
Closing summary
It is approaching 5pm in Gaza City and 6pm in Tel Aviv. This blog will be closing shortly but you can follow the Guardian’s Middle East coverage here.
Here is a summary of the latest updates from today’s live blog:
At least 29 Palestinians, including children, were killed on Wednesday from an Israeli strike in the Shujaiya area of Gaza City, local health authorities said. Medics said dozens of others were injured in the attack that hit a multi-floor residential building in the eastern suburb of Gaza City. They said many were still believed to be missing and trapped under the ruins of the building. The strike damaged several other houses nearby.
Local health authorities in Gaza added that nine other Palestinians were killed in separate Israeli military strikes in other parts of the territory, raising Wednesday’s death toll to 38. The Gaza health ministry said on Wednesday that at least 1,482 Palestinians have been killed since Israel resumed intense strikes on the Gaza Strip on 18 March, taking the overall death toll since the start of the war to 50,846.
The Israeli military said in a statement it struck a senior Hamas militant responsible for planning and executing attacks from Shujaiya in northern Gaza, whom it did not identify. The military said several steps were taken before the attack to mitigate harm to civilians.
Indonesian president Prabowo Subianto said on Wednesday that his country will offer temporary shelter to Palestinian medical evacuees and children orphaned by the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza. He said Indonesia is ready to evacuate a first group of about 1,000 victims, who will stay in the country until they have fully recovered from their injuries and Gaza is safe enough to return to. Subianto said the move was not for permanent resettlement.
United Nations (UN) secretary general António Guterres said on Tuesday that Gaza had become “a killing field” because Israel has continued to block aid, an accusation an Israeli official quickly denied, saying there was “no shortage” of aid. “More than an entire month has passed without a drop of aid into Gaza. No food. No fuel. No medicine. No commercial supplies. As aid has dried up, the floodgates of horror have re-opened,” Guterres said in remarks to journalists.
Six weeks since Israel completely cut off all supplies to the 2.3 million residents of the Gaza Strip, food stockpiled during a ceasefire at the start of the year has all but run out. “All basic supplies are running out,” said Juliette Touma from the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (Unrwa). She said: “Every day without these basic supplies, Gaza inches closer towards very, very deep hunger.” Israel accuses the Hamas militants who have run Gaza of exploiting aid but Hamas deny this and accuses Israel of using starvation as a military tactic.
The mother of an Israeli soldier held hostage in Gaza told Agence France-Presse (AFP) that she fears that Israel’s renewed bombardment of the territory puts his life at even greater risk. “Our children are in danger,” Herut Nimrodi told AFP during an interview. Her son, Tamir, who turned 20 in captivity, is one of 24 hostages believed to be alive, though no proof of life has been sent since his abduction.
Suspected US airstrikes pounded the area around Yemen’s Red Sea port city of Hodeida on Tuesday night, killing at least 10 people and injuring 16 others, the Iran-backed Houthi rebels said. The strikes hit around Hodeida’s al-Hawak district, the rebels said, and injured 16 people.
President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Wednesday Iran has no objection to US investors doing business in the country but the country firmly opposes any attempts at regime change or foreign interference. “The leader has no objection to the presence of American investors in the country,” Pezeshkian said of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in a speech broadcast on state television. “We oppose their flawed policies, such as conspiracies and attempts at regime change.”
Saudi Arabia’s top diplomat is in Washington to lay the groundwork for US president Donald Trump’s upcoming visit, the first foreign trip of his second term, a Saudi government source told Agence France-Presse (AFP) on Wednesday. Last month, Trump said he may visit Saudi Arabia as early as April. The source, who requested anonymity to discuss sensitive matters, said “developments in Gaza, Yemen and Syria” were some of the topics on the agenda of the Saudi foreign minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan.
As calls for Lebanon’s Hezbollah to disarm gain momentum, a senior Hezbollah official told Reuters the group is ready to hold talks with the Lebanese president about its weapons if Israel withdraws from south Lebanon and stops its strikes. US-backed president Joseph Aoun, who vowed when he took office in January to establish a state monopoly on the control of arms, intends to open talks with Hezbollah over its arsenal soon, three Lebanese political sources told Reuters.
