LIVE UPDATES: Israel, US say ‘unacceptable’ as Hamas gives Gaza truce response

Mazzaltov World News provides you with the latest live coverage of Current Affairs, Sports, Health, Weather, Entertainment, Business and Travel News from around the world.

Here’s what happened today

We’ll be closing this live page soon. Here’s a look at the day’s main developments:

  • Hamas said it filed its response to a US-backed proposal for a Gaza truce deal, refuting Israeli claims it rejected it, but saying it still seeks “a guarantee” of a permanent ceasefire.
  • Steve Witkoff, the US special envoy for the Middle East, said Hamas’s response “is totally unacceptable and only takes us backward”.
  • Hamas official Basem Naim says Witkoff’s proposal does not guarantee a 60-day temporary ceasefire or increased deliveries of humanitarian aid into Gaza.
  • Israel’s military ordered “all residents” of southern Gaza’s Khan Younis, Bani Suheila, and Abasan to evacuate immediately after rockets were fired.
  • Foreign ministers of Arab countries who planned to visit the occupied West Bank to discuss a state of Palestine condemned Israel’s decision to block their trip.
  • The Israeli army said it killed Hamas’s military chief Mohammed Sinwar in a May 13 attack, confirming Prime Minister Netanyahu’s announcement this week.

Saudi Arabia and Israel: From ‘normalisation’ to confrontation

Earlier, we reported on the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, and Bahrain, alongside the secretary-general of the Arab League, being blocked by Israel from visiting the occupied West Bank to hold talks on the establishment of a Palestinian state.

Had the visit gone ahead, the delegation’s head, Prince Faisal bin Farhan, would have become the first Saudi foreign minister to visit the West Bank.

Firas Maksad, managing director for the Middle East and North Africa at Eurasia Group, said Israel’s rejection of the visit indicated “how far Saudi and Israel have moved from normalisation to diplomatic confrontation”.

The planned visit “underscores just how much the Saudi position has shifted away from creating a credible pathway towards a Palestinian state through conditional normalisation with Israel, to one that aims to create such a path via an international coalition in support of Palestinian aspirations”, Maksad said.

a man with a moustache in a red and white head dress and mustard robes
Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan attends the G20 foreign ministers meeting in 2024

Egypt says using ‘all our strength’ to end Gaza war

Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty says his country is exerting maximum pressure to end the Israeli onslaught against the Gaza Strip.

“We are pressing with all our strength to end the war on Gaza, and we hope to reach an agreement to stop the bloodshed in Gaza as soon as possible,” Abdelatty said in a news conference in Cairo.

He stressed the “urgent need for unrestricted and full access of humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip”.

“It is unacceptable to use hunger as a weapon against the Palestinians in Gaza,” said Abdelatty.

Israel has kept all border crossings shut since March 2, cutting off the entry of food, medicine, fuel, and other essential supplies for Gaza’s 2.3 million residents.

Egypt's Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty
Egypt’s Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty

PSG fans hold ‘Stop genocide in Gaza’ banner at Champions League final

Paris Saint-Germain supporters displayed the banner during the Champions League final.

They raised it shortly after Achraf Hakimi gave their team a 1-0 lead against his former side Inter Milan in the 12th minute.

PSG fans are known for their stance against the war in Gaza, previously displaying a giant banner saying “Free Palestine” in November during the Champions League match against Atletico Madrid.

Israel’s nearly three-month blockade on Gaza has pushed the population of 2.3 million to the brink of famine.

Football fans hold a banner reading, 'Stop genocide in Gaza'
Fans hold a giant banner reading ‘Stop genocide in Gaza’ in French during the UEFA Champions League final between Paris Saint-Germain and Inter Milan

‘Deeply disgusted’: Paris Holocaust memorial, synagogues vandalised

France’s Holocaust memorial, three Paris synagogues, and a restaurant have been vandalised with paint.

An investigation has been opened into “damage committed on religious grounds”, the Paris public prosecutor’s office said, as the Israeli embassy denounced the attack. No arrests have been made.

“I am deeply disgusted by these heinous acts targeting the Jewish community,” French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau posted on X.

Retailleau last week called for “visible and dissuasive” security measures at Jewish-linked sites amid concerns about possible anti-Semitic acts.

