16m ago / 3:53 PM UTC
Families of hostages condemn Israeli minister’s statement about nuclear bomb
A campaign group for the families of Israelis held hostage by Hamas has condemned a far-right Israeli minister who said that dropping a nuclear bomb on the Gaza Strip was “an option.”
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday suspended Heritage Minister Amihai Eliyahu from cabinet meetings.
Eliyahu’s statement was “reckless and cruel” and “should never have been made,” the families group, called Bring Them Home Now, said in a statement on X.
“International law, along with fundamental principles of human morality and common sense, strictly prohibits the use of mass destruction weapons,” Shelly Aviv Yeini said in the statement, adding that Israel’s priority in Gaza must be securing the hostages’ release.
50m ago / 3:18 PM UTC
Family of Scotland’s first minister arrive back in U.K. from Gaza
The family of Scotland’s First Minister Humza Yousaf have arrived in the U.K. after being trapped in the Gaza Strip for four weeks.
In a post on the social media platform X, Yousaf said that he and his wife, Nadia El-Nakla, were “elated” to be reunited with his in-laws Elizabeth and Maged El-Nakla after what he called a “traumatic” few weeks.
“Our thoughts remain with those who can’t leave and are trapped in a war zone,” he added.
Yousaf said in a post last week that his parents-in-law had run out of fresh drinking water and that contact with them was severely limited.
1h ago / 2:50 PM UTC
A rare look inside northern Gaza
NORTHERN GAZA — NBC News got a rare look inside northern Gaza on Sunday, accompanying a combat engineering unit in the Israel Defense Forces that has been tasked with finding and destroying Hamas’ vast tunnel network.
The group entered a devastated area north of Gaza City via the border fence that Hamas terrorists burst through on Oct. 7. The few buildings still standing were pockmarked with bullet holes.
But the IDF unit was less interested in what’s above ground than what’s below: miles of concrete tunnels that the Israeli military says Hamas fighters are using to launch ambush attacks with rockets and machine guns.
From the wreckage of a vacation resort that had already been cleared by Israeli troops, three Hamas fighters burst out of a tunnel yesterday to launch an ambush, the Israeli military said. In the IDF’s view, the incident is evidence of the scale of the tunnel network — and how no area can be considered secure until the tunnels below it are destroyed. As NBC News watched, one tunnel entrance was blasted with heavy explosives.
Maayan, a major in the unit whose last name the IDF said cannot be published for security reasons, said searches of the tunnels have so far yielded no sign of the hostages.
NBC News accompanied the IDF into Gaza under certain conditions. Stay tuned for a full report.
2h ago / 2:22 PM UTC
49 people injured in attacks near Al Quds hospital, according to Palestine Red Crescent
JERUSALEM — “Relentless and severe” attacks by Israeli forces in the vicinity of the Al Quds hospital in the southern Gaza strip this week have injured 49 people, the Palestine Red Crescent Society said Sunday.
Heavy artillery and aerial bombardment injured 12 people inside the hospital, two in the intensive care unit and 35 displaced people living in the hospital’s vicinity, the statement said. Four are in critical condition due to injuries from shrapnel and shattered glass.
The hospital, which is in the area of Gaza where residents were told to go for their own safety, has also sustained damage to two floors, its critical care unit and water supply lines. Hospital vehicles owned by the Palestine Red Crescent were damaged, as well.
The organization said that shelling in the hospital’s vicinity has become “almost continuous, day and night” and described fears of a direct attack on the hospital building, which is holding 500 patients for treatment and sheltering more than 14,000 internally displaced Gaza residents.
2h ago / 1:39 PM UTC
Pope pleads for an end to the conflict ‘in the name of God’
Pope Francis reiterated his calls for a cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas conflict during his weekly address on St. Peter’s Square in Vatican City on Sunday. “I pray you to stop in the name of God,” he said, “cease the fire.”
The pontiff described the humanitarian situation in Gaza as “very grave” and urged the rescue of the injured and an increase in humanitarian aid. He focused particularly on the plight of children in his address, saying that children taken hostage by Hamas on Oct. 7 “must return to their families.”
“Let’s think about the children, all the children involved in this war. Like in Ukraine and in other conflicts, their future is being killed,” he added.
3h ago / 1:17 PM UTC
World Food Programme calls for increased humanitarian access to ease ‘nightmare’ of life in Gaza
Food and water shortages in Gaza are contributing to the “horrific nightmare” of life in the strip, according to U.N. World Food Programme Executive Director Cindy McCain.
The current level of aid allowed to enter Gaza is not enough to meet survival needs, she said, warning that “conflict will spread” if humanitarians are not able to deliver food and water safely to the strip.
A total of 43 WFP trucks had been allowed to enter by Thursday, McCain said. Prior to Oct. 7, Gaza, which imports the vast majority of its food given Israeli restrictions on fishing and agriculture, received 400 trucks per day.
“We are suffering, every day we are suffering” said Norhan Ziadeh, a Gaza resident speaking from the city of Khan Younis. “Tomatoes, cucumbers, potatoes have all been erased from our lives completely. We only have bread and water to quiet the kids so they sleep at night.”
