Hostilities around Al-Shifa Hospital “have not stopped,” Doctors Without Borders says

November 11, 2023 Israel-Hamas war

By Chris Lau, Andrew Raine, Sophie Tanno, Adrienne Vogt and Tori B. Powell, CNN

Updated 0514 GMT (1314 HKT) November 12, 2023
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5:00 p.m. ET, November 11, 2023

Hostilities around Al-Shifa Hospital “have not stopped,” Doctors Without Borders says

From CNN's Eve Brennan and Kareem Khadder

Hostilities around Al-Shifa Hospital Saturday “have not stopped,” according to Médecins Sans Frontières, also known as Doctors Without Borders.

“The ambulances can no longer move to collect the injured, and non-stop bombardment prevents patients and staff from evacuating,” the organization said in a statement.

A freelance journalist based at the hospital told CNN there were still dozens of bodies at the hospital awaiting burial, but that people feared going outside to bury them. 

“The situation is very difficult and dire. After a slowdown in shelling this afternoon, the shelling and gunfire resumed, heavily targeting anything that moves,” Mustafa Sarsour said.

Medics inside the hospital are working by candlelight, Sarsour said. Other resources are also getting scarce.

“We are running out of canned food. The food is being rationed on patients and medical crews, and I have even seen doctors and nurses giving their own food to patients. … Now the electricity is cut off, people (have) started drinking the pipe water,” the journalist said.

Some background: The Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza said the hospital was under "complete siege" Saturday, and that a floor of the complex's surgery building was heavily shelled. The ministry says three newborn babies died at the hospital after it "went out of service" due to heavy damage.

Israel’s army has said there is “ongoing intense fighting” around the vicinity of Al-Shifa Hospital, but denied claims it was firing at or laying siege to the complex.

It has also said it is in touch with the hospital director and willing to help people leave. Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said Saturday evening that the hospital staff has requested help evacuating babies from the pediatric department, and that the IDF "will provide the assistance needed" Sunday.

CNN has been unable to confirm whether anyone was able to leave the hospital complex over the course of the day.

This post has been updated with additional comments from an IDF spokesperson.

3:51 p.m. ET, November 11, 2023

53 aid trucks enter Gaza Saturday, Palestine Red Crescent says

From CNN's Abeer Salman and Hamdi Alkhshali

The Palestine Red Crescent Society received 53 aid trucks packed with vital supplies —including food, water, relief items, medical equipment and medications, but no fuel — the group said Saturday.

“Since October 21, 2023, a total of 904 trucks have been received, averaging around 41 trucks per day," the aid organization said. "Unfortunately, the Israeli occupying authorities have not permitted the entry of fuel so far.”
3:20 p.m. ET, November 11, 2023

More foreign nationals will be allowed to leave Gaza through Rafah crossing Sunday, officials say

From Ibrahim Dahman and Hamdi Alkhshali

Ambulances queue to cross the Rafah border from the Egyptian side on November 6.
Ambulances queue to cross the Rafah border from the Egyptian side on November 6. Mahmoud Khaled/Getty Images

Operations at the Rafah land crossing will resume Sunday for the departure of foreign passport holders, the General Authority for Crossings and Borders in Gaza said in a statement Saturday.

Only people whose names are specifically included on a list that was released November 1 will be permitted to travel through the Rafah crossing, the authority emphasized.

The Rafah crossing failed to open Friday for foreign nationals wishing to leave Gaza, highlighting once again the frustrations facing diplomats looking to get their nationals out of the strip.

One diplomatic source in Egypt described the process as “long, non-transparent and arduous.”

Remember: Rafah is the only Gazan border crossing that isn’t controlled by Israel, which shut its crossings with the territory following Hamas’ October 7 attack. It has emerged as a crucial location as the humanitarian situation in the territory worsens.

For the first few weeks of the Israel-Gaza war, the Rafah crossing remained shut – leaving Palestinians and other people stranded in the strip with no way out of the enclave.

But it was partially opened late last month to allow a small number of aid trucks into Gaza, and has briefly reopened at times in November to allow safe passage to a limited amount of injured Palestinians and foreign nationals.

CNN's Abbas Al Lawati, Mohammed Abdelbary and Rob Picheta contributed reporting to this post.

2:34 p.m. ET, November 11, 2023

Israeli military denies claims it has laid siege to Gaza’s largest hospital

From CNN's Jo Shelley

The Israeli military denies it is firing at Al-Shifa Hospital in northern Gaza, and rejected suggestions the hospital is under siege

"There is no shooting at the hospital and there is no siege," Col. Moshe Tetro, a senior Israeli defense ministry official with responsibilities for Gaza, said in a statement. "The East Side of the hospital remains open. Additionally, (the military) can coordinate (with) anyone who wants to leave the hospital safely."