Several European nations have reported a spike in “anti-Muslim hatred” and “anti-Semitism” since the start of the Gaza war.

Thousands of people march in silence through Paris to protest racism and anti-Semitism

Divided Israel faces internal unrest amid escalating Gaza war

As Israel’s devastating war on Gaza grinds on, pushed forward by a prime minister insistent that a goal of total military victory be met, the divisions within Israeli society are growing increasingly deeper.

In the last few weeks, as Israeli peace activists and antiwar groups have stepped up their campaign against the conflict, supporters of the war have also increased their pressure to continue, whatever its humanitarian, political or diplomatic cost.

“All the peace activists risk being physically attacked or threatened, even the families of the hostages are at risk of attack by these bigots,” said antiwar lawmaker Ofer Cassif.

Read the full story here.

A coalition of conscience needed to stop genocide in Gaza

Eight decades after the Holocaust, another genocide is unfolding – this time with Palestinian children as both victims and witnesses of ethnic cleansing.

Each of these children carries a harrowing story the world needs to hear. One day, we may read their accounts in memoirs – if they survive long enough to write them.

But the international community must not wait that long. It must confront the suffering of these children now. That is why we gave children in Gaza a platform to ask the world a searing question: “Why are you silent?”

Read the opinion piece here.

Israeli decision to bar Arab delegation from occupied West Bank slammed

The Palestinian Authority has decried the blocking of a meeting in the occupied West Bank by Israel to be attended by regional foreign ministers.

The Israeli government’s decision to block the delegation “constitutes a blatant violation of its obligations under international law as an occupying power, [is] a breach of signed agreements, and a continuation of its ongoing violations against the Palestinian people”, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

The delegation – including ministers from Egypt, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates – was forced to cancel after Israel denied access through the airspace over the occupied West Bank, which it controls.

Witkoff statement shows US ‘solidly’ behind Israel: Ex-US diplomat

Former US diplomat Robert Hunter says Witkoff made his statement on the US ceasefire proposal as quickly as he did, in part, in order to demonstrate “the Trump administration is solidly in support of the Israeli position”.

“I think Trump is getting a little frustrated because he’s trying to announce a huge success for himself and the negotiating positions of the two sides – Israel and Hamas – are still very far apart,” Hunter told Al Jazeera from Washington, DC.

Still, Hunter noted that Trump has made clear he’s in Israel’s corner by “in effect giving a greenlight to Israel to do whatever it wants militarily, including with American weaponry”.

The US president also has been “giving Israel free play in Gaza”, Hunter added, because he is hoping to reach a nuclear deal with Iran – something the Israeli government is opposed to.

Three wounded in Israeli drone strike in Jabalia

Our colleagues at Al Jazeera Arabic report three Palestinians were injured when an Israeli drone bombed a house in northern Gaza’s Jabalia.

Earlier, medical sources at Nasser Hospital in southern Khan Younis said six Palestinians were killed by Israeli fire as they attempted to reach an aid distribution centre in Rafah, southern Gaza.

At least 20 Palestinians have been killed in attacks since dawn, the Health Ministry said.

Has Israel turned Gaza into a starvation camp?

“The hungriest place on Earth” – this is how the United Nations has described Gaza.

Months of a total Israeli blockade, on top of severely reduced aid supplies, have left 2.3 million Palestinians facing famine.

Hundreds of deaths have been reported from shortages of food, water and medicine. Tonnes of aid are waiting at the border, but the UN says only a trickle is being allowed through.

Al Jazeera’s Inside Story discusses if Israel is using starvation as a weapon of war and what effects famine and hunger will have on Palestinians in the years to come.

Prolonging war helps Netanyahu ‘maintain grip on power’

As we’ve been reporting, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has reiterated that Israel will continue its military assault on Gaza until it secures the release of Israeli captives and destroys Hamas.

But experts – including senior officials within Israel, and other observers, have noted the Israeli prime minister has failed to achieve either of those goals – and he’s unlikely to do so.

Instead, many argue Netanyahu is seeking to prolong the Israeli bombardment of Gaza as a way to maintain his grip on power.

The Israeli leader has faced growing public anger within Israel for failing to secure the captives’ release, with many families urging him to agree to a deal that would see them freed in exchange for a permanent end to the war.