The Trump administration has reversed sweeping cuts in emergency food aid to several nations while maintaining them in Afghanistan and Yemen, two of the world’s poorest and most war-ravaged countries, officials said on Wednesday. Funding has been restored for programmes in Somalia, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and Ecuador, according to the USAID official and one of the UN officials.
Almost 40 MPs and peers in the UK have signed a letter organised by politician Jeremy Corbyn calling for an independent inquiry into the government’s role in the war in Gaza. In the letter, they say the death toll in Gaza has exceeded 61,000 and that “Britain has played a highly influential role in Israel’s military operations, including the sale of weapons, the supply of intelligence and the use of Royal Air Force (RAF) bases in Cyprus”. They say an inquiry should establish what decisions were taken and what the consequences were.
The US state department said on Tuesday it was aware of the killing by Israeli forces of a Palestinian American teenager in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and was seeking more information about the incident. A state department spokesperson made the comments to reporters when asked about the killing of US citizen Omar Mohammad Rabea, 14, and the shooting of two other teenagers.
The death toll from suspected US airstrikes that pounded the area around Yemen’s Red Sea port city of Hodeida (see 9.44am BST) has risen to at least 10 people, according to the Houthis. The rebels also aired footage they said showed the debris left after shooting down yet-another American MQ-9 Reaper drone.
The strikes on Tuesday night hit around Hodeida’s al-Hawak district, the rebels said, and injured 16 people.
Saudi Arabia’s top diplomat is in Washington to lay the groundwork for US president Donald Trump’s upcoming visit, the first foreign trip of his second term, a Saudi government source told Agence France-Presse (AFP) on Wednesday.
Last month, Trump said he may visit Saudi Arabia as early as April in a reprisal of 2017, when the oil-rich, conservative kingdom was the first destination of his first term in office.
Foreign minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan arrived in Washington on Tuesday, aiming to “prepare for Trump’s visit to Riyadh”, the source close to the Saudi government told AFP.
The source, who requested anonymity to discuss sensitive matters, said “developments in Gaza, Yemen and Syria” were also on Prince Faisal’s agenda.
The official Saudi Press Agency said Prince Faisal was to meet his US counterpart Marco Rubio to discuss “key regional and international developments”.
In January, Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, promised to pile $600bn into US trade and investments. Trump later said Saudi Arabia had agreed to “spend close to a trillion dollars … in our American companies, which to me means jobs”.
Trump forged close relations with Riyadh in his first term and is expected to push Saudi Arabia towards normalising ties with Israel as a major foreign policy objective.
The US state department said on Tuesday it was aware of the killing by Israeli forces of a Palestinian American teenager in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and was seeking more information about the incident, reports Reuters.
A state department spokesperson made the comments to reporters when asked about the killing of US citizen Omar Mohammad Rabea, 14, and the shooting of two other teenagers.
“We are certainly aware of that dynamic,” the state department spokesperson said. “There is an investigation that is going on. We are aware of the reports from the IDF that this was a counter-terrorism act, we need to learn more about the nature of what happened on the ground.”
The Palestinian foreign ministry condemned the weekend incident as an “extra-judicial killing” by Israeli forces during a raid. A local mayor said Rabea was shot along with two other teenagers by an Israeli settler and that the Israeli army pronounced him dead after detaining him.
The Israeli military said it shot a “terrorist” who endangered civilians by hurling rocks.
“We don’t have the complete picture of what was going on on the ground,” the state department spokesperson added.
The family of the teenager, who was a New Jersey native, said he was shot multiple times. Local community leaders gathered at the Palestinian American community centre in Clifton, New Jersey, on Tuesday to pay tribute to him and demand justice.
Six weeks since Israel imposed total Gaza blockade, 'all basic supplies are running out' says Unrwa
Six weeks since Israel completely cut off all supplies to the 2.3 million residents of the Gaza Strip, food stockpiled during a ceasefire at the start of the year has all but run out, while emergency meal distributions are ending, bakeries are closed and markets are empty, reports Reuters.
