Tag: Israel

  • Israel closes diplomatic missions worldwide amid military operations in Iran

    Israel closes diplomatic missions worldwide amid military operations in Iran

    Israel has temporarily closed all of its diplomatic missions worldwide as its military operation in Iran continues, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Friday.

    As a result, consular services would not be available to Israeli citizens currently abroad, the ministry said.

    It urged Israelis overseas to complete an online form updating their location and situation and advised those in need of urgent assistance to contact the ministry’s situation room directly.

    The statement also warned Israelis abroad to avoid displaying national symbols in public, refrain from posting identifiable information or travel plans on social media and avoid attending large-scale events linked to Israel.

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    Earlier on Friday, Israel launched a large-scale strike on dozens of military targets in Iran, including nuclear facilities.

    The attacks killed several senior Iranian military commanders, including Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces, Mohammad Bagheri, and Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Commander, Hossein Salami, according to Iranian media.

    Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, vowed retaliation, warning that Israel had prepared a bitter fate for itself.” 

    (Xinhua/NAN)

  • 17 dead as Israel presses new Gaza offensive

    17 dead as Israel presses new Gaza offensive

    The Palestinian city of Khan Younis was targeted by intensive airstrikes overnight, as Israel pursued its ramped-up offensive across the Gaza Strip.

    According to Palestinian news agency WAFA on Monday, 17 people were killed in the coastal territory during the night.

    WAFA did not initially provide details on the identity of the victims.

    According to medics in Gaza, at least six people were killed and dozens injured in airstrikes on Khan Younis.

    Witnesses told dpa that there were about 30 airstrikes on the area.

    The internet connection failed in large parts of the city.

    Palestinian media reports by WAFA and others said that a special unit of the Israeli army had killed a commander of the al-Nasser Salah al-Din Brigades, which is allied with the Islamist movement Hamas.

    Read Also: Hamas seeks global resistance against Trump’s plan in Gaza

    The information could not initially be independently verified.

    The Israeli military emphasised that it did all it can to avoid civilian casualties when attacking targets belonging to Hamas or other terrorist organizations.

    This cannot be verified either as reporters has very limited access to the area.

    The Israeli Air Force has been carrying out massive aerial attacks on targets in the Gaza Strip in recent days, and Israel announced an “extensive’’ new ground operation across the territory on Sunday.

    Dozens of Palestinian deaths are being reported daily from the Gaza Strip.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Israel denies two UK MPs entry

    Israel denies two UK MPs entry

    Two British members of parliament who were refused entry to Israel have returned to London.

    Abtisam Mohamed and Yuan Yang from Britain’s governing Labour Party were travelling as part of a parliamentary delegation, but were stopped at the border on the grounds that they intended to provoke anti-Israel activities, according to the Israeli embassy in Britain.

    The blocking of their visit marks the latest in a series of attempts by Israel to restrict entry of foreign lawmakers and dignitaries who have criticised the country’s policies.

    “We’re astounded at the unprecedented step taken by the Israeli authorities to refuse British MPs entry on our trip to visit the occupied West Bank,” Mohamed and Yang said in a joint statement.

    “It is vital that parliamentarians are able to witness, firsthand the situation in the occupied Palestinian territory.”

    The Israeli embassy in London said the interior ministry had a duty to prevent entry to people who intended to cause the state harm.

    “These individuals had accused Israel of false claims, were actively involved in promoting sanctions against Israeli ministers, and supported campaigns aimed at boycotting the State of Israel,” the embassy said.

    Read Also: Khamenei pledges ‘firm retaliatory response’ to U.S., Israel

    In their statement yesterday, Mohamed and Yang said they had spoken out in Britain’s parliament about the conflict between Israel and Palestine and the importance of complying with international law.

    “Parliamentarians should feel free to speak truthfully in the House of Commons, without fear of being targeted,” they said.

    In November, Mohamed asked Britain’s government if it would review its relationship with Israel in light of “atrocities taking place in Gaza, the West Bank and in Lebanon”.

