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In a move that could signal an upcoming ground assault, Israelâs military has told people in northern Gaza to leave, which a United Nations spokesperson said was impossible without âdevastating humanitarian consequences.â
The area includes Gaza City and encompasses some 1.1. million people, according to an IDF spokesperson and Stéphane Dujarric, spokesperson for the U.N. Secretary-General.
A ground offensive has not been announced. IDF Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus said in a video livestream Friday that civilians were being asked to leave for their own safety.
Also Thursday, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken traveled to Israel, where he pledged that the U.S. âwill always be there by your side,â as airstrikes in Gaza continued and deaths increased.
The number of dead in Israel from Hamas terror attacks on the country is more than 1,300 people. Twenty-seven Americans have been killed, officials in the U.S. said.
In Gaza, 1,537 people have been killed, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.Â
Crucial supplies in Gaza are running out. Israel has said its âcomplete siegeâ will not be lifted until Hamas releases the 100 to 150 people estimated to have been taken hostage.
The World Health Organization on Thursday warned that the health system in Gaza is at a breaking point.
âTime is running out to prevent a humanitarian catastrophe if fuel and life-saving health and humanitarian supplies cannot be urgently delivered,â the organization said. It said it has documented the deaths of 11 health workers on duty attacks on Gaza.
Social media posts have called for a âDay of Rageâ Friday. Former Hamas leader Khaled Mashal recently called for it to be a global day of âangerâ in support of the attack on Israel.
Police departments around the U.S. said they were prepared but were not aware of any specific credible threats.Â
200 evacuees arrive in India from Tel Aviv
Indiaâs first chartered flight brought over 200 Indian nationals back home from Tel Aviv on Friday, nearly a week after the latest Israel-Hamas war erupted.
âEveryone is scared. We have no idea what would happen there. We had to move to shelters when there were missile attacks. This was not normal,â said Deepak Sharma, a 20-year-old student who was studying physics at a college in north Israel.
There are about 18,000 Indian citizens living in Israel, a small percentage of them students, according to Indiaâs External Affairs Ministry. Nearly one-third of them have registered with the Indian embassy ready to fly back home.
New Delhi has not heard of any Indian casualties since Hamas launched its incursion Saturday, the ministry said.
âWeâre bracing ourselvesâ: Inside the White House as it grapples with the attack on Israel

WASHINGTON â Midway through one of the most forceful speeches of his presidency, President Joe Biden noticed a woman in the audience had teared up.
He stopped and looked at Sheila Katz, one of the Jewish leaders gathered at the White House just four days after Hamas terrorists slaughtered more than 1,300 people in Israel, including young children.
âYou OK, kiddo?â he asked, pausing behind a lectern heâd been pounding as he described taking his children to see the Nazi death camps.
âI felt really seen by him,â Katz, the CEO of the National Council of Jewish Women, recalled in an interview. âIn that moment, to have the president of the country pause his remarks to check in on me was really moving.â
Not everyone at the White House is OK these days. Hamasâ attack has shaken an administration that feels a deep emotional bond with Israel and the Jewish community.
Families remember the Americans killed in the Israel-Hamas war
Nearly a week after Hamas terrorists attacked Israel, setting off a war as Israel retaliated with airstrikes over the Gaza Strip, the death toll continues to rise above 1,000. Of the victims, 27 have been identified as U.S. citizens.
Among the U.S. citizens slain was a mother protecting her son, an American Israeli soldier, an idealist daughter and a young man who had recently moved to Salt Lake City, where he was active in the Jewish community.
The White House on Thursday confirmed the number of American deaths.
U.N. says operations and staff moved to south Gaza
The United Nations agency that works for relief for Palestinian refugees says it has moved its operations center and staff members to south Gaza after the Israeli military warned people to evacuate northern Gaza within 24 hours.
The agency, UNRWA, said on X, "We urge the Israeli Authorities to protect all civiliansâ in its shelters, which include schools.
âThese UN schools and all other UN shelters are UN facilities. They must be protected at all times and must never come under attack in accordance with international humanitarian law,â the agency said.
IDF confirms order to evacuate northern Gaza
The Israel Defense Forces confirmed the order to evacuate northern Gaza that was shared by the U.N. and said it included Gaza City, IDF Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus said in a video livestream.
He said it was in consideration of noncombatants. âThis evacuation is for your own safety,â the warning says, according to Conricus.
The warning says people will be allowed to return to Gaza City only when another announcement is made, he said.Â
âThe aim here is to minimize the damage to civilians,â he said. He did not announce a ground offensive.
Israelâs leaders have vowed to destroy Hamas after it carried out terrorist attacks in the country that killed at least 1,300 people.
âThere are significant combat operations ongoing, and we are preparing for future and the continuance of our combat operations,â Conricus said.
Conricus has previously said that Hamas hides in civilian areas and that airstrikes are against legitimate military targets.
âWe are asking them to evacuate so that we will be able continue to strike military targets belonging to Hamas in the Gaza Strip,â he said.
Israel tells U.N. northern Gaza should evacuate within 24 hours, U.N. official says
Israel's military has told the United Nations to evacuate northern Gaza within 24 hours, a U.N. official confirmed, in what could be a prelude to a ground assault.
U.N. offices âwere informed by their liaison officers in the Israeli military that the entire population of Gaza north of Wadi Gaza should relocate to southern Gaza within the next 24 hours,â said Stéphane Dujarric, the spokesperson for the U.N. secretary-general.
"This amounts to approximately 1.1 million peopleâ he said in a statement. "The United Nations considers it impossible for such a movement to take place without devastating humanitarian consequences."
The order also applies to U.N. personnel and people sheltering in U.N. facilities, Dujarric said.
Israel's military has not announced a ground offensive, but 300,000 reservists have been called up and ground forces have been positioned in southern Israel after Hamas terrorist attacks that killed over 1,300 people in Israel.
Whatâs behind Trumpâs lashing out at Netanyahu after Hamasâ attack on Israel
WASHINGTON â Irate in the wake of a brutal assault by Hamas fighters that has pushed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Joe Biden together, Donald Trump is lashing out with pointed criticism of Netanyahu and his government.Â
An adviser to Netanyahu said there had been no outreach by Trump in the wake of the attacks. Instead, Trump has leveled repeated broadsides at the leader of a close U.S. ally in remarks on the campaign trail as he seeks a return to the White House.
Number of displaced Palestinians rises to 340,000, U.N. says
There are 340,000 displaced Palestinians in Gaza, with 220,000 people sheltering at United Nations schools, the international body said Thursday.
"With no access to provide essential supplies, UN humanitarians warn that Gaza is on the brink of running out of food, water, electricity & critical supplies," the U.N. said on X.
Some schools have been struck, including two run by the U.N. agency for Palestine refugees, known as UNRWA, where people were sheltering, the U.N. said in a statement.
The U.N.'s previous number of displaced Palestinians was 338,934.
Hereâs why any Israeli attempt to rescue the 150 hostages in Gaza will be âbrutalâ and painful
Rescuing the hostages held by Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip poses unprecedented and painful choices for Israel, which may have to place a higher priority on a military victory against its adversaries than saving all the hostages, former senior U.S. officials and military officers say.
Israel has a history of daring raids to rescue its citizens or kill its enemies, but the circumstances now are beyond anything the country has faced before. Israel estimates that 150 people are being held prisoner. Any rescue attempt in Gaza would most likely be paired with a major military push to smash Hamas, an operation that could jeopardize the lives of the hostages. Â
Hamas has threatened to kill a hostage every time Israel bombs civilian targets in Gaza without warning.
âThis is not going to be a John Wayne ending,â said a former federal law enforcement official who worked closely with Israel.
As medical supplies dwindle in Gaza, so do hopes
A surgeon at Gazaâs Al-Shifa hospital said she had treated so many injured people â most of them children â that she lost count and thinks itâs only a matter of time before she faces a similar fate.Â
The entire medical complex has been turned into a trauma hospital, and it has become home for some who have sought refuge in its halls after their homes were destroyed in Israeli airstrikes, Dr. Sara Al Saqqa said in an interview.
The harrowing scene has been worsened by an Israeli blockade that has barred food, water, electricity and other essentials from entering the densely populated city of 2.3 million people, she said. Half of the Palestinians living in Gaza are younger than 19.
âAccording to the hospital manager of Shifa today, he said that we are running out of everything in a matter of hours,â Al Saqqa said. âSo no one knows how much can we handle.â
Al Saqqa said that among the children treated at Al-Shifa, she had seen head injuries, abdomens punctured by shrapnel and injuries from blunt force trauma and falls.Â
âAll kinds of injuries,â she said. âItâs insane.â Â
For every 20 patients the hospital treats, Al Saqqa estimated, only five may survive â though they still might not make it depending on how extensive or complex their injuries are, she said.Â
She described treating two babies, one 8 months old and the other 9 months old, who were pulled from the rubble of a building.Â
âTheyâre anonymous,â she said. No one knows âwho they are or what family they are belonging to.â
Al Saqqa described Gaza as a âbig huge cageâ with a massive population trapped beneath relentless bombs.Â
Asked about her safety, she said: âItâs just a matter of time, and it will be our turn soon.â
Lester Holt speaks with Blinken about Israel-Hamas war and getting Americans out
U.K. PM Sunak and Netanyahu discuss military package to help in fight against Hamas
United Kingdom Prime Minister Rishi Sunak spoke on the phone today with Netanyahu and confirmed the authorization of a military package, a spokesperson for Sunak said.
Sunak said the U.K. is sending a Royal Air Force surveillance aircraft, two Royal Navy ships that will patrol the eastern Mediterranean, three Merlin helicopters and a detachment of Royal Marines, the spokesperson said.
The military assistance, which will be deployed in the coming days, is meant to bolster security in the wider region and prevent attempts to escalate the conflict, the spokesperson said.
Sunak said the U.K. stands with Israel "in fighting terror and agreed that Hamas can never again be able to perpetrate atrocities against the Israeli people," the spokesperson said.
Sunak also said, according to his spokesperson, that it's important to protect ordinary Palestinians and facilitate humanitarian aid to the region.
He discussed his conversation with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi, which touched on "the importance of opening the Rafah crossing to allow for humanitarian access and provide a route for British and other nationals to leave Gaza,â the spokesperson said.
Miami-Dade County increases security in community
Members of Congress at a vigil for Israel on the House steps

