Here is a summary of today's events thus far
The Israeli army said Monday that one of its soldiers was killed in the country’s north, where cross-border fire with Lebanese militant group Hezbollah has soared during the 10-month-old Gaza war.
Benjamin Netanyahu’s three-hour meeting with Antony Blinken was “positive and conducted in a good spirit”, according to a statement from the Israeli prime minister’s office.
Blinken said in Tel Aviv now is “probably the best, maybe the last” opportunity to get the hostages home and to get a ceasefire.
Lebanese group Hezbollah said on Monday that two of its fighters were killed and claimed attacks on northern Israel, including with drones, in the latest cross-border violence amid fears of full-blown war.
The armed wings of Hamas and Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility on Monday for a bomb blast near a synagogue in Tel Aviv that Israeli police and the Shin Bet intelligence agency described as a terrorist attack.
The Health Ministry in Hamas-run Gaza has said there have now been 40,139 Palestinians killed and 92,743 injured in Israel’s millitary offensive on Gaza since October 7.
Top US diplomat Antony Blinken spoke to Israeli defence minister Yoav Gallant after he met one-on-one with prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu for 2 and a half hours on Monday.
Blinken will travel to Egypt on Tuesday for meetings in the Mediterranean city of el-Alamein after he wraps up his Israel stop.
Mediators will meet again this week in Cairo to try to cement a ceasefire.
Updated
The Israeli government has released footage of a person who it claims is the bomber who detonated explosives in Tel Aviv.
“Fortunately, only one person sustained moderate injuries when the bomb the terrorist was carrying detonated in his backpack, killing him instantly”, it said in a statement.
It said Israeli security agencies continue to maintain heightened security measures following the incident, which involved a “powerful explosive”.
Hamas has claimed responsibility for an attempted terror attack in Tel Aviv earlier this week involving a powerful explosive.
— Israel ישראל (@Israel) August 19, 2024
Fortunately, only one person sustained moderate injuries when the bomb the terrorist was carrying detonated in his backpack, killing him instantly.… pic.twitter.com/1CXw7NYEQi
A bomber in Tel Aviv failed to reach a more populated area because his explosives detonated, the Israeli government spokesman has commented.
Israeli police and the Shin Bet intelligence agency described the bomb blast near a synagogue in the city as a terrorist attack. The armed wings of Hamas and Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility on Monday.
Israeli government spokesperson David Mencer said the man was carrying a backpack loaded with explosives that detonated “before he managed to reach a more heavily populated area”.
Updated
Claims of Palestinians being tortured, left untreated in hospital and unable to escape constant bombardment have been submitted to the high court in London by lawyers seeking an order preventing the UK government continuing to grant arms export licences to British companies selling arms to Israel.
The 14 witness statements covering more than 100 pages come from Palestinian and western medical doctors working in Gaza’s hospitals, as well as from ambulance drivers, civil defence department workers and aid workers.
The graphic evidence is designed to support a request for a court order that the UK government has acted irrationally in refusing to ban the sale of arms, arguing there was not a clear risk the weapons would be used to commit breaches of international humanitarian law. This is the statutory test set for the government to decide whether to grant arms export licences. The Labour government is reviewing the policy.
Read more here:
Israel is “flagrantly and regularly” committing war crimes in Gaza, according to a former British diplomat who recently resigned over ministers’ failure to ban arms sales to Benjamin Netanyahu’s government.
Mark Smith, who resigned as a counter-terrorism official at the British embassy in Dublin after raising complaints about the sale of British weapons to Israel, told the BBC on Monday that he believed Israel to be in breach of international law.
Smith told Radio 4’s Today programme: “When you look at what constitutes a war crime, it’s actually quite clear, even from what you see in open source on the TV, that the state of Israel is perpetrating war crimes in plain sight.
“Anybody who has a kind of basic understanding of these things can see that there are war crimes being committed, not once, not twice, not a few times, but quite flagrantly and openly and regularly.”