“The prolongation of the war has served a dual purpose for the prime minster: to maintain his grip on power, considering his uncertain political prospects in a future election, and to provide a public distraction and delay to the pending corruption cases against him,” political analyst Thair Abu Ras wrote last month in a policy brief for the Arab Center Washington DC.

“Reshaping the Gaza Strip both geographically and demographically,” Abu Ras added, also “serves Netanyahu’s survival interests as well as his ideological priorities and, crucially, those of his coalition partners.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
Netanyahu is at the helm of a far-right coalition government

More from Hamas’s Basem Naim

Despite Steve Witkoff’s proposal falling short of Hamas’s demands, the Palestinian group “responded positively and in a very responsible manner”, Naim says.

“We have said, ‘OK – based on the dire situation on the ground, the needs of our people, we have to find a way to find common ground with his proposal’. This is exactly what we have done,” the Hamas official told Al Jazeera.

Naim said Hamas wanted to go into ceasefire negotiations with two proposals on the table, to see how things could move forward.

“The main goal for us is how to secure our people a 60-day temporary ceasefire and enough inflow of humanitarian aid, and at the end of these negotiations, to guarantee a permanent ceasefire or an end to this war.”

Basem Naim
Basem Naim, a senior Hamas official 

Hamas official says Witkoff plan offered ‘no guarantees’ for end to war

We’ve been speaking with Hamas official Basem Naim. Here’s some of what he said:

  • “One week ago, we agreed with Mr Witkoff on one proposal and we said ‘this is acceptable, we can consider this a negotiating paper’. He went to the other party, to the Israelis, to get their response. Instead of having a response to our proposal, he brought us a new proposal … which had nothing to do with what we agreed upon.”
  • That new proposal did not guarantee a 60-day temporary ceasefire or deliveries of humanitarian aid into Gaza.
  • “In the end, there are no guarantees for negotiations to end the war, or a permanent ceasefire, or a total withdrawal” of Israeli forces from Gaza.
  • “We have said many times, yes we are ready to go for negotiations, but we cannot accept such a proposal as a baseline for the negotiations. Because at the end – again – what they have presented is not responding to even guarantee the inflow of humanitarian aid.”
  • “They want us to legitimise their [aid] distribution plan, which has been rejected by the whole international community, including the UN.”

Israel’s Saar calls on European powers to pressure Hamas

The Israeli foreign minister accused the Palestinian group of “its continuation [of the war] by refusing to release our hostages and disarm”.

“If France and the UK want to reach a ceasefire – pressure should be put on Hamas that continues to say No, instead of attacking Israel, which says Yes.”

His statement comes as Hamas seeks amendments to a US-backed proposal for a temporary ceasefire with Israel in Gaza, which President Donald Trump’s envoy described as “totally unacceptable”.

European powers led by London and Paris have been toughening their rhetoric towards Israel recently amid the genocide ongoing in Gaza.

If you’re just joining us

Let’s bring you up to speed on the latest developments:

  • Hamas says it responded to the latest US proposal for a Gaza ceasefire with a plan that would see 10 Israeli prisoners freed and 18 bodies returned in exchange for a number of Palestinian prisoners.
  • US special envoy Steve Witkoff slams Hamas’s response as “totally unacceptable” saying the Palestinian group should “accept the framework proposal we put forward as the basis for proximity talks, which we can begin immediately this coming week”.
  • Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar says Hamas is responsible for the continuation of the war in Gaza by refusing to release captives and disarm.
  • The Israeli military has ordered all Palestinian residents of Khan Younis, Bani Suheila, and Abasan in southern Gaza to evacuate immediately after rockets were fired.
  • A Gaza civil defence spokesperson says Israel bombed 60 homes in Gaza City and other parts of northern Gaza in the past 48 hours as the military intensifies its offensive there.

‘Netanyahu did not commit genocide by himself’: UN expert

Francesca Albanese, the UN special rapporteur on human rights in the occupied Palestinian territory, has warned against pinning all of the blame for what is happening in Gaza on the Israeli prime minister alone.

“The problem will not be resolved by scapegoating him, ignoring the rest,” Albanese wrote in a post on social media.

She stressed Israel’s policies of genocide, occupation and annexation, and apartheid all must be halted.