Justice Department says it's working to find missing Americans
The Justice Department is working with the families of missing Americans to help find their loved ones, Attorney General Merrick Garland said today in a statement.
"My heart is with the families whose loved ones have been killed and those whose loved ones are still missing," he said. âSince these attacks began, the Justice Department has focused on working with the families of missing Americans to locate their loved ones. We continue to work on the return of all missing Americans, including those believed to be taken hostage."
The Justice Department has offered to help the Israeli government, including through multiple FBI teams that include its Critical Incident Response Group, its Operational Technology Division and its Laboratory Division, Garland said.
âThese highly trained hostage rescue specialists and other experts stand ready to advise their Israeli counterparts to help locate and bring home missing U.S. citizens,â the statement said.
World Health Organization says Gaza health care at the brink
The World Health Organization called for the establishment of a humanitarian corridor in the Gaza Strip, warning that the health system in the region is at a breaking point.
Humanitarian supplies canât be delivered because of the complete blockade to the area, the WHO said in a statement.
âHospitals have only a few hours of electricity each day as they are forced to ration depleting fuel reserves and rely on generators to sustain the most critical functions,â it said.
There is an âacute shortage of medical supplies," it said.
Since Saturday, the WHO has documented the death of 11 health workers who were on duty, as well as damage to 19 health facilities and 20 ambulances.Â
It said that it is ready to send essential health supplies through its logistics hub in Dubai and that it is working with partners so the supplies can reach the Gaza Strip from the Rafah border crossing.
Â
Vigil planned on the steps of U.S. Capitol tonight
Democratic Reps. Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey and Debbie Wasserman-Schultz of Florida will host a vigil for Israel on the steps of the Capitol at 6:45 tonight, according to an invitation sent to fellow members and obtained by NBC News.Â
âWith more than 1,200 Israelis and 25 Americans confirmed dead, 150 taken hostage, and thousands more injured it is essential for Congress to stand in solidarity with Israel. Please join us for a prayer and moment of silence tonight,â the invitation reads, in part.
More than 1,500 dead in Gaza
The death toll in Gaza has risen to 1,537, including 500 children, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health â Gaza.
More than 6,200 people have been injured, the ministry said.
Capitol Police to boost presence ahead of 'Day of Rage'
U.S. Capitol Police will increase the law enforcement presence tomorrow on Capitol Hill in response to social media posts calling for a âDay of Rage.â
Former Hamas leader Khaled Mashal recently called for tomorrow to be a global day of âangerâ in support of the recent Hamas attack on Israel, which has left more than 1,300 Israelis dead.
A Capitol Police spokesperson said that âalthough there are not specific threats toward the Congress tomorrow, we are not taking any chances.â
Photo: Lights out in Gaza

GOP lawmaker: Instead of speaker race, Congress should be focused on war
WASHINGTON â Rep. Zach Nunn, R-Iowa, expressed frustration today that House Republicansâ failure to coalesce around a candidate for speaker is taking away from time that could be spent addressing the Israel-Hamas war.
Nunn, who is in his first term, spoke after a closed-door House Republican Conference meeting as members grapple with trying to find a candidate who could be elected speaker in a floor vote.
Nunn, 44, said he spent the morning working with a family in his congressional district â which covers southwest Iowa â that was trying to leave Israel.
âWe got them on a private charter aircraft, thanks to our incredible governor,â Nunn said, referring to Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds.
Columbia's NYC campus open only to ID holders ahead of protests
Columbia Universityâs New York City campus is open only to people with university IDs ahead of two protests tonight. Dennis Mitchell, the interim provost, said there had been âsubstantial effortsâ to enlist outside supporters to participate in the campus demonstrations, âcreating an unsafe environment for our community.âÂ
âThis is why we have limited our access today to CUID holders only,â he said in a letter to the community.Â
A school spokesperson said the university had also made âan accommodation for a limited number of media outlets.â
Two groups, Students for Justice in Palestine and Students Supporting Israel, were expected to hold protests one day after a 24-year-old was allegedly attacked on campus with a stick, according to New York City police.
The student was passing out flyers with the names and pictures of Israelis whom Hamas had supposedly taken as hostages, the student newspaper, The Columbia Daily Spectator, reported. A 19-year-old woman was taken into custody and charged with assault, police said.
Senators want Biden to be ready to send munitions quickly
A group of Democratic senators led by Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, along with independent Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, is calling on Biden to replenish Iron Dome interceptors and make sure Israel has the munitions it needs.
In a letter to Biden, the senators stressed that Israel may need additional personal protective equipment, assistance to rebuild communities and/or intelligence.
"We ask that the Department of Defense holistically assess its stockpiles of these defense articles â especially Iron Dome interceptors â so that it can quickly transfer these munitions to Israel, upon request," they wrote.
The group also includes Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, Jacky Rosen of Nevada, Mark Kelly of Arizona and Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin.
"We further urge the Department of Defense to coordinate ammunition transfers with allies, especially those that have joined American calls of support for Israel."
The group also urges the Biden administration to âquicklyâ evaluate near-term Israeli needs and submit a supplemental assistance package request to Congress.
A bipartisan group of senators sent a letter this week asking Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin to send Israel two Iron Dome batteries â the systems that launch interceptors to block incoming rockets â as soon as possible.
Photo: Israeli tanks move along the border with Gaza

