LIVE | Day 5: Death toll crosses 3,600; Gaza power plant runs out of fuel

Update: 2023-10-11 01:45 GMT
Live Updates - Page 2
2023-10-11 08:26 GMT

Gaza power authority warns electricity will run out within hours after Israeli cutoff

Gaza's power authority says its sole power plant will run out of fuel within hours, leaving the territory without electricity after Israel cut off supplies.

Israel said it would cut off all electricity to the territory after Hamas' bloody rampage over the weekend. All of Gaza's crossings are closed, making it impossible to bring in fuel for the power plant or the generators on which residents and hospitals have long relied. The power authority said Wednesday that the plant would shut down in the afternoon. 

2023-10-11 07:41 GMT

Some Israelis abroad desperately try to head home — to fight, or just to help

At the most harrowing of times, some Israeli citizens living overseas aren't running from the war at home, but to it. From Athens to New York, they're rushing to airports and diving into online chat groups for help, desperate to make their way to the country after Hamas militants attacked.

Some of these Israelis abroad are yearning to serve, whether that means fighting in a military reserve unit or volunteering to shuttle supplies to those in need, even as the war has already claimed at least 1,800 lives and shows no signs of abating.

Yaakov Swisa, a 42-year-old father of five, said nobody called and asked him to return to Israel to fight, but he feels he has no choice. He served for 15 years, and he said he learned that his army roommate was among at least 260 killed at a music festival.

Swisa wants to rejoin his reserve unit, even if that means leaving his family and his construction-business job in Los Angeles.

“I've been crying for two, three days. Enough. That's it. I am ready to fight," he said. “What else would I do ... while my friends are being buried in Israel?”

In some cases, Israelis who are too young to serve in the military, as well as non-Israelis with close ties to the country, have been trying to travel to assist family members or volunteer.

Adam Jacobs, an 18-year-old community college student in New Jersey, said he was born and raised in the US and for years travelled every summer to visit family in Israel. He said he learned his cousin was among those killed, and he wants to make his way to Israel to take on volunteer work, possibly shuttling supplies.

“I couldn't live with myself if I stayed here,” Jacobs said. “It's never been this bad.”

Travel has been challenging, with major airlines suspending flights in and out of Israel. The US State Department issued travel advisories for the region. Some reservists in the United States, home to more than 140,000 people born in Israel, were trying to get on charter flights.

Ofer Cohen, a New York businessman, said he learned there were more than 200 reservists travelling through South America on vacation at the time of the attacks. They've been called back to base but are unable to get there, thanks to cancelled flights. So Cohen is trying to cobble together hundreds of thousands of dollars to hire a plane to pick them up, as WhatsApp messages describing their troubles keep rolling in.

In Greece, hundreds of people waited hours to board emergency flights at Athens International Airport, many without a ticket and most travelling from other European destinations after cutting holiday and work trips short. As officers patrolled the area to provide security, volunteers handed travellers apples, bananas, and bottled water.

Israel Lawrence, 27, was born in Israel and grew up in London. He said that although he hasn't been formally called up, he's making the trip to join his fellow soldiers, many already on the front lines, and help his family members, who are living in terror and chaos.

“I want to be honest with you, I'm scared," said Lawrence, a trained rifleman who was on his way to Israel via Cyprus. "All the guys I'm with are terrified, but we are trained, and we'll do the best we can.”


2023-10-11 05:57 GMT

Israeli fighter jets strike over 200 targets in Al-Furqan area

An update by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) on X on Wednesday morning (October 11) said that dozens of Israeli Air Force fighter jets struck over 200 targets in the Al-Furqan neighbourhood - a terrorist hotspot from which Hamas devises and executes their attacks. This is the 3rd counterstrike in the area during the last 24 hours, in which 450 targets were struck.


2023-10-11 03:49 GMT

Israeli village near Gaza border lies in ruin

On the road approaching the rural village of Kfar Aza in Israel, the bodies of militants lie scattered between the shells of burned-out cars. Walls and doors of what used to be neatly-kept stucco homes are blasted wide open. As bags holding the bodies of slain residents await identification, the smell of death hangs thick in the hot afternoon air.

This is the scene confronting Israel's military as it battles to beat back the sweeping assault launched by Hamas from the Gaza Strip.

“You see the babies, the mothers, the fathers in their bedrooms and how the terrorists killed,” Maj. Gen. Itay Veruz, a 39-year veteran of the Israeli army who led forces that reclaimed the village from militants, said on Tuesday (October 10) as he stood amid the wreckage.

“It's not a battlefield. It's a massacre.”

The Israeli military led a group of journalists, including an Associated Press reporter, on a tour of the village on Tuesday, a day after retaking it from what they said was a group of about 70 Hamas fighters.