Netanyahu slams Hamas response to ceasefire proposal, echoing Witkoff

We have a short statement from the Israeli prime minister:

“While Israel has agreed to the updated Witkoff outline for the release of our hostages, Hamas continues to adhere to its refusal. As Witkoff said, Hamas’ response is unacceptable and sets the situation back. Israel will continue its action for the return of our hostages and the defeat of Hamas.”

Italy’s Emilia-Romagna region cuts ties with Israel

Michele de Pascale, the president of the region, has announced the decision to break off institutional relations with Israel, according to Italian media.

Emilia-Romagna has been running numerous cooperation projects with Israeli entities for years, the il Fatto Quotidiano reported.

According to the newspaper, de Pascale said Emilia-Romagna’s decision was taken “in the face of the very serious violence under way in the Gaza Strip, which continues to severely affect the civilian population, as demonstrated by the dramatic events of recent days in Rafah, and in consideration of the proceedings initiated by the International Criminal Court against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for war crimes and crimes against humanity“.

Israel’s army issues ‘immediate evacuation’ order for south Gaza

Israel’s military has ordered “all residents” of Khan Younis, Bani Suheila, and Abasan to evacuate immediately after rockets were earlier fired.

“Terrorist organizations continue to use your surroundings to launch rockets toward Israel. The [army] will aggressively attack any area used as a launching pad for terrorist activity,” military spokesperson Avichay Adraee said in a statement.

He added the area of southern Gaza “has been warned several times in the past and has been designated a dangerous combat zone”.

“Terrorist organizations have brought you disaster – for your own safety, evacuate immediately,” said Adraee.

Rockets are fired toward Israel from the Gaza Strip
Rockets are fired toward Israel from the Gaza Strip in October 2023

Trump was hopeful for deal, but Witkoff statement suggests long way off

President Trump had said he believed Hamas was looking to get out of this, but there was always a concern the United States was perhaps favouring Israel in the negotiations.

Certainly, in the various drafts we’ve seen, there was a suggestion the Israelis would not agree to a 90-day ceasefire, which Hamas was very keen on; a withdrawal of forces; free movement of people inside Gaza itself, and of course, if the discussions continued, an end to the war in Gaza. All those things were considered to be red lines by Hamas.

What they’ve done is taken the Witkoff proposals, had a look at them, and it appears they’ve responded by saying, “This simply isn’t what we need.”

You have to remember that Benjamin Netanyahu has committed himself to destroying Hamas, even though numerous people in the Israeli government and senior figures in the likes of Shin Bet, the intelligence service, have said it would be impossible to do that.

It seems Steve Witkoff may still try to go to the Israelis. But of course, there are those who will argue that Netanyahu doesn’t want a deal because, as long as the war continues, it puts his legal troubles far, far away. And as long as there’s a war, he can keep his coalition together and doesn’t have to go to the electorate in Israel for yet another election.

So what happens next? It’s a very big question.

Aid rots in Jordan as Palestinians starve in Gaza: Report

About 200,000 tonnes of flour is going bad in Jordan as the desperate people of Gaza await a flood of aid after three months of Israeli restrictions on food, water, and medicine, a news report says.

Boxed meals that could feed 200,000 people for a month are going bad in warehouses as starvation worsens by the day in the besieged Palestinian territory.

“Some of the food we have is arriving at expiration in July … Some of it will have to be dumped,” UNRWA spokesman Jonathan Fowler told NPR.

Israeli officials have told UN authorities they will no longer allow in aid from Jordan or neighbouring Egypt as the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation takes over crucial relief deliveries, it said.

Palestinians carry bags of flour after storming a U.N. World Food Program warehouse in Zawaida, Central Gaza Strip, on Wednesday, May 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana)
A man carries a bag of flour after storming a UN World Food Programme warehouse in az-Zawayda, central Gaza 

US envoy Witkoff slams Hamas response as ‘unacceptable’

Steve Witkoff, the US special envoy for the Middle East, has said Hamas’s response to the Gaza ceasefire proposal “is totally unacceptable and only takes us backward”.

“Hamas should accept the framework proposal we put forward as the basis for proximity talks, which we can begin immediately this coming week,” Witkoff said in a post on X.

