France sees ‘window’ to end wars in Gaza and Lebanon after Trump win – minister
Franceâs foreign minister, Jean-Noel Barrot, who met hostage families earlier today, has been speaking to journalists in Jerusalem, alongside Israel Katz, the outgoing foreign minister who is due to replace Yoav Gallant as defence minister.
He expressed hope that president-elect Donald Trumpâs victory in the US election would increase the likelihood of Israelâs wars in Gaza and Lebanon being brought to an end.
Citing Trumpâs âwish to see the end of the Middle Eastâs endless warsâ, he said:
I believe a window has opened for putting an end to the tragedy in which Israelis, Palestinians and the entire region have been immersed since 7 October.
âDiplomatic solutions are possible to free the hostages, protect civilians and ensure the safety of all,â the French foreign minister wrote on X, shortly before meeting Katz. âIt is time to end the tragedy that began on October 7.â
Trump has promised to bring âpeaceâ to the Middle East, but not specified how. Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was among the first of the worldâs leaders to call Trump with congratulations on Wednesday, has called him the âbest friend that Israel has ever had in the White Houseâ.
In this analysis piece, my colleague, Julian Borger, explains why Trumpâs election night victory over Kamala Harris has been so welcomed by Netanyahu. Here is an extract from it:
The incoming administration will almost certainly not defend Unrwa. Trump cut off US funding to the agency in 2018 and it was only restored by Biden three years later. The UN and the whole relief effort in the region could well face a funding crisis.
The restoration of Trump also removes a substantial barrier to Israelâs full control and potential annexation of at least part of Gaza and the West Bank. The incoming president has shown himself unburdened by the weight of international law and UN security council resolutions when it comes to territory. His administration recognised Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights in 2019.
Key events
Lebanese army says 3 troops and 4 UN peacekeepers injured in Israeli airstrike on Sidon
The Lebanese army said three of its troops and four Malaysian UN peacekeepers have been injured in an Israeli airstrike near an army checkpoint in the southern Lebanese city of Sidon. The army said the airstrike killed three Lebanese citizens.
âThe Israeli enemy targeted a car while it was passing through the Awali checkpoint in Sidon, which led to the killing of three citizens who were inside it, in addition to the injury of three soldiers manning the checkpoint and four members of the Malaysianâ contingent in the United Nations peacekeeping mission in Lebanon (Unifil) force, the army said in a statement.
The UN has said Unifil positions had come under attack many times since the start of Israelâs ground assault on southern Lebanon on 1 October, including by direct fire. Israel has denied deliberately targeting UN peacekeepers, and has said Lebanese militant group Hezbollah has used Unifil positions as cover for attacks that have killed Israelis.
Israeli airstrike kills 10 Palestinians in school sheltering displaced people in Gaza city – medics
An Israeli airstrike has killed at least 10 Palestinians and injured many others in a school housing displaced people in al-Shati refugee camp in Gaza City, one of the Gaza Stripâs eight historic refugee camps, according to medics.
Palestinian news agency Wafa reports that Israeli forces bombed the al-Shati elementary boys school, which is affiliated with the UN relief agency for Palestinian refugees (Unrwa). Unrwa has provided education, health care and other basic services to millions of Palestinian refugees across the region.
The Israeli parliament â the Knesset – passed two bills last month banning Unrwa from Israeli territory and prohibiting Israeli state contact with the agency on the basis of allegations that Hamas had infiltrated it.
Unrwaâs commissioner general, Philippe Lazzarini, has previously said his agency had responded promptly and seriously to the initial Israeli allegations that 12 staff members had taken part in the 7 October Hamas-led attack on southern Israel, in which 1,200 people were killed. He said 10 staff had been sacked immediately and two investigations completed, including one by the former French foreign minister Catherine Colonna.
Unrwa said the new laws â due to come into effect within three months â will cause the supply chain of aid to Gaza to âfall apartâ, exacerbating an already dire humanitarian crisis caused by Israelâs war on the territory.
As we reported in an earlier post, several large Israeli airstrikes hit Beirutâs southern suburbs early on Thursday, including one on a site adjacent to Lebanonâs only international airport, Rafic Hariri.
The Israeli military had earlier issued an evacuation notice for the site, claiming there were Hezbollah facilities there, without giving more details.
There were no immediate reports of casualties. Here is a video of the huge fireball near Rafic Hariri airport:
Incoming rocket sirens have been heard in the northern Israeli city of Haifa and in surrounding areas.
The Israel Defense Forces said earlier this afternoon that about 40 rockets were fired from Lebanon, with some being shot down, while others were reported to have struck inside Israel.
