International
90 people killed in Israeli attack on al-Mawasi
90 people killed in Israeli attack on al-Mawasi
Israeli air strikes on the al-Mawasi camp in southern Gaza have killed at least 90 people and wounded 300 others, according to Palestinian health officials.
The attack on Saturday on the Israeli-designated “safe zone”, located west of Khan Younis in southern Gaza, involved fighter jets and drones, according to witnesses.
Israeli officials have said the attack targeted two senior members of Hamas’s military wing, claiming they were hiding among civilians.
Hamas has dismissed this claim as “false”, saying it is a way of covering up the “horrific massacre” at a location where displaced Palestinians were urged to seek shelter after receiving orders to evacuate their homes elsewhere in the Strip.
Here’s everything you need to know about the attack and its aftermath:
What’s the situation on the ground?
The attack killed at least 90 civilians in a densely populated area sheltering about 80,000 people, according to Gaza’s Ministry of Health.
Israeli warplanes hit tents housing displaced Palestinians and a water distillation unit.
Reporting from Deir el-Balah in central Gaza, Al Jazeera’s Tareq Abu Azzoum said the area was hit by “five bombs and five missiles”.
Displaced people sheltering in the area said their tents were torn down by the force of the strikes and have described bodies and body parts strewn on the ground.
“I couldn’t even tell where I was or what was happening,” said Sheikh Youssef, a resident of Gaza City who is displaced in the al-Mawasi area.
“I left the tent and looked around. All the tents were knocked down, body parts, bodies everywhere, elderly women thrown on the floor, young children in pieces,” he told the Reuters news agency.
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The injured were taken to the Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Younis, which is severely understaffed and lacks critical equipment. Rescue workers say the Israeli army attacked crews who were on their way to help victims.
An official at Nasser Hospital told Al Jazeera that medical teams did not have the capacity to receive any more wounded patients as civil defence teams continued to work on search and rescue operations at the site of the attack.
Mohammad Subeh, an emergency doctor working at one of the field hospitals near al-Mawasi, told Al Jazeera that rescuers were “digging people out of the ground”.
The al-Mawasi area has been repeatedly attacked by the Israeli military, with a strike in late May that hit tents housing displaced families killing at least 21 people.
What are Israeli officials saying?
The Israeli military claimed in a statement that it acted based on “precise intelligence” to hit an area where “two senior Hamas terrorists” and additional fighters hid among civilians. It described the location of the strike as “an open area surrounded by trees, several buildings, and sheds”.
The figures targeted were Rafa’a Salameh, commander of Hamas’s Khan Younis Brigade, and Mohammed Deif, head of Hamas’s military wing – both accused of masterminding the Hamas-led October 7 attack on southern Israel.
Speaking at the Ministry of Defence headquarters in Tel Aviv, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said it was “not absolutely certain” that the Hamas officials were killed in the attack but maintained that it had nonetheless been beneficial to Israel.
“Just the attempt to assassinate Hamas commanders delivers a message to the world, a message that Hamas’s days are numbered,” he said. “And this is what I will be doing next week at the US Congress. I will deliver Israel’s message to the United States and the entire world.”
Netanyahu said he approved the strike after receiving satisfactory information on collateral damage and the type of ammunition to be used. He added that the Israeli military would “one way or another” kill all Hamas leaders.
Al Jazeera’s Hamdah Salhut, reporting from Amman, Jordan, said Netanyahu’s directive to “target and kill Hamas officials wherever they are”, claiming that it was carrying out precise and targeted attacks, had repeatedly been used as a justification to strike civilians in densely populated Gaza.
What are Palestinian leaders saying?
Khalil al-Hayya, Hamas’s deputy head in Gaza, claimed that Netanyahu had wished to declare a “fake victory” and that claims about targeting the Hamas leaders were false.
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“Mohammad Deif is listening to you now and mocking your false, empty statements,” he told Al Jazeera Arabic.
Hamas had earlier issued a statement on Telegram calling on Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and occupied East Jerusalem to “mobilise” in response to the attack.
“We call on all resistance brigades to mobilise for Gaza and in loyalty to the blood of the martyrs,” the statement read.
The armed group Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) said in a statement that Israel was “continuing the war of extermination against our people”.
“This crime confirms that the occupation has disregarded all international norms and covenants,” the PIJ said.
Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa condemned Israel’s “genocidal crimes” in Gaza, saying that Palestinians were “going through a very difficult stage”.
Mustafa said Israel’s actions were more broadly targeting the Palestinian project as a whole and included Israel’s goal of establishing an independent state with Jerusalem as its capital.
Hanan Ashrawi, a scholar and activist, said the attack on al-Mawasi had “turned all of Gaza into one massive death zone”.