Aid agencies that have been supplying emergency meals say they will have to stop within days unless they can bring in more food.
The World Food Programme used to provide bread at 25 bakeries across the Gaza Strip. All of those bakeries are now shut. It will soon have to halt distribution of food parcels at reduced rations.
“All basic supplies are running out,” said Juliette Touma from the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (Unrwa). She said:
The prices of commodities have exponentially increased over the past one month plus since the Israeli authorities put the siege on the Gaza Strip.
It means babies, children are going to bed hungry. Every day without these basic supplies, Gaza inches closer towards very, very deep hunger.”
According to Reuters, a 25 kilo sack of flour that used to sell for $6 now costs ten times as much, while a litre of cooking oil – if it can be located – costs $10 instead of $1.50.
“Food distributions have almost stopped altogether, with remaining stocks now diverted to keep hot meal distributions going for a few more days, but that will soon finish too,” said Gavin Kelleher, an access manager for the Norwegian Refugee Council in Deir al-Balah.
Medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières says it is encountering children and pregnant women with severe malnutrition, and lactating mothers are themselves too hungry to be able to breastfeed.
Israel denies that Gaza is facing a hunger crisis. The military accuses the Hamas militants who have run Gaza of exploiting aid, and says it must keep all supplies out to prevent the fighters from getting it.
“The IDF (Israel Defense Forces) is acting in accordance with the directives of the political echelon. Israel is not transferring and will not transfer aid to the hands of terrorist organizations,” the military said.
The ministry of foreign affairs said 25,000 aid trucks had entered Gaza in the 42 days of the ceasefire – before it shut the border at the start of March – and that Hamas had used the aid to rebuild its war machine.
Hamas denies exploiting aid and accuses Israel of using starvation as a military tactic.
Updated
The Trump administration has reversed sweeping cuts in emergency food aid to several nations while maintaining them in Afghanistan and Yemen, two of the world’s poorest and most war-ravaged countries, officials said Wednesday.
The United States had initially cut funding for projects in more than a dozen countries, part of a dramatic reduction of foreign aid led by billionaire Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency. Aid officials warned the cuts would deny food to millions of people and end health programs for women and children.
The administration informed the World Food Program of its reversal on Tuesday, according to two UN officials. An official with the US Agency for International Development (USAID) confirmed that Jeremy Lewin, the Musk associate overseeing the dismantling of USAID, ordered the reversal of some of his weekend contract terminations after The Associated Press reported them. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief media, AP reported.
The WFP said Monday it had been notified that USAID was cutting funding to the UN agency’s emergency food program in 14 countries.
Funding has been restored for programs in Somalia, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and Ecuador, according to the USAID official and one of the UN officials. The status of funding for six other unidentified countries was not immediately clear.
One of the UN officials said the decision to restore funding came after intense behind-the-scenes lobbying of members of Congress by senior UN officials.
The cuts could prove disastrous for millions in Afghanistan and Yemen, reeling from decades of war and US-led campaigns against militants.
Children among rising number of dead found after Israeli attack on Gaza residential block, say local officials
The death toll from an Israeli strike in the Shujaiya area of Gaza City has risen to 29 Palestinians, Reuter reports. Local health authorities said the deaths included children.
The Israeli military said in a statement it struck a senior Hamas militant responsible for planning and executing attacks from Shujaiya in northern Gaza, whom it did not identify. The military said several steps were taken before the attack to mitigate harm to civilians.
Local health authorities said nine other Palestinians were killed in separate Israeli military strikes in other parts of the territory, raising Wednesday’s death toll to 38.
Updated
Here are some of the latest images that have been shared via the newswires:
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Israel army says targeted 'senior Hamas' militant in strike that hit Gaza block
The Israeli military said it targeted a senior Hamas militant on Wednesday in a strike that local health authorities said had killed at least 26 Palestinians, including children.
When asked by Agence France-Presse (AFP) about the strike in the city’s Shujaiya neighbourhood, the military said it “struck a senior Hamas terrorist who was responsible for planning and executing terrorist attacks” from the area. It did not give the target’s name, reports AFP.