3h ago / 12:49 PM UTC
Death toll in Gaza climbs past 9,700
In the last 24 hours alone, 243 people have been killed in Gaza, according to a health ministry spokesperson, bringing the death toll to at least 9,770. Another 24,808 people are injured and 2,660 are missing, the spokesperson said.
Of those killed, 4,800 were children, spokesperson Ashraf Al-Qudra added — accounting for just under 50% of the total death toll.
In Israel, officials say 1,400 people have been killed, mainly on Oct. 7, the day of Hamas’ terror attacks.
4h ago / 12:37 PM UTC
Photo: Aftermath of an Israeli attack on the Al-Maghazi refugee camp
This was the scene after a strike on the refugee camp in central Gaza late yesterday, which Palestinian officials said killed at least 47 and injured more than 100. The attack came after multiple strikes on the Jabalia and Bureij refugee camps that have drawn criticism against Israel for targeting civilians.
4h ago / 12:16 PM UTC
Hospital workers face an ‘impossible’ task in northern Gaza
TEL AVIV — An aid worker at Al Quds hospital in Gaza City has described the increasingly “miserable” conditions at the medical facility, where thousands of people sheltering have faced repeated calls from the Israeli military to move south — an order he said is “impossible” to fulfill.
With ongoing bombings in the vicinity of the hospital, “the infrastructure is totally devastated along with the roads,” Muhammad Abu Musabih, the director of ambulance and emergency services and a spokesperson for the Palestine Red Crescent Society, told NBC News.
Trying to transfer delicate ICU patients on ventilators along with children and pregnant women, Abu Musabih said, would be challenging, as is rescuing those injured in Israel’s strikes. He said paramedics were being killed and injured as they were “doing their job while wearing their uniforms.”
“The situation in Gaza now is very complex in terms of reaching the injured and delivering them to the hospitals,” he said.
4h ago / 11:50 AM UTC
Palestinian president calls for immediate cease-fire in Gaza
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas told Secretary of State Anthony Blinken there should be an immediate cease-fire and that aid should be allowed into Gaza, his spokesperson Nabil Abu Rudeineh said today.
Abbas’ Palestinian Authority exercises limited self-rule in the Israeli-occupied West Bank but it has seen its popularity shrivel amid allegations of graft, incompetence and widely hated security cooperation arrangements with Israel.
5h ago / 11:30 AM UTC
Blinken meets with Palestinian Authority president
RAMALLAH, West Bank — Secretary of State Antony Blinken reaffirmed America’s commitment “to the delivery of life-saving humanitarian assistance and resumption of essential services in Gaza,” in a meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas today.
Blinken, on a surprise visit to the occupied West Bank, made it clear that “Palestinians must not be forcibly displaced,” State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said in a readout.
Miller added that the pair also “discussed efforts to restore calm and stability in the West Bank, including the need to stop extremist violence against Palestinians and hold those accountable responsible.”
Blinken “also expressed the commitment of the United States to working toward the realization of the Palestinians’ legitimate aspirations for the establishment of a Palestinian state,” Miller said.
5h ago / 10:50 AM UTC
Israeli minister who suggested dropping a nuclear bomb on Gaza is suspended
An Israeli minister has been suspended by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over comments made on the Kol Beramah radio show today suggesting that dropping a nuclear bomb on the Gaza Strip was an option.
The comment made by Amichai Eliyahu, Israel’s minister of Jewish heritage, and a member of the far-right Otzma Yehudit (“Jewish Power”) party was met with immediate criticism within Israel. The leader of Israel’s opposition called it “shocking and crazy,” and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said, “It’s a good thing that people like this are not in charge of Israel’s security.”
Eliyahu later walked back his comments, saying he was speaking “metaphorically.”
In a post on X, Netanyahu’s office said Eliyahu’s comments were “not based in reality” and that the IDF was “operating in accordance with the highest standards of international law.”
The IDF has struck 2,500 targets in the Gaza Strip since the beginning of its ground invasion on Oct. 28, where the death toll is estimated at over 9,400.
6h ago / 10:24 AM UTC
Blinken makes surprise visit to occupied West Bank
RAMALLAH, West Bank — Secretary of State Anthony Blinken made a surprise visit to the occupied West Bank today where he met with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. Neither commented on the visit.
Blinken’s trip follows fraught meetings with Arab leaders in the Jordanian capital Amman, where he was pressed repeatedly to call for a cease-fire in Gaza by Egyptian, Jordanian, Saudi, Qatari and Emirati diplomats and a senior Palestinian official.
After his stop in the West Bank, Blinken will move on to Ankara early next week to meet with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, another late addition to his tour.
Erdoğan, who initially pitched himself as a potential mediator in the Israel-Hamas war, recalled Turkish ambassadors to Tel Aviv on Saturday and released a statement severing ties with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who he said was the “main person to blame” for the ongoing bombardment of Gaza.
6h ago / 9:41 AM UTC
Hamas says 60 hostages have been killed as a result of Israeli bombardment
Sixty hostages have been killed by Israeli airstrikes in Gaza, Abu Obaida, spokesperson for Hamas’ military wing, said in a statement on Telegram.
