January 30, 2024 Israel-Hamas war | CNN

January 30, 2024 Israel-Hamas war

Jenin hospital killing CCTV
Israeli special forces infiltrate Palestinian hospital in medical clothing, hijabs
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WHO says it delivered essential medical supplies to key hospital in Khan Younis 

Tedros Ghebreyesus speaks to the media during a news conference at the Government Buildings in Dublin on December 18, 2023.

The World Health Organization (WHO) was able to reach Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis and “deliver essential medical supplies for 1000 patients” on Monday, WHO Director-General Tedros Ghebreyesus said.

WHO has issued several warnings about fighting in nearby areas. The vicinity around Nasser Hospital has seen frequent shelling and air strikes as the Israeli military says it is targeting operatives.

A referral hospital is usually a major hospital that includes specialty and emergency care.

The team had hoped to also deliver food to the hospital but were unable to do so because those supplies were grabbed by crowds gathered around the checkpoint.

Tedros said the incident “underscores the utter desperation of people in Gaza, who live in hellish conditions, including severe hunger.”

He highlighted the knock-on effect of delays in deliveries, saying the shortages “increase the health risks of vulnerable patients and hamper health personnel.” 

The hospital is grappling with a “serious shortage” of specialist medical personnel, medicines, oxygen and fuel, Tedros said.  

He also said WHO continues to seek permission to deliver fuel to the hospital.  

US destroyer intercepts Houthi missile, US Central Command says

A US destroyer intercepted a single Houthi anti-ship cruise missile launched toward the Red Sea on Tuesday, according to US Central Command.  

The USS Gravely, an Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer, intercepted the missile shortly before midnight in Yemen (approximately 3:30 p.m. ET). There were no injuries or damage reported, Central Command said in a statement.

More on Red Sea attacks: The latest Houthi attack on commercial vessels in one of the world’s most critical waterways comes just days after a Houthi anti-ship ballistic missile hit an oil tanker in the Gulf of Aden, sparking a fire on the ship.

The USS Carney, another destroyer operating in the region, was one of several ships that responded to the Marshall Islands-flagged M/V Marlin Luanda after it issued a distress call.

The US has carried out a series of strikes against Houthi targets in Yemen, some along with the UK, to go after Houthi weaponry and disrupt the rebel group’s ability to target international shipping lanes.

Families of US hostages meet with White House officials

The families of the six remaining American hostages in Gaza met Tuesday night at the White House with National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan and White House Middle East Coordinator Brett McGurk, according to a White House official. 

Sullivan and McGurk updated the families on the ongoing hostage negotiations, including information from Sullivan’s meeting this week with Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani. They also emphasized the administration’s continued commitment to get the hostages out, the official said. 

The families participated both in person and virtually and had a chance to ask questions.

UN humanitarian committee calls on countries to reconsider funding suspension to UN aid agency

The heads of the United Nations’ various humanitarian agencies warned nations against withdrawing funding from the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA).

More than a dozen countries have suspended their contributions to UNRWA following allegations that some of its staff members were involved in Hamas’ October 7 attack. Many of those countries met with UN Secretary-General António Guterres on Tuesday evening to discuss possible steps forward. 

The UN officials cautioned that pausing funding to UNRWA would have “catastrophic” consequences.

The committee also reiterated the need for further investigation and accountability for the alleged involvement of the UNRWA staff members. 

Netanyahu rejects Hamas demand for withdrawal from Gaza as part of hostage deal. Here's what you should know

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses a gathering at an Israeli settlement in the West Bank on Tuesday, January 30.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel “will not release thousands of terrorists,” as part of a deal with Hamas, vowing to press on until the aims of the war in Gaza are achieved.

And he pushed back at Hamas’s main stated aim in any deal, saying Israel would not pull troops out of Gaza.

The prime minister’s comments come as Hamas has said it is studying a proposal for a potential hostage deal and ceasefire but that it wants the complete withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza.  