“That is the only way we can close a 60-day ceasefire deal in the coming days in which half of the living hostages and half of those who are deceased will come home to their families, and in which we can have at the proximity talks substantive negotiations in good-faith to try to reach a permanent ceasefire.”

As we reported earlier, Hamas said it submitted a response to the proposal that would see 10 living Israeli captives held in Gaza freed and 18 bodies returned in exchange for a number of Palestinian prisoners.

The Palestinian group stressed its response was within a framework that would ensure a permanent ceasefire, a full and comprehensive withdrawal of the Israeli military from the Gaza Strip, and the free flow of humanitarian aid.

Israeli army confirms killing Hamas’ Mohammed Sinwar on May 13

The military has confirmed what Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced earlier this week.

Mohammad Sinwar, Hamas’s military chief, was the target of an Israeli strike on a hospital in southern Gaza earlier this month. Netanyahu said on Wednesday that he had been killed.

Sinwar was the younger brother of Yahya Sinwar, the Palestinian group’s deceased leader and main planner of the October 2023 attack on Israel.

Hamas has neither confirmed nor denied his death.

Photos: Protesters rally in Tel Aviv to demand captives’ release

People protest in Tel Aviv to demand the release of Israeli captives in Gaza
People take part in a protest in Tel Aviv, May 31, 2025
People protest in Tel Aviv to demand the release of Israeli captives in Gaza
Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu has faced mass protests demanding a deal to secure the release of Israeli captives in Gaza
People protest in Tel Aviv to demand the release of Israeli captives in Gaza
Hamas says it agreed to release 28 living and dead captives, but restated its demand for a permanent end to the war

Israeli army says rockets fired from Gaza fell in open areas

A military update says several rockets were launched from the Strip at southern Israel a short time ago. Hostile aircraft warnings were activated in border areas.

The rockets hit open areas near the Israeli settlements of Nirim and Ein Hashlosha, according to the army. No casualties were reported.

Smoke trails are seen as a salvo of rockets are launched from the Gaza Strip into Israel, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, as seen from southern Israel, December 21, 2023. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
Smoke trails are seen as a salvo of rockets is launched from the Gaza Strip into Israel

US group condemns MIT for barring anti-war student from graduation

The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) has denounced the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) for banning a class president from attending her graduation ceremony after she gave a speech critical of MIT’s collaboration with the Israeli military.

Megha Vemuri was told she’s barred from the campus after she highlighted MIT’s research ties with the Israel army and said, “we are watching Israel try to wipe Palestine off the face of the Earth, and it’s a shame that MIT is a part of it”.

Tahirah Amatul-Wadud, CAIR’s Massachusetts executive director, said Vemuri was punished because she “dared to deliver a powerful speech criticizing the university’s complicity in war crimes perpetrated by the Israeli government”.

“MIT officials should be ashamed of themselves for both helping enable the Israeli government’s genocide and for silencing their own students who speak up against those crimes against humanity,” Amatul-Wadud said in a statement.

“MIT must respect academic freedom and respect the voices of its students, not punish and intimidate those who speak out against genocide and in support of Palestinian humanity.”

Israeli, Palestinian activists meet pope in Vatican to promote peace

Prominent peace activists Maoz Inon and Aziz Abu Sarah have met Pope Leo XIV in Vatican City to promote peace as Israel’s war on Gaza rages.

“Peace takes shape from the ground up, beginning with places, communities and local institutions, and by listening to what they have to tell us,” said the pontiff, who called for peace in Gaza shortly after his election earlier this month.

Inon is an Israeli entrepreneur who lost his parents during the Hamas-led attacks in southern Israel on October 7, 2023. He has since founded a peace coalition and tried to promote dialogue and understanding.

Abu Sarah is a Palestinian activist from occupied East Jerusalem, whose brother was killed in an Israeli prison after he was arrested during the first Intifada.

Cancelled West Bank trip highlights floundering of Israel-Saudi ‘normalisation’

Firas Maksad, a fellow at the US-based Middle East Institute, has said Israel’s rejection of a visit by Arab diplomats to the occupied West Bank indicates “how far Saudi and Israel have moved from normalisation to diplomatic confrontation”.

As we’ve been reporting, Israel blocked plans by the foreign ministers of Egypt, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE – as well as Turkiye – to meet Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas for talks on reviving the two-state solution.