The rockets triggered sirens in the upper and western Galilee and Haifa Bay area, according to reporting from the Times of Israel.
Al Jazeera said the Israeli military has extended the order shutting down its bureau in the occupied West Bank, the Associated Press reports.
Walid al-Omari, the networkâs bureau chief, said Israeli soldiers raided the office in Ramallah again early this morning and posted a notice extending the closure for an additional 45 days.
Israel had previously raided the office and shut it down in late September. Earlier this year, authorities barred the Qatar-based network from operating in Israel.
The Israeli military has repeatedly accused journalists from the network of being âterrorist agentsâ in Gaza affiliated with Hamas or its ally, Islamic Jihad. Al Jazeera, which says it has no affiliation with militant groups, vehemently denies these accusations.
The network says that Israel systematically targets its employees in the Gaza Strip and that Israeli forces have killed several Al Jazeera journalists and their family members in Gaza since Israelâs war began last October.
As of 7 November 2024, preliminary investigations conducted by the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) showed at least 137 journalists and media workers have been killed since the war began, making it the deadliest period for journalists since CPJ began gathering data in 1992.
Last week, Al Jazeera Media Network said journalists in Gaza have received âgrievous threatsâ as they continue to report on Israelâs war on the territory (foreign journalists are banned from entering Gaza).
âThese systematic attacks extend beyond individual tragedies; they constitute a calculated campaign to silence those who dare to document the realities of war and devastation and a direct assault on the fundamental right to information,â the network said.
France sees ‘window’ to end wars in Gaza and Lebanon after Trump win – minister
Franceâs foreign minister, Jean-Noel Barrot, who met hostage families earlier today, has been speaking to journalists in Jerusalem, alongside Israel Katz, the outgoing foreign minister who is due to replace Yoav Gallant as defence minister.
He expressed hope that president-elect Donald Trumpâs victory in the US election would increase the likelihood of Israelâs wars in Gaza and Lebanon being brought to an end.
Citing Trumpâs âwish to see the end of the Middle Eastâs endless warsâ, he said:
I believe a window has opened for putting an end to the tragedy in which Israelis, Palestinians and the entire region have been immersed since 7 October.
âDiplomatic solutions are possible to free the hostages, protect civilians and ensure the safety of all,â the French foreign minister wrote on X, shortly before meeting Katz. âIt is time to end the tragedy that began on October 7.â
Trump has promised to bring âpeaceâ to the Middle East, but not specified how. Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was among the first of the worldâs leaders to call Trump with congratulations on Wednesday, has called him the âbest friend that Israel has ever had in the White Houseâ.
In this analysis piece, my colleague, Julian Borger, explains why Trumpâs election night victory over Kamala Harris has been so welcomed by Netanyahu. Here is an extract from it:
The incoming administration will almost certainly not defend Unrwa. Trump cut off US funding to the agency in 2018 and it was only restored by Biden three years later. The UN and the whole relief effort in the region could well face a funding crisis.
The restoration of Trump also removes a substantial barrier to Israelâs full control and potential annexation of at least part of Gaza and the West Bank. The incoming president has shown himself unburdened by the weight of international law and UN security council resolutions when it comes to territory. His administration recognised Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights in 2019.
Summary of the day so far â¦
It is approaching 2pm in Beirut, Tel Aviv and Gaza City, 3.30pm in Tehran and 7am in Washington DC. Here are the latest headlines â¦
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Palestinian news agency Wafa reports that three children are among the latest victims of Israeli airstrikes in the Gaza Strip, killed in an attack in the east of Rafah
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Israelâs military has announced it was expanding its ground operation in Gaza, saying that âtroops started to operate in the area of Beit Lahiaâ after, it said, âprior intelligence information and a situational assessment indicating the presence of terrorists and terrorist infrastructureâ. Israel said that in the past day it had conducted 110 airstrikes combined in Gaza and Lebanon
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Overnight the IDF released the name of a solider it said was killed in fighting in southern Lebanon
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A 22-year-old Palestinian was reported killed by Israeli security forces in the Tulkarm refugee camp in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Others were wounded when an Israeli drone attacked the camp
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Lebanonâs transport minister said the countryâs only international airport was operating normally after Israeli strikes on the southern suburbs of the capital Beirut, including one on an area near the hub
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Lebanonâs National News Agency reports that during the night at least ten locations were the subject of Israeli airstrikes, while heavy artillery fire continued on locations in the south of the country near the UN-drawn blue line that separates Lebanon and Israel.
