November 30, 2023 Israel-Hamas war | CNN

November 30, 2023 Israel-Hamas war

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Alarming stats show reality of Palestinians detained by Israel
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What we covered

  • Eight more hostages were released from Gaza and 30 Palestinians were freed from Israeli jails Thursday, the seventh day of a temporary and uneasy truce between Israel and Hamas that is set to expire shortly.
  • Egyptian and Qatari negotiators are working to extend the pause for an additional two days, Egypt said. And US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who met with Israeli leaders and the president of the Palestinian Authority, said the truce has helped get more aid into Gaza.
  • Blinken also said he told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that Israel needs to make further efforts to protect civilians in Gaza — such as designating safe zones in south and central Gaza — when Israel resumes its military campaign.
  • Meanwhile, three people were killed at a bus stop in Jerusalem in a shooting claimed by Hamas.
  • Here’s how to help humanitarian efforts in Israel and Gaza.
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Israeli military intercepts rocket launched from Gaza shortly before truce is set to expire

The Israeli military’s air defense system intercepted one rocket launched from the Gaza Strip just over an hour before the truce between Israel and Hamas is set to expire, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said early Friday local time.

There is no indication of who launched the single rocket.

Rocket sirens have been heard in the Sderot area in the final hours of the seven-day truce.  

The current agreement between Israel and Hamas is set to expire at 7 a.m. local time Friday (midnight ET).

This post has been updated with additional information.

Israel was aware of Hamas’ attack plan over a year ago, New York Times reports

Palestinian militants ride an Israeli military vehicle that was seized by gunmen who infiltrated areas of southern Israel on October 7.

Israeli officials obtained a document describing Hamas’ battle plan for its October 7 terror attack more than a year before the militant group carried out the assault, the New York Times reported Thursday, citing documents, emails and interviews. 

The roughly 40-page document did not give a date for the attack, but outlined “point by point” the kind of deadly incursion that Hamas carried out in Israeli territory in October, according to the Times, which reviewed the translated document.

Israeli military and intelligence officials dismissed the plan, assessing that it would be too difficult for Hamas to carry out, according to the Times.

The document, which the Israeli authorities code-named “Jericho Wall,” detailed an assault that would overwhelm fortifications around the Gaza Strip, take over Israeli cities and target key military bases. It was followed with precision by Hamas on October 7, the Times said.

On that day, Hamas militants struck across the border from Gaza in a coordinated assault taking more than 200 hostages and killing around 1,200 people – the largest such attack on Israel since the country’s founding in 1948. 

The attack was widely seen a major Israeli intelligence failure, with a number of top defense and security officials coming forward in October to take responsibility to some extent for missteps that led to the attacks. 

Later that month, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu received sharp public criticism after he accused security chiefs in a later-deleted social media post of failing to warn him about the impending attack.

“On the contrary, all the defense officials … assessed that Hamas was deterred,” Netanyahu wrote at the time.

According to the Times, the “Jericho Wall” document was circulated widely among Israeli military and intelligence leaders, but it was unclear whether Netanyahu or other top political leaders saw the document.

30 Palestinians released from Israeli custody Thursday, prison service says

A total of 30 Palestinians were released from Israeli prisons in Damon, Megiddo, Ofer, Nafha, Ktzi’ot and Ramon on Thursday, the Israeli prison service said in a statement. 

Under the terms of the Israel-Hamas truce, Israel has to free three Palestinians for every Israeli hostage freed.  

After a tense and lengthy back-and-forth on extending the truce into a seventh day, the Israeli government eventually accepted a proposal for Hamas to release eight new Israeli hostages on Thursday. Israel agreed to count two Israeli-Russian hostages who were set free on Wednesday as part of Thursday’s release, multiple sources familiar with the discussions told CNN. 

Qatari foreign ministry spokesperson Majed Al-Ansari also reiterated the terms of the truce extension Thursday, stating Israel would release 30 Palestinians in Israeli prisons in exchange for the release of 10 hostages in Gaza — with the two Israeli-Russian nationals released on Wednesday counted on the list as part of the hostage deal.

CNN’s MJ Lee, Alex Marquardt, Kaitlan Collins and Becky Anderson contributed reporting to this post.