Read the full report here:
Updated
The Israeli army said Monday that one of its soldiers was killed in the country’s north, where cross-border fire with Lebanese militant group Hezbollah has soared during the 10-month-old Gaza war.
Mahmood Amaria, a 45-year-old member of the Bedouin Trackers Unit, “fell during combat in northern Israel”, a military statement said.
In Gaza, a mother worries that her month-old son, Mohammed, could be infected with polio after the Palestinian health ministry confirmed the first case in the enclave on Friday, ending a 25 year period in which the Strip was polio-free.
Just three days after his birth, Ghada al-Ghandour’s son Mohammed started developing skin rashes.
“He had skin rashes as if he was burnt,” she told Reuters. A doctor told her there were no creams to treat her child.
She later brought him to Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza to seek a diagnosis and treatment. The rash fueled his mother’s fears that other symptoms and diseases could follow due to a lack of hygiene and medical supplies in Gaza after more than 10 months of conflict.
Updated
The Israeli military said a soldier was killed on Monday and another severely wounded in northern Israel, a region that has come under near-daily rocket and drone attack from Hezbollah militants based in Lebanon.
The military said it had successfully intercepted multiple drone strikes on Israel’s north near the border with Lebanon, but that some of the drones had landed in the northern region of Ya’ara.
Netanyahu's office says meeting with Blinken was 'positive'
Benjamin Netanyahu’s three-hour meeting with Antony Blinken was “positive and conducted in a good spirit”, according to a statement from the Israeli prime minister’s office.
“The prime minister reiterated Israel’s commitment to the latest American proposal regarding the release of our hostages — taking into account Israel’s security needs, which he insists on firmly,” Netanyahu’s office said.
Hezbollah says two fighters killed in Israeli strike
Lebanese group Hezbollah said on Monday that two of its fighters were killed and claimed attacks on northern Israel, including with drones, in the latest cross-border violence amid fears of full-blown war.
We had earlier (see post at 09.24BST) reported Lebanon’s health ministry saying that an Israeli strike killed two people in south Lebanon on Monday in the border village of Hula but without giving further details of their identities.
Now Agence France-Presse have reported Hezbollah said two of its fighters were “martyred on the road to Jerusalem”, the phrase the Iran-backed group has used to refer to members killed by Israeli fire since October.
The Israeli military said air forces struck “Hezbollah terrorists” in the Hula area and “Hezbollah military structures” elsewhere in south Lebanon.
Lebanon’s official National News Agency (NNA) reported Israeli shelling and raids on several southern areas, and said “enemy warplanes broke the sound barrier twice over Beirut and its suburbs... at low altitude”.
Hezbollah said it launched a “simultaneous air attack” with “explosive-laden drones” on two Israeli military positions - the Yaara barracks near the border, and a base near the coastal town of Acre, around 15 kilometres (10 miles) from the frontier.
The Israeli military said in a statement that “multiple suspicious aerial targets were identified crossing from Lebanon”.
Air defences “intercepted some of the targets, and others fell” in the Yaara area, the statement added.
Updated
Police in Istanbul have launched a large-scale investigation after a Palestinian was killed and two others were wounded in a shooting as they sat in a car, officials and media said Monday.
The killer dropped a handgun fitted with a silencer at the scene, the Istanbul governor’s office said in a brief statement, according to Associated Press.
The Demiroren news agency reported that the man sitting in the driver’s seat was killed and his friend seriously wounded in the shooting late Sunday. Another man, who the governor’s office described as the dead man’s bodyguard, was injured in the foot.
The identities of the victims were not disclosed beyond their initials. But the apparently professional nature of the attack led to widespread speculation in the Turkish media over whether Israel may have been involved. It was also suggested that the shooting may be related to business debts.
Turkey has for years provided haven for Hamas officials. In December, the head of Israel’s Shin Bet security agency said that his organisation was prepared to target Hamas anywhere, including in Turkey.
