UN calls for investigation after CNN report on indiscriminate Israeli fire that killed half a family in Gaza

February 28, 2024 - Israel-Hamas war

By Kathleen Magramo, Sana Noor Haq, Antoinette Radford, Aditi Sangal and Maureen Chowdhury, CNN

Updated 8:54 a.m. ET, February 29, 2024
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3:17 p.m. ET, February 28, 2024

UN calls for investigation after CNN report on indiscriminate Israeli fire that killed half a family in Gaza

From CNN’s Richard Roth and Amy Cassidy

The United Nations is urging an investigation into indiscriminate Israeli fire that killed half of a family in Gaza, after a CNN report about it was published Wednesday.

“We call for a full investigation into what was reported,” the UN secretary-general’s spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said Wednesday during a news conference, in response to a question from CNN. 

The UN does not have its own information on the incident, “but they need to be investigated,” Dujarric said, reiterating the UN’s plea for Israel to allow more journalists in Gaza.  

3:12 p.m. ET, February 28, 2024

Israel hasn't provided evidence to support allegations against UNRWA employees, agency chief says

From CNN's Ami Kaufman, Amy Cassidy and CNN staff

Israel still has not provided evidence to support its allegations that members of the main United Nations aid agency in Gaza were involved in the October 7 Hamas attacks, according to the head of the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA).

“To my knowledge, up to today, there (hasn’t) been any new information transmitted to UNRWA and to the United Nations,” the organization's Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour in his first one-on-one TV interview since the allegations emerged in January.
“We keep now calling to the Israeli authority to cooperate with the investigation team so that we can come to a swift conclusion,” he continued.

"We haven’t received anything more than what we see on the media," he said.

Lazzarini called footage that purports to show a UNRWA staff member participating in the kidnapping of Yonatan Samerano — who was killed in kibbutz Be’eri on October 7 — "shocking images."

Background on the footage: A video screened last week during a press conference with the Hostage and Missing Families Forum showed a white SUV approaching the entrance of what appears to be the kibbutz. Two men exit the vehicle and are seen carrying a body from the road into the vehicle. One of the men is identified in the footage as an UNWRA worker. CNN could not independently verify the identity of the men or Israel’s allegations about his involvement with Hamas.

Lazzarini said Wednesday that he "personally cannot recognize the person on the video." He called for "more forensic evidence to be provided," while acknowledging the name of the accused man in the video "matched our staff list" and that his UNRWA contract was terminated.

Remember: UNRWA fired 10 of the 12 staff members accused by Israel of involvement in the October 7 attacks and launched an investigation into the allegations, in hopes of keeping international funding to the agency flowing at a critical time. At least 16 countries have paused or suspended funding to UNRWA since the allegations emerged, Lazzarini said, warning that operations beyond March will be impacted unless more money is donated.

2:13 p.m. ET, February 28, 2024

US calls on Israel to allow access to al-Aqsa mosque for Ramadan

From CNN's Michael Conte and Jennifer Hansler

The Dome of the Rock, in the al-Aqsa mosque compound, is seen in the distance as an Israeli soldier stands guard during Friday noon prayer along a street in the east Jerusalem neighborhood of Ras al-Amud, on January 26.
The Dome of the Rock, in the al-Aqsa mosque compound, is seen in the distance as an Israeli soldier stands guard during Friday noon prayer along a street in the east Jerusalem neighborhood of Ras al-Amud, on January 26. Marco Longari/AFP/Getty Images

The US called on Israel to allow worshippers to go to the al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem for Ramadan, as Hamas calls for Palestinians in Jerusalem and the West Bank to march on the mosque on the first day of the holy month.

Far-right Israeli cabinet minister Itamar Ben Gvir has proposed increased restrictions to the holy site for Palestinians during Ramadan. Such restrictions, if instituted, threaten to ignite already increased tensions.

About the site: The al-Aqsa compound is one of the most revered places in Islam and Judaism. The sacred grounds — known to Muslims as Al Haram Al Sharif (Noble Sanctuary) and to Jews as Temple Mount — have been a flashpoint of tensions between Israel and the Palestinians for decades. 

“We continue to urge Israel to facilitate access to the Temple Mount for peaceful worshippers during Ramadan, consistent with past practice, and that will continue to be our position,” said State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller at a briefing on Wednesday. 

Miller said allowing access to al-Aqsa is “a matter that directly is important to Israel's security," adding that “it is not in Israel's security interest to inflame tensions in the West Bank or in the broader region.”

CNN's Salam Abdelaziz and Abeer Salman contributed to this report.