Updated
Almost 40 MPs and peers in the UK have signed a letter organised by politician Jeremy Corbyn calling for an independent inquiry into the government’s role in the war in Gaza.
In the letter, they say the death toll in Gaza has exceeded 61,000 and that “Britain has played a highly influential role in Israel’s military operations, including the sale of weapons, the supply of intelligence and the use of Royal Air Force (RAF) bases in Cyprus”.
They say an inquiry should establish what decisions were taken and what the consequences were, and that ministers from the last Conservative government and the current Labour one should cooperate fully. They add:
Many people believe the government has taken decisions that have implicated officials in the gravest breaches of international law.
These charges will not go away until there is a comprehensive, public, independent inquiry with the legal power to establish the truth.
The letter has been signed by 37 MPs and peers, from the Labour party, Sinn Féin, the Greens, the SNP, Plaid Cymru, as well as independents.
In a message on social media where he has posted the letter, Corbyn says:
Last month, I wrote to the prime minister calling for an independent inquiry into the UK’s involvement in Israel’s assault on Gaza.
Today, more than 30 MPs have supported that call.
This is not going away. We will campaign for as long as it takes to establish the truth.
All seven Sinn Féin MP have signed the letter. In a statement explaining why, the Sinn Féin Chris Hazzard said:
For 18 months now, the Israeli army has continually attacked the defenceless population of Gaza, while world leaders turn a blind eye to these barbaric and inhumane actions.
Some members of the international community are complicit in the ongoing genocide, displacement and apartheid targeting the Palestine people.
This letter calls for a public inquiry into the British government’s role in the war on Gaza, and how it has assisted Netanyahu’s reckless and out-of-control regime.
While Israel must be held fully accountable for its flagrant breaches of international law, we also must establish what role successive British governments have played in this war.
President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Wednesday Iran has no objection to US investors doing business in the country but the country firmly opposes any attempts at regime change or foreign interference, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP).
“The leader has no objection to the presence of American investors in the country,” Pezeshkian said of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in a speech broadcast on state television. “We oppose their flawed policies, such as conspiracies and attempts at regime change.”
Iran has had no diplomatic relations with Washington since 1980, but is to hold nuclear talks with US officials in Oman on Saturday.
The talks follow a letter sent by US president Donald Trump on 7 March, urging Khamenei to resume nuclear negotiations and warning of possible military action if Iran refuses.
Tehran responded weeks later, saying it was open to indirect negotiations and dismissed the possibility of direct talks as long as the US maintains its “maximum pressure” policy. “The leader said that we are ready to negotiate, but not in direct negotiations because we do not trust them,” Pezeshkian said.
Death toll from Israeli attack on residential block rises
The death toll from an Israeli strike in the Shujaiya area of Gaza City has risen to 26 Palestinians, local health authorities said, according to Reuters. The number includes children, local health authorities said on Wednesday.
Medics said dozens of others were injured in the attack that hit a multi-floor residential building in the eastern suburb of Gaza City. They said many were still believed to be missing and trapped under the ruins of the building. The strike damaged several other houses nearby, medics said.
There was no immediate comment from the Israeli army.
Updated
The Gaza health ministry said on Wednesday that at least 1,482 Palestinians have been killed since Israel resumed intense strikes on the Gaza Strip on 18 March, taking the overall death toll since the start of the war to 50,846.
Hamas’s October 2023 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people on the Israeli side, mostly civilians, according to an Agence France-Presse (AFP) tally based on Israeli official figures.
Hossam Badran, a member of Hamas’s political bureau, told AFP on Tuesday that it was “necessary to reach a ceasefire” in Gaza. He added that “communication with the mediators is still ongoing” but that “so far, there are no new proposals”.
Badran said Hamas “is open to all ideas that would lead to a ceasefire and stop the genocide enacted against our Palestinian people”.
US president Donald Trump and Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday that new negotiations were in the works aimed at getting more hostages released from captivity in Gaza.
Of the 251 hostages seized during Hamas’s attack on Israel, 58 are still held in Gaza, including 34 the Israeli military says are dead.