“American bombs and shells rain down on Gaza while the Israeli government and thugs succeed in preventing any form of medical, food, or fuel supplies from reaching the devastated population,” she said in a post on X.
What’s the situation under international law?
Francesca Albanese, the United Nations special rapporteur on the human rights situation in the occupied Palestinian territory, told Al Jazeera the attacks may have breached international law.
“People in a safe area are protected under international law. If there is a military target within a safe zone, the action has to be proportional to the military advantage that is going to be achieved. Killing 70 people for one is not proportional,” she said.
“I’m disgusted by the tolerance of Israel’s impunity which is enabling the genocidal war,” she added.
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In March, the UN expert issued a report that stated there were “reasonable grounds” to believe that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.
How is the world reacting?
Egypt
“We condemn in the strongest terms the Israeli raids on the al-Mawasi area,” Egypt’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement. The ministry emphasised that “ongoing violations against the rights of Palestinian citizens” add serious “complications” to achieving a ceasefire deal.
Qatar
Qatar’s Foreign Ministry said that “the repetition of the heinous crimes proves day after day the need for urgent international action to immediately end this brutal aggression and provide protection for the Palestinian people”.
It also warned that Israel’s “recklessness” would undermine international efforts to implement a two-state solution “and thus pave the way for the expansion of the cycle of violence in the region and the threat to international peace and security”.
Saudi Arabia
The Foreign Ministry called for “activating international accountability mechanisms” against Israeli abuses. “The Foreign Ministry condemns in strongest terms the continuation of genocidal massacres against the Palestinian people at the hands of the Israeli war machine,” it said in a statement.
Iran
Foreign Ministry spokesperson Nasser Kanaani said the attack was the “latest crime in the series of crimes committed by the child-killing Zionist regime”, in a post on X.
“The Zionists have once again brutally shown that in order to compensate for the defeats suffered on the battlefield with the resistance, they do not recognise any humane and moral red line towards the defenceless residents of the Gaza Strip, but they must know that insisting on this path is nothing but a wider global hatred.”
Jordan
The Foreign Ministry said in a statement that it condemned the attack on “displaced persons’” tents. Spokesperson Sufyan al-Qudah said that Jordan denounces Israel’s continued violation of international law and stressed the need for the international community to act to bring an end to Palestinian suffering.
Colombia
President Gustavo Petro expressed outrage at what he called “the greatest injustice”.
“I am even more outraged because this destruction of international human law is a prelude to the barbarism they want to unleash on all the oppressed people of the earth,” he said in a post on X.
90 people killed in Israeli attack on al-Mawasi
International
€10 Million Stolen from Sparkasse Bank Vault in Gelsenkirchen Over Christmas
€10 Million Stolen from Sparkasse Bank Vault in Gelsenkirchen Over Christmas
Thieves exploited the quiet Christmas holiday to break into a branch of Sparkasse Bank in Gelsenkirchen, Germany, stealing at least €10 million, police confirmed on Tuesday.
The suspects drilled through a thick concrete wall to gain access to the bank vault, where they forced open customer safe deposit boxes and made off with the money and valuables.
The crime went undetected until the early hours of Monday, December 29, when a fire alarm alerted authorities to the breach. Most shops and banks in Germany are closed from the evening of December 24 during the holiday season, allowing the robbers to carry out the heist unnoticed.
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According to witnesses, several men carrying large bags were seen moving through the stairwell of a nearby parking garage late on Saturday night. Investigators are also examining reports that a black Audi RS6, with masked occupants, left the garage early Monday morning. The car reportedly had stolen licence plates from Hanover, more than 200 kilometres from Gelsenkirchen.
Angry and anxious customers gathered outside the bank on Tuesday, demanding information about their belongings. One customer, who had used the deposit box for 25 years to store retirement savings, told Welt, “I couldn’t sleep last night. We’re getting no information.” Another reported storing cash and family jewellery in the box.
Police investigations into the massive bank robbery are ongoing.
€10 Million Stolen from Sparkasse Bank Vault in Gelsenkirchen Over Christmas
International
Elon Musk Faces Backlash Over ‘Hotness’ Remark on Teen Facing Deportation
Elon Musk Faces Backlash Over ‘Hotness’ Remark on Teen Facing Deportation
Tech billionaire and Tesla CEO Elon Musk has come under renewed criticism following remarks he made about the physical appearance of a teenage girl who was facing possible deportation from Denmark.
The backlash followed a post by Musk, 54, on X (formerly Twitter), where he suggested that people who are physically attractive should be exempted from deportation. The comment was made in reference to Audrey Morris, a 19-year-old American student whose immigration status in Denmark recently became a public issue.