Only hours left in truce agreement between Israel and Hamas. Here's where things stand

There are only hours remaining in the uneasy truce between Israel and Hamas that has lasted for seven days and led to the release of dozens of hostages, the freeing of Palestinians from Israeli jails and the ratcheting up of much-needed humanitarian supplies to the Gaza Strip.

The truce, which was only renewed at the last minute for the seventh day, is set to expire again at around 7 a.m. local time Friday (midnight ET).

Both sides are in a day-to-day extension phase of the agreement under which Hamas must offer up a new list of 10 hostages to be released to secure another 24 hours in the pause in fighting. 

The military wing of Hamas is calling for its forces to remain on “high combat readiness” in case combat resumes, a statement said.

Here’s what you should know to get up to speed:

  • Released hostages: Hamas released eight hostages on Thursday — six of whom have just arrived in Israel, the Israel Defense Forces said. The two other hostages, Amit Soussana and Mia Schem, were released earlier in the day. The seventh group was released at different times because they were held in different locations in Gaza, an Israeli official said. According to sources, to extend the truce, Israel accepted eight new hostages plus the two Israeli-Russians released on Wednesday.
  • Status of the truce: Egyptian and Qatari negotiators are pushing to extend the truce for an additional two days, Egypt said. The current extension is expected to expire at 7 a.m. local time Friday (midnight ET) if there is not a new agreement. Under Thursday’s extension, which was agreed upon minutes before it was set to expire, 10 Israeli hostages and 30 Palestinian prisoners were to be released — the same terms as the previous days.
  • Negotiation challenges: But continuing to extend the pause in fighting could be challenging, negotiators said. Hamas claimed until the last minute that it was having trouble locating 10 women and children hostages — a condition that Israel insisted must be met — to extend the truce into Thursday. A member of Israel’s parliament said the government is willing to discuss different terms for the release of men and soldiers held by the militant group.
  • Talks on the sidelines of climate summit: Israeli President Isaac Herzog is asking United Arab Emirates President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan to use his “full political weight” to help speed up the release of remaining hostages in Gaza. The leaders met on the sidelines of the UN climate summit COP28 in Dubai, according to a readout of the meeting.
  • Blinken in Israel and the West Bank: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken met separately with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the war cabinet and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas on Thursday. The top US diplomat said Netanyahu offered concrete steps to ensure Israel makes further efforts to protect civilians in Gaza when fighting resumes. Blinken also “condemned extremist violence against Palestinian civilians in the West Bank and said he would continue to insist on full accountability for those responsible” in his meeting with Abbas.
  • Other visitors to Israel: The International Criminal Court’s chief prosecutor visited Israel at the request of survivors and families of victims of the October 7 attacks. The court said Karim Khan’s visit was “not investigative in nature.” Five countries have submitted a referral to the ICC to investigate whether crimes have been committed in the Palestinian territories as part of Israel’s response to the Hamas attacks.

Here's why only 8 hostages were released on the seventh day of Israel and Hamas' truce

Hamas and Israel are now fully in a day-to-day extension phase of their truce, where Hamas must offer up a new list of 10 hostages in order to secure another 24 hours in the pause in fighting.

Hamas claimed until the last minute Thursday that it was having trouble locating enough hostages to fulfill Israel’s terms, posing serious challenges for the talks on extending the truce into a seventh day. After a tense and lengthy back-and-forth, Hamas ultimately waited until very close to the truce expiring to hand over a list.

The Israeli government decided to accept the proposal from Hamas, which was to release only eight new Israeli hostages on Thursday, and count two Israeli-Russian hostages who were set free on Wednesday as part of Thursday’s release, multiple sources familiar with the discussions told CNN.

When the time came, hostages were released Thursday from different places and at different times. According to an Israeli official, this is because the hostages were held in different locations in Gaza.

With Thursday’s challenges in mind, anxious negotiators fear the process of extending the truce into an eighth day could be very challenging.

Tamar Michaelis contributed reporting to this post.

Today's second group of freed hostages are in Israel, the Israeli military says

Top row: Sapir Cohen, Shani Goren and Nili Margalit. Bottom row: Ilana Gritzewsky, Bilal Alziadna and Aisha Alziadna

The six additional hostages released by Hamas on Thursday have arrived in Israel and will head to Hatzerim Airbase, where they will undergo an initial medical assessment, the Israel Defense Forces said.

