Middle East crisis live: death toll rises in southern Lebanese city as Israeli army urges residents to evacuate

Middle East crisis live: death toll rises in southern Lebanese city as Israeli army urges residents to evacuate


Death toll from Israeli attack on Tyre rises to 7, Lebanon’s health ministry says

Lebanon’s health ministry has increased the death toll from the Israeli attack on the southern city of Tyre from five to seven, and revised the number of people injured from 10 to 17 (see earlier post at 07.51 for more details).

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Key events

Summary of the day so far…

  • The Israeli military issued an evacuation order for large swathes of the southern Lebanese city of Tyre, including areas already ordered to evacuate and other new ones. The National News Agency reported “a series of strikes” on the ancient coastal city, beginning with a raid on a residential apartment that was reported to have killed at least seven people.

  • The Palestinian Civil Emergency Service said about 100,000 people are trapped in northern Gaza’s Jabalia, Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun areas without medical or food supplies. The emergency service said its operations had ground to a halt because of the three-week-long Israeli assault back into the northern part of the Strip.

  • At least 43,020 Palestinian people have been killed and 101,110 injured in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza since 7 October 2023, the territory’s health ministry said in its latest update.

  • Iraq condemned Israel’s use of its airspace to attack neighbouring Iran in a protest letter sent to UN secretary general, Antonio Guterres, and the UN security council.

  • The UN security council is expected to meet today to discuss Israel’s attack on Iran, which targeted military sites in several regions of the country early on Saturday and killed at least four soldiers.

  • Israel’s parliament – the Knesset – is expected to vote on Monday on a pair of bills that, if passed, will make it impossible for the UN relief and works agency for Palestinians, Unrwa, to operate in Gaza and the West Bank.

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Hezbollah says its fighters ‘ambushed’ Israeli troops near Lebanon border village

Hezbollah, the Iran-backed Lebanese militant group, said it has ambushed Israeli troops near a Lebanon border village.

Hezbollah said it “ambushed … the Israeli enemy’s vehicles and soldiers as they advanced towards” the outskirts of the border village of Kfar Kila ahead of deadly clashes. We will give you more details on this developing news as we get it.

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Israel’s parliament is expected to vote on a pair of bills today that could effectively bar the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, Unrwa, from operating in Israel, and severely limit its activities in Gaza and the occupied West Bank (see post at 09.39 for more details).

ActionAid UK is urging the UK government – and calling for international action – to stop the proposed bills. In a statement, Hannah Bond, co-CEO at ActionAid UK, said:

World leaders must act now to defend Unrwa from the unprecedented threats by the Israeli government. Passing these bills would turbo-charge an already dire humanitarian disaster, with millions of Palestinian refugees cut off from essential services they rely on every day.

This isn’t just about one agency—dismantling Unrwa would unravel the international protections for Palestinian refugees and set a dangerous precedent for global humanitarian efforts.

The people of Gaza and beyond cannot wait. We call on the global community to act decisively, protect Unrwa, and uphold international law.

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We have been reporting on the deadly Israeli airstrikes on the Lebanese city of Tyre in today’s blog. My colleague William Christou has written a profile on Tyre, the second most populated city in south Lebanon, from which tens of thousands of residents had already fled due to intensifying Israeli bombings over the last month.

Here is some of the story, which you can read in full here:

Over the last year, Tyre had been a refuge for thousands of people displaced by Israel-Hezbollah fighting along the border.

During the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war, it played a similar role, hosting internally displaced people, humanitarians and journalists who relied on it as a safe zone.

Now, Tyre was no longer safe. The day after Israel issued its evacuation order, the city was almost entirely empty.

Burnt-out cars, flipped upside down by the force of a blast, lined the main thoroughfare of the city. Distant thuds announced Israeli airstrikes, and the occasional volley of a dozen outgoing Katyushas, the rockets popping and flaring up before accelerating and disappearing into the sky, was Hezbollah’s reply.

Where beachgoers would usually lounge were journalists and a row of cameras pointed at Lebanon’s snaking coastline, with plumes of smoke where Israeli bombs dropped visible under Tyre’s clear blue sky.

Smoke billows from an area after an Israeli airstrike in Tyre, Lebanon. Photograph: EPA
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Israel’s president Isaac Herzog has called for the “urgent and immediate” return” of the hostages in Gaza, calling it a “binding order of the state toward its citizens”.

“We listen to the families and we do not forget Maimonides’ command that there is no greater mitzvah than the mitzvah of redeeming captives,” he said.

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Five rockets were launched from Lebanon at the Haifa area in Israel a short while ago, according to the Israel Defence Force.

“Some of them were intercepted by the airforce, crashes in the area were detected,” it said on X.

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EU foreign policy chief renews calls for ‘immediate ceasefire’ in Lebanon

Spanish politician Josep Borrell, who serves as the EU’s high representative of the union for foreign affairs, has called for an “immediate ceasefire” in Lebanon and condemned Israel’s “unacceptable attacks” on UN peacekeepers in the region.

Borrell told a forum in Barcelona that the bloc calls “for an immediate ceasefire across the blue lines”.