Gaza rescuers say 20 killed in Israel strike on residential block
Agence France-Press (AFP) are reporting that the Israeli strike in the Shujaiya area of Gaza City killed at least 20 people on Wednesday. Earlier Reuters put the death toll at 18 (see 10.28am BST).
Gaza’s civil defence agency spokesperson Mahmud Bassal said the strike resulted in “20 martyrs and more than 40 injured” and the search for bodies in the rubble was ongoing.
The military said they were looking into the attack, reports AFP.
An Israeli airstrike killed at least 18 Palestinians in a house in Shujaiya in Gaza City, local health authorities said, reports Reuters.
Medics said dozens of others were injured in the attack that hit a multi-floor residential building in the eastern suburb of Gaza City. There was no immediate comment from the Israeli army, according to Reuters.
Last week, the military ordered Shujaiya residents to evacuate, saying forces intended to operate against militants in the area.
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Iran says talks with US will be indirect, contrary to Trump’s words
Iran, wrongfooted by Donald Trump’s revelation that “direct talks” between the US and Iran on its nuclear programme are set to start in Oman on Saturday, insisted the talks would actually be in an indirect format, but added that the intentions of the negotiators were more important than the format.
Trump on Monday threw Tehran off guard by revealing the plan for the weekend talks and saying that if the talks failed Iran would be in “great danger”. There has been an unprecedented US military buildup across the Middle East in recent weeks, and Trump’s decision to make the talks public looks designed to press Iran to negotiate with urgency.
The US delegation to the talks will be led by Steve Witkoff, Trump’s special envoy to the Middle East, who has also been involved in talks with Russia over the Ukraine war; and the Iranian side by its foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi. Witkoff’s efforts to broker peace between Israel and Hamas and between Russia and Ukraine have so far failed.
Iran had in public been stalling about talks, saying simply that it was prepared for indirect talks with the US, but had not yet received a formal response from the US as to whether talks were going ahead. In a post on X issued some hours after Trump used an Oval Office press conference to reveal the agreement to stage weekend talks, Araghchi described the talks as an opportunity and a test. He insisted the ball was in the US’s court.
Speaking during a visit to Algiers, Araghchi elaborated that Iran wanted indirect talks. He said:
The form of negotiations is not important, whether they are direct or indirect. In my opinion, what is important is whether the negotiations are effective or ineffective, whether the parties are serious or not in the negotiations, the intentions of the parties in the negotiations, and the will to reach a solution. These are the criteria for action in any dialogue.”
He added Iran had not agreed on any formula that would allow indirect talks to convert into direct talks, but the US expects the talks to evolve into a direct negotiation. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader, has vetoed direct talks in protest at US sanctions and in deference to hardliners that believe talks with the US over Tehran’s nuclear programme are a political trap.
US defence secretary Pete Hegseth, speaking in the Oval Office on Monday during a visit by Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, warned that the US was “not going to relent” in its campaign targeting the Houthis.
“So we have a lot more options and a lot more pressure to apply,” Hegseth said. “And we know, because we see the reports, how devastating this campaign has been in them. And we will not relent.”
An Associated Press (AP) review has found the new US operation against the Houthis under president Donald Trump appears more extensive than those under former president Joe Biden, as Washington moves from solely targeting launch sites to firing at ranking personnel and dropping bombs on cities.
The new campaign of airstrikes started after the rebels threatened to begin targeting “Israeli” ships again over Israel blocking aid entering the Gaza Strip. The rebels have loosely defined what constitutes an Israeli ship, meaning many vessels could be targeted, reports the AP
The Houthis targeted more than 100 merchant vessels with missiles and drones, sinking two of them and killing four sailors from November 2023 until January of this year. They also launched attacks targeting US warships without success.
The US campaign shows no signs of stopping, as the Trump administration has linked its airstrikes on the Houthis to an effort to pressure Iran over its rapidly advancing nuclear program as well.
Suspected US airstrikes pounded the area around Yemen’s Red Sea port city of Hodeida on Tuesday night, killing at least six people, the Iran-backed Houthi rebels said, according to the Associated Press (AP).