    Britain’s Foreign Secretary David Lammy said the detention of lawmakers Mohamed and Yang was no way to treat parliamentarians.  

  • Why So Many People Choose to Move to Israel

    Why So Many People Choose to Move to Israel

    When people talk about countries that spark curiosity, Israel always seems to make the list. But what’s the real reason so many people pack their bags and start calling this small Mediterranean country home? Turns out, the appeal runs deeper than sunshine and shawarma.

    A Country That’s Both Ancient and Cutting-Edge

    It’s almost surreal how Israel blends its ancient soul with a tech-driven future. You can walk through streets that are thousands of years old in Jerusalem, then hop over to Tel Aviv and find yourself in the middle of a buzzing startup scene. This collision of old and new is part of what makes living here such a constant surprise.

    Sun, Sea, and Something More

    Beaches? Stunning. Desert landscapes? Check. Snow-capped peaks in the north? Yep, that too. For such a compact country, Israel’s got an almost unfair variety of climates and scenery. And thanks to its size, you can have breakfast with a view of the Mediterranean, lunch in the Negev Desert, and dinner by the Sea of Galilee — all in one day.

    A Culture of Connection

    One thing everyone notices when they move to Israel — life here feels personal. Strangers talk to each other like old friends, and it’s perfectly normal to strike up a deep conversation with your taxi driver or the person sitting next to you in a café. That sense of community is magnetic, especially for newcomers.

    Entertainment for Every Taste

    From ancient festivals reimagined for modern times to live music at beachfront bars, Israel’s entertainment scene keeps things interesting. And for those who enjoy a bit of online action, platforms like https://casinosanalyzer.com/online-casinos/israel-isr offer a reliable guide to online casinos available in the country. Whether it’s traditional gaming or cutting-edge virtual experiences, there’s no shortage of options.

    Opportunity Knocks — Loudly

    Career-wise, Israel punches above its weight. Known as the “Startup Nation,” the country attracts ambitious entrepreneurs and tech innovators from all over the world. Whether you’re a software developer, a creative professional, or a scientist, the odds of finding exciting work opportunities are stacked in your favor.

    More Than Just a Place to Live

    At the end of the day, moving to Israel isn’t just a change of address. It’s a lifestyle shift — one that comes with intense energy, unexpected friendships, and a front-row seat to history in the making. For many, that’s more than enough reason to call it home.

  • Israeli forces resume ground operations in Gaza, says IDF

    Israeli forces resume ground operations in Gaza, says IDF

    Israel has resumed “focused ground operations” in the “centre of the Gaza Strip” over the past 24 hours, according to the Israel Defence Forces.

    Israeli forces have also taken control and “re-expanded their control to the centre of the Netzarim” corridor – the line that separates northern Gaza from the south – an IDF spokesperson said.

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    As a part of the terms of the ceasefire deal that went into effect on Jan. 19, Israeli forces agreed to withdraw troops on the ground in Gaza to a buffer zone they carved out along the perimeter of Gaza, and troops remained in the Philadelphi corridor – the 8-mile-long border between Gaza and Egypt.

  • Israel should not resume the war in Gaza

    Israel should not resume the war in Gaza

    • By Mark Lavie

    Israel has a new military chief. From his first day on the job, Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir has been threatening to resume a full-scale war against Hamas in Gaza. He is clear about his goal—to wipe out Hamas once and for all.

    That’s a mistake.

    In parallel, Israel has rejected the Egyptian plan for Gaza after the war, because it leaves Hamas more or less intact.

    That’s a mistake, too.

    The situation as it stands today is this: Phase one of the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas is over. Several dozen Israeli hostages have been released, along with the bodies of others murdered in captivity—including the red-headed Bibas children and their mother.

