policy, everybody in Gaza would be dead. But that’s not our policy.

Netanyahu said diplomacy was “just another way to say defeat and surrender”, adding: “Victory” was “the last word left in the army’s lexicon”.

He also told the audience: “Americans recognise that Israel stands for the same values as America. They recognise that we are fighting the barbarians at the gate … not only the goal of destroying Israel, it’s even the method that they use to murder and mutilate the heathen, as they call them.”

Updated

We are just receiving pictures via the wires from inside Nasser Medical Complex, a hospital in Khan Younis, southern Gaza.

In a statement carried by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the World Health Organisation says medical supply entry into Gaza remains “difficult and ever changing” despite the delivery of 80 trucks of supplies since June 25, when a suspension of more than three months was lifted.

Many critical items, including ICU beds, anaesthesia machines and cold chain medicines, have been denied entry, while clearance processes for goods arriving via Ben Gurion Airport remain slow, the statement said.

WHO said it has delivered 6,000 blood units to Al Shifa and Nasser hospitals, but these are only a fraction of what is needed as health facilities face mass casualty incidents and rising cases of infectious disease.

Shortages of fuel for generators and spare parts are also crippling the 230 health points still partially functional across Gaza, the statement said.

Updated

The UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) has just issued a warning on X, saying that soaring temperatures in Gaza are now above 40°C, making an already dire humanitarian situation “far worse”.

“With very limited water available, dehydration is increasing,” the agency said in a post on X. It added that bombardments and forced displacement continue, while limited electricity and fuel mean there is “no relief from the extreme heat”.

UNRWA reiterated its call for an immediate ceasefire.

Far-right minister outlines plans to expand Israeli settlements in West Bank

Israeli advocacy group Peace Now has condemned plans to expand settlements in the occupied West Bank, which are illegal under international law, the group said.

The plans, announced by Israel’s far-right finance minister Bezalel Smotrich, approve tenders for more than 3,000 housing units in the controversial E1 settlement project between Jerusalem and Ma’ale Adumim in the West Bank.

Smotrich said in a statement cited by the Times of Israel:

Approval of construction plans in E1 buries the idea of a Palestinian state and continues the many steps we are taking on the ground as part of the de facto sovereignty plan that we began implementing with the establishment of the government.

After decades of international pressure and freezes, we are breaking conventions and connecting Ma’ale Adumim to Jerusalem. This is Zionism at its best – building, settling and strengthening our sovereignty in the Land of Israel.

The E1 plan has been frozen for decades amid strong opposition from the international community, which warns it would divide the West Bank into northern and southern regions, and prevent the development of a Palestinian urban area linking East Jerusalem with Bethlehem and Ramallah.

Peace Now said in a statement: “The E1 plan is deadly for the future of Israel and for any chance of achieving a peaceful two-state solution. We are standing at the edge of an abyss, and the government is driving us forward at full speed.”

Updated

NGOs call for an end to Israel’s ‘weaponisation’ of aid

More than 100 international NGOs have accused Israel of using humanitarian aid as a weapon in Gaza, saying most major agencies have been unable to deliver a single truck of supplies since early March.

Despite Israeli authorities claiming there is no limit on humanitarian aid entering the territory, the groups say dozens of requests to bring in food, medicine, water and shelter items have been rejected on the grounds that the organisations are “not authorized to deliver aid”. In July alone, more than 60 requests were denied, according to the statement.

The aid backlog has left millions of dollars’ worth of goods stranded in warehouses in Jordan and Egypt, while hospitals run short of basic supplies and civilians die from hunger and preventable illnesses. Many of the affected organisations say they have worked in Gaza for decades.

The groups link the obstruction to new registration rules introduced in March, which allow Israeli authorities to reject applications based on vague criteria such as alleged “delegitimisation” of the state. Agencies say the process is being used to control independent organisations and censor humanitarian reporting.

“Since the full siege was imposed on 2 March, CARE has not been able to deliver any of our $1.5m worth of pre-positioned supplies into Gaza,” said Jolien Veldwijk, CARE’s country director. Oxfam said it has over $2.5m worth of goods blocked from entering.

The signatories called on governments and donors to press Israel to end the restrictions, demand the opening of all land crossings, and ensure agencies can operate without compromising independence or staff safety.

Israel says it intercepts missile launched from Yemen

The Israeli military says the missile was fired overnight.

In a statement posted on X, it said: “The Air Force intercepted one missile launched from Yemen; according to policy, no alerts were activated.”

A Houthi military spokesperson, Yahya Saree, later claimed the group had targeted Ben Gurion Airport near Tel Aviv “using a hypersonic ballistic missile”.

Houthi rebels in Yemen have regularly launched missile and drone attacks on Israel, saying they are acting in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza.

Israel has previously carried out strikes on areas under Houthi control, including ports in western Yemen and Sanaa airport.

Welcome and opening summary

Hello, and welcome to our live coverage of the war in Gaza.

At least 123 people have been killed and 437 injured in the Gaza Strip over the past 24 hours, according to the territory’s health authorities.

Hospitals also reported that eight people – including three children – died from starvation and malnutrition during the same period, bringing the total number of such deaths to 235, among them 106 children.

The number of aid convoy victims recorded in the past day reached 21 dead and 185 injured, according to officials, bringing the total number killed in such incidents since the start of the war to 1,859, with more than 13,594 injured.

Philippe Lazzarini, head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA), described the starvation deaths as the latest in the “war on children” in Gaza.

The Israeli military said its chief of staff, Eyal Zamir, has approved the “main concept” for a new attack plan in the Gaza Strip, without giving further details. Reuters reports the decision comes after a rift between Israel’s political leadership and its military commanders.

A Hamas official accused Israeli forces of making “aggressive” incursions into Gaza City on Wednesday after news of the plan’s approval. “The Israeli occupation forces continue to carry out aggressive incursions in Gaza City,” said Ismail Al-Thawabta, director general of the Hamas government media office.

The Israeli military also said it struck a group of militants in Gaza disguised as aid workers and using a car with the logo of international charity World Central Kitchen. The charity confirmed that neither the men nor the vehicle were affiliated with it, saying in a statement: “We strongly condemn anyone posing as World Central Kitchen or other humanitarians, as this endangers civilians and aid workers.”

In Lebanon, an Israeli drone strike targeted a car on the Haris–Hadatha road in the south of the country, killing one person, according to Lebanon’s health ministry.

We’ll bring you all the latest developments throughout the day.

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