700 Hollywood stars, producers, others condemn Hamas in letterÂ
In a strong sign of support of Israel from Hollywood, more than 700 figures from the entertainment industry have signed an open letter to condemn Hamas and demand the safe return of hostages being held in Gaza.
The letter is the first major move from the entertainment industry, as Israel has been under attack.
Released by the nonprofit Creative Community for Peace, the letter has been signed by celebrities and Hollywood leaders including Gal Gadot, Jamie Lee Curtis, Chris Pine, Mayim Bialik, Liev Schreiber, Amy Schumer, Michael Douglas, Jerry Seinfeld, Debra Messing, Ryan Murphy, Greg Berlanti, Haim Saban, Irving Azoff, Ynon Kreiz, Mark Hamill, Howie Mandel, Bella Thorne, Antoine Fuqua and more.
The open letter calls on the entertainment community at large to speak out forcefully against Hamas, to support Israel, to refrain from sharing misinformation about the war and to do whatever is in their power to urge Hamas terrorists to return hostages back to their families.
Defense secretary headed to Israel
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin plans to travel to Israel tomorrow, a senior defense official said.Â
He will meet with Netanyahu, Israel's defense minister and the Israeli War Cabinet.
They will talk about support for Israel, including additional resources. The first shipment including munitions arrived this week.
E.U. further threatens X over Hamas content
The enforcement arm of the European Union has escalated its confrontation with X, formerly known as Twitter, over terrorist content on the site.
Many accounts on X, including verified accounts viewed by NBC News, have posted official Hamas videos that went viral on the platform since Hamas attacked Israel. The E.U. has designated Hamas a terrorist organization.Â
On its website today, the European Commission warned X that the agency âcan impose fines for incorrect, incomplete or misleading information in response to a request for information.â
E.U. Commissioner Thierry Breton has previously issued three open letters to tech platforms over concerns they werenât properly moderating Hamas content: X, Meta and TikTok.
X CEO Linda Yaccarino said yesterday, âThere is no place on X for terrorist organizations or violent extremist groups, and we continue to remove such accounts in real time, including proactive efforts.â
Photo: Gaza is on fire

No new or specific threats to NYC or U.S., sources say
An NYPD spokesperson said that there are no new or specific threats to New York City today or tomorrow but that the force is still adding patrols at religious institutions and other locations as a precaution amid antisemitic and anti-Arab rhetoric and incidents around the county.
The spokesperson told NBC News the added patrols will provide reassurance to New Yorkers concerned over âevents overseasâ or online postings â âmany which have little credibility.â
Several law enforcement sources also say there are no new, specific threats to the U.S. in connection with the Israel-Hamas war and regional tensions.
The law enforcement sources say departments across the country are âoverestimatingâ the possibility of disturbances as a precaution.Â
Holocaust survivors say, 'Today, men, women, and children are again targeted as Jews'
Illuminated in white and blue, Holocaust survivors gathered at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., yesterday to honor the Jewish lives lost in the Hamas terrorist attacks.Â
âToday, men, women and children are again targeted as Jews. Today, we witness the worst killing of Jews since the Holocaust,â 33 Holocaust survivors who volunteer at the museum wrote in an open letter denouncing the violence.Â
"We are also living proof of resilience. That we can rebuild as our fierce determination demonstrates. We must be realistic about the dangers, but we must never despair. That would be a victory for those seeking to destroy us,â the letter continued.
âWe promised our loved ones we would never forget and never give up. Especially at this darkest of moments, that remains our promise and our challenge to humanity.â
Former Israeli PM says Hamas is responsible for safety of civilians used as 'human shields'
Former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and Sky News anchor Kamali Melbourne got into a heated on-air conversation today about if the IDF will ensure that ordinary Palestinian civilians in Gaza are not purposefully placed in the path of violence.
âAre you seriously (going to) keep on asking me about Palestinian civilians? Whatâs wrong with you? Weâre fighting Nazis,â Bennett said on Sky News. âThe world can come and bring them anything they want, if you want to give them electricity. Iâm not going to feed electricity or water to my enemies.â

Bennett accused Melbourne of using Palestinian narratives in his questions and compared Israel's current situation to the joint British and American aerial bombing attack on the city of Dresden in World War II, wherein tens of thousands of civilians were killed.
"If Hamas decides to murder its own people by using them as human shields, then Hamas will be responsible for murdering those Palestinians," he said. "If someone is shooting at your children and hiding behind a human shield, will you shoot back or not?"
Bennett, who served in the IDF's special forces, said the Israeli military's first step is to kill all the Hamas militants remaining in Israel. Next, he said the IDF will go on the offensive and eradicate Hamas.
"I've never used the term Nazi for anything but the original Nazis; This is the first time I'm using it because it's the exact same ideology of annihilating Jews just because they are Jews," he said.
Unverified allegations of 'beheaded babies' inflame social media
A series of shocking reports have spread horrific claims of baby beheadings by Hamas militants across social and mainstream media in recent days, adding a particularly incendiary element to an already violent and bitter war. But the reports are still unconfirmed, and in some cases have been retracted.Â
The most high-profile claim came last night when Biden said that he had seen photographic evidence of terrorists beheading children. The White House later clarified that Biden was referring to news reports about beheadings, which have not included or referred to photographic evidence.
Photos have been published by Hamas showing beheaded soldiers, while the X account belonging to Netanyahu posted pictures today of babies killed and burned by Hamas. No photo evidence had been made public as of this afternoon corroborating claims that babies had been beheaded.Â
Unverified and false information spreads quickly on social media, particularly around breaking news events, reaching even larger audiences when it is shared by mainstream news outlets, politicians and people with large followings. Follow-ups that retract or add context are less likely to be repeated or reach the same audience.
Bidenâs statement followed a series of news reports and comments from Israeli officials, most of which have since been softened or walked back entirely. Easily debunked misinformation like fake press releases have circulated widely since the start of the war, but such stories often die down quickly once proven false. The claims about beheadings, difficult to verify or debunk, have continued to spread in part due to the lack of clarity.
Knesset approves formation of emergency government
The Knesset, Israelâs parliament, approved the formation of an emergency government today.Â
Of the 120 seats, 66 members voted in favor of forming the emergency government, and four against, according to the Knessetâs website.Â
Netanyahu and centrist opposition party leader Benny Gantz agreed to form an emergency united government due to the war.
In remarks last night, Netanyahu said: "The emergency government that we are fitting today out of national responsibility conveys a message of enormous power to the world and as well here in our country. We are all standing in this battle together."
In his speech, Netanyahu compared Oct. 7 â the day of the Hamas incursion â as âthe most horrifying day for the Jewish people since the Holocaust.âÂ
Photos: French police crack down on pro-Palestinian protest
Police in Toulouse responded to an unauthorized demonstration in support of Palestinians today. France has banned pro-Palestinian protests in the wake of Hamas' terror attacks in Israel.