Kfar Aza, surrounded by farms and just a few minutes down a country road from the heavily fortified fence Israel erected around Gaza, is one of more than 20 towns and villages attacked by Palestinian fighters early Saturday (October 7). Before the attack, the kibbutz, whose name means “Gaza village” in English, was a modestly prosperous place with a school, a synagogue, and a population of more than 700.

Walking through what is left provides chilling evidence of its destruction.

On the town's perimeter, the gate that once protected residents had been blasted open. Inside the settlement, the doors of many homes had been blown from their hinges by militants using rocket-propelled grenades. Throughout the town, walls and torched cars are riddled with bullet holes, tracing a path of violence that continues inside to bedrooms with mattresses spattered in blood, safe rooms that could not withstand the attack, even bathrooms.

By the time journalists were escorted into the town on Tuesday, rescuers had already removed the bodies of most of the villagers killed in the attack. But reporters watched as crews carried several more bags containing bodies to a truck and then to a lot in front of Kfar Aza's synagogue, where workers attached name tags.

Veruz, retired from the military for eight years before he was recalled on Saturday (October 7), said the scene was unlike anything he had ever witnessed, even in a country where violent clashes with Hamas and other militant groups are frequent. A military spokesman, Maj. Doron Spielman, agreed, comparing the toll in Kfar Aza and nearby villages he visited to scenes he witnessed as a New Yorker after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

“I remember going through 9/11 and waking up the next day, the next week, and everything had changed,” he said. “It's the same thing again. But worse because we're such a small country.”


2023-10-11 02:31 GMT

Indian-Americans hold rally in Chicago to express solidarity with Israel

Indian Americans held a peaceful rally in Chicago to express solidarity with Israel in the aftermath of the terrorist attack by Palestinian militant group Hamas.

“Terrorism is not only an Israel issue, it's an ongoing humanitarian issue. It must be stopped before it gets too late!” members of the Indian American community said in a statement.

The demonstrators displayed flags of India, the US and Israel during the rally.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi told his Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday in a phone conversation that the people of India stand firmly with his country in this difficult hour, and expressed strong and unequivocal condemnation of terrorism in all its forms.

2023-10-11 02:26 GMT

Blinken to visit Israel today

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is scheduled to travel to Israel on Wednesday to meet senior leaders.

“It will be a message of solidarity and support,” US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said.

On Tuesday, US President Joe Biden condemned the attacks on Israel by Hamas, stating that it was an “unadulterated evil unleashed on the world.”

2023-10-11 02:26 GMT

Hamas attack is unadulterated evil unleashed on the world: US President Joe Biden

US President Joe Biden on Tuesday said the Hamas’ attack on Israel is an “unadulterated evil unleashed on the world” and added that at least 14 American citizens were killed in the incident.

Biden also said it was Hamas’ stated purpose to annihilate the state of Israel and kill Jewish people.

“There are moments in this life – and I mean this literally – when pure, unadulterated evil is unleashed on this world. The people of Israel lived through one such moment this weekend. The bloody hands of the terrorist organisation Hamas – a group whose stated purpose for being is to kill Jews,” Biden said in his address to the nation from the White House.

The US president has earlier vowed his administration's "rock solid and unwavering" support to Israel. The United States has launched a major global diplomatic drive to garner support for Israel and take necessary action against Palestinian militant group Hamas.


2023-10-11 02:17 GMT

No specific information on role of Iran in latest Hamas attack: White House

The White House has said that there is no specific information about the role of Iran in the latest terrorist attack against Israel by Hamas, but it is complicit “in a broad sense” for funding the military wing of the militant group.

“We have said since the beginning that Iran is complicit in this attack in a broad sense because they have provided the lion's share of the funding for the military wing of Hamas. They have provided training. They have provided capabilities. They have provided support and they have had engagement and contact with Hamas over years and years,” US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan told reporters on Tuesday.

“All of that has played a role in contributing to what we have seen. Now, as to the question of whether Iran knew about this attack in advance or helped plan or direct this attack, we do not, as of this moment I'm standing here at the podium, have confirmation of that. We are talking to our Israeli counterparts on a daily basis about this question,” he said.

The NSA said the US is trying to gather from its intelligence holdings on whether they have any further information on that. “We're looking to acquire further intelligence. And if there's an update to that, I'll share it with you,” Sullivan said. “While Iran plays this broad role, sustaining a deep and dark role in providing all of this support and capabilities to Hamas, in terms of this particular gruesome attack on October 7th, we don't currently have that information. We will continue to look for it,” he added.


2023-10-11 02:15 GMT

Israel responds to fire from Syria with artillery and mortar

The Israeli military said it is responding to fire from Syria with artillery and mortar shelling.

The military said on Tuesday that unidentified projectiles were fired from Syria and appeared to have fallen in an open area. The flare-up comes as Israel is striking in Gaza in response to a stunning attack by Hamas and as exchanges of fire with the Lebanese Hezbollah have continued.

There was no immediate comment from Syria.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based opposition war monitor, said a Palestinian faction conducted the rocket attack from Syrian territory.



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