Updated
Claims of Palestinians being tortured, left untreated in hospital and unable to escape constant bombardment have been submitted to the high court in London by lawyers seeking an order preventing the UK government continuing to grant arms export licences to British companies selling arms to Israel.
The 14 witness statements covering more than 100 pages come from Palestinian and western medical doctors working in Gaza’s hospitals, as well as from ambulance drivers, civil defence department workers and aid workers.
The graphic evidence is designed to support a request for a court order that the UK government has acted irrationally in refusing to ban the sale of arms, arguing there was not a clear risk the weapons would be used to commit breaches of international humanitarian law. This is the statutory test set for the government to decide whether to grant arms export licences. The Labour government is reviewing the policy.
You can read the full story here:
Video footage of top US diplomat Antony Blinken’s meeting with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been released.
U.S. secretary of state Antony Blinken warned on Monday that the latest push for a Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal was probably the best and possibly last opportunity, urging Israel and Hamas towards an elusive agreement.
Updated
The armed wings of Hamas and Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility on Monday for a bomb blast near a synagogue in Tel Aviv that Israeli police and the Shin Bet intelligence agency described as a terrorist attack.
A man who was carrying the bomb was killed and a passerby was injured in the incident late on Sunday, according to police at the scene.
In their statement the Brigades added that their “martyrdom operations” inside Israel would return to the forefront as long as the “occupation’s massacres and assassination policy continue” - an allusion to Israel’s offensive in Gaza and the July 31 killing of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran.
Israel has neither claimed nor denied responsibility for Haniyeh’s death in the Iranian capital.
The US secretary of state has met with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem, and is due to travel on Tuesday to Cairo where ceasefire talks are expected to resume this week.
Western ally Jordan, hostage supporters protesting in Israel, and Hamas itself have called for pressure on Netanyahu in order for an agreement to be reached.
On Sunday Netanyahu reiterated that Hamas “remains obstinate” and must be pressured, a day after his office said Israeli negotiators had expressed “cautious optimism” about reaching a deal.
Here is a first picture of the meeting:
Updated
Mediators said they were hopeful about brokering a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war after two days of talks in the Qatari capital, Doha, last week, announcing that a “bridging proposal” had been agreed.
However, previous optimism that a deal was close at hand proved to be misplaced. Joe Biden said in February that he believed a ceasefire agreement was “imminent”, while the beginning of Ramadan in March, and intense diplomatic efforts before Israel’s invasion of Rafah in May, were also touted as “last chances”.
Will the latest talks between Hamas and Israel lead to a ceasefire in Gaza? Read our explainer here:
Back in May, when the image of a decapitated child in Rafah started circulating, my friend texted: This is the image. This is the one. Now the world’s going to roar. For many of us, this has been the reality of the last months: waiting for the image that will shake complacency and complicity; waiting for the image so staggering it’ll be non-negotiable. An amputated toddler. A blown-apart body. A girl hanging from the side of a building. We are still waiting.
As we are saturated with horror, it gets normalized – and Israel’s assault continues unfettered. A Palestinian poet on dehumanization:
The Health Ministry in Hamas-run Gaza has said there have now been 40,139 Palestinians killed and 92,743 injured in Israel’s millitary offensive on Gaza since October 7. Gaza’s ministry of health do not distinguish between fighters and civilians in casualty figures.
The US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, said it could be the ‘best and last opportunity’ to get hostages held in Gaza home and secure a ceasefire as he arrived in Israel on a diplomatic mission. After landing in Tel Aviv, Blinken was quoted as saying that it was a ‘decisive moment’ for the negotiations. The push comes amid heightened fears of an anticipated Iranian and Hezbollah attack against Israel and the threat of an all-out regional war.
Watch the video:
Israeli police said Monday that a “powerful” explosion the night before in Tel Aviv was a “terror attack” that wounded one person, amid heightened tensions as Gaza mediators push for a truce.