Father and uncle say kidnapped festivalgoer has been denied vital medication
The father and uncle of 22-year-old Omer Wenkert, who was abducted by Hamas from an outdoor music festival Saturday, said on MSNBC that Omer has been denied medication for his chronic colitis, without which he cannot survive.
Omer Wenkert's father, Shai Wenkert, and uncle Ricardo Grichener said they tried to send his medicines through the Red Cross, which appealed to Hamas, but the militant group denied the request.
Article 55 of the Geneva Convention, which outlines international humanitarian laws during wartime, stipulates that occupying powers have a duty to bring food and medical supplies to the population. Grichener said that convention has been broken by Hamas.
Shai Wenkert found out his son had been kidnapped through a video shared by Hamas. In the video, his son is seen stripped and tied up in the back of a moving pickup truck.
"We are strong and we are waiting for him to come back home alive," he said.
When Omer Wenkert was initially fleeing the festival, Shai Wenkert said he tried to rescue his son from a shelter where he knew he was hiding, but he was too late. By the time he arrived, Omer was gone and a friend of his who was hiding in the same shelter had been killed. Shai Wenkert and Grichener attended the funeral today.
Britain sending military assistance to Israel
Britain will deploy military assistance to the Eastern Mediterranean to support Israel and âreinforce regional stability,â the prime minister's office announced today.
It will send Royal Air Force surveillance aircraft to begin patrols tomorrow to âhelp partners track emerging threats to regional security.â A Royal Navy task group will also deploy to the Eastern Mediterranean in coming days to âhelp mitigate humanitarian crisis.â
The military assistance will also track threats to regional stability âsuch as the transfer of weapons to terrorist groups.â
âWe must be unequivocal in making sure the types of horrific scenes we have seen this week will not be repeated. Alongside our allies, the deployment of our world class military will support efforts to ensure regional stability and prevent further escalation,â Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said.Â
âHamas continues to use civilians as human shieldsâ: Blinken

Blinken said today that a major issue in the ongoing conflict in Israel and the Gaza Strip is the targeting of civilians.
âOn the humanitarian situation in Gaza, I think itâs first important to remember the fundamental issue that makes this complicated. Hamas continues to use civilians as human shields,â he said. "Civilians should not be used in any way as the targets of military operations. They are not the target of Israelâs operations,â he said.Â
Still, thousands of civilians have died on both sides of the conflict and residential towers in Gaza have been leveled in the past few days of Israeli airstrikes.
In his talk with Netanyahu earlier in the day, they covered ways to address the humanitarian needs of the people in Gaza and the possibilities of safe passage for civilians who want to leave Gaza. Â
Photos: Israeli tanks advance near the border with Gaza


Death toll mounts to more than 2,700
As of today, the Israel-Hamas conflict has led to more than 2,700 fatalities.
The Palestinian Health Ministry in Gaza today reported 1,417 deaths and more than 6,200 injured. Meanwhile, the death toll in the West Bank is at 31 with 180 injured, according to the Health Ministry there.Â
Israel has reported at least 1,300 killed and 3,300 wounded, Israeli Public Broadcaster Kan reported this evening local time.
CAIR objects to Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro's support for Israel
An advocacy group for American Muslims lashed out at Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro today over his support of Israel and condemnation of Hamas.
The Philadelphia and Pittsburgh chapters of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) said Shapiro has shown "disregard for his Palestinian-American constituents who have lost family members or are concerned for their safety due to Israelâs indiscriminate attacks against civilian areas" in Gaza.

"Since last weekend, you have not even once publicly recognized the inhumane treatment of civilians, systematic occupation and apartheid, and dehumanization by Israel against civilian Muslim, Christian, Druze Palestinians," according to the organization's open letter to Shapiro. "Not only did you fail to recognize the structural root causes of the conflict, you chose to intentionally ignore the civilian loss of life in Gaza."
In recent official statements from Shapiro, the governor condemned "the terrorist organization Hamas and their enablers" and said that there's "no moral equivalency between Hamas â a foreign terrorist organization as designated by the United States â and Israel, the only pluralistic functioning democracy in the Middle East."
"We are most troubled by Gov. Shapiro not recognizing the now thousands of Palestinian civilians killed," said Ahmet Selim Tekelioglu, executive director of CAIR's Philadelphia chapter.
Photos: People rally for Palestinians


27 Americans killed in Israel-Hamas war, White House says
The White House now says 27 Americans have been killed so far in the Israel-Hamas war that erupted Saturday.
Another 14 Americans remain unaccounted for, John Kirby, National Security Council coordinator for strategic communications, said today.
"Weâre obviously doing everything we can to support and inform the families," he said.
Earlier, officials said 25 U.S. citizens were killed in the conflict.
Conservatives stoke fears of a Hamas attack in the U.S. despite no credible threat, according to FBI
The FBI has said it has no information indicating a credible terrorist threat against the United States, but social media pundits who have been raising the alarm for days arenât backing down.Â
Conservative social media influencers have been filling platforms such as X and Truth Social with speculation not backed by any evidence that attacks on civilians in Israel would soon be followed by similar attacks in major U.S. cities and that people should begin preparing â including by avoiding cities and purchasing firearms.Â
The speculation with no evidence to support it has come from former President Donald Trump, his son Donald Trump Jr. and a host of right-wing commentators with big followings who issued vague warnings about imminent invasions or attacks. Many of the posts tie in a hodgepodge of Republican Party talking points on subjects such as gun rights, immigration from Asia, crime and Iran policy.Â
The posts show how quickly the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas has upended online political debate thousands of miles away, and how itâs being used by political figures to push certain agendas and issues.Â
Photos: Israeli volunteers prepare aid packages


U.S. and Qatar agree not to release Iranâs $6B
WASHINGTON â The U.S. and Qatari governments have agreed to block Iran from accessing any of the $6 billion it gained access to as part of a prisoner swap deal between the Biden administration and Tehran last month, Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo told House Democrats today, according to three sources familiar with his remarks, two of whom were in the room.
The decision comes as the administration faced bipartisan pressure to block Iranâs access to the money and as U.S. officials continue to investigate whether Iran had any direct involvement in Hamasâ terrorist attack on Israel. The Biden administration has said the $6 billion in unfrozen Iranian oil assets could be used by Tehran only for humanitarian assistance.
Netanyahuâs office tweets graphic photos described as babies killed by Hamas
Netanyahuâs office shared today three photos on X that it described as babies killed by Hamas.Â
"These are horrifying photos of babies murdered and burned by the Hamas monsters," the post said. "Hamas is inhuman. Hamas is ISIS."
Earlier in the day, Blinken acknowledged in a news conference that he was shown the photographs and videos from the Israeli government.
"Itâs hard to find the right words. Itâs beyond what anyone would ever want to imagine, much less actually see and God forbid experience. A baby, an infant riddled with bullets. Soldiers beheaded. Young people burned alive in their cars or in their hideaway rooms," he said.
Photos: Blinken meets with Israelis in Tel Aviv