The strikes hit around Hodeida’s al-Hawak district, the rebels said, and injured 16 people. The area is home to the city’s airport, which the rebels have used in the past to target shipping in the Red Sea, reports the AP.
Since its start, the intense campaign of US airstrikes targeting the rebels over their attacks on shipping in Middle East waters – related to the Israel-Hamas war – has killed at least 79 people, according to casualty figures released by the Houthis.
The AP reports that footage aired by the rebels’ al-Masirah satellite news channel showed chaotic scenes of people carrying the injured to waiting ambulances and rescuers searching by the light of their mobile phones. The target appeared in the footage to be a home in a residential neighbourhood, likely part of a wider campaign launched by the Trump administration to kill rebel leaders.
Other strikes targeted Yemen’s mountainous Amran governorate, north of the rebel-held capital of Sana’a. There, the Houthis described US strikes hitting telecommunication equipment. Previous US strikes also targeted telecommunications gear in Amran near Jebel Aswad.
Strikes later apparently targeted Jebel Nuqum near Sana’a. Others hit Dhamar and Ibb governorates, injuring three people, reports the AP.
The US military’s Central Command (Centcom), which oversees US military operations, did not immediately acknowledge the strikes, according to the news agency. That follows a pattern for the command, which now has authorisation from the White House to conduct strikes at will in the campaign that began on 15 March.
The US military also has not been providing any information on targets hit in the campaign. The White House has said more than 200 strikes have been conducted so far.
Updated
As calls for Lebanon’s Hezbollah to disarm gain momentum, a senior Hezbollah official told Reuters the group is ready to hold talks with the Lebanese president about its weapons if Israel withdraws from south Lebanon and stops its strikes.
US-backed president Joseph Aoun, who vowed when he took office in January to establish a state monopoly on the control of arms, intends to open talks with Hezbollah over its arsenal soon, three Lebanese political sources told Reuters.
Hezbollah emerged severely weakened from the 2024 conflict with Israel when its top leaders and thousands of its fighters were killed and much of its rocket arsenal destroyed. The blow was compounded when its ally Bashar al-Assad was toppled from power in Syria, cutting its supply lines from Iran, reports Reuters.
The senior Hezbollah official told the news agency that the group was ready to discuss its arms in the context of a national defence strategy but this hinged on Israel pulling out its troops from five hilltops in south Lebanon.
“Hezbollah is ready to discuss the matter of its arms if Israel withdraws from the five points, and halts its aggression against Lebanese,” the senior official told Reuters.
Hezbollah’s position on potential discussions about its arms has not been previously reported. The sources spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity due to political sensitivities. Hezbollah’s media office did not immediately respond to a request for comment and the presidency declined to comment, it added.
Israel, which sent ground troops into south Lebanon during the war, has largely withdrawn but decided in February not to leave the five hilltop positions. It said it intended eventually to hand them over to Lebanese troops once it was sure the security situation allowed.
The mother of an Israeli soldier held hostage in Gaza told Agence France-Presse (AFP) that she fears that Israel’s renewed bombardment of the territory puts his life at even greater risk.
“Our children are in danger,” Herut Nimrodi told AFP during an interview. Her son, Tamir, was 18 when he was taken to Gaza on 7 October 2023. “We don’t know much, but one thing that is certain is that military pressure on Gaza endangers the hostages,” she said.
Of the 251 hostages seized during Hamas’s unprecedented attack on Israel, 58 are still held in Gaza, including 34 the Israeli military says are dead.
A truce that lasted from 19 January to 17 March led to the return of 33 Israeli hostages – eight of them in coffins – in exchange for the release of about 1,800 Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.
But on 18 March, after weeks of disagreement with Hamas over how to extend the ceasefire, Israel resumed large-scale military operations in the Gaza Strip, beginning with heavy bombardments.
Tamir, a soldier with Cogat, the Israeli military body that oversees civilian affairs in the Palestinian territories, sent his mother a message on 7 October about the thousands of rockets that Hamas began launching at dawn that day. He was taken hostage 20 minutes later, along with two other soldiers killed two months later inside Gaza, under unknown circumstances, reports AFP.