“This was a terror attack involving the explosion of a powerful explosive,” the police force said in a statement. On Sunday authorities reported that the blast had killed one person, who Israeli media said was the suspected assailant.
Israel’s president has claimed there is “no greater global humanitarian cause” than returning his nation’s hostages, as top US diplomat Antony Blinken visits Tel Aviv for peace talks.
Blinken earlier said President Joe Biden had sent him “to get this agreement to the line and ultimately over the line”. “It is time for it to get done,” Blinken said.
Isaac Herzog posted pictures of himself with Blinken on ‘X’ and stated he had thanks him “for the important efforts of the U.S., along with the other mediators, to bring our hostages back home”.
Herzog added: “I reiterated that there is no greater global humanitarian cause than returning our hostages to their families. Side by side with ensuring Israel’s right to self-defense.
“The State of Israel is surrounded and threatened by terror on different fronts, but at the same time, it is also surrounded and supported by allies and friends, chief among them the United States of America.”
He thanked the Biden administration for leading a coalition “to project and deploy power to ensure regional stability and Israel’s right to protect itself”.
This morning, I thanked @SecBlinken for the important efforts of the U.S., along with the other mediators, to bring our hostages back home. I reiterated that there is no greater global humanitarian cause than returning our hostages to their families. Side by side with ensuring… pic.twitter.com/aA0LVg1Tok
— יצחק הרצוג Isaac Herzog (@Isaac_Herzog) August 19, 2024
Updated
Two people killed by Israeli strike in Lebanon, country's health ministry says
Lebanon’s health ministry said an Israeli strike killed two people in south Lebanon on Monday, while Hezbollah claimed attacks on troops and military positions in northern Israel, including with drones.
An “Israeli enemy strike” on the border village of Hula killed two people, Lebanon’s health ministry said, without specifying if they were fighters or civilians.
Lebanon’s official National News Agency reported Israeli shelling and raids on several southern areas, saying “enemy drone strikes” killed two people in Hula.
Hezbollah said Monday it launched a “simultaneous air attack” with “explosive-laden drones” on two Israeli military positions - a barracks near the border and a base near the coastal town of Acre, around 15 kilometres (10 miles) from the frontier.
Updated
My life in Gaza was constantly at risk, and I could have been targeted and killed at any moment. Had I stayed, there is every chance that I would’ve been one of the 40,000 Palestinians killed by Israel, of which as many as 17,000 are children, over 11,000 women and 113 journalists like me. A Lancet study even suggests that the Gaza death toll could exceed 186,000.
I had less than 24 hours notice that I was leaving Gaza, but it wasn’t one of those times where I was excited to pack to go on a vacation. It felt like I was living everything my grandpa once lived through during the Nakba in 1948. I left Gaza with a heavy heart, a fake Dolce & Gabbana top, a black jacket and lipstick.
But now that Plestia Alaqad has fled and survived, she finds herself this week a “national security risk” for Australia. Read more here:
Another round of ceasefire and hostage talks, this time in Doha, has ended in disappointment. This is in large part because Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, is unlikely to accept any agreement that Hamas could present as a victory – and has handcuffed the Israeli mediators with conditions that appear impossible for Hamas to accept.
Beyond the substance of any potential agreement between the two sides is the emotional juice of so much of the Israeli-Palestinian relationship: the battle for national dignity and honour. Huge quantities of explosives have been dropped on Gaza by Israel since 7 October because of the humiliation felt by all Israelis, and especially Israel’s leaders and military. So much of this war over more than 10 months has been fought on both sides as a war of revenge. Nonetheless, it also has major strategic consequences for Israel, Hamas, the Palestinian people, the nations of the region, and the world’s major powers – above all the United States.
Neither side will tolerate the necessary concessions until the US, Egypt and Qatar exert their considerable influence, Gershon Baskin argues in full here:
Top US Diplomat Antony Blinken met Israeli President Isaac Herzog, who also commented on ongoing ceasefire talks.