He added that the bodies of 23 Israeli hostages remain buried under rubble, “and it seems that we will never be able to reach them due to the continued brutal aggression of the occupation against Gaza.”
NBC News was unable to independently verify those numbers, and the Israel Defense Forces did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the Hamas statement.
Hamas took more than 240 hostages, at least 33 of them children, during its terror attack on Israel on Oct. 7, according to the Israeli government. Four have been released, and one has been rescued.
7h ago / 9:30 AM UTC
Obstetric care in Gaza collapsing, mothers and newborns disproportionately impacted
Israeli strikes on health-care infrastructure and the reduced capacity of health facilities in Gaza are disproportionately impacting new and expecting mothers and newborn babies, a group of humanitarian agencies said.
In a joint statement, the World Health Organization, UNICEF, the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees and the U.N.’s sexual and reproductive health agency warned that bombardments and collapsing water and electricity supplies are severely disrupting maternal and child health services in Gaza.
An estimated 180 women give birth per day in the Gaza Strip, according to the statement. But recently, women have had to deliver in emergency shelters and on the street among rubble, and clean water and sanitation services are severely limited, the agencies said. That has caused medical complications and infections associated with childbearing to rise.
As hospitals run out of fuel and are unable to provide emergency obstetric services, that also threatens the lives of 130 premature babies currently relying on intensive care services and medical equipment in hospitals, such as incubators, the statement said.
An estimated 3,800 children and 2,400 women have been killed in the Gaza Strip since Oct. 7, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Gaza. That’s a majority of the war’s casualties in the enclave.
7h ago / 8:59 AM UTC
Blinken meets with Jordanian king
AMMAN, Jordan — In a meeting with King Abdullah II of Jordan on Sunday, Secretary of State Antony Blinken reiterated the U.S.’ commitment to seeing essential services resumed in Gaza and humanitarian assistance delivered.
As he continued his tour of the Middle East, Blinken “emphasized the U.S. commitment to working with partners towards a durable and sustainable peace in the region,” State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said in a statement.
Blinken also expressed “concern regarding the increasing violence in the West Bank,” Miller said.
The United States’ refusal to call for a cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas conflict has put it at odds with leaders across the Arab World. King Abdullah II has recalled Jordan’s ambassador to Israel over the country’s approach to the conflict, and told Israel’s envoy not to return to Jordan until the Gaza crisis is over.
7h ago / 8:45 AM UTC
Photo: Red handprints on gateposts in front of White House
Photos show painted red handprints left on a fence in front of the White House, where protesters had gathered, some holding Palestinian flags. Demonstrators marched in Washington on Saturday, some calling for a cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war.
In a statement, U.S. Secret Service spokesperson Anthony Guglielmi said there had been an attempted gate trespass earlier, which was “handled without incident” by the Secret Service and others.
He said demonstrators were beginning to leave the area.
“As of now, no arrests have been made by Secret Service personnel,” Guglielmi said.
7h ago / 8:45 AM UTC
Families and supporters of hostages call for their release at Tel Aviv demonstration
Thousands of people joined a demonstration in Tel Aviv organized by families of the 241 hostages held in the Gaza Strip.
“Now!” the crowd chanted repeatedly, calling for the hostages to be freed without delay. Many held pictures of the hostages, some of them children and older people, who have spent nearly a month in captivity.
Hamas militants abducted the hostages in the Oct. 7 terror attack that triggered the war. The plight of the hostages and their families has captured the world’s attention.
Hadas Kalderon of Kibbutz Nir Oz, whose two children — ages 16 and 12 — were kidnapped, called for a cease-fire in exchange for the hostages’ return. Ella Ben-Ami, a 23-year-old Israeli whose parents were abducted, said she holds Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu responsible. She called for a halt in all humanitarian aid to Gaza until the hostages are freed.
7h ago / 8:45 AM UTC
Israel Defense Forces work to navigate and destroy Hamas tunnels in Gaza
Tunnel warfare expert Daphne Richemond-Barak spoke to MSNBC’s Alex Witt about Israel’s efforts to locate and destroy Hamas’ vast tunnel network under Gaza.
“It’s very difficult to know where Hamas is, where the hostages might be inside the tunnel network,” Richemond-Barak said, “and then try to get intelligence about that. But again, your traditional intelligence gathering techniques do not work when it comes to the underground.”
7h ago / 8:45 AM UTC
Dozens killed by Israeli strike on refugee camp, Hamas says
An Israeli attack on the Al-Maghazi refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip has killed 33 people and injured 100 more, Hamas said in a statement.
The militant group said that the majority of the dead were women and children, and that homes had been directly targeted in the camp.
The camp is located in a built-up residential area in central Gaza, within the evacuation zone where Israel’s military had urged Palestinian civilians to seek refuge as it focuses its military offensive in northern areas.
The Palestinian WAFA news agency previously reported that 51 people had been killed in the strike on the Al-Maghazi camp. NBC News could not independently verify the number of deaths and has contacted the Israel Defense Forces for comment.
7h ago / 8:45 AM UTC