In a video sent out by the Israel Defense Forces to accompany the written statement, Tetro said there were, “clashes between IDF troops and Hamas terrorist operatives around the hospital.” 

He added that he was in “constant contact” with the director of Al-Shifa, and had told him the IDF could coordinate evacuations from the hospital.

CNN has been unable to confirm whether anyone was able to leave the hospital complex over the course of the day.

What officials in Gaza have said: A senior official at the Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza told CNN earlier Saturday that Al-Shifa is surrounded on all four sides by Israeli forces, under "complete siege."

In a separate statement sent to CNN Saturday, the ministry said the hospital was “out of service,” with the fifth floor of the surgery building heavily shelled and medical staff unable to move within the complex.

12:47 p.m. ET, November 11, 2023

About 300,000 attend pro-Palestinian rally in London, according to police

From CNN's Livvy Doherty, Dan Wright, Niamh Kennedy, Radina Gigova, Eve Brennan and Sophie Tanno

People attend a pro-Palestinian demonstration in London on November 11.
People attend a pro-Palestinian demonstration in London on November 11. Henry Nicholls/AFP/Getty Images

A huge pro-Palestinian demonstration is underway in London as hundreds of thousands of people march through the center of the city Saturday, according to a CNN team on the ground.

A spokesperson for London’s Metropolitan Police told CNN that an estimated 300,000 people attended the rally.

There was heavy police presence in central London’s Hyde Park Corner as protesters chanted “free, free Palestine” and “ceasefire now.” They were also heard chanting “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!”

Police arrested 82 counter-protesters in London who attempted to confront those taking part in the rally. The Metropolitan Police said the people were apprehended “to prevent a breach of the peace.”

Police said they had “faced aggression from counter-protesters” who stormed the area “in significant numbers” ahead of what could be the biggest march yet since the Israel-Hamas conflict began about a month ago.

Elsewhere in Europe, thousands of people in Brussels and Paris also attended pro-Palestinian demonstrations Saturday.

Meanwhile, in the US: A group of pro-Palestinian protesters on Saturday gathered near the street where President Joe Biden lives in Delaware to call for a ceasefire in Gaza. 

The crowd began forming at roughly 11 a.m. ET. Many are carrying Palestinian flags, and there are large cellophane balloons spelling out “ceasefire now.”

Biden is currently at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia for Veterans Day events. He’s expected to travel to his Wilmington home later on Saturday.

On Friday, about 2,000 people attended a demonstration in New York City, gathering in Columbus Circle before marching to the area around Times Square and eventually to Grand Central, where demonstrations temporarily closed access to the terminal.

CNN's Kevin Liptak contributed reporting to this post.

12:50 p.m. ET, November 11, 2023

Hezbollah leader says his group will keep pressure on Israel as country seeks to "impose submission" on region

From CNN’s Tamara Qiblawi and Radina Gigova in London

Supporters watch Hezbollah Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah deliver an address in Lebanon on November 11.
Supporters watch Hezbollah Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah deliver an address in Lebanon on November 11. Aziz Taher/Reuters

Hezbollah Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah gave his second speech since the Hamas-Israel war started via video link from an undisclosed location Saturday, in which he addressed the situation in Gaza and clashes on the Lebanon-Israel border.

Nasrallah called the situation unfolding in Gaza "big, exceptional and dangerous in this region and the world,” adding that what will emerge from the death and destruction in Gaza "will be generation after generation of resistance fighters."

“This painful event and these grave crimes are an expression of Israeli revenge. This is the spirit of a vicious revenge that have no moral or humanitarian or legal limits. It expresses the true nature of the entity (Israel),” he said. 

“This isn’t just revenge, it’s not just lashing out. It is aggression with an objective. One of the main objectives is to impose submission, not just Gaza’s people, but also to grind the people of Palestine, Lebanon and the region to submission,” Nasrallah said. 

On clashes at the Israel-Lebanon border: Hezbollah’s strikes on Israeli territory have increased in number and employed more advanced weaponry over the last week of cross-border fire between Israel Defense Forces and the powerful, Iran-backed armed group, Nasrallah said in a speech Saturday.

“In the last week, without a doubt, there was an elevation in resistance activities (on the border). Numerically and in the kinds of weapons that we used,” said Nasrallah.