He added: “More than ever we need to reclaim the humanity lost in Gaza, while the world seems unable, or unwilling, to stop the man-made catastrophe unfolding before our eyes.”

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The Palestinian Red Crescent has said three people have been killed in an Israeli drone attack on Gaza City.

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100,000 residents ‘trapped in northern Gaza’ – Palestinian emergency service

The Palestinian Civil Emergency Service has said about 100,000 people are trapped in northern Gaza’s Jabalia, Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun areas without medical or food supplies.

The emergency service said its operations had ground to a halt because of the three-week-long Israeli assault back into the northern part of the Strip, which the IDF claims is being conducted to stop Hamas fighters from regrouping there.

Residents, however, say Israeli troops have besieged shelters and levelled civilian infrastructure, while killing many civilians in deadly airstrikes. Residents in the north, under sweeping evacuation orders, say they feel trapped as there is nowhere safe for them to flee to due to the relentless Israeli attacks there.

Meanwhile, north Gaza’s three hospitals, where officials refused orders by the Israeli army to evacuate, said they were hardly operating. At least two had been damaged by Israeli attacks during the assault and run out of medical, food and fuel stocks.

On Monday, the Gaza health ministry said there was only one of roughly 70 medical staff – a paediatrician – was left at Kamal Adwan hospital after Israel “detained and expelled” the others (see post at 10.25 for more details).

Palestinians view the damage done by Israeli forces after the military withdrew from the area around Kamal Adwan hospital in Jabalia. Photograph: Reuters
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Death toll in Gaza reaches 43,020, says health ministry

At least 43,020 Palestinian people have been killed and 101,110 injured in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza since 7 October 2023, the Gaza health ministry said in a statement on Monday.

The ministry has said in the past that thousands of other dead people are most likely lost in the rubble of the territory.

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Hezbollah said its fighters have targeted “an Israeli enemy troop gathering” near Wazzani village in southern Lebanon “with a rocket salvo”. The Lebanese militant group earlier claimed four attacks with rockets and artillery on Israeli troops at Fatima’s gate, a shuttered border crossing at the nearby Lebanese village of Kfar Kila.

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Lebanon’s foreign ministry has complained to the UN security council over an Israeli airstrike last week that killed three journalists in Hasbaya, in the country’s south.

Wissam Qassem, a camera operator with TV station Al-Manar, and news channel Al Mayadeen’s Ghassan Najjar, a correspondent, and Mohammad Reda, a technician, were killed in the strike.

As my colleague William Christou explains in this story, the airstrikes hit a group of small chalets that 18 journalists from at least seven different media outlets – including Al Jazeera, Sky News Arabia and TRT – were staying in while covering Israel’s war on Lebanon.

Lebanon has now submitted “a complaint to the security council regarding the latest Israeli attacks that targeted journalists and media facilities in Hasbaya in south Lebanon, and the Ouzai area” in Beirut’s southern suburbs, according to a statement from the foreign ministry.

“The repeated Israeli targeting of media crews is a war crime” and Israel must be “held to account and punished”, the statement added.

Lebanon’s prime minister Najib Mikati said the attack was deliberate and both he and Information Minister Ziad Makary labelled it a war crime. The Israeli army said on Friday that the airstrike was “under review”, claiming it targeted Hezbollah militants. Israel has killed at least 12 journalists in Lebanon – six of whom were on duty – since 8 October 2023.

Three journalists killed by Israeli airstrike in southern Lebanon – video

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Death toll from Israeli attack on Tyre rises to 7, Lebanon’s health ministry says

Lebanon’s health ministry has increased the death toll from the Israeli attack on the southern city of Tyre from five to seven, and revised the number of people injured from 10 to 17 (see earlier post at 07.51 for more details).

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X suspends new Hebrew-language account for Iran’s supreme leader

The social media platform X – owned by Elon Musk – has suspended a new account on behalf of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, 85, that posted messages in Hebrew.

The account was suspended early on Monday with a brief note appended to it saying: “X suspends accounts which violate the X Rules.” It wasn’t immediately clear what the violation was.

Khamenei said in a speech on Sunday that Israel’s airstrikes on Iran early on Saturday “should not be exaggerated nor downplayed,” while stopping short of calling for retaliation.

The X account opened on Sunday with a message in Hebrew reading: “In the name of God, the most merciful,” a standard Islamic greeting.

🔰 Zionists are making a miscalculation with respect to Iran. They don’t know Iran. They still haven’t been able to correctly understand the power, initiative, and determination of the #Iranian people. We need to make them understand these things.

Imam Khamenei
Oct. 27, 2024 pic.twitter.com/4h2K5sZV8G

— Khamenei Media (@Khamenei_m) October 27, 2024

A second message corresponded to a speech Khamenei gave on Sunday and was sent on his English account as: “Zionists are making a miscalculation with respect to Iran. They don’t know Iran. They still haven’t been able to correctly understand the power, initiative, and determination of the Iranian people.”

Khamenei – the ultimate authority in Iran – has reportedly previously had his Facebook and Instagram accounts removed by Meta over his support of Hamas after the militant group’s 7 October attack on southern Israel, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 250 taken hostage.

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