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his government insist that increased military pressure is the only way to force Hamas to release the hostages, dead or alive.
“For a year and a half, that hasn’t worked. What’s worked is negotiations and pressure [from US President Donald Trump],” said Nimrodi, accusing Israel of not prioritising the return of the hostages.
Tamir, who turned 20 in captivity, is one of 24 hostages believed to be alive, though no proof of life has been sent since his abduction.
His mother regularly joins other hostage families at rallies in Tel Aviv, though they do not all agree on the best strategy to secure their return, reports AFP. Some, like Tzvika Mor, whose son was abducted at the Nova music festival, believe that strength rather than negotiation is the way to proceed.
“Hamas will never free the hostages out of the goodness of their heart and without military pressure,” he said. A founder of the Tikva forum – which means “hope” in Hebrew – Mor said, “every time Hamas says ’time out’, the government negotiates instead of increasing pressure to free all hostages at once”.
Indonesia offers to temporarily shelter injured and orphaned Palestinians from Gaza
Indonesian president Prabowo Subianto said on Wednesday that his country will offer temporary shelter to Palestinian medical evacuees and children orphaned by the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.
“We are ready to evacuate those who are injured or traumatised, and orphans, if they want to be evacuated to Indonesia, and we are ready to send planes to transport them,” Subianto said, adding that he has instructed his foreign affairs minister to discuss evacuation plans with the Palestinian authorities at once.
According to the Associated Press (AP), he said Indonesia is ready to evacuate a first group of about 1,000 victims, who will stay in the country until they have fully recovered from their injuries and Gaza is safe enough to return to. Subianto said the move was not for permanent resettlement.
Subianto spoke before getting on a flight to Abu Dhabi, the first stop in a weeklong tour of the Middle East that also includes stops in Turkey, Egypt, Qatar and Jordan. He said he would consult on the planned evacuations with those countries, some of which have also accepted Palestinians for humanitarian reasons, reports the AP.
He added that other countries have called on Indonesia to increase its role in seeking a resolution to the conflict in Gaza. The world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation has long been a strong supporter of the Palestinians.
“This is something complicated; it’s not easy, but I think it encourages the Indonesian government to play a more active role,” Subianto said.
UN secretary general says Gaza transformed into 'killing field'
United Nations (UN) secretary general António Guterres said on Tuesday that Gaza had become “a killing field” because Israel has continued to block aid, an accusation an Israeli official quickly denied, saying there was “no shortage” of aid, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP).
“More than an entire month has passed without a drop of aid into Gaza. No food. No fuel. No medicine. No commercial supplies. As aid has dried up, the floodgates of horror have re-opened,” Guterres said in remarks to journalists.
Pointing to the Geneva conventions governing the treatment of people in war, Guterres emphasised the obligation of the “occupying power” to ensure the provision of food and medical supplies to the population. “None of that is happening today. No humanitarian supplies can enter Gaza,” Guterres said.
According to AFP, Israeli ministry of foreign affairs spokesperson Oren Marmorstein rejected the allegations, saying there was “no shortage of humanitarian aid in the Gaza Strip.” Marmorstein further alleged that Hamas has used recent aid to Gaza to “rebuild its war machine.”
Guterres also referenced recent Israeli proposals over controlling aid into Gaza, which a UN source told AFP included monitoring calories to prevent misuse by Hamas.
“The Israeli authorities newly proposed ‘authorization mechanisms’ for aid delivery risk further controlling and callously limiting aid down to the last calorie and grain of flour,” he told reporters at UN headquarters in New York.
“Let me be clear – we will not participate in any arrangement that does not fully respect the humanitarian principles – humanity, impartiality, independence and neutrality,” Guterres said, demanding guarantees for the unhindered entry of aid to the coastal territory.
Guterres also raised the alarm about the situation in the West Bank. “The current path is a dead end – totally intolerable in the eyes of international law and history,” he said.
He added:
And the risk of the occupied West Bank transforming into another Gaza makes it even worse.
It is time to end the dehumanisation, protect civilians, release the hostages, ensure lifesaving aid, and renew the ceasefire.”