    That horror is behind us, but the way forward is unclear. There has been no agreement about Phase two of the ceasefire, including an Israeli withdrawal from strategic points in Gaza, and it’s not at all certain that there will be one. Zamir clearly doesn’t want another phase, and apparently neither does his boss, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    Netanyahu invented the concept of wiping all traces of Hamas off the map. It sounded right just after the Hamas pogrom of Oct. 7, 2023, when thousands of Hamas terrorists stormed across the border and attacked Israeli villages and a music festival, killing 1,200 and hauling 240 others off into captivity in Gaza tunnels.

    Those atrocities would have justified practically any Israeli response. What Israel did was attack Gaza from the air and the ground, blowing up tunnels, battling and killing thousands of terrorists, and destroying buildings and neighborhoods, while doing its best to minimize casualties among Gaza civilians.

    That last point is complicated, because Hamas bases its terrorists among civilians, fires rockets from schools and mosques, and digs tunnels under hospitals and neighborhoods. Despite its efforts, Israel has taken an international beating over civilian deaths in Gaza, though the actual numbers show that Israel is doing a much better job of protecting civilians than, say, American forces did in Iraq not so many years ago.

    The intensive counterattack against Hamas was justified—but now it has played itself out. It’s time for Israel’s leaders, political and military, to accept the basics:

    Hamas was formed as a terrorist organization. Its victories are counted in Israeli civilian deaths and damage to Israel’s cities and towns.

    Partly because of misguided Israeli encouragement, Hamas transformed its structure from terrorist cells into military formations over the past decade.

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    Israel has destroyed most of those military formations.

    Few hostages were freed through Israeli military action. Agreements have led to exchanges of captured terrorists for more than 150 hostages. There are still 59 hostages in Hamas captivity.

    Now that Hamas is back to operating as a terrorist group, further large-scale Israeli military operations won’t eliminate Hamas or free more hostages. Instead, Israel will find that over the six weeks of the first phase of the ceasefire, Hamas has booby-trapped what’s left of Gaza, ready for the next Israeli incursion. Of course, Israeli soldiers could kill some more Hamas terrorists, but the cost in soldiers’ lives would be prohibitive, and Hamas, as a terrorist entity, would emerge intact.

    Here’s the issue: “Victory” does not mean the same thing for armies and terrorists. A victory for an army means defeating the enemy. A victory for terrorists can be a single attack on a civilian target. Oct. 7 was the ultimate terrorist victory, on the scale of al-Qaida’s 9/11 attack on the United States in 2001.

    The bottom line: terrorist groups cannot be eliminated by military means alone.

    In the case of the Middle East, that means two things: Israel cannot solve the Hamas problem by itself, and moderate Arab nations that have more important issues to deal with, like the Iran issue, can and must contribute to the Gaza solution.

    Shocked by the fantastical “Palestinian-free American Gaza Riviera” proposal floated by US President Donald Trump, Arab nations sprang into action, starting with Egypt—the nation with the most to lose from the Trump plan, which envisions moving Palestinians out of Gaza to, wait for it, Egypt.

    In general terms, Egypt’s proposal, adopted by the Arab League and endorsed by the 57-nation Organization of Islamic Cooperation, envisions a government of non-Hamas Palestinian technocrats supervised by Arab nations. Hamas would remain in place with its weapons, but they would be under the eyes of the Arab forces. A multibillion-dollar reconstruction project would restore housing in Gaza.

    Obviously there are flaws here. Can Arab nations be trusted to keep Hamas under control? Is it even possible that Hamas, today one of the main employers in Gaza (especially when you add in the UN, which is basically the same thing), can be kept on the sidelines? Can Gaza be rebuilt the way it was, with its neighborhoods a stone’s throw (literally) from Israeli villages across the border, without endangering Israel?

    So understandably, Israel rejected the Egyptian plan, charging that it “fails to address the realities of the situation” after the Hamas pogrom.

    That’s a mistake.