11:49 a.m. ET, February 28, 2024

Catch up: Israel and Hamas distance themselves from ceasefire optimism as death toll approaches new milestone

From CNN Staff

After US President Joe Biden projected optimism that a hostage-for-ceasefire deal in Gaza could be reached by the end of this week, officials from Israel, Hamas and Qatar have distanced themselves from his comments.

Meetings are currently taking place, but there are disagreements over "numbers, ratios and troop movements," Majed Al-Ansari, a Qatar foreign ministry spokesperson, said on Tuesday.

On Wednesday, Hamas' political leader Ismail Haniyeh said the militant group has displayed flexibility in negotiations but remains ready to continue fighting.

Meanwhile, the death toll in Gaza is approaching 30,000 people, according to the health ministry in the enclave. The total number of people killed in Gaza is around 29,878, with the number of injured reaching 70,215, since October 7, according to the ministry.

Here's what else to know:

  • Lebanon fire: Lebanon and Israel exchanged fire near the border on Wednesday, a statement from the Israel Defense Forces said. Approximately “10 launches” crossed from Lebanon into northern Israel, with sirens sounding near Kiryat Shmona, the IDF said. It said it also targeted the "sources of the fire" in Lebanon in response.
  • Palestinian factions to meet in Moscow: Palestinian political faction Fatah told CNN it would attend an intra-Palestinian meeting on Thursday in Moscow. The meeting will tackle ways to “unite the Palestinian factions under the Palestinian Liberation Organization,” Fatah spokesperson Hussein Hamayel told CNN. 
  • Hostages begin march: Families of hostages in Gaza have started a four-day march from the site of the Nova Festival in southern Israel's Re'im to Jerusalem, repeating calls for the release of those kidnapped on October 7. There are believed to be 130 hostages still in Gaza, of which 99 are believed to be alive.
  • Families demand answers: 17-year-old Mohammad Khdour was killed when an Israeli gunman opened fire on his family's car, shooting him in the head. The death of the Florida-born US citizen, just weeks after another 17-year-old American citizen was shot, has underscored the frustrations among Palestinian Americans who say the United States is doing little to respond to the deaths of their loved ones.
  • Gaza chapel shelter: Some Palestinians are finding refuge in the chapel of St. Philip in Gaza City. The chapel has been turned into a makeshift emergency ward for Palestinians wounded in Israel's military offensive.
  • Director gets death threats: Israeli journalist and film director Yuval Abraham said he is receiving death threats and has canceled his flight home from the Berlin International Film Festival amid backlash to an acceptance speech in which he decried the “situation of apartheid” and called for a ceasefire in Gaza.
9:59 a.m. ET, February 28, 2024

How indiscriminate Israeli bombing killed half a family

From CNN's Abeer Salman, Mohammad Al Sawalhi, Benjamin Brown, Mick Krever, Jomana Karadsheh, Ivana Kottasová, Gianluca Mezzofiore, Carlotta Dotto, Byron Manley and Lou Robinson

The right side of Roba Abu Jibba’s face is almost completely gone – a deep, bloody wound is where her eye should be.

The 18-year-old, confused and in pain, lies on a gurney in Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza. She tries to explain how she got there. She had been sheltering with her family for two months in an industrial warehouse on Salaheddin Street, the strip’s main north-south highway, she explains, when they came under heavy fire from the Israeli military.

In a whisper, she recalls being shot at, explosions and bulldozing. She says she watched her brothers and sisters die around her. Her mother and three of her siblings were able to flee, but she’s not sure where they went.

After a chance encounter and the discovery of Roba’s identification card under rubble, a weeks-long CNN investigation has been able to piece together what happened during one terrifying night in early January, which left five of her siblings dead. Their story offers a window into the Israeli military’s overwhelming and often indiscriminate use of force in areas where civilians were told they would be safe, helping to uncover an atrocity that would otherwise have remained hidden.

CNN interviewed seven eyewitnesses to the attack, tracking down relatives now scattered across the enclave, including Roba’s mother. Their testimonies were cross-referenced with hospital records, satellite imagery and dozens of videos and photos from the scene, reviewed by forensics and ballistic experts, who analyzed the damage to the building and injuries of the people found inside of it.

Read more about the CNN special report here.

Watch the full report here:

8:03 a.m. ET, February 28, 2024

Hamas political leader says group showed flexibility in negotiations but remains ready to continue fighting

From CNN’s Mostafa Salem in Abu Dhabi

Chairman of the Hamas Political Bureau, Ismail Haniyeh, is pictured speaking to media in Istanbul, Turkey, in September 2023.
Chairman of the Hamas Political Bureau, Ismail Haniyeh, is pictured speaking to media in Istanbul, Turkey, in September 2023. Cem Tekkesinoglu/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh said Wednesday the militant group has displayed flexibility in negotiations but remains ready to continue fighting.