Herzog, speaking alongside Blinken, denounced “the refusal of Hamas to move forward”.
The president, who holds a largely ceremonial role, said Israelis wanted to see the return “as soon as possible” of hostages still held in Gaza.
Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid, in a post on social media platform X, called on Netanyahu to “not miss this opportunity” and “bring them back”.
Western ally Jordan, hostage supporters protesting in Israel, and Hamas itself have called for pressure on Netanyahu in order for an agreement to be reached. Netanyahu was “fully responsible for thwarting the efforts of the mediators”, the Palestinian movement said in a statement.
Updated
Hezbollah on Monday claimed attacks on troops and military positions in northern Israel, including a drone strike on a base and an assault on soldiers allegedly “infiltrating” near the Lebanese border.
The Iran-backed group has exchanged regular cross-border fire with the Israeli army in support of ally Hamas since the Palestinian militant group’s October 7 attack on Israel sparked the Gaza war.
Hezbollah said Monday it launched a “simultaneous air attack” with “explosive-laden drones” on two Israeli military positions - a barracks near the border and a base near the coastal town of Acre, around 15 kilometres (10 miles) from the frontier, according to AFP.
It said it came “in response” to an Israeli “attack and assassination” in south Lebanon’s Tyre area. A fighter from the group was killed in an Israeli strike in the area on Saturday.
While top US diplomat Antony Blinken is in Tel Aviv, back in America political protests have begun over the Gaza conflict.
As Kamala Harris prepares to be formally nominated, organisers are expecting widespread protests at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
A protest of up to 1,000 marchers combining support for the Palestinian cause and abortion rights gathered at the iconic corner of Wacker Drive and Michigan Avenue in Chicago Sunday evening. The protest is the first of several demonstrations, legally permitted and not, planned for the convention.
You can read a full report by George Chidi in Chicago here:
Israeli airstrikes on Yemen’s Hodeidah port last month appeared to be an indiscriminate or disproportionate attack on civilians which may amount to a war crime, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said on Monday in a report carried by Reuters.
Israel said on 20 July its warplanes struck Houthi military targets near Hodeidah.
The attack targeted oil facilities and a power station and HRW said it killed at least six people and wounded at least 80.
It took place a day after a Houthi drone hit Israel’s economic hub Tel Aviv, killing one person, which HRW said also may constitute a war crime.
The retaliatory Israeli airstrikes on Hodeidah hit more than two dozen oil storage tanks and two shipping cranes in the port, as well as a power plant in the province’s Salif district, Human Rights Watch said.
“The attacks appeared to cause disproportionate harm to civilians and civilian objects. Serious violations of the laws of war committed willfully, that is deliberately or recklessly, are war crimes.”
There was no immediate comment from the Israeli foreign ministry.
What’s at stake in the ceasefire and hostage-release negotiations?
A ceasefire would halt the deadliest war ever fought between Israelis and Palestinians, a conflict that has destabilised the Middle East and sparked worldwide protests. Associated Press has compiled a primer on the current situation.
Israel’s offensive has killed over 40,000 Palestinians in Gaza, according to health officials. The vast majority of the population has been displaced, often multiple times. Hundreds of thousands of people are packed into squalid tent camps, the health sector has largely collapsed and entire neighbourhoods have been obliterated.
The Hamas-led attack on 7 October killed around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and saw militants abduct around 250 hostages. Some 110 hostages are still in Gaza, with Israeli authorities saying around a third are dead. Over 100 hostages were released during a weeklong ceasefire in November.
Lebanon’s Hezbollah has launched drones and rockets into Israel on a near-daily basis since the start of the war, and Israel has responded with airstrikes and artillery. The violence has escalated, forcing tens of thousands of people to flee their homes on both sides of the border.
Hezbollah has vowed an even more severe attack — without saying when or how — in response to the killing last month of Fuad Shukur, one of its top commanders, in an Israeli airstrike in Beirut. Iran and Israel traded fire directly in April, and many fear a repeat if Iran makes good on its threat to avenge the killing of top Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran. Hezbollah has said it would halt its operations along the border if there is calm in Gaza.