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Gali Baharav Miara, the attorney general of Israel, has written to Israelâs high court to say that Benjamin Netanyahu was within his powers to fire defense minister Yoav Gallant earlier this week. The move by Netanyahu sparked protests across Israel and a legal challenge
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Iranâs supreme leader Ali Khamenei has said acts of jihad in Lebanon, Gaza, and Palestine âwill definitely lead to the victory of the Resistance Frontâ
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Iranâs foreign minister has criticised the EU for what he described as a failure to take action over Israelâs âheinous crimes and genocide in Palestine and Lebanonâ. Abbas Araqchi was speaking to Finlandâs foreign minister Elina Valtonen. Iranâs foreign ministry spokesperson has said the presidential election result in the US was a chance for a new administration to âreview the wrong approaches of the pastâ
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The Palestinian Authorityâs ambassador to the UK, Husam Zomlot, has called on US president-elect Donald Trump to act immediately to intervene in the Middle East conflict, and not wait until he takes office in January. Speaking on Israelâs Channel 12 news, a spokesperson for the US Republican party said she believed Trump wanted the conflict in the Middle East to end with âa decisive victoryâ for Israel
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The Israeli defence ministry said on Thursday it had signed an agreement to acquire 25 next generation F-15 fighter jets from Boeing as part of a broader package of US aid approved by the outgoing Biden/Harris administration
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French interior minister Bruno Retailleau has said he is not ruling out sanctions against the football club Paris Saint-Germain after their fan unveiled a large âFree Palestineâ banner ahead of last nightâs Uefa Champions League tie against Spainâs Atlético Madrid
Beirut airport operating normally after ‘minor damage’ from Israeli strike
Lebanonâs transport minister said the countryâs only international airport was operating normally after Israeli strikes on the southern suburbs of the capital Beirut, including one on an area near the hub.
Minister Ali Hamie told AFP that planes were taking off and landing without any issue.
The overnight strike in Beirut caused âminor damageâ to some buildings but ânot inside the terminal buildingâ, an airport official told AFP on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to media.
He said the strike had affected a maintenance building belonging to a subsidiary of Middle East Airlines, Lebanonâs national carrier which is practically the only airline still operating flights, although aid deliveries have been using the airport.
A witness to the strike told AFP âThe entire car park shook. People were carrying their luggage on their shoulders and running. When I made it to the street there was so much smoke I had to turn the headlights [of my taxi] on.â
Another nearby resident told the agency âWeâve had to flee our homes several times. Sometimes we sleep in the car. Death has become a matter of luck.â
An AFP photographer said a heater factory next to the airportâs perimeter wall had been badly damaged.
Three children in Rafah among Palestinians killed in Gaza by Israeli airstrikes â reports
Palestinian news agency Wafa reports that three children are among the latest victims of Israeli airstrikes in the Gaza Strip, killed in an attack in the east of Rafah.
The agency also reports that four people were killed and an unknown number of others wounded when Israeli forces bombed two houses in Jabalia in the north of the Gaza Strip.
Another ten people were reported killed in earlier strikes on Thursday. It has not been possible for journalists to independently verify the casualty figures being issued during the conflict.
Israelâs military has announced that it was expanding its ground operation in Gaza, saying that âtroops started to operate in the area of Beit Lahiaâ after, it said, âprior intelligence information and a situational assessment indicating the presence of terrorists and terrorist infrastructure.â
Israel said that in the past day it had conducted 110 airstrikes combined in Gaza and Lebanon.
Reporting from Deir el-Balah for Al Jazeera, Hind Khoudary wrote:
The situation continues to be indescribable in the north. We are talking about more than a month of the Israeli army targeting densely populated houses.
Most of the people living in the Jabalia refugee camp evacuated to Beit Lahiya, so these are already displaced Palestinians from Jabalia, and now Israeli forces are targeting them.
Palestinians there say Beit Lahiya and Jabalia have been transformed into rubble after Israeli forces have been bulldozing agricultural land, wiping out and bombing residential houses.
Civil defence teams are also not allowed to enter â so whoever needs to be rescued or taken from under the rubble canât be assisted.
Gazaâs civil defence said it was the 16th consecutive day that Israeli forces had prohibited access to the north of Gaza.
Iranâs supreme leader Ali Khamenei has been speaking this morning, and his social media account has just posted this brief summary of his words, in which he said that victory over Israel was assured.
The post, in English, states:
These acts of jihad, which are continuing with strength and power in Lebanon, Gaza, and Palestine today, will definitely lead to the victory of the Resistance Front. This is what we understand from the overall events and also from what God has promised.