Israeli soldiers will escort the freed hostages to hospitals, where they will reunite with their families, the military said, according to the Israeli Prime Minister’s Office. Three different medical centers will care for the hostages: two in the Tel Aviv area and one in Be’er Sheva, in southern Israel, according to health officials.

Live visuals showed a convoy of Red Cross vans entering the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt en route to Israel late Thursday night.

Earlier Thursday, two women who had been held in Gaza were released and taken to Israeli hospitals.

Hostages were released in separate batches Thursday because they were being held in different locations in Gaza, according to an Israeli official.

Identity of hostages: The Hostages and Missing Persons Families Forum in Israel released the names of the hostages — some of whom hold dual citizenship.

Their identities are as follows: 

  • Sapir Cohen, adult 
  • Shani Goren, adult
  • Nili Margalit, adult
  • Ilana Gritzewsky, adult
  • Bilal Alziadana, adult
  • Aisha Alziadana, child

Among the complete group of hostages released Thursday, those with dual nationalities include a Mexican, a Russian and an Uruguayan, according to Qatari foreign ministry spokesperson Dr. Majed Al-Ansari.

Four out of the total eight hostages are residents of kibbutz Nir Oz in southern Israel, the kibbutz said in a statement.  

This post has been updated with more details about the released hostages.

6 hostages handed over to Red Cross, Israel military says

Six more hostages held in Gaza have been handed over to the Red Cross, the Israel Defense Forces said Thursday.

They are on their way to Israeli territory, according to the IDF.

Israel offered "concrete steps" to protect civilians in Gaza, US secretary of state says

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks during a press conference in Tel Aviv on Thursday, November 30

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that Israel needs to make further efforts to protect civilians in Gaza — such as designating safe zones in south and central Gaza — when Israel resumes its military action against Hamas.

Blinken said Netanyahu “agreed with the need for this approach” to protect civilians and that the Israeli government offered “concrete steps” to do so.

Blinken said Israel must avoid “further significant displacement of civilians inside of Gaza,” adding that displaced civilians must eventually be allowed to return.

“There must be no enduring internal displacement,” Blinken said.

Blinken also said Israel should avoid damage to critical infrastructure such as hospitals, power stations and water facilities.

Hamas releases hostage video of father of 2 children that group says was killed in Israeli airstrike

Yarden Bibas is seen in this undated handout image released by the Hostages and Missing Families Forum.

Hamas released a brief hostage video of Yarden Bibas, the father of 10-month-old Kfir and 4-year-old Ariel, blaming Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the death of his wife and two children in an airstrike.

CNN has not confirmed the deaths nor the claim of the airstrike and will not air the hostage propaganda video. CNN also does not have any insight into the location of where it was filmed.

The armed wing of Hamas on Wednesday claimed without providing evidence, that Kfir, his brother Ariel and their mother Shiri Bibas, were killed in an Israeli airstrike.

The Israel Defense Forces called the video cruel on Thursday and said they have yet to confirm the deaths.

IDF spokesman Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari added Thursday that this is an “act of psychological terror which Hamas is using against families of hostages … aimed to apply pressure, to hurt and damage our resilience. Hamas’ claims concerning the Bibas family are yet to be confirmed.”

Yarden Bibas, the husband and father in the video, speaks directly to the camera appearing distraught with a photo of his wife and children superimposed by Hamas in the upper right corner. Speaking in Hebrew and likely under duress, the father pleaded for the Israeli government to bring him and the rest of his family home so they could be buried in Israel. 

Yarden Bibas has been held captive since October 7, separate from his family.

Israeli military waiting for more hostages to be released Thursday, spokesperson says

More hostages are expected to be freed from Gaza and return to Israel Thursday night, the Israeli military said, adding that their release is progressing.

“At this hour, we’re progressing and are waiting for the return of more hostages, expected to come back tonight as part of the framework that has been agreed,” Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Daniel Hagari said in a news briefing.

Hagari did not specify how many more hostages are expected to be released Thursday night.

Two Israeli women hostages were released from Gaza earlier in the day. More were expected to be freed within hours — released in a separate batch because they were being held in different locations in Gaza, according to an Israeli official.

“Overnight, we have insisted that the current framework to return women and children will be fulfilled, and we’ll do so for tomorrow as well,” Hagari said. 

Thursday’s release of hostages came after a temporary truce between Israel and Hamas was extended for a seventh day. Egyptian and Qatari negotiators are working to extend it further, Egypt said.

Over 2,700 trucks carrying aid have entered Gaza from Egypt since October 21, Egyptian official says

Trucks loaded with humanitarian aid wait for entry into Gaza from the Rafah border crossing in Egypt on Thursday, November 30.

A total of 2,781 trucks carrying thousands of tons of international aid have crossed from Egypt into Gaza since October 21 through the Rafah crossing, according to an Egyptian official.

The aid comprises a substantial quantity of medical supplies and medications, amounting to 3,176 tons, according to Ayman Walash, director of Egypt’s foreign press center.

Additionally, the aid includes 13,348 tons of food; 10,359 tons of water; 3,203 tons of other relief materials; and 137 tons of tents, Walash said during a press briefing in Al-Arish, Egypt, on Thursday. 

On the ground: A CNN team driving on a highway toward the Rafah crossing has observed hundreds of trucks loaded with aid awaiting entry into Gaza. One truck driver told CNN he has been waiting for 10 days to enter Gaza.

2 hostages freed Thursday are now in Israeli hospitals, health ministry says 

The two Israeli hostages, Amit Soussana and Mia Schem, freed by Hamas on Thursday are now in Israeli hospitals, Israel’s health ministry said. 

Hostages are being released on Thursday from different places and at different times, because they were held in different locations in Gaza, according to an Israeli official.

Jordanian military drops parachutes with relief supplies into Gaza

A Royal Jordanian Air Force plane carried out a parachute drop of urgent relief and medical aid in Gaza on Thursday, according to a statement issued by the General Command of the Jordanian Armed Forces.

“This operation marked the third time aid has been delivered to the Jordanian field hospital in Gaza, Hospital 76,” the Jordanian Army said.

Jordan has previously air-dropped medical aid packages to the Jordanian field hospital in Gaza on November 6 and November 12.

Residents in Gaza confirmed to CNN that they heard the sound of a plane around the time of the Jordanian military’s announcement.

2 Israeli men who were missing since October 7 Hamas attacks have been confirmed dead 

Rockets are fired from Gaza City towards Israel on October 7.

Two Israeli men that were missing after Hamas’ attacks on Israel on October 7 have been confirmed dead.  

Aviv Atzili was killed on October 7, his family confirmed. He was the husband of Israeli-American woman Liat Beinin, who was released from Hamas captivity Wednesday.

It’s not clear where Atzili was killed. He had been missing since Hamas attacked his kibbutz during the attack. Atzili was 49 years old, according to a spokesperson for kibbutz Nir Oz. The family was notified of his death by the office of the chief rabbi, Atzili’s father-in-law Yehuda Beinin said Thursday.

Ofir Tzarfati, 27, another Israeli man who went missing after the attacks, is also dead, the Israel Defense Forces confirmed Thursday. The IDF hasn’t yet specified when and where Tzarfati was killed.

About 46,000 homes have been destroyed in Gaza since conflict began, according to UN

A woman stands among the rubble of residential buildings in Gaza, on November 28. 

Since October 7, an estimated 46,000 housing units in Gaza have been completely destroyed and more than 234,000 have been partially damaged, according to a United Nations report on November 29.

Satellite analysis by researchers at the CUNY Graduate Center and Oregon State University estimate that between 26% and 34% of all structures in the strip have been damaged as of November 29. Comparatively, those figures were between 20% and 26% on November 18. In the Gaza and North Gaza governorates, where the heaviest concentration of airstrikes has occurred, an estimated 52% to 65% of structures have been damaged.

Here’s where the damage has been located:

Read more about the damage analysis.

Israel willing to discuss different terms for further hostage releases, parliament member says

People walk past a wall with posters showing missing people in Tel Aviv, Israel, on November 30.

The Israeli government is willing to discuss a different framework for the release of men and soldiers held by Hamas — so long as those releases continue, a member of Israel’s Knesset, or parliament, told CNN Thursday. 

“Hamas wants to set new terms for the men and the Israeli soldiers,” Danny Danon said, adding that “we are close to the end” of the current phase of the deal.

Danon is a former Israeli permanent representative to the United Nations and is a member of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party.

He said that he did not believe Hamas would release all the hostages it holds because the militant group views them as bargaining chips for a negotiated end to the war.

“The US secretary of state shares the Israeli government view that there needs to be a new regime in Gaza,” Danon said. “But our international partners are more interested in what comes after Hamas than we are. Israel is putting its energy into prosecuting this war and defeating the enemy first.” 

He said that Israel had paid a “high price” for the release of women and children.

“And we are also willing to pay a high price for the others. But we also understand that military pressure will bring us closer to the release of hostages,” Danon said.

Hamas military wing asks forces to be ready for combat if truce isn’t extended

The military wing of Hamas has issued a statement on Thursday calling for its forces to remain on “high combat readiness” in case the truce with Israel is not extended.

Israel has also expressed similar posture for the resumption of military action if a truce is not extended. Israeli government and military leaders ratcheted up war rhetoric on Wednesday as the expiration of the truce loomed.

The current extension is expected to expire at 7 a.m. local time Friday (midnight ET) if there is not a new agreement to extend the pause.

Macron celebrates the release of French-Israeli hostage Mia Schem from Hamas

French President Emmanuel Macron attends a meeting in Paris, on November 22. 

French President Emmanuel Macron celebrated the release of French-Israeli citizen Mia Schem, in the latest round of hostages released by Hamas on Thursday. 

“I also express my solidarity with all those who remain hostages of Hamas. France is working with its partners to obtain their release as soon as possible,” he added. 

French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna also posted a message on social media about the 21-year-old’s release. 

“Mia has regained her freedom. I share the happiness of a family so dignified in adversity. With @emmanuelmacron I will continue to work to ensure that all French people come back,” Colonna said. 

Schem was kidnapped from the Nova festival near the Gaza Strip after Hamas fighters launched a terror attack on October 7. Prior to her capture, she worked at a tattoo parlor, according to the Hostages and Missing Persons Families Forum.

Shortly after the attack, Hamas released a video showing Schem lying on a bed, her arm being bandaged by someone out of the frame. A long, fresh scar was visible. 

Speaking into the camera, Schem, who looked pale, but was sitting up straight with her head held high, said she was injured and taken to Gaza, then pleads to be returned to her family.

Following the video’s release, Macron called for her “immediate and unconditional release,” denouncing “the despicable way in which it [the video] was staged.”

Here's how the Israel-Hamas truce was extended another day – and why it could end soon

A deal to extend a truce between Israel and Hamas into Thursday went down to the wire after Hamas declined for hours to produce a list of hostages that had 10 women and children on it – a condition that Israel insisted must be met.

After a tense and lengthy back-and-forth on extending the truce into a seventh day, the Israeli government eventually accepted a proposal for Hamas to release just eight new Israeli hostages on Thursday and agreed to count two Israeli-Russian hostages who were set free on Wednesday as a part of Thursday’s release, multiple sources familiar with the discussions told CNN.

After Israel rejected one iteration of Hamas’ list that had seven women and children and the bodies of three more who they claimed were killed by Israeli bombardment, Hamas continued to claim that it could not locate more women and children. Hamas then proceeded to offer seven women and children, and three elderly people – also deemed unacceptable to the Israelis, one source said.

Hamas ultimately waited until very close to the truce expiring to finally hand over a list that Israel accepted – eight new hostages, plus the two Israeli-Russians released on Wednesday, according to sources. The negotiations have proven to be fluid, leaving open the possibility that the number of the hostages released on Thursday could change.

The parties are now fully in a day-to-day extension phase of the truce, where Hamas must offer up a new list of 10 hostages in order to secure another 24 hours in the pause in fighting. Given the serious challenges that came up with Hamas claiming until the last minute that they were having trouble locating enough hostages, anxious negotiators are anticipating that the process of extending the truce into an eighth day could be very challenging.

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