What are the sticking points?
The two sides have been working to an evolving proposal for a three-phase process in which Hamas would free all the hostages in exchange for the release of Palestinian prisoners, an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza and a lasting ceasefire.
President Joe Biden came out in favour of the proposal in a 31 May speech and the UN Security Council approved it. But since then, Hamas has proposed “amendments” and Israel has asked for “clarifications,” with each side accusing the other of making new demands it cannot accept.
Hamas wants assurances that Israel will not resume the war after the first batch of hostages — around 30 of the most vulnerable — are released. Israel wants to ensure negotiations do not drag on indefinitely over the second phase, in which the remaining living hostages, including male soldiers, are to be freed.
Netanyahu has also demanded in recent weeks that Israel maintain a military presence along the Gaza-Egypt border which it says is necessary to stop Hamas and other militias rearming and regrouping.
Who decides whether there is a ceasefire?
Any deal would have to be accepted by Netanyahu and Yahya Sinwar, who helped mastermind the 7 October attack and became Hamas’ overall leader after Haniyeh was killed.
Netanyahu faces intense pressure from families of the hostages and much of the Israeli public to make a deal. But far-right leaders in his coalition have threatened to bring down the government if he concedes too much.
Sinwar, meanwhile, is hiding in Gaza, likely deep inside Hamas’ vast network of tunnels, and has stuck to a hard line throughout the talks. He also tops Israel’s most-wanted list, raising questions about what happens if he is killed.
In the past it has taken several days for Hamas’ negotiators to send proposals to Sinwar and receive his feedback. That means that even when the work of hammering out the latest proposal is completed, it would likely take a week or more for Hamas to formally respond to it. When Hamas accepted an earlier proposal in May, spontaneous celebrations erupted — but those hopes were soon dashed.
Aid groups have called for a ceasefire since the start of the war, saying it’s the only way to ensure desperately needed food and humanitarian aid reaches Gaza.
Blinken says this is 'maybe the last' chance to get hostages out of Gaza and secure ceasefire
We have more of what Antony Blinken said in Tel Aviv.
“This is a decisive moment – probably the best, maybe the last, opportunity to get the hostages home, to get a ceasefire and to put everyone on a better path to enduring peace and security,” Agence France-Presse quoted the top US diplomat as saying during a meeting with the Israeli president, Isaac Herzog.
Blinken said President Joe Biden had sent him “to get this agreement to the line and ultimately over the line”.
“It is time for it to get done,” Blinken said.
It’s also time to make sure that no one takes any steps that could derail this process.
We’re working to make sure that there is no escalation, that there are no provocations, that there are no actions that in any way could move us away from getting this deal over the line, or, for that matter, escalating the conflict to other places, and to greater intensity.
Blinken, on his ninth visit to the Middle East since Hamas’s 7 October attack on Israel, is scheduled to meet later on Monday with Benjamin Netanyahu, the prime minister.
The visiting secretary of state said it was a “fraught moment” in Israel and warned against any moves that could heighten regional tensions, following threats from Iran and Lebanon’s Hezbollah to avenge the recent killings of two militant leaders.
Herzog, who holds a largely ceremonial role, said Israelis wanted to see the return “as soon as possible” of hostages still held in Gaza since the 7 October attack that triggered the war.
“There is no greater humanitarian objective, and there’s no greater humanitarian cause, than bringing back our hostages,” Herzog told Blinken.
Updated
Photos have arrived of Antony Blinken meeting the Israeli president, Isaac Herzog, in Tel Aviv on Monday.
The US secretary of state said before their meeting that was a “decisive moment” in the Gaza ceasefire talks, describing the latest diplomatic push by Washington to strike a deal between Israel and Hamas to end the war as “probably the best, maybe the last opportunity” to also get the hostages in Gaza home, Reuters reports.
