HEADLINES
Netanyahu ousts NSC chief Hanegbi calls inquiry
WHO evacuates 41 critically ill Gaza patients
US warns West Bank sovereignty risks ceasefire
The time is now 12:00 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
Midnight update from the Middle East desk. In a development that startled many observers, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu removed National Security Council head Tzahi Hanegbi from his post, a move that comes as Israel confronts accusations of failures surrounding the October seventh attacks. Hanegbi, in his resignation statement, urged a formal inquiry into those events, setting a sharply critical tone at a moment of heightened scrutiny over security and preparedness.
In the West Bank, the Israel Defense Forces demolished the home of Jamil Samara, identified as involved in the May attack that killed Tzeela Gez. The action underscores Israel’s use of demolition as a tool in the pursuit of attackers, a practice that remains controversial internationally while continued violence persists in the territory.
Across the cultural landscape, a prominent Israeli pop artist, Yoni Bloch, unveiled an updated video project that began as an artificial intelligence rendition of freed hostages. The latest version replaces the AI imagery with real footage, highlighting the ongoing emotional imprint of hostilities and the public interest in authentic depictions of hostage releases.
On the diplomatic front, United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio cautioned that advancing a bill to apply sovereignty over parts of the West Bank could jeopardize the Gaza ceasefire agreement, a warning issued ahead of his planned visit to Israel. The remarks reflect continuing US concerns that steps altering the territorial status quo could destabilize the current ceasefire framework and any accompanying arrangements.
In Umm al-Fahm, police opened investigations into two fatal incidents. One involved a shooting at a business that left a Palestinian man in his twenties dead on the scene, while another serious disturbance left a separate Palestinian man in his late twenties dead in the same city. Separately, a road incident on Highway Six near the Nitzanei Oz interchange left a 64-year-old man dead; two other people were treated for injuries at the scene.
On the humanitarian front, the World Health Organization reported that it led the medical evacuation of forty-one critically ill patients and one hundred forty-five companions out of Gaza in the latest phase of a broader relocation effort. The agency noted roughly fifteen thousand Gaza patients remain on evacuation lists, including about three thousand eight hundred children. The Rafah crossing remains closed to transfers as Israel conditions openings on Hamas fulfilling obligations in the current hostage release and ceasefire agreement. Since the crisis began, the WHO says more than seven thousand patients have been evacuated in total, with Egypt taking the majority; the pace of transfers has slowed markedly since the crossing’s closure earlier this year. The organization continues to urge that all routes be opened to speed medical evacuations, citing the health system’s collapse in Gaza.
In related security news, Justice Minister Yariv Levin announced the deportation of thirty-two foreign activists who had helped Palestinians harvest olives in the West Bank, saying they violated a military order and belonged to the Union of Agricultural Work Committees, which Israel designates as a terrorist organization. Among the deportees was a British national who told reporters he was held for seventy-two hours before being deported, and that he never appeared before a judge. Palestinian authorities condemned the actions, arguing the arrests and deportations escalated tensions around a sensitive annual olive harvest season.
Meanwhile, the case of Mordecha
Published on 1 week, 6 days ago
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