Hezbollah has in recent days struck deeper into Israeli territory, Nasrallah said, marking an escalation in the month-long flareup, where the fighting has largely stuck to a 4-kilometer (about 2-mile) radius around the border.

He said Hezbollah used self-detonating, explosive-laden drones in an attack on Israeli positions for the first time in the paramilitary group’s history. (The Israeli military has acknowledged Hezbollah's use of an attack drone in at least one of the strikes claimed by the Lebanese armed group.)

Hezbollah has, also for the first time, fired Iran-made Burkan missiles, which have a payload of up to 500 kilograms (about 1,100 pounds), on Israeli positions, Nasrallah said. Hezbollah this week released video showing a large explosion caused by a Burkan missile.

The Hezbollah leader accused Israel of hiding its casualty figures from Hezbollah attacks on the border.

Nasrallah accused Israel of hiding its casualty figures from Hezbollah's attacks on the border.

“The southern front in Lebanon will continue to be a front that applies pressure (on Israel),” he said.

On the US: Nasrallah accused the US of “administering” the Israeli operation in Gaza and chastised it for supporting the continuation of Israel's operation in Gaza.

Nasrallah said “all pressure” to bring about a ceasefire should be directed toward the US. He praised militant actions against US positions in Iraq in recent weeks and said they would only “stop” if the US pushes for a ceasefire in Israel.

Hezbollah's chief described Iran-backed armed groups in Iraq, Yemen, Lebanon and Syria as having created “supporting fronts” for Hamas in Gaza.

CNN reported earlier this month that the US intelligence community believes – for now – that Iran and its proxies are calibrating their response to Israel’s military intervention in Gaza to avoid direct conflict with Israel or the US while still exacting costs on its adversaries. But the US is also keenly aware that Iran does not maintain perfect control of its umbrella of proxies – in particular over Lebanese Hezbollah, the largest and most capable of the various groups. Hezbollah is an ally of Hamas, the group that attacked Israel on October 7, and has long positioned itself as fighting against Israel. US officials are deeply concerned that the group’s internal politics may cause Hezbollah to escalate simmering tensions.

Nasrallah's speech last Friday: In his first public, in-person speech since 2006 — when a monthlong war erupted between Lebanon and Israel — Nasrallah said "all scenarios" are possible on the Lebanon-Israel border, warning Israel against further escalation of its operations there. He also urged for a ceasefire in Gaza, calling it Hezbollah's first priority.

12:00 p.m. ET, November 11, 2023

Joint Arab and Islamic summit resolution condemns "Israeli aggression against the Gaza Strip"

From CNN’s Zeena Saifi in Jerusalem

Smoke rises over Gaza following an Israeli strike on November 11.
Smoke rises over Gaza following an Israeli strike on November 11. Kenzo Tribouillard/AFP/Getty Images

The final resolution issued by the joint Arab and Islamic summit in Riyadh demands the end of what it describes as Israel’s aggression against Gaza, as well as "war crimes and barbaric, brutal and inhumane massacres." 

“We condemn the Israeli aggression against the Gaza Strip, the war crimes and the barbaric, brutal and inhumane massacres committed by the colonial occupation government against the Palestinian people, including in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem. We demand it be stopped immediately,” the resolution read. 

The statement said the summit rejects the characterization of this “war of revenge as (one of) self-defense” and demands the end of the siege in Gaza as well as the entry of humanitarian aid convoys, including food, medicine, and fuel immediately. 

It also demanded the United Nations Security Council take a “decisive and binding decision” that imposes a cessation of aggression.

“We demand the Security Council take an immediate decision condemning Israel’s barbaric destruction of hospitals in the Gaza Strip and preventing the entry of medicine, food and fuel,” it added. 

The resolution also called on the International Criminal Court to conduct an investigation into what it described as war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by Israel against the Palestinian people in all occupied Palestinian territories.  

It called on all countries to stop exporting weapons and ammunition to Israel used by its army and the “terrorist settlers who kill Palestinian people and destroy their homes.” 

The summit said that a “just, lasting and comprehensive peace” is the only way to guarantee security and stability for the people of the region. 

“Protection from cycles of violence and wars will not be achieved without ending the Israeli occupation. ... We hold Israel, the occupying power responsible for the continuation and aggravation of the conflict as a result of its aggression against human rights,” it added.

3:56 p.m. ET, November 11, 2023

Arab and Muslim leaders call for ceasefire and criticize West during summit

From CNN’s Zeena Saifi in Jerusalem

Leaders pose for a photo at the Extraordinary Summit in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on November 11.
Leaders pose for a photo at the Extraordinary Summit in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on November 11. Mustafa Kamaci/Anadolu/Getty Images

Leaders at the Joint Arab-Islamic Extraordinary Summit in Riyadh on Saturday reiterated calls for a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas as the humanitarian situation in Gaza worsens.