Here are other headlines you should know:

  • Jordan attack update: President Joe Biden told reporters he has made a decision about the US response to the drone strike that killed three US service members and injured dozens in Jordan. Meantime, the most powerful Iran-backed militia in Iraq announced the suspension of its military operations against US forces, two days after the attack. “We’ve seen those reports,” a Pentagon official said. “I don’t have a specific comment to provide other than actions speak louder than words.”
  • Military activity: The Israeli military confirmed Tuesday that it has been pumping “large volumes of water” into suspected Hamas tunnels in Gaza. When rumblings of the military’s plans to flood tunnels emerged in December, concerns were raised about the safety of hostages, many of whom are believed to be held underground. Experts also highlighted concerns about the potential to contaminate freshwater supply and damage infrastructure at the surface level.
  • UNRWA updates: The US has put about $300,000 in funding to the the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East on hold in light of the allegations brought by Israel that some of the agency’s employees were involved in the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7.
  • Missing rescue team: The Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) said it lost contact with a team in central Gaza that was dispatched to rescue a 6-year-old girl, who was trapped in a car after her family members were killed in an Israel strike. CNN has reached out to the Israel Defense Forces for comment on operations in the area.
  • Israeli military at Khan Younis hospital: After surrounding the Al Amal hospital in Khan Younis in southern Gaza for more than a week, Israeli military vehicles entered its compound, which is crowded with thousands of displaced people, the PRCS said. The tanks fired “live ammunition and smoke grenades,” the aid agency said. Meanwhile, the chief of staff of Israel’s military said it will not allow hospitals to become a “cover for terrorism” after special forces infiltrated the Ibn Sina hospital in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin and killed three Palestinian men.
  • UK weighs Palestinian statehood: The United Kingdom will consider recognizing a Palestinian state to help end the war with Israel, the country’s foreign secretary said. Also, the UK said it was “alarmed” by a conference held in Jerusalem on Sunday calling for the resettlement of Gaza by Jewish Israelis, which was attended by several Israeli cabinet ministers.

Powerful Iran-backed militia in Iraq says it's suspending military operations against US forces

The most powerful Iran-backed militia in Iraq announced on Tuesday the suspension of its military operations against US forces, two days after a drone attack killed three US service members and wounded dozens of others in Jordan. 

The group is considered the most powerful armed faction in the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, an umbrella group of a number of Iran-backed militias in the country. The US holds Iran broadly responsible for arming and supporting these groups and has specifically singled out Kataib Hezbollah as likely to have carried out the deadly attack on Sunday.

Asked about the statement, Pentagon press secretary Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder said at a briefing Tuesday:

The US has carried out a series of strikes in Iraq and Syria since the start of the war in Gaza targeting Kataib Hezbollah and other groups in response to attacks on US interests in the region. Even so, the attacks have persisted. US troops in the Middle East have come under attack approximately 166 times since October, US officials said. 

Israel will not allow hospitals to be a "cover for terrorism," military chief of staff says

Herzi Halevi, the Israel Defense Forces chief of the general staff, speaks during his transition ceremony in Jerusalem on January 16.

The chief of staff of Israel’s military said it will not allow hospitals to become a “cover for terrorism” after special undercover forces infiltrated the Ibn Sina hospital in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin and killed three Palestinian men, according to Israeli and Palestinian officials.

Defense Forces Chief of the General Staff Herzi Halevi claimed that the men were involved in a terrorist cell planning to carry out a “serious attack” on Israeli civilians.

The IDF has repeatedly accused Hamas of using hospitals as shelters to plan operations and as “human shields.” Hamas has previously denied such allegations.

In his address to IDF reservists, Halevi said that the Israeli military will “enter even the most complex places to eliminate terrorism, to harm terrorism, to strike terrorists.”

UK will consider recognizing a Palestinian state to help end the war, foreign secretary says

The United Kingdom will consider recognizing a Palestinian state to help end the war with Israel, the country’s foreign secretary said Monday.

British Foreign Secretary David Cameron told a Westminster reception for Arab ambassadors in London that the move would help to make a two-state solution an “irreversible” process to end the war, according to the UK’s Press Association news agency (PA).

It follows Cameron’s written remarks earlier this week, in which he said:

Amid a fresh US push for a two-state solution, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected the idea of Palestinian sovereignty suggesting Israel’s security needs would be incompatible with Palestinian statehood.

New UN Gaza humanitarian coordinator urges faster delivery of aid

Dutch diplomat Sigrid Kaag speaks during a press conference at the United Nations in New York on January 30.

The fate of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) is going to be one of many hurdles for Dutch diplomat Sigrid Kaag, who has been charged by the UN Security Council with getting life-saving aid into the devastated enclave on a faster timetable. 

Dozens of countries have announced temporary suspensions of aid to the beleaguered UN humanitarian agency in Gaza and the region after 12 UNRWA staff members were accused of joining the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel.

Kaag, who once worked for UNRWA, held her first briefing for the Security Council behind closed doors Tuesday morning in New York.

US Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield told reporters after the meeting that “the Council once again just endorsed her efforts and I’m here to say that I’m certain she is really the right person for the job. Now, she needs continued backing of the Council and the entire international community. She needs the support of the United Nations.” 

“Her success is the UN’s success. It is the council’s success. And her work is essential,” Thomas-Greenfield said.

Kaag will visit Washington, DC, on Wednesday before returning to the Middle East.

A UN assessment mission to Gaza could happen in the next few days, US official says

The first steps to moving forward with a United Nations assessment mission to northern Gaza are expected to take place in the next few days, according to the US State Department.

Spokesperson Matt Miller said Tuesday that security and road conditions need to first be checked to ensure that the full assessment mission can be carried out safely. 

The planned assessment mission was delayed “because of a renewed outbreak in fighting in the north,” Miller said at a briefing. 

Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced earlier this month that Israel had agreed to allow such a mission to move forward to “determine what needs to be done to allow displaced Palestinians to return safely to homes in the north.”

US has paused $300,000 in funding to UNRWA while UN investigates Israel allegations against staffers

People line up for flour being distributed by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), in Deir al-Balah, Gaza, on December 7.

The United States has put about $300,000 in funding to the United Nations’ main aid agency in Gaza on hold as the UN investigates allegations that staff of the agency were involved in the October 7 Hamas attacks, State Department spokesperson Matt Miller said Tuesday.

That funding to UNRWA was due to be delivered in the coming weeks. The US announced last week it was temporarily suspending funding after the allegations came to light. There could theoretically be more funding that is impacted by the pause, depending on how much money is authorized by Congress for the fiscal year, Miller explained.

The US has provided about $121 million to UNRWA this fiscal year, Miller said at a State Department briefing.

Miller stressed the need for a thorough investigation into the allegations. He also emphasized the important role that UNRWA plays in Gaza.

The US and 34 other donor nations are set to meet with the UN Secretary-General António Guterres on Tuesday afternoon for a briefing on actions taken since the revelation that some of UNRWA’s staff joined in the attacks on Israel. Guterres will also stress the organization’s critical humanitarian work, according to UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric.

The US has been a top donor for UNRWA:

This post has been updated with additional information about donor countries meeting the UN Secretary-General.

CNN’s Richard Roth contributed reporting to the post.

Israeli military confirms it has been pumping "large volumes of water" into suspected Hamas tunnels

The Israeli military provided official confirmation Tuesday that it has been pumping “large volumes of water” into suspected Hamas tunnels in Gaza, following weeks of speculation.

Back in December, a US official told CNN that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) were “carefully testing” out the method of pumping seawater into tunnels “on a limited basis.” The IDF failed to respond to CNN’s request for comment at the time.

However, in a statement released Tuesday, the IDF said it has been implementing “new capabilities” to target Hamas infrastructure in the Gaza Strip by “channeling large volumes of water into the tunnels.” The IDF said tools like pumps and pipes were being used.

The Israeli military maintained that the water pumping was “only carried out in tunnel routes and locations that were suitable, matching the method of operation to each case.”

Some background: When rumblings of the IDF’s plans to flood tunnels emerged in December, concerns were raised about the safety of hostages, many of whom are believed to be held underground in Gaza. Experts also highlighted concerns about the potential to contaminate freshwater supply and damage infrastructure at the surface level.

Hamas also downplayed the prospect of Israel’s success, stressing that its network of tunnels had been built to withstand water being pumped into them.

Biden says he has decided how to respond to drone attack in Jordan

President Joe Biden speaks to the media at the White House in Washington, DC, on January 30.

President Joe Biden told reporters Tuesday he has made a decision about the US response to the drone strike that killed three US service members and injured dozens in Jordan.

Asked by CNN’s Arlette Saenz whether he has decided how to respond, Biden said, “Yes,” but declined to provide further details.

Biden had warned in a statement Sunday that the US will respond in a “time and manner of our choosing” as he weighs how to deter future attacks without escalating the conflict. US officials said on Monday that the American response was likely to be more powerful than previous US strikes in Iraq and Syria against Iranian interests, but they have suggested it is unlikely the US will strike within Iran. 

The White House offered few details on the response but suggested that any action would be aimed at both degrading the group’s capabilities and sending a strong message of deterrence. National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby also suggested it could take place in a “tiered approach” that could include “potentially multiple actions.”

Biden said Tuesday as he prepared to depart for a fundraising swing in south Florida that he holds Iran responsible for the attack, which CNN has reported was carried out by suspected Iranian proxy forces.  

He reiterated that he is hoping to deter a broader conflict in the region, saying, “I don’t think we need a wider war in the Middle East. That’s not what I’m looking for.”

The president spoke with the families of the killed troops on Tuesday and will attend a dignified transfer ceremony at Dover Air Force Base on Friday, the White House said.

This post has been updated with additional information from the White House.

CNN’s Kevin Liptak contributed reporting to this post.

The UK says its "alarmed" by conference in Jerusalem calling for resettlement of Gaza by Jewish Israelis

The UK said it was “alarmed” by a conference held in Jerusalem on Sunday calling for the resettlement of Gaza by Jewish Israelis, which was attended by several Israeli cabinet ministers.

Several Israeli cabinet ministers attended the conference, including far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi of Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party, along with Members of Knesset from the Likud, Jewish Power, and Religious Zionism parties. The conference was titled: “Rally for Victory: Liberating and resettling the Gaza Strip.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said his country does not intend to maintain a permanent presence in Gaza again, but that it would maintain security control over the territory for an indefinite period of time.

Israeli tanks are stationed in Khan Younis hospital complex and are "firing live ammunition," aid group says

A map shows the location of Al Amal hospital in Khan Younis, Gaza.

After surrounding the Al Amal hospital in Khan Younis in southern Gaza for more than a week, Israeli military vehicles have entered its compound, and they are stationed in the hospital front yard, which is crowded with thousands of displaced people, the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) said.

The tanks are “firing live ammunition and smoke grenades,” the aid agency said in a series of messages between 10 a.m. ET and 11 a.m. ET.

CNN is unable to verify the situation independently and has asked the Israel Defense Forces for comment.

Earlier, Israeli forces were asking the crews and displaced people to “evacuate the building at gunpoint,” Muhammad Abu Musabih, director of Ambulance and Emergency Services at the hospital, told CNN in an audio message.

This comes after PRCS had earlier reported gunfire from Israeli tanks on Tuesday in the area, killing one displaced woman and injuring nine others. Some 8,000 displaced people and 100 staff are at the hospital and the PRCS headquarters that is adjacent to the hospital, a PRCS official told CNN.

Israeli forces “demolished the outer wall of the building and fired … smoke bombs at the displaced people and the association’s staff,” the PRCS said. “The situation is becoming more dangerous. We are extremely concerned for the safety of our crews, the wounded, the sick, and the thousands of displaced people in the building.”

What’s the situation like at two key hospitals in Khan Younis: Despite frequent shelling and strikes in the area, efforts have continued to sustain minimal operations at both Al Amal and Nasser hospitals. CNN received photographs of a tanker truck organized by the World Health Organization reaching the Nasser Medical Complex Tuesday with 24,000 liters of diesel fuel.

The situation in the larger Khan Younis city of Gaza has also worsened: The southern city was originally the place that residents of northern Gaza were asked to evacuate to. But now, with Israeli operations focused on Khan Younis, things are worsening for the already displaced people. As Israeli military issues instructions for people to leave neighborhoods in the area, journalists have told CNN there may be as many as 100,000 displaced people in UN shelters and other facilities in the area. Many are afraid to move to supposedly safer areas. Very little aid has reached these facilities in recent days because of the fighting.

Netanyahu vows Israel will not release "thousands of terrorists" in Hamas deal 

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends a weekly cabinet meeting in Tel Aviv, Israel, on January 7.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday that Israel “will not release thousands of terrorists,” as part of a deal with Hamas, vowing to press on until Israel’s original war aims are achieved.

And he pushed back at Hamas’s main stated aim in any deal, saying Israel would not pull troops out of Gaza.

Netanyahu said he was committed to “total victory …. And the majority of our nation and we are not going to compromise for less than that.”

The prime minister’s comments came as Hamas has said it is studying a proposal for a potential hostage deal and ceasefire but that it wants the complete withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza.  

3 US service members who were injured in Jordan drone attack will arrive at medical center in Germany tonight

Three US service members injured in the drone attack on a base in Jordan on Sunday are expected to arrive at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany this evening, according to a spokesperson. More than 40 US service members were injured in the attack.

All three are reported to be stable, but one is in critical condition, Kirk Frady, a spokesperson for Medical Readiness Command, Europe, said. Landstuhl Regional Medical Center is the largest Defense Department hospital outside the United States.

Once they arrive at the hospital, they will undergo an examination from the trauma team, which will determined whether any of the service members require evacuation to the US for further treatment.

Iceland and Estonia suspend UNRWA funds

Both Iceland and Estonia announced they are suspending funds to UNRWA, the main United Nations relief agency in Gaza. The move is in light of the allegations brought by Israel that some of the UN agency’s employees were involved in the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7.

Estonia’s Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna announced the suspension and called for a “quick and in-depth investigation” into the “very serious allegations.” 

Iceland’s Foreign Minister Bjarni Benediktsson also called for a thorough investigation and said contributions would be frozen until consultations with the other Nordic countries, the United Nation’s Regional Information Centre for Western Europe said in a press release on Monday.

So far, the agency has fired the employees in question. But advocates have warned that lack of funding would spell disaster for the civilians.

Who else has halted funding: Many Western countries, who are also among the agency’s top donors, have decided to suspend the funding. This includes Finland, United States, Italy, Canada, Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Australia, the UK, France, Japan, Austria, Romania and New Zealand.

Who continues to fund: Norway has already said it will continue funding UNRWA, along with Ireland, Turkey, Luxembourg, Jordan and the European Union.

Gaza authorities say 100 unidentified bodies have been returned from Israel

The Gaza Crossings Authority says that 100 unidentified bodies have been returned to Gaza from Israel.

Hisham Adwan, a spokesperson for the Crossings Authority, told CNN that “100 unidentified bodies were delivered from the Israeli side through the Kerem Shalom crossing on Tuesday morning in a container.”

He said the bodies had been taken from the Gaza Strip, and it was possible that some of them were taken from cemeteries in Gaza. CNN has previously reported that the Israeli military desecrated at least 16 cemeteries in its ground offensive in Gaza, leaving gravestones ruined, soil upturned, and, in some cases, bodies unearthed.

In Khan Younis, in southern Gaza, where fighting escalated recently, Israeli forces destroyed a cemetery, removing bodies in what the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) told CNN was part of a search for the remains of hostages seized by Hamas during the October 7 terror attacks.

The bodies returned on Tuesday were later buried in an open space in Rafah in southern Gaza.

In response to a question from CNN about the remains of 100 Palestinians, the IDF said bodies had been returned to Gaza once it was established they were not those of Israeli hostages. The IDF said it “is committed to fulfilling its urgent mission to rescue the hostages, and find and return the bodies of hostages that are held in Gaza.”

This post has been updated to reflect that the IDF confirmed the return of bodies to Gaza but did not specify a number.

CNN’s Lauren Izso contributed reporting to this post.