Reacting to the comment, Morris described Musk’s remark as demeaning, saying it reduced her case to her looks rather than her personal achievements and life circumstances.
“It’s definitely crazy,” Morris told the Daily Beast, adding that while she was not entirely shocked, she was floored that such a comment came from someone of Musk’s stature.
She said public attention quickly shifted from her academic achievements, volunteer work, and long-term residence in Denmark to her appearance.
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“It would’ve been really cool if he commented on my academic achievements or what I’ve accomplished,” she said. “That would have been helpful.”
Morris noted that although the attention was embarrassing, she hoped it would at least bring awareness to her situation.
The teenager has lived in Denmark since the age of nine after her family relocated from the United States in 2015 for her mother’s doctoral studies. She remained in the country under a temporary residency permit as an accompanying child, which expired in June 2024.
Her immigration troubles reportedly began after she moved into a boarding facility at her high school in another city and changed her address—an action that violated the conditions of her residency permit. At one point, the threat of deportation became serious enough for her to prepare to return to the United States, leaving behind her family and boyfriend.
In a later development, Danish authorities granted Morris a 10-year residency permit, sparing her immediate deportation. However, she was denied citizenship, even as her American mother and 15-year-old brother were granted the status.
“Denmark is my home—one hundred percent,” Morris said in an earlier interview. “I am as Danish as a foreigner can possibly be.”
Musk’s comment, in which he wrote that “8 or above level hotness should get an exemption,” has since drawn criticism from social media users and commentators who accused him of objectifying women and trivialising a serious immigration issue.
Elon Musk Faces Backlash Over ‘Hotness’ Remark on Teen Facing Deportation
International
Israel to Revoke Licences of 37 Aid Groups in Gaza, West Bank, Sparks International Outcry
Israel to Revoke Licences of 37 Aid Groups in Gaza, West Bank, Sparks International Outcry
Israel has announced plans to revoke the licences of 37 humanitarian aid organisations operating in Gaza and the occupied West Bank, a move that has drawn sharp criticism from several Western governments and international humanitarian bodies.
The affected organisations include major international non-governmental organisations (INGOs) such as ActionAid, the International Rescue Committee, and the Norwegian Refugee Council, whose licences are set to be suspended from January 1, with their operations expected to wind down within 60 days.
According to Israel’s Ministry of Diaspora Affairs, which oversees the registration of aid groups, the decision followed the organisations’ failure to comply with new registration requirements, including the submission of what it described as “complete and verifiable personal details” of staff members.
The announcement triggered condemnation from the foreign ministers of 10 countries, including the United Kingdom, France, Canada, Japan, Norway and Sweden, who described the new rules as “restrictive” and “unacceptable.” In a joint statement, they warned that shutting down INGO operations would have a severe impact on access to essential services, particularly healthcare, in Gaza.
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The ministers stressed that the humanitarian situation in Gaza remains catastrophic and urged the Israeli government to ensure aid organisations can operate in a sustained and predictable manner.
Israel, however, insisted that the move would not disrupt the flow of humanitarian assistance. The Ministry of Diaspora Affairs said aid continues to reach Gaza through approved and vetted channels, including United Nations agencies, bilateral partners and selected humanitarian organisations.
The ministry argued that the licence revocations were necessary to prevent the infiltration of terrorist operatives into humanitarian structures, adding that fewer than 15% of aid organisations were found to be in violation of the new regulatory framework.
Israel’s military coordination body, Cogat, also claimed that the suspended organisations did not deliver aid to Gaza during the current ceasefire, and that their combined contribution previously accounted for about 1% of total aid volumes.
The new framework allows for licence denial on grounds including denying Israel’s existence, denying the Holocaust or the October 7, 2023 Hamas attacks, supporting armed struggle against Israel, promoting delegitimisation campaigns, or calling for a boycott of Israel.
In contrast, the Humanitarian Country Team of the Occupied Palestinian Territory, which represents UN agencies and over 200 local and international organisations, warned that the registration system “fundamentally jeopardises” humanitarian operations in Gaza and the West Bank. The group said the criteria were vague, arbitrary and politicised, making compliance difficult without breaching international humanitarian principles.
The forum noted that INGOs currently support most of Gaza’s field hospitals, primary healthcare centres, emergency shelters, water and sanitation services, and nutrition centres for malnourished children.
Israel’s Minister of Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism, Amichai Chikli, defended the policy, stating: “Humanitarian assistance is welcome — the exploitation of humanitarian frameworks for terrorism is not.”
Other organisations facing suspension include CARE, Medico International, and Medical Aid for Palestinians.
Israel to Revoke Licences of 37 Aid Groups in Gaza, West Bank, Sparks International Outcry
BBC
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