Blinken also said Washington was working to ensure there was no regional escalation amid concerns over a possible attack by Iran on Israel following the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran in July.
Blinken says truce talks are 'maybe the last opportunity' to get hostages out of Gaza
Welcome to our live coverage of the Israel-Gaza war and wider crisis in the Middle East crisis. Here’s an overview of the latest.
The US secretary of state has declared it to be “maybe the last opportunity” to get hostages held in Gaza out after he arrived in Israel to push for a ceasefire agreement.
After landing in Tel Aviv Antony Blinken was quoted as saying that it was a “decisive moment” for the truce talks.
Making his ninth trip to the Middle East since October, the top US diplomat is to meet Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other Israeli leaders. Blinken aimed “to press any and all parties that it’s important to get the remaining pieces of this across the finish line”, a US official said.
The push comes amid heightened fears of an anticipated Iranian and Hezbollah attack against Israel and the threat of an all-out regional war.
Netanyahu earlier traded blame with Hamas for delays in reaching a ceasefire agreement.
Meanwhile, Israeli strikes killed 19 people in Gaza on Sunday, including six children, Palestinian health authorities said. The children and their mother were killed in an Israeli airstrike on a house in the central town of Deir Al-Balah, the officials said. There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military.
In Israel, police were investigating an explosion that killed one person in Tel Aviv on Sunday, a spokesperson said, reportedly appearing to suggest the incident could have been a militant attack.
“As a result of the explosion, one person, whose identity is still unknown, was killed, and another person was moderately injured.”
In other news:
An attack at a Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank on Sunday killed an Israeli man, a hospital said, three days after a deadly raid on a nearby Palestinian village. Doctors made several attempts to save his life, the Beilinson Hospital said. The Israeli military said a “terrorist” had “attacked a civilian, stole his weapon and made his escape” in the Kedumim settlement, in the northern West Bank. Local officials identified the victim as a resident of the settlement which is close to the village of Jit, where the Palestinian health ministry said Israeli settlers had killed a 23-year-old Palestinian man in an attack on Thursday.
Israeli air force jets attacked Hezbollah military buildings in southern Lebanon in the areas of Aita al-Sha’ab, Beit Leaf and Khula on Sunday night, the Israel Defence Forces said on X. An aerial video accompanied its post on Monday.
Fighting between Hezbollah and Israel intensified over the weekend, with an Israeli attack on Saturday one of the bloodiest for civilians since fighting began in October. Ten Syrian workers and their family members were killed in what Israel said was a strike on a Hezbollah weapons depot in Nabatieh, south Lebanon. In response, Hezbollah launched a 55-missile barrage at the town of Ayelet HaShahar, in northern Israel.
Three Unifil peacekeepers were lightly injured in an explosion on Sunday while on patrol in the Lebanese border town of Yarin. A source in Unifil (UN interim force in Lebanon) said they believed the soldiers were injured by a nearby Israeli airstrike but that they were still investigating the incident.
Israel is conducting a “robust investigation” of suspects accused of sexually abusing a Palestinian prisoner, the foreign affairs ministry said on Sunday, adding it was committed to upholding international legal standards on the treatment of detainees. The UN special rapporteur on torture on Friday condemned what she called a “particularly gruesome” case of the alleged sexual abuse of a Palestinian prisoner by Israeli soldiers and said the perpetrators must be held accountable. Israeli media reports said the alleged abuse was of a member of an elite Hamas unit at the Sde Teiman detention facility in the Negev desert in southern Israel.
A UK Foreign Office official has resigned over the UK’s refusal to ban arms exports to Israel because of alleged breaches of international law. Mark Smith, a counter-terrorism official based at the British embassy in Dublin, said he had resigned after making numerous internal complaints – including through an official whistleblowing mechanism – but receiving nothing but pro-forma responses.
US Central Command said on Sunday its forces destroyed a Houthi uncrewed aerial vehicle in a Houthi-controlled area of Yemen.
Updated