“Any flexibility we show in negotiations out of concern for the blood of our people and to put an end to their great pain and enormous sacrifices…is paralleled by a willingness to defend our people,” Haniyeh said in a televised statement.

“We are reaffirming to the Zionists and Americans…that what they have failed to impose on the battlefield they will not take through political machinations,” he said.

Haniyeh called on Palestinians in Jerusalem and the West Bank to march to Al Aqsa Mosque on the first day of Ramadan.

7:56 a.m. ET, February 28, 2024

Lebanon and Israel exchange fire as IDF strikes Hezbollah targets

From CNN's Lauren Iszo in Jerusalem and Caitlin Danaher in London

A photo taken from northern Israel shows a launch by Israel's Iron Dome missile defense system to intercept rockets being fired from Lebanon, on February 28.
A photo taken from northern Israel shows a launch by Israel's Iron Dome missile defense system to intercept rockets being fired from Lebanon, on February 28. Jalaa Marey/AFP/Getty Images

Lebanon and Israel exchanged fire near the border on Wednesday, a statement from the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said.

Approximately “10 launches” crossed from Lebanon into northern Israel, with sirens sounding near Kiryat Shmona, the IDF said.

The IDF said it successfully intercepted “a number of the launches” and “struck the sources of the fire” in Lebanon in response. 

Strikes against Hezbollah military targets were also carried out by the IDF in Ramyeh, southern Lebanon.

IDF fighter jets struck a “Hezbollah weapons storage facility” and “military structures” in Ramyeh, the statement said. 

A “Hezbollah weapons manufacturing site” was also hit by the IDF in the Khirbet Selm area overnight, the IDF added.

10:23 a.m. ET, February 28, 2024

Political faction Fatah will attend intra-Palestinian meeting in Moscow

From CNN's Matog Saleh and Celine Alkhaldi

Palestinian political faction Fatah told CNN it would attend an intra-Palestinian meeting on Thursday in Moscow.

Earlier this month, Russia invited all Palestinian factions, including Hamas, to meet in Moscow.

The meeting will tackle ways to “unite the Palestinian factions under the Palestinian Liberation Organization,” Fatah spokesperson Hussein Hamayel told CNN. The aim is to form a new government capable of working in East Jerusalem, the occupied West Bank and Gaza, he said.

Fatah controls the Palestinian Authority (PA) based in the West Bank, which held administrative control over Gaza until 2007. Hamas won the 2006 legislative elections in the occupied territories and expelled the faction from the enclave. Since then, Hamas has ruled Gaza and the PA governs parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Fatah's delegation will be represented by officials Samir Al Rifai and Azzam Al Ahmad, the spokesperson said.

Hamayel said Hamas had not confirmed its attendance but that he is optimistic they would join and send a “high ranking official from their political office to represent them.”

Hamas has not responded to CNN’s request for confirmation of their attendance.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov said Tuesday that “all parties” agreed to participate in the Moscow meeting.

"Of course, they have agreed," he said, adding that "some want to send two representatives or even more, that is more than we invited.”
10:24 a.m. ET, February 28, 2024

Campaign for protest vote against Biden's Gaza response claims success in Democratic primary 

From CNN staff

Supporters of the movement urging Michigan Democratic voters to check “uncommitted” in protest of the Biden administration's response to Israel's war in Gaza said their campaign had been a success.

“We know Joe Biden is going to be our nominee. So it’s a very, very significant outcome,” former Michigan Rep. Andy Levin, a supporter of the “uncommitted” effort, told CNN on Tuesday night.

“My worry was that this primary would happen, and the president wouldn’t get the message about how mad people are.”

Levin said that the message that Biden can’t win Michigan in November unless he “changes course” had been “effectively communicated” through Tuesday’s result.

The campaign kept its focus narrow, aiming to convince Biden’s White House to seek a permanent ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas conflict.

"Uncommitted" campaign exceeds expectations: Organizers of the movement had hoped at least 10,000 people would support the cause, a nod to the 10,700-vote margin that delivered the state to Donald Trump in 2016. 

More than 100,000 voters checked "uncommitted," a raw total well over Trump’s margin of victory in 2016.

A Biden campaign email touting the president’s Michigan win made no mention of the Israel-Hamas conflict.

Read more about the impact of the "Uncommitted" protest vote in the Michigan Democratic primary.