    Israel’s blanket rejection removes it from the process of developing the Egyptian-Arab League plan into something that might actually work. If there is to be a solution to the Hamas threat, it has to come with the cooperation of the Arab world, and Israel must take part in that.

    It’s possible that the new Israeli army chief is blowing off steam or trying to improve Israel’s bargaining position with his threats of annihilation of Hamas. Possible, but not likely, since “total victory” has been the mantra of the Netanyahu government since the day after the Oct. 7 pogrom.

    That’s a mistake.

    • This article was originally published in www.themedialine.org
  • Arab States, UN condemn Israel’s blockade of humanitarian aid to Gaza

    Arab States, UN condemn Israel’s blockade of humanitarian aid to Gaza

    Several Arab nations and the United Nations strongly criticised Israel’s decision to block all humanitarian aid from entering the Gaza Strip.

    The move, made on Sunday, has been tagged as a violation of the ceasefire agreement reached between Israel and Hamas.

    Egypt and Qatar, who played major roles in mediating the ceasefire, alleged Israel of breaching international humanitarian law, with Qatar’s foreign ministry stating that it “strongly condemns” Israel’s action, calling it a “clear violation” of the ceasefire.

    Egypt’s foreign ministry slammed Israel for reportedly using starvation as a weapon against the Palestinian people.

    Reacting to the development, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu justified the blockade, claiming Hamas was stealing the humanitarian aid meant for civilians and using them to fund its militant operations.

    Read Also: Israel delays Palestinian prisoners’ release over Hamas’ treatment of hostages

    He further alleged that Hamas rejected a proposal from U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff to extend the ceasefire after it expired on Saturday.

    A Hamas spokesperson described Israel’s actions as a “cheap blackmail” and tagged the blockade a “coup” against the ceasefire agreement.

    The ceasefire, which had stopped 15 months of fighting, had given room for the release of 33 Israeli hostages in exchange for around 1,900 Palestinian prisoners.

    However, negotiations for a permanent ceasefire and other crucial issues, including the release of all remaining hostages and the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza, have remained stagnant.

    UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher cries against Israel’s actions.

    Via his X handle, he wrote: “International humanitarian law is clear: We must be allowed access to deliver vital lifesaving aid.”

    While aid trucks were alleged to have been stopped on Sunday, agencies confirmed that stocks were still available in Gaza, though the blockade threatens future supplies.

    Despite the ceasefire’s collapse, ongoing tensions have caused casualties, including four deaths from Israeli airstrikes on Gaza.

  • Israel delays Palestinian prisoners’ release over Hamas’ treatment of hostages

    Israel delays Palestinian prisoners’ release over Hamas’ treatment of hostages

    Israel will delay the seventh hostage-prisoner exchange in protest of Hamas’ “humiliating” treatment of hostages, according to Israeli officials.

    The release of 620 Palestinian prisoners, which was scheduled for Saturday, was postponed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Yesterday morning, Netanyahu’s office issued a statement condemning Hamas propaganda generated during the exchange.

    “In light of Hamas’s repeated violations, including the ceremonies that humiliate our hostages and the cynical exploitation of our hostages for propaganda purposes, it has been decided to delay the release of terrorists that was planned for yesterday until the release of the next hostages has been assured, and without the humiliating ceremonies,” the office’s statement said.

    The statement came after reports of Hamas fighters exploiting Israeli prisoners while they were being released. On Saturday, five of the six freed hostages were accompanied by armed militants in front of a crowd, including three Israeli hostages who posed alongside terrorists.

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    Omer Wenkert, Omer Shem Tov and Eliya Cohen were among the hostages forced to pose with the terrorists. Shem Tov was also forced to appear cheerful, kiss two militants on the head and blew kisses to the crowd.

    The three also wore fake army uniforms, though they were not enlisted when they were captured by Hamas.

    In another recent ceremony orchestrated by Hamas, four coffins were placed in front of a caricature of Netanyahu with a banner that said, “The war criminal Netanyahu & his Nazi army killed them with missiles from Zionist warplanes.”