Maksad told AFP the planned visit “underscores just how much the Saudi position has shifted away from creating a credible pathway towards a Palestinian state through conditional normalisation with Israel”.

Instead, the Gulf country is now promoting ways “to create such a path via an international coalition in support of Palestinian aspirations”, he said.

During Trump’s first term as US president, Israel signed deals to normalise diplomatic relations with Arab states as part of the US-brokered “Abraham Accords”.

Trump’s successor, Joe Biden, maintained support for the pacts and was pushing for an Israeli-Saudi normalisation deal. But the effort stalled amid global outrage over Israel’s war on Gaza, with Saudi leaders saying they will not normalise ties with Israel until a Palestinian state is established.

‘If you are strong, you get aid. If you are not, you leave empty-handed’

We’ve spoken to Palestinians in the Gaza Strip who say the limited aid being handed out by the US- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) falls far short of what they need to survive under Israel’s blockade.

“We went to this new area and we came out empty handed,” resident Layla al-Masri said of the new distribution point. “What they are saying about their will to feed the people of Gaza are lies. They neither feed people nor give them anything to drink.”

Another displaced Palestinian, Abdel Qader Rabie, said people across the besieged territory have nothing left to feed their families. “There’s no flour, no food, no bread. We have nothing at home,” he said.

Rabie said when the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) would distribute assistance, he would receive a message to go pick up supplies in an orderly way.

Now, he said that every time he tries to get a box of aid at the GHF, he is swarmed by hundreds of other people trying to get it. “If you are strong, you get aid. If you are not, you leave empty-handed,” Rabie added.

‘Militarising’ humanitarian aid distribution not working in Gaza

Lindsey Hutchison of Plan International says humanitarian organisations and the UN warned against the Israeli government’s aid distribution scheme currently in place in Gaza, and so far, it has been completely ineffective.

“We saw chaos and despair at the distribution site, which is frankly masquerading as a humanitarian aid scheme. That’s not what this is,” she told Al Jazeera from New York.

“This week, we have seen continual destruction of the Gaza Strip and the starvation of the population because the Israeli blockade remains,” Hutchison stressed.

She said the current scheme in place is a “militarisation of humanitarian aid”, adding it’s not working.

“The Israeli scheme to distribute limited supplies has been condemned by Plan [International] as well as the UN and others in the humanitarian sector as violating the core humanitarian principles that we all are obligated to abide by,” she said.

These are “humanity, neutrality, impartiality and independence”, Hutchison noted.

“Having the military control aid and choose who they distribute it to in limited ways completely violates the way humanitarian operations are supposed to be conducted.”

Israel bombed 60 north Gaza homes in past 48 hours: Civil Defence

We have some lines from Mahmoud Basal, the spokesman of the Palestinian Civil Defence in Gaza:

  • Israel is intensifying air attacks on Gaza City and the northern Gaza Strip.
  • Residential buildings that shelter dozens of families have been targeted.
  • Thousands of Palestinian families have become homeless as a result of the bombing of their homes in areas across Gaza.
  • About 60 homes, containing dozens of residential apartments and hundreds of Palestinian families, have been bombed in less than 48 hours in Gaza City and the northern Gaza Strip.

Reuters is quoting a Hamas official as saying the group had responded in a positive way to the Gaza ceasefire proposal presented by Witkoff but is seeking some amendments.

The official did not provide details on the amendments being sought by Hamas, the news agency reported.

Separately, Axios reported that Israeli officials said Hamas demanded several changes to the US envoy’s proposal.

“Hamas effectively rejects Witkoff’s proposal,” an Israeli official was quoted as saying in a post on X by Axios’s Barak Ravid.

Israeli army targeting high-rise residential buildings in Gaza City

While people are trying to hear more about the response from Hamas and a potential ceasefire agreement, they’re keeping their eyes up to the sky, trying to hide from the unpredictable falling bombs.

The Israeli military, since the early hours of this morning, is carrying out deadly attacks.

Bombs are being dropped on residential buildings in the eastern and northern parts of Gaza City.

They’re clearing the city from any of the high-rise buildings around here. Almost 10 of these buildings have been completely destroyed from the early hours of this morning.

Also, a vehicle was targeted in the past few hours in the northern part of Gaza City around a medical complex.

Three people inside the vehicle were killed.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *