March 30, 2024 - Israel-Hamas war

March 30, 2024 - Israel-Hamas war

By Chris Lau, Joshua Berlinger, Tori B. Powell and Adrienne Vogt, CNN

Updated 0558 GMT (1358 HKT) March 31, 2024
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1:55 a.m. ET, March 31, 2024

Our live coverage of Israel's war on Hamas in Gaza has moved here.

6:09 p.m. ET, March 30, 2024

Israeli police arrest 16 people in Tel Aviv during anti-government protests

From CNN's Lauren Izso and Mohammed Tawfeeq

The Israel Police said 16 people were arrested in Tel Aviv during large protests calling for the release of hostages held in Gaza and the removal of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The demonstrators were arrested "for disruption of traffic and road blockages," the police said in a statement released Saturday.

"There were large amounts of protestors who disrupted public order by igniting fires, toppling police barriers, obstructing roads, and scuffling with law enforcement: 16 disorderly individuals were arrested and 9 citations of 1000 shekels ($270) were written for disruption of traffic and road blockages," according to the statement.

Video shows police using a water cannon to disperse protesters on the Ayalon Highway in Tel Aviv and arresting at least one person, who was taken into a police vehicle.

The footage shows a number of protesters standing in front of the water cannon, chanting: "We will not give up until things get better."

Israel Police encouraged protesters in Tel Aviv to obey the law and avoid violent protests in a separate statement released on Saturday and posted on X.

4:24 p.m. ET, March 30, 2024

Gaza to receive desperately needed food aid in the coming days by ship as death toll rises. Catch up here

From CNN staff

Children wait to receive food cooked by a charity kitchen amid shortages of food supplies in Rafah, Gaza, on March 5.
Children wait to receive food cooked by a charity kitchen amid shortages of food supplies in Rafah, Gaza, on March 5. Mohammed Salem/Reuters

Nearly 400 tons of food aid are expected to arrive in Gaza by ship in the coming days, according to a nongovernmental organization arranging the deliveries. A ship facilitating the delivery has left port in Cyprus and embarked on its second mission to the enclave.

In March, Israeli authorities denied 30% of humanitarian aid missions to northern Gaza and 10% of missions into southern Gaza, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said Friday. 

Here are other headlines you should know:

  • Humanitarian crisis: About 9,000 patients stuck in Gaza require urgent evacuation abroad, World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Saturday.
  • Gaza death toll: At least 82 people have died over the past 24 hours in Gaza, bringing the total number of those killed since October 7 to 32,705, the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Gaza said Saturday. Another 75,190 people have been wounded, the ministry said in a statement. CNN cannot independently verify these numbers.
  • Al-Shifa raid continues: The Israel Defense Forces said Saturday that operations are ongoing around the Gaza City medical complex, where it says its forces "continued to eliminate terrorists." The raid is poised to enter a second week on Sunday.
  • Ceasefire talks: Negotiations over a ceasefire and hostage deal between Israel and Hamas are expected to resume in Cairo on Sunday, Egypt’s state-run Al-Qahera News reported on Saturday, citing a security source. Meanwhile, high-level talks between US and Israeli officials over a looming ground offensive into Rafah could take place in Washington, DC, as soon as Monday, US officials tell CNN. 
  • Israeli soldier killed: Israel's military said one soldier was killed and several others were seriously injured during a battle in the south of the territory. His death brings the number of troops killed in Israel’s war against Hamas to 254. 
  • Teen killed in West Bank: Israeli soldiers shot and killed Moatasem Abu Abed, a 13-year-old Palestinian boy, during a military raid near the city of Jenin in the occupied West Bank on Saturday, according to Palestinian official news agency WAFA. He was one of three Palestinians shot by Israeli forces in the town of Qabatiya, south of Jenin, WAFA said. The IDF told CNN that a review is underway into the circumstances of the killing.
  • Drone strike: A United Nations vehicle was hit in southern Lebanon by a drone strike on Saturday morning, according to Lebanese state media. Four peacekeepers affiliated with the UN's peacekeeping mission in Lebanon were injured. The IDF quickly denied reports in Lebanese media that it was behind the attack.
  • Israel admits to brutal killings: The IDF admitted to killing two Palestinian men and burying their bodies with a bulldozer after Al Jazeera published a video purportedly showing the incident Wednesday. The IDF claimed in a statement to CNN that the men approached its "operational area" in central Gaza “in a suspicious manner” and didn’t respond to a warning shot. The Israelis killed them and bulldozed their bodies, fearing they carried explosives, the IDF said.
4:28 p.m. ET, March 30, 2024

Anti-government protests call for release of hostages and Netanyahu's removal

From CNN's Lauren Izso and Mohammed Tawfeeq

People gather in Tel Aviv, Israel, during a protest for Israeli hostages held in Gaza on March 30.
People gather in Tel Aviv, Israel, during a protest for Israeli hostages held in Gaza on March 30. Jack Guez/AFP/Getty Images

Thousands of protesters took to the streets in the Israeli cities of Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Caesarea, Raanana and Herzliya on Saturday, demanding the release of all hostages held in Gaza and for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to be removed from office.

Demonstrations held at Kaplan Street in Tel Aviv also called for a general election to be held immediately. A video from the rally shows police officers attempting to push protesters at the Begin Gate, one of the entry gates to the Kirya military headquarters in the city.

"No one leaves! We will march to Jerusalem and remain there, until the government disbands," one banner read.

In a separate rally held at Hostages Square in Tel Aviv, survivors of Hamas captivity urged Israeli authorities to immediately bring home all the hostages still held in Gaza.

Freed hostage Aviva Siegel, whose husband Keith Siegel remains in Gaza, called on Israeli authorities to "take responsibility" and put more effort into releasing her spouse and other hostages held by Hamas and other militant groups in the strip. 

"I ask you — the chief of staff, the prime minister, the defense minister — I'm dying here; do you understand that? We are dying inside here!" Siegel said during her speech at the rally.

Many hostage rally supporters continue to march through the streets of Tel Aviv on Saturday night.

The Hostages and Missing Families Forum said in a statement Saturday that the gathering will be relocated next week to Jerusalem in front of the Knesset, Israel's parliament.

In the coastal city of Caesarea, protesters walked around police barricades to march toward Netanyahu's residence, chanting: "There is no forgiveness for the angel of destruction" and "there is no forgiveness for failures and abandonment."

This post has been updated with additional information about scenes from the protests.

1:41 p.m. ET, March 30, 2024

Egypt will host new round of Israel-Hamas talks Sunday, Egyptian state-run media reports

From CNN’s Eyad Kourdi

Negotiations over a ceasefire and hostage deal between Israel and Hamas are expected to resume in Cairo on Sunday, Egypt’s state-run Al-Qahera News reported on Saturday, citing a security source.

"Egypt and the UAE continue their joint efforts to achieve progress in the negotiations between the two sides," the security source added, according to Al-Qahera News. 

CNN is reaching out to the Israeli government as well as Hamas.

Remember: Earlier this month, talks over the release of hostages and a humanitarian pause were held in Qatar. On Friday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu authorized an Israeli negotiating delegation to travel to Qatar and Egypt in the coming days.

 

12:39 p.m. ET, March 30, 2024

Nearly 400 tons of food aid will arrive in Gaza by ship in the coming days, NGO says

From CNN’s Benjamin Brown

Nearly 400 tons of food aid are expected to arrive in Gaza by ship in the coming days, according to the non-governmental organization arranging the deliveries.

The aid will be provided to people in the northern part of the strip, said Juan Camilo, a community outreach manager with World Central Kitchen.

The Open Arms, a salvage vessel that delivered aid to Gaza earlier this month, is towing a barge, while a cargo vessel, the Jennifer, is also carrying aid, Camilo said.

World Central Kitchen said the vessels were also carrying machinery to speed up the process of offloading the ships, and that it was delivering dates provided by the United Arab Emirates for Palestinians observing Ramadan.

12:30 p.m. ET, March 30, 2024

Ship transporting food aid to Gaza leaves Cyprus port

From CNN’s Benjamin Brown

The Open Arms vessel and a tugboat towing a barge depart with humanitarian aid for Gaza from Larnaca, Cyprus, on March 30.
The Open Arms vessel and a tugboat towing a barge depart with humanitarian aid for Gaza from Larnaca, Cyprus, on March 30. Yiannis Kourtoglou/Reuters

A ship facilitating a food aid delivery to Gaza has left port in Cyprus and embarked on its second mission to the enclave.

The Open Arms, a Spanish-flagged salvage vessel, set sail from the Cypriot port of Larnaca on Saturday, according to Oscar Camps, the founder of a charitable organization that owns the vessel.

The operation to transport aid to Gaza by sea is led by World Central Kitchen, a non-governmental organization that already launched an aid shipment from Cyprus earlier this month.

The Open Arms' second voyage to Gaza will see “hundreds of tons of food” transported to the strip, according to Camps. The ship is normally a search and rescue vessel used by the NGO Open Arms.

Earlier this month, World Central Kitchen said almost 200 tons of aid were delivered by ship in an operation conducted with the Emirati government and Open Arms, with support from Cyprus.

2:28 p.m. ET, March 30, 2024

Israel admits killing 2 Palestinians and then burying them with a bulldozer after shocking video surfaces

From CNN's Tim Lister, Allegra Goodwin, Gianluca Mezzofiore, Abeer Salman, Alex Stambaugh and Paul P. Murphy

A screen grab from a video obtained by Al Jazeera shows a man walking along a beach in Gaza before being killed by IDF forces.
A screen grab from a video obtained by Al Jazeera shows a man walking along a beach in Gaza before being killed by IDF forces. Obtained by Al Jazeera

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has admitted killing two Palestinian men and burying their bodies with a bulldozer after Al Jazeera published a video purportedly showing the incident Wednesday. 

The men approached its "operational area" in central Gaza “in a suspicious manner” and didn’t respond to a warning shot, the IDF said in a statement to CNN. The Israelis killed them and bulldozed their bodies fearing they carried explosives, it said.

What the video shows: In the video, which is filmed from a distance and has been heavily edited, two men are seen walking along a beach in Gaza, apart from one another; both appear to be waving white flags, to symbolize surrender, as they cautiously approach a group of Israeli soldiers. The video shows one man walking toward the soldiers with his hands in the air. He passes out of view behind some sand and concrete. It's not clear what happens to him next. The second man turns away from the soldiers. As he hurriedly walks away from the camera, he is seen being followed by an Israeli armored vehicle. Suddenly, he falls to the sand, apparently shot. 

The video then cuts to another angle, a location that CNN has been unable to geolocate, where an Israeli military bulldozer is seen unceremoniously burying two bodies in sand and debris. It’s not clear whether the bodies shown in the second half of the film are the two men who were filmed at the start of the sequence. Al Jazeera claims the bodies are the same men.

Al Jazeera said in its commentary that the "giant bulldozer shovels the two bodies and buries them in sand and litter. The Israeli soldiers attempt to conceal the executions."

CNN has asked Al Jazeera for an unedited copy of the footage. Al Jazeera said the incident happened near Al Rasheed Street in central Gaza. CNN geolocated the video and confirmed it showed the incident at the beach. Additional visual evidence – satellite imagery and videos – shows Israeli military engineering vehicles such as bulldozers were deployed there.

What Israel said: The edited video "represents two different incidents," the IDF said.

"The first incident occurred in the southern part of the corridor. After the suspect did not respond to a warning shot, the (force) fired to his direction and he was shot and slightly wounded," the IDF said, adding he was released after receiving medical treatment and questioning. 

The second incident occurred in the northern part of the corridor and the two suspects were fired at after approaching Israeli forces "in a suspicious manner," the IDF said.

"Two suspects with bags on their backs observed our forces and approached them, in a suspicious manner. After not responding to a warning shot, the forces conducted live fire towards them as a result of which they were killed. The bodies were moved from the area using the documented tool out of fear of [there] being explosives on the suspects and risk to the forces," the IDF said.
1:27 p.m. ET, March 30, 2024

16 arrested for incitement in Jerusalem during Friday prayers, Israeli police say

From Lauren Izso

A drone view shows the Dome of the Rock on the al-Aqsa mosque compound, also known as the Temple Mount by Jews, in Jerusalem's Old City on March 29.
A drone view shows the Dome of the Rock on the al-Aqsa mosque compound, also known as the Temple Mount by Jews, in Jerusalem's Old City on March 29. Ilan Rosenberg/Reuters

Israeli police says 16 people have been arrested on suspicion of “incitement and identification with terrorism and terrorists” in Jerusalem's Old City following Friday prayers.

The incident took place at the holy site known as the Temple Mount by Jews and as the Haram ash-Shairf complex by Muslims. It is home to the Western Wall and the al-Aqsa mosque, important places of worship for Jews and Muslims, respectively. The site has long been a flashpoint in tensions between Israelis and Palestinians.

Police said that after the conclusion of the evening and dawn prayers on Friday and Saturday “some individuals took advantage of this situation to engage in incitement and express support for terrorism.” 

“Following various investigation operations, suspects were located, including 16 who have already been arrested, and additional suspects who will be arrested," the statement read.

The police alleged “that among the incitement calls, which lasted for a relatively short period of time, there were also expressions of support for the Hamas terrorist organization and its leaders, calls to harm Jews, and encouragement for the Hezbollah terrorist organization to fire at Tel Aviv.”

While calls to support Hamas and hurt Jews are illegal in Israel, there has seemingly been less tolerance for criticism of the Israeli military since October 7. Dozens of Palestinian residents and citizens of Israel have been arrested in Israel for expressing solidarity with Gaza and its civilian population.