U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited a donation center for victims of the Hamas terror attacks in Tel Aviv today.
German cities ban pro-Palestinian rallies
Some German cities are banning pro-Palestinian rallies out of caution against Hamas sympathizers.Â
In Berlin, police banned a âSolidarity with the Civilian Population in the Gaza Stripâ gathering scheduled for today at Brandenburg Gate.
Police tweeted that all alternative events have also been canceled through Oct. 18 by the assembly authority, âespecially because meeting participants will most likely sympathize with Hamas.â
German city-state Bremen also banned a pro-Palestinian demonstration slated for tomorrow, stating in a news release that gatherings with content related to Hamas or its attacks on Israel are prohibited. The ban also applies to "spontaneous or urgent demonstrations."
Officials said that the ban is in place because of a "global call from Hamas to the Arab and Muslim world" for protests and "asking their followers to 'be prepared to sacrifice.'"
The terrorists' call makes the ban "absolutely necessary despite the great importance of freedom of assembly," Bremen officials said.
U.S. in talks with Egypt, Israel over safe passage for some 600 Palestinian Americans in Gaza
There is a community of 500 to 600 Palestinian Americans in Gaza, a senior U.S. official said.Â
While not all of them want to leave the Strip â home to 2.3 million Palestinians within roughly 140 square miles â the U.S. is having discussions with the governments of Israel and Egypt about arrangements for safe passage for those who do.Â
The official noted these are âwartime conditionsâ and those discussions are taking place between Washington and the Egyptian government, as well as through the U.S. Embassy on the ground.Â
Photos: Rally for Israel in Romania


Hundreds gathered today in the Romanian capital, Bucharest, to show their solidarity for Israel.
Parking lot transformed into 'underground hospital' in Tel Aviv
TEL AVIV â A parking lot is being transformed into an "underground hospital" today, with doctors, nurses and other hospital staffers working to move as many as 700 patients at the Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center below ground level.
Ronni Gamzu, CEO of the medical center, said the decision to move patients underground to prepare "for the possibility of an intense attack in Tel Aviv" was made Saturday, the day Hamas launched its unprecedented attack on Israel. "I understood the scenario, the possible scenarios," Gamzu said. The contingency plan, however, was drafted around 12 years ago, he said â this is just the first time they've had to put it into action.

Dr. Amy Isenberg, a resident physician in the internal medicine ward, said the move comes as a relief. Up until now, when sirens warning of possible air attacks sound, her ward, on the third floor, has had to leave bedbound patients upstairs, with only hospital workers and patients who are able to walk typically making their way to shelter spaces.
"It feels like that's the way it needs to be done, but it feels a little selfish," she said. "Being here is just safer and it allows us to go on with the day without those considerations," she said.
âWe donât know what to doâ: Israeli uncle speaks about missing niece
E.U. warns TikTok about 'illegal' Hamas terror content
European Union Commissioner Thierry Breton has published a confrontational open letter to TikTok, warning that itâs being used to spread Hamas terrorist videos in violation of E.U. law.
The E.U. passed strict new regulations earlier this year, which include potential penalties for the world's largest tech companies if they allow users to share content from designated terror groups like Hamas.
âI remind you that following the opening of an investigation and a finding on non-compliance, penalties can be imposed,â Breton wrote.
TikTok did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Breton previously published a similar letter to X, formerly known as Twitter, and a less confrontational one to Facebook.
Gazan student shares video showing life under fire
Photos: Argentina evacuates its citizens from Israel


Argentine citizens boarded an Argentine Air Force C-130 Hercules aircraft bound for Mario de Bernardi Air Base near Rome at Ben Gurion International Airport in Tel Aviv today.
Israeli military chief admits 'IDF failed to keep nation secure'

Herzi Halevi, the Israeli military chief of staff, admitted to security failures in the brutal Hamas incursion Saturday.
âIDF is responsible for the security of our nation and its citizens, and we failed to do so on Saturday morning in the Gaza Envelope area,â he said. âWe will look into it, we will investigate, but now it is time for war.â
Halevi condemned the acts of the "murderous terrorists" who targeted children and women, while vowing to âdisassembleâ Hamas.
"IDF, under my command, understands the magnitude of this time, and the magnitude of the mission that lays on our shoulders," he added.
Palestinian President Abbas ârejectsâ civilian killings and capture of hostages

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas called for peace today, denouncing the killing of civilians and pleading for an immediate end to the aggression against the Palestinian people.Â
âWe reject the practices of killing civilians or abusing them on both sides because they contravene morals, religion and international law,â he said, according to the WAFA News Agency, a Palestinian outlet. He called for the release of civilians and prisoners.
Abbas met with King Abdullah II of Jordan today in Amman where they discussed the need for humanitarian and medical aid, as well as water and electricity in the Gaza Strip.Â
Abbas said Palestinians are still steadfast in their goals of freedom and independence, âleading to ending the occupation and embodying the independence of our Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital on the 1967 borders.âÂ
Abbas is set to meet with Blinken tomorrow in Amman, Jordan.Â
Photos: Israelis sign up to carry weapons


At Ayyelet HaShahar, a kibbutz along Israel's northern border with Lebanon, Israelis signed up at a weapons distribution point.
German foreign minister to visit Israel tomorrow
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock will travel to Israel tomorrow for a "solidarity visit," the ministry confirmed.
Details of the visit were not immediately available.
Music festival hostage turns 26
Noa Argamani â an Israeli whose kidnapping at the Supernova Music Festival on Saturday has gone viral â turned 26 today, according to her friends and family.
In a post on Instagram, Argamani's family and friends pleaded for her release.
"Our hearts are broken and we await her safe return," the post reads. "We have a duty to our loved ones who have been abducted to share and spread light on this situation as much as possible in hopes for their safe return."
"Our beautiful smiling girl," her family and friends continued. "We will never stop fighting until you smile again with us."
Argamani's boyfriend, Avinatan Or, is also presumed to have been kidnapped Saturday.
Gazans say Israeli plane dropped flyers telling them to flee neighborhood
The Israeli military dropped leaflets in Beit Lahia in northern Gaza today telling Palestinians to flee, according to someone in the area who sent a photo of the flyer to NBC News.
The leaflet says that its from the Israel Defense Forces and that Hamas operations have prompted the army to "move against it in your areas of residence," a translation said.

"For your safety, you must evacuate your homes immediately and go to known shelter centers," the translation said. "The Israeli army is not interested in harming you or your family members. Anyone who approaches Hamas terrorists or their facilities will put their lives in danger."
Beit Lahia is home to roughly 62,000 Palestinians, according to population projections by Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics. The borders to and from Gaza are closed, leaving Palestinians with few options as airstrikes continue days into the war.
Palestinians plead for humanitarian aid amid fears of ongoing airstrikes and âstarvationâÂ
Palestinians under siege in Gaza told NBC News today that âhumanitarian aid is needed more than anytime beforeâ as they face an onslaught of Israeli airstrikes and many are running out of basic necessities to survive.Â
âThere is no water. There is no food, no electricity,â Amjad Shabat, 32, told NBC News over WhatsApp. Shabat said she is sheltering with her family, including her husband and 2-year-old daughter, with the only food remaining is some stored chickpeas that âwonât last longer than a day.â
Shabat said families are trapped in their homes with âno safe places to go toâ as the Israeli military is âbombing different parts at different times.â
âThe airstrikes did not stop for a moment,â she said. âPeople do not know how to evacuate their houses.â
She said that sometimes, the Israeli military sends messages telling people to evacuate certain blocks, âother times they donât, they only demolish houses over the heads of the people. There are no safe places.â

Niveen Almadhoun, 40, in Jabalia is sheltering at her apartment with about two dozen other family members, including seven children.Â
âWe are running out of food and water, electricity,â she said. âWe donât know what we will do. We are trying to calm the children.â
Almadhoun said many Palestinians are trapped inside Gaza and canât escape, while aid is also unable to come in.
âWe canât travel. And no one from outside can enter,â Almadhoun said. âWe see blood everywhere. We are not understanding what is happening,â she said, adding that she is afraid of the airstrikes, âafraid to lose my daughter or my husbandâ or her mother, afraid to lose âyour leg, your eye. Everyone feels afraid.â
Almadhoun said she and her brother lost about 15 extended family members so far during the Israeli attacks on Gaza. That family had already lost some members in the conflict a few years ago.
âAll of them are dead now,â she said.
âWe are running from one place to another place, one place to another place,â she said. âWe want to be safe. We donât want food. We donât want money. We want just to feel that we are safe.â
Blinken shares an emotional moment with music festival survivor
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with one of the survivors of the Supernova Music Festival, where Israeli authorities said 260 people were killed, during his visit to Israel on Thursday.
"We went through horror," dual U.S.-Israeli citizen Lior Gelbaum told Blinken. "I am 24, and I never imagined something like this would happen ever at a dance and music festival."
Gelbaum and her boyfriend, Klil, survived the massacre Saturday and are now volunteering at a donation center.Â
"We were saved by a miracle," an emotional Gelbaum said. "Thank you for being here, it's really important."
Drexel University investigating possible hate incident in Jewish student's dorm
Drexel University is investigating a "distressing incident" in a Jewish student's residence hall dorm room amid heightened tensions due to the Israel-Hamas war.
In a statement yesterday, University President John Fry asked for "mutual respect" in discourse and protests surrounding the conflict.
"Unfortunately, we were made aware of a distressing situation that included destruction inside one of our residence halls. Thankfully, no one was injured," he said. The school is investigating to determine if bias or hate played a role in the incident. Britt Faulstick, executive director of news and media relations at Drexel, said today: âThe university is aware and investigating the incident.â Â
Drone video reveals the huge scale of destruction in Gaza City caused by Israeli bombardments
Photos: Palestinians search for survivors in refugee camps


Israeli family living 'double tragedy' after son goes missing, home destroyed in Hamas attack
Sagui Dekel-Chen was part of a group of young men who tried to defend their home against Hamas when the militants raided Nir Oz, a kibbutz near the Gaza Strip, early Saturday.Â
All communication with him stopped a few hours later, and there has been no trace of him since.
Sagui, a 35-year-old father of two who is also an American citizen, is considered missing. While no evidence has yet emerged that he was taken hostage by Hamas, his father, Jonathan Dekel-Chen, told NBC News he fears this is the case.
While dealing with a complete lack of information from both Israeli and American authorities about what could have happened to his son, Dekel-Chen said the the family is also mourning the loss of their home â the kibbutz has been rendered uninhabitable.Â
âWe are living with a double tragedy,â Dekel-Chen said. âWhat we believe to be the captivity, in my case of a son, but again, brothers, sisters, parents, children â they have also been taken, and the total physical destruction of our community and of our home. We donât have anywhere to go home to.â

American troops not being sent for hostages, White House says
There are currently no plans to send American soldiers to Israel for hostage rescue operations, Jon Finer, deputy national security adviser, told MSNBC's "Morning Joe."
"We are not contemplating U.S. boots on the ground," Finer said.
America experts are involved in advising Israelis on how to proceed, however, Finer noted. There are an estimated 100 to 150 people currently being held hostage by Hamas, officials have said, including missing American citizens.
Syrian airports hit by Israeli airstrikes, state media reports
Aerial attacks hit two different Syrian airports in Aleppo and Damascus today, according to Syrian Arab News Agency, a state media site.
The site blamed Israel for the strikes, which it said had damaged the landing strips at both airports and put them out of service, accusing Israel of trying to divert attention from its airstrikes on Gaza.
Israel has hit the airports in the past, but these are the first strikes reported since the Hamas attack.
Rocket strikes and sirens in a southern Israeli town
SDEROT, Israel â Warning sirens blared as we arrived at this southern Israeli town near the Gaza border around midday local time, followed quickly by incoming rocket fire in a primarily residential area of the town.
Rockets from Gaza are striking Sderot periodically, with few civilians on the streets but a large presence of Israeli police and military, many on patrol. There is a constant tempo of outgoing fire from large Israeli weaponry, and small arms fire can also be heard in the distance.
From our vantage point atop a hill overlooking northern Gaza, strikes can be seen steadily hitting the strip. The skyline of Gaza City now is barely visible, through smoke and dust plumes.
Democratic lawmaker cuts ties with prominent left-wing group over pro-Palestinian rally
WASHINGTON â Rep. Shri Thanedar, D-Mich., announced yesterday that he is renouncing his membership in the Democratic Socialists of America after the left-wing group promoted a pro-Palestinian rally a day after Hamasâ deadly terrorist attack on Israel.
In a statement, Thanedar, who is in his first term, cited what he called a âhate-filled and antisemitic rally in New York City,â which other progressives in Congress have also condemned.
âWeâre not Hamas,â Gaza residents say as death toll rises
GAZA CITY, Gaza â After days of devastating Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip, residents of the besieged enclave say there is no way to escape death.Â
Hamas controls the Palestinian enclave, where 2.2 million people live in about 140 square miles â making it one of the most densely populated places in the world.Â
Schools have been flattened, walls blown off houses and entire families buried under tons of concrete. Residents are scrambling to rescue relatives as smoke and dust from the relentless bombing make it difficult to breathe.Â
âItâs all collateral damage. We are all civilians, normal doctors, nurses, teachers, students. Weâre not Hamas,â Mohamed Mughisib, a Palestinian doctor and a deputy coordinator with Doctors Without Borders, said in a telephone interview from Gaza.Â
âItâs the children who are dying,â he said.
Palestinian health system 'has begun to collapse,' ministry says
âThe health system has begun to collapse,â the Palestinian Health Ministry said in a statement today.
The number of injured Palestinians in Gaza â more than 6,000 people â currently exceeds the number of available operating rooms and beds, it said. Expanded intensive care units have already been filled.
âThe number of injured people is greater than the hospitalsâ clinical capabilities, even after they were expanded and the injured were placed in the corridors,â the ministry said.
Latino Jews grieve, worry as attack in Israel puts close family ties in focus
Fernando Russek, 51, a Jewish resident of south Texas who was born in Mexico, spoke with urgency and strength about âpeople on the side of goodâ standing with Israel and speaking out against the attack by Hamas.Â
But he couldnât maintain the bravado as he disclosed that his daughter is fighting in the war because she is a captain in the Israeli army and that his brother, a reservist, was reactivated two weeks before he was to have opened a restaurant in Israel.Â
âI am like a father â and like any brother,â Russek said when he was asked how he was coping.
The gruesome violence that unfolded when Hamas staged a surprise attack along the Gaza border in Israel and the current state of war have put into focus the Latino Jewish diaspora and the interconnected nature of families, friends and cross-cultural ties among the U.S., Latin America and Israel.Â
âThereâs literally thousands of Latinos who are Jewish,â said Rabbi Peter Tarlow, executive director of the Center for Latino-Jewish Relations, whoâs based in College Station, Texas. âLike anyone else in the Jewish community, this is personal. You know, it hits home."
Blinken says at least 25 American killed in attack by Hamas
Secretary of State Antony Blinken said today that the number of Americans killed in Hamas' attack on Israel has grown to at least 25.
"Tragically, the number of innocent lives claimed by Hamasâ heinous attacks continues to rise. Among those, at least 25 American citizens were killed," he said.
Speaking at press conference in Tel Aviv with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, he reiterated America's support for Israel's defense, through supplying ammunition, aircraft and other aid.
"As Israelâs defense needs evolve, we will meet with Congress to make sure those needs are met," he said. "There is no excuse, there is no justification for these atrocities. This is and this must be a moment for moral clarity."
Blinken condemned the loss of innocent lives. "Hamas does not represent the Palestinian people and does not stand for the future," he said. "They have one agenda â to kill Jews."
"President Biden was absolutely correct in calling this sheer evil," Netanyahu said. "Hamas is ISIS and just as ISIS was crushed, so too will Hamas be crushed. And Hamas should be treated just as ISIS was treated."
Contradictory reports about Egypt's Rafah crossing from besieged Gaza
There were contradictory reports today about whether the only border crossing out of the Gaza Strip not controlled by Israel is open amid a complete blockade of the enclave.
The Egyptian Foreign Ministry said in a statement that the Rafah border crossing between Egypt and the Gaza Strip is "open for business" and "has not been closed at any stage since the beginning of the current crisis, except that its basic facilities on the Palestinian side were destroyed."
"As a result of the repeated Israeli bombing, it prevents them from carrying out work normally," the ministry said, calling on Israel to avoid targeting the Palestinian side of the crossing to keep this âlifelineâ for Gaza residents available.
But Embassy of Palestine representative at the Rafah crossing, Kamal Al Khatib, told NBC News today that the border has been closed since Oct. 8 when the Gazan side of the border was first bombed by Israel.
There have been conflicting reports about whether the crossing has been operating since the beginning of the Israel-Hamas war. On Tuesday, the Israeli military revised a recommendation by one of its spokespeople that Palestinians fleeing its airstrikes in Gaza head to Egypt.
IDF preparing for a potential ground assault
Israel is preparing for a possible ground operation in Gaza, Lt. Col. Richard Hecht, an Israeli military spokesman, told reporters today.
He said forces âare preparing for a ground maneuver if decided,â but that political leaders have not yet ordered one
NBC News correspondents have previously seen Israeli tanks lined up at the border with Gaza, indicating the potential for a ground assault.
Gaza is home to more than 2 million Palestinians, half of whom are children. The densely populated strip would make a ground assault difficult and likely increase casualties.
Shrapnel damage after strike in Sderot, Israel
Israeli soldiers inspect shrapnel damage on a wall after a rocket strike in the southern border city of Sderot today.

For more coverage on the Israel-Hamas war, read yesterday's live blog here.
Family of missing American mom and teenager fear they have been kidnapped
The family of a missing American mom and her teenage daughter, told NBC Newsâ Lester Holt yesterday that they feared they had been kidnapped by Hamas militants and were doing âeverything in our powerâ to bring her home safely.Â
Seventeen-year-old Natalie Ranaanâs aunt Saray Cohen said that she last heard from her shortly after midday Saturday. Natalie, who had just graduated high school in Chicago, told her via text message that they were âhearing shooting out of their apartment. And she said that the other room out of the security room was bombed,â Cohen added.Â
Ranaanâs grandmother Tamar Levitan said she was later accompanied by five soldiers when she went round to the apartment where Natalie was staying with her mother, Judith. âI saw the front door open and the door to the backyard was broken. Itâs glass door. So they broke it and I think from there they came into the house,â she said.    Â
âWe want the U.S. to help us find its citizens Judith and Natalie,â Cohen added.
Water situation in Gaza becoming more dire, U.N. says
As the complete blockade of the Gaza Strip by Israel continues for its fourth day today, the United Nations is sounding the alarm about water shortages for the enclave's more than 2 million residents.
Israel said Monday that water was on of the resources it was cutting off for the Gaza Strip, along with fuel, food and electricity.

The U.N. said yesterday there was already a "severe shortage" of drinking water affecting more than 650,000 people.Â
Israeli airstrikes have also damaged seven facilities that had been providing water and sanitation services to more than 1.1 million people, more than half of Gaza's estimated population, the U.N. said. In some areas, sewage and solid waste are now accumulating in the streets, posing a health hazard, the report added.
Palestinian President Abbas to meet Blinken tomorrow, official says
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas will meet Blinken tomorrow, a Palestinian official said early today.
Blinken landed in Tel Aviv this morning and is meeting with Israeli senior officials, including Netanyahu.
Hussein Al-Sheikh, secretary general of the executive committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization, also said on X that Abbas will meet with Jordanian King Abdullah in Amman today.
Israeli troops, tanks gather along the Lebanese border
4 Palestinian medics killed in Gaza, Red Crescent says

The Red Crescent confirmed that four of its Palestinian ambulances workers died while working in Gaza yesterday.
Palestine Red Crescent Society identified the four workers today as Hatem Awad, Khalil Al-Sharif, Yousry Al-Masry and Ahmed Dahman, according to a translated post on X. The post also released images of fellow medics crying over their bodies outside Al-Shifa Hospital.
A video of the medics being carried into the hospital by distraught Palestinians circulated social media yesterday and appears to match the images shared by the Red Crescent.
"The IFRC reiterates the call on all parties to respect their legal obligations under international humanitarian law," the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said in a statement. "This is non-negotiable. Civilians, healthcare workers, health facilities and civilian infrastructure must be respected and protected at all times."
No way out for U.N. agency director's family after border crossing bombed
Hani Almadoun's entire family is in Gaza, and he was watching from afar the neighborhoods he knows very well, being destroyed beyond recognition from the constant Israeli airstrikes.
Almadoun, who's the director of philanthropy for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, said, "They cannot leave if they wanted to," as airstrikes pound the only border crossing out between Gaza and Egypt.
"We've not been able to establish contact with my parents," he said. "There's a lot of death and airstrikes around them."
Iranian foreign minister to do Middle East tour, including Lebanon
Hossein Amir Abdullahian, Iran's foreign minister, will be doing a tour of the region that includes Lebanon "in light of the current events," according to an X post by Iran's ambassador to Lebanon.
Iran is a known supporter of Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, which has been exchanging fire sporadically across the border with Israel since Hamas' attack Saturday.
Gaza death rises to 1,354; more than 330,000 displaced
Gaza's Health Ministry has once again revised its death toll to 1,354, up from 1,203 reported this morning. It said more than 6,000 are injured as Gaza's hospitals are struggling to provide help to all those who need it amid Israel's complete blockade and airstrikes.
The United Nations said the number of those displaced in Gaza has also grown and now stands at 338,934.
Animals left to fend for themselves in Gaza
A horse eats from a dumpster along a street filled with garbage and rubble in Gaza City today.

Gaza hospitals face a âtsunami of woundedâ as supplies and power run out
GAZA CITY, Gaza â After Hamasâ terror attack, Israeli airstrikes have reduced entire neighborhoods in Gaza, including hospitals, to soot. The remaining clinics and emergency units have been operating without power and supplies.
âOur hospitals are flooded with patients and injured people, and we have to deal with casualties that are arriving on a daily basis at our emergency department,â Marwan Abu Seeds, deputy director of the Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, said as ambulances brought in one casualty after another.Â
Officials say at least 1,100 people have died in Gaza in bombings since the attack. Now, as Israelâs forces prepare for a possible ground invasion, doctors and aid workers say the health care system in Gaza is about to collapse.
âThe situation is really catastrophic,â said Sarah Chateau, Paris-based desk manager for Doctors Without Borders, which has 300 staff members in Gaza. âWe barely can operate in Gaza. The bombing is almost nonstop.â
Blinken is meeting with Israeli PM
Blinken is meeting with Netanyahu, government ministers and officials as part of his visit today to show Washingtonâs solidarity with Israel.
A statement from Netanyahu's office said Blinken is also set to meet with Defense Minister Yoav Gallant and centrist opposition party leader Benny Gantz, with whom Netanyahu formed an emergency unity government yesterday.
97 families of hostages have been notified
As of this morning, 97 families have been informed of their loved ones being taken hostage by Hamas, according to IDF spokesman Daniel Hagari.
Officials have estimated that between 100 and 150 people have been kidnapped by Hamas.
Residents of Khan Younis in the Gaza Strip recover airstrike's victims and search for loved ones
Two Palestinians in West Bank killed by settlers, Palestinian Health Ministry says
Two Palestinians have been killed by Israeli settlers near the town of Qusra in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, the Palestinian Health Authority said today.
Witnesses told Reuters that the father and son were shot when settlers opened fire at the funeral of four Palestinians who were killed by armed settlers and Israeli soldiers in Qusra, near the northern city of Nablus, yesterday.
NBC News could not verify the reports.
X issues formal response to accusations of platform's disinformation
Linda Yaccarino, CEO of X, issued a formal response to European authorities on what the platform is doing to mitigate "illegal content and disinformation" following the break out of war.
Thierry Breton, European commissioner in charge of the internal market of the European Union, sent a letter to Elon Musk on Tuesday implying X may be subject to investigation for violations of the E.U.'s Digital Services Act.
Community notes, which are user-submitted addendums to posts, appear to be where the platform is largely focusing its efforts to add "context to a wide range of topics related to the conflict," according to the letter.
"We recently launched a major acceleration in the speed in which notes appear," Yaccarino wrote.
Researchers found a propaganda network of 67 accounts coordinating to spread false, inflammatory content related to the Israel-Hamas war. At least one of them was a verified user account, NBC reported Monday.
Israeli forces preparing ground offensive against Hamas
Guns distributed to Israelis near Lebanon border
Israelis have been receiving weapons at a distribution point for people allowed to carry arms, at the Ayyelet HaShahar Kibbutz, in northern Israel, near the Lebanese border today.


Israel normally has tight gun restrictions and civilians are not normally allowed to carry firearms, but this week residents in some Israeli towns have been told they will be able to. Some 10,000 people applied for a license in the southern town of Sderot, National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said yesterday.
Gaza death toll passes 1,200 ahead of expected Israeli ground offensive
Gaza's Health Ministry said this morning that 1,203 people were killed and another 5,763 injured since the bloody incursion of Hamas into Israel this weekend and retaliatory airstrikes on the enclave by Israeli forces.
Taiwan sets up task force to study Israel-Hamas war
Taiwan has set up a task force to learn from the surprise attack on Israel by Hamas, the islandâs defense minister said today.
Like the war in Ukraine, the Israel-Hamas war has raised concerns about potential conflict over Taiwan, a self-governing democracy that China claims as its territory. Taiwan is under growing pressure from Beijing, which says it seeks âpeaceful unificationâ with the island but has not ruled out the use of force.
Taiwanese Defense Minister Chiu Kuo-cheng said officials had already drawn lessons from the Israel-Hamas war.
âThe first is that intelligence work is really important, and when intelligence is available, many countermeasures can be made,â he told reporters. âThese countermeasures also include our ability to prevent a war from happening.â
Satellite images show airstrikes' damage in Gaza
New satellite images show the extent of damage caused by Israeli airstrikes. The remains of the Watan tower in Gaza City can be seen in pictures published by Maxar Technologies.



Other images captured by Maxar show the destruction across the Rimal district in Gaza City.
Israelâs sense of security forever changed from Hamas attack
No humanitarian aid for Gaza until Israeli hostages returned, Israeli minister says
Israel's energy minister said there will be no humanitarian aid for Gaza until Israelis taken hostage by Hamas are returned home.
"No electrical switch will be turned on, no water stop cork will be opened, and no fuel truck will enter until the kidnapped Israelis are returned home," Israel Katz said on X today.
"Humanitarian for humanitarian. And no one will preach us morals," Katz wrote.
Aid organizations and the United Nations have been sounding the alarm about a growing humanitarian crisis in the densely populated Gaza Strip since Israel announced a complete blockade Monday, cutting off supplies of fuel, food, water and electricity, in retaliation for the unprecedented Hamas attack this weekend. It comes amid a barrage of airstrikes from Israel, which has already displaced more than a quarter million people in the enclave.
3 Chinese nationals killed and 2 missing, Foreign Ministry says
The Chinese Foreign Ministry confirmed today that three Chinese nationals had been killed and two are missing in the Israel-Hamas war.
Several others have been injured, ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said at a regular news briefing in Beijing.
âWe express our deep sorrow for the victims, and express our sincere condolences to the families of the victims and the injured,â he said.
It was unclear whether the number of missing Wang cited included Noa Argamani, 25, whose abduction from a music festival by Hamas was seen in a widely shared video and who the Israeli Embassy in Beijing says is Israeli Chinese.
Gaza morgue inundated with bodies
A morgue worker arranges body bags at Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City today.

Israel-Hamas war escalates tensions nationwide
Number of displaced people in Gaza rises to 263,000; all 13 hospitals only partially operational, U.N. says
The mass displacement of civilians in Gaza has now topped 263,000 people, the United Nations said yesterday, with more than 175,000 sheltering in U.N. schools in the enclave that's home to more than 2 million people.
The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said in its daily update that more than 1,000 housing units in Gaza have been destroyed since Israel started launching airstrikes on the region.
All 13 hospitals and other health facilities in the enclave are only partially operational because of supply shortages and fuel rationing, the U.N. said.
Cease-fire is imperative, Chinaâs Mideast envoy tells Palestinian official
China is âdeeply saddenedâ by the war between Israel and Hamas and the civilian deaths and injuries that have resulted, and calls for an immediate cease-fire, Beijingâs Middle East envoy told a Palestinian official.
The international community should work together to de-escalate the situation and provide Palestinians with humanitarian assistance, the envoy, Zhai Jun, said in a phone call yesterday with Amal Jadou, first deputy minister of Palestinian foreign affairs.
Zhai also reiterated Chinaâs support for a two-state solution.
âChina will continue to promote a cease-fire to stop the violence, help alleviate the humanitarian crisis, and actively promote peace and negotiations, so as to play a constructive role in promoting a comprehensive, just and lasting solution to the question of Palestine,â Zhai told Jadou, according to a readout published by the Chinese Foreign Ministry.
Blinken lands in Tel Aviv
Blinken has landed in Tel Aviv, five days after a surprise Hamas attack on Israel.

The State Department said Tuesday that Blinken's message was one of solidarity and support. Spokesperson Matthew Miller said Blinken will be meeting with senior leaders in the Israeli government about the situation on the ground and how the U.S. can continue to best support Israel.
UNRWA director loses contact with family in Gaza as humanitarian crisis worsens
Catch up with nbcnews.com's coverage from Israel and Gaza
Here are just some of the articles our team in the region and beyond have produced in the last 24 hours.
- Gaza hospitals face a âtsunami of woundedâ as supplies and power run out
- Death and heartbreak at every turn in kibbutz near Gaza that was ambushed by HamasÂ
- Families of Israel music festivalgoers are beginning to learn their loved ones are among the dead
- âWeâre not Hamasâ: Gaza residents say airstrikes are putting civilians in grave danger
- U.S. intelligence indicates Iranian leaders were surprised by Hamas attack
- Supporters rally to provide milk for an Israeli infant whose mother is missing after Hamas festival attack
- 'Itâs a massacre': Bodies of victims still strewn across kibbutz once home to 700