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi is in the Saudi capital for the summit, marking the first trip by an Iranian leader to Saudi Arabia in 11 years, after the two countries restored diplomatic relations in March. Raisi said attendees had gathered there on behalf of the Islamic world to "save the Palestinians." Meanwhile, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman said "we categorically reject this brutal war" in opening remarks.

Here's what others are saying:

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said the United States, "which has the greatest influence on Israel, bears responsibility for the absence of a political solution."

“We demand that they put a stop to the Israeli aggression and the Israeli occupation of our land,” he said.

He called on the United Nations Security Council to "immediately put an end to the brutal Israeli aggression on Palestinians," and he repeated the need to secure the entry of aid supplies into Gaza. 

“My mind cannot believe that this is happening under the eyes and ears of the world, without calling for an immediate halt to this brutal war,” he added.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan told the summit that "the world remaining silent in the face of this brutality shames us all."

“Gaza has been almost completely destroyed, and Western countries aren’t even calling for a ceasefire. …There is no doubt that whoever remains silent about injustice is a partner in the practice of injustice,” Erdogan added. 

The Turkish president said Israel is trying to seek revenge for Hamas' attacks on October 7, adding that while nobody supports what happened that day, it is not an excuse for Israel to kill civilians.  

“Words have become insufficient in describing what is happening in Gaza and Ramallah since October 7,” Erdogan said, claiming that Israel was targeting civilians, hospitals, ambulances, and places of worship in a “brutal and barbaric way that is unparalleled in history.” 

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad criticized the normalization agreements between Arab countries and Israel, saying the policy does more harm than good.

“More hands extended by us equals more massacres against us … what we have to do to help Palestine is use actual political tools, not rhetorical tools, and that firstly is stopping any political process with the Zionist entity,” he said. 

Assad said what’s happening in Gaza today should not be treated in isolation, but rather looked at as a “manifestation” of the Palestinian cause and a “blatant expression of the suffering” of Palestinians. 

“If we continue to deal with the aggression against Gaza today with the same methodology, then we will pave the way for the completion of the massacre … and the death of the cause,” he said.  

Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani slammed the international community for failing to “stop war crimes and massacres” in Gaza.

“We wonder how long will the international community continue to treat Israel as if it is above international law, and how long will it be condoned to flout all international laws in its brutal, never-ending war on the country’s indigenous population,” the Qatari ruler said.  

The emir said Qatar continues to support all regional and international diplomatic efforts for "de-escalation, stemming the bloodshed and protecting civilians, including continuing efforts in humanitarian mediation to release hostages," adding that "we hope to reach a humanitarian truce in the near future." 

11:14 a.m. ET, November 11, 2023

Staff and patients unable to evacuate Al-Shifa Hospital, Hamas-controlled health ministry says

From CNN’s Kareem Khadder and Niamh Kennedy 

The exterior of Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City is seen on November 10.
The exterior of Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City is seen on November 10. Ismail Zanoun/AFP/Getty Images

Staff and patients have been unable to leave the Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City as the hospital complex remains under "complete siege," according to the Hamas-controlled health ministry in Gaza. 

The director-general of the ministry, Dr. Munir Al-Bursh, told CNN there were more than 100 bodies wrapped in blankets on the ground within the hospital complex. 

We can’t bury them,” he told CNN by phone. The sound of explosions could be heard as he spoke.

CNN is unable to verify the number of dead at Al-Shifa.

“There is a complete siege on the Al-Shifa hospital from all sides. The occupation is surrounding the hospital, preventing the evacuation of the injured,” Al-Bursh said. 

He said people who had been injured in Gaza were instead being transported to the Al-Ahli Baptist Hospital, as Al-Shifa was inaccessible. He said there was no water, food or electricity at the hospital.

What Israel's military says: The Israeli army told CNN it is engaged in “ongoing intense fighting” against Hamas in the vicinity of the hospital complex but refused to comment further on its forces’ proximity to the complex because military activity was still underway.

Israeli army spokespeople in a separate telephone briefing with journalists Saturday did not address reports of shelling in the hospital vicinity.

Angelita Caredda, the Norwegian Refugee Council’s Middle East director, said in a statement that the council was "horrified by reports of relentless attacks on Gaza’s hospitals."

"Patients, including babies, and civilians seeking relief are trapped under attack. It is an affront to wage war around and on hospitals," she said.