    Hamas condemned Israel’s decision to postpone the release of Palestinian prisoners and detainees, arguing that Israel’s claim that the hostages’ handover ceremonies are “humiliating” was false and a pretext to evade obligations under the ceasefire agreement.

  • Hamas frees three hostages, Israel begins releasing Palestinians

    Hamas frees three hostages, Israel begins releasing Palestinians

    Palestinian militant group Hamas handed over three Israeli hostages on Saturday, whose gaunt appearance shocked Israelis, while Israel began freeing dozens of Palestinians in the latest stage of a ceasefire aimed at ending the 15-month war in Gaza.

    Ohad Ben Ami and Eli Sharabi, both taken hostage from Kibbutz Be’eri during the cross-border Hamas-led attack on October 7, 2023, and Or Levy, abducted that day from the Nova music festival, were led onto a Hamas podium by gunmen.

    The three men all appeared thin, weak and pale, and in worse condition than the 18 hostages who had previously been freed under the truce agreed last month.

    “He looked like a skeleton, it was awful to see,” Ohad Ben Ami’s mother-in-law, Michal Cohen, told Channel 13 News as she watched the Hamas-directed handover ceremony, which included the hostages answering questions posed by a masked man as militants armed with automatic rifles stood on each side.

    In another show of force by Hamas, which has paraded fighters during previous releases, dozens of its militants deployed in central Gaza as it handed hostages over to the International Committee of the Red Cross.

    The hostages were then driven in ICRC cars to Israeli forces and into Israel, where they were reunited in smiles and tears with family members and flown to hospitals. “We missed you so much,” the mother of Or Levy, Geula, said as she hugged her son.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the sight of the frail hostages was shocking and would be addressed.

    Israel’s President Isaac Herzog described the release ceremony as cynical and vicious. “This is what a crime against humanity looks like,” he said.

    Read Also: Israeli-Hamas ceasefire deal

    The Hostage Families Forum said the images of the three hostages evoked images of survivors of Nazi concentration camps during the Holocaust. “We have to get ALL THE HOSTAGES out of hell,” it said.

    In exchange for the hostages’ release, Israel is freeing 183 Palestinian prisoners, some convicted of involvement in attacks that killed dozens of people, as well as 111 detained in Gaza during the war.

    Cheering crowds greeted the buses as they arrived in Gaza, embracing the freed detainees as they disembarked, some of them weeping with joy and tearing prison-issued bracelets off their wrists.

    Among those freed in Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, was Eyad Abu Shkaidem, sentenced to 18 life terms in Israel for masterminding suicide attacks in revenge for Israel’s 2004 assassinations of Hamas leaders.

    “Today, I am reborn,” Shkaidem told reporters upon arrival in Ramallah, as the crowd cheered.

    The Palestinian Red Crescent medical service said six of the 42 released in the West Bank were in poor health and were taken to hospitals. Some prisoners complained of ill-treatment. “The occupation humiliated us for over a year,” said Shkaidem.

  • Israel denies reports on Gaza truce

    Israel denies reports on Gaza truce

    Israel on Wednesday denied agreeing to a week long ceasefire in Gaza in exchange for a list from Hamas of hostages that the group would release.

    Media reports claimed the proposed deal would include a six-to-eight-week ceasefire, expanded aid access to the Palestinian enclave, and efforts to rebuild its health system, destroyed by Israeli strikes.

    In return, Israel was said to receive a list of hostages still alive and information about deceased hostages, including the locations of their remains.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dismissed the reports as “absolutely false.” In a statement issued by his office, he said Israel has not agreed to a pause in the war in exchange for a list of hostages. He accused Hamas of waging “psychological warfare.”

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    The statement came as negotiators met in Doha in renewed efforts to broker an agreement between Israel and Hamas to end the war, which began in October 2023, and to secure the release of approximately 100 hostages still held in Gaza.

    (Xinhua/NAN)