August 11, 2025 - Gaza News Updates | CNN

August 11, 2025 - Gaza News Updates

Palestinians check the destroyed Al Jazeera tent at Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on August 11, 2025, following an overnight strike by the Israeli military. Qatari broadcaster Al Jazeera said on August 11, that five of its journalists were killed in an Israeli strike, including a prominent reporter. The Israeli military acknowledged in a statement targeting correspondent Anas al-Sharif, accusing him of being a "terrorist" affiliated with Hamas. (Photo by BASHAR TALEB / AFP) (Photo by BASHAR TALEB/AFP via Getty Images)
Al Jazeera: Israeli strike kills multiple journalists in Gaza
3:40 • Source: CNN
Palestinians check the destroyed Al Jazeera tent at Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on August 11, 2025, following an overnight strike by the Israeli military. Qatari broadcaster Al Jazeera said on August 11, that five of its journalists were killed in an Israeli strike, including a prominent reporter. The Israeli military acknowledged in a statement targeting correspondent Anas al-Sharif, accusing him of being a "terrorist" affiliated with Hamas. (Photo by BASHAR TALEB / AFP) (Photo by BASHAR TALEB/AFP via Getty Images)
3:40

What we covered today

Funeral processions: Crowds gathered in Gaza to mourn Al Jazeera journalists who were among seven people killed by Israel in a military strike on Gaza. The UN called the strike a “grave breach of international humanitarian law.”

• Journalist targeted: The IDF said it targeted correspondent Anas Al-Sharif, 28, a prominent reporter who extensively covered the war from inside Gaza, after previously accusing him of leading a Hamas cell, an allegation Al-Sharif and Al Jazeera vehemently denied.

Media access: Israel does not allow international journalists to enter Gaza to report independently.

Netanyahu defends plan: Elsewhere, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has stood by his controversial plan to expand the war in Gaza, claiming it offers the fastest path to ending the crisis.

27 Posts

Our live coverage of news out of Gaza has concluded for the day. Please scroll through the posts below for today’s developments.

Madonna asks Pope Leo to visit Gaza "before it's too late"

 Madonna attends the 2025 Met Gala on May 05, in New York.

Madonna has urged Pope Leo to visit Gaza in a humanitarian mission to help starving Palestinian children, saying “there is no more time.”

The American superstar, who was raised a Roman Catholic, pleaded with the new pontiff to visit the enclave in an Instagram post Monday.

Madonna said she was calling on Leo to visit Gaza because “politics cannot affect change,” but “consciousness can.”

In the post, published on her son Rocco’s birthday, Madonna said the best gift she could give to him is “to ask everyone to do what they can to help save the innocent children caught in the crossfire in Gaza.”

Since his papacy began in May, the pope has been robust in his criticisms of Israel’s war in Gaza, consistently voicing his concern for Palestinian civilians facing Israeli bombardment.

CNN has reached out to the Vatican for comment.

Whether Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government would grant the pope entry to the enclave is not certain.

Madonna’s comments come as a growing number of artists, including Massive Attack, Brian Eno and most recently U2, have highlighted the humanitarian situation in Gaza.

Five more people die of malnutrition in past 24 hours, Palestinian health ministry says

Children wait with pots in their hands as a charitable organization distributes food to Palestinians suffering food crisis under Israeli blockade in Bureij refugee camp, Gaza on Monday.

At least five people, including one child, have died of malnutrition in Gaza over the past 24 hours, the Palestinian health ministry said Monday.

This brings the total number of people who have died from malnutrition in the enclave to 222, it said, including 101 children.

On Friday, the United Nations’ World Food Programme (WFP) warned that acute malnutrition is spiking in Gaza, with more than 300,000 children at severe risk.

Starvation and malnutrition in the territory are at the “highest levels ever” since the war began, it said, with half a million people “on the brink of famine.”

It added that more than a third of Gaza’s population is “not eating for days at a time.”

On Sunday, Ramesh Rajasingham, the head of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), said that humanitarian conditions in Gaza are “beyond horrific,” adding: “We have frankly run out of words to describe it.”

Hunger-related deaths in the enclave are rising, he said, especially in cases of children with severe malnutrition.

On Sunday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu again said that there is no starvation crisis in Gaza, despite contrary reports from international organizations including the UN.

The UN’s International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF) said Sunday that the number of cases of malnutrition among children in Gaza was “staggering,” with nearly 12,000 children identified as acutely malnourished in July alone.

UN Secretary General calls for investigation into killing of Al Jazeera journalists in Gaza

UN Secretary General António Guterres condemns the killing of the Al Jazeera journalists in an Israeli airstrike on Gaza and is calling for “an independent and impartial investigation into these latest killings,” his spokesperson said on Monday.

Dujarric added that at least 242 journalists have been killed in Gaza since the war began.

The UN spokesperson also highlighted warnings from the World Food Programme, which has said that acute malnutrition is spiking in Gaza, with more than 300,000 children at severe risk.

“People need a predictable lifeline, not a trickle of aid,” Dujarric added.

“The World Food Programme says that just to cover basic humanitarian food assistance needs, more than 62,000 metric tons are required to enter Gaza every month, and so far, humanitarians have not been permitted to bring in enough supplies to support the Palestinians there.”

Al Jazeera news chief says Israel is trying to “eliminate” eyewitnesses in Gaza after reporter’s killing

Al-Jazeera correspondent Anas al-Sharif reports near the Arab Ahli Hospital in Gaza City on October 10, 2024. Qatari broadcaster Al Jazeera said on August 11, 2025, that five of its journalists were killed in an Israeli strike, including al-Sharif.

Al Jazeera English’s director of news has vehemently denied Israel’s claim that reporter Anas al-Sharif – who was killed by an Israeli airstrike late Sunday – was leading a Hamas cell, saying that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is seeking to “eliminate any eyewitness” to the military’s plans to take over Gaza City.

“Anything for this Israeli government which doesn’t go along with its desires and narratives and what it plans to Gaza or other places is (a) ‘Hamas member,’” Salah Negm told CNN’s Christina Macfarlane Monday.

“This is the easiest accusation that happens. This is a government that is lying and lying and lying, and its lies are proved by so many organizations, eyewitnesses, countries throughout this war,” he said.

CNN has reached out to the Israeli prime minister’s office for comment.

French president calls for UN mission into Gaza, slams Israel’s plan to expand war

French President Emmanuel Macron hold a press conference on July 10.

French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday called for a United Nations “stabilization” mission to protect the civilian population in Gaza and disarm Hamas, as international outrage grows around Israel’s planned military takeover of Gaza City.

Israel’s announced expansion of the conflict constitutes “a disaster of unprecedented gravity and a headlong rush into permanent war. The Israeli hostages and the people of Gaza will continue to be the first victims of this strategy,” Macron said in a statement.

The French leader’s appeal echoes a document signed by 17 countries, the European Union and the Arab League in July that called for such a mission, if requested by the Palestinian Authority.

The temporary force, for which some signatories were ready to provide troops, would protect the civilian population, monitor any future peace agreement and oversee the transfer of security responsibilities to the PA in Gaza.

“This war must end now with a permanent ceasefire,” the French president said, calling on the UN Security Council, of which France is a permanent member, to establish such a peacekeeping force.

“It is the only credible way to begin to emerge from the permanent war and rebuild peace and security for all,” Macron said.

Other European leaders call for peace: Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof said Monday that the war in Gaza “must stop,” adding that “journalists must be allowed to do their work safely and without interference” and calling for a ceasefire.

Tanja Fajon, Slovenia’s foreign minister, spoke out about the killings of several Al Jazeera journalists in Gaza Monday. The killings are “unacceptable and shameful,” she said on social media, adding that “attacking journalists is attacking freedom of the press. Attacking the truth.”

Amnesty International calls for investigation after "deliberate" killings of Palestinian journalists

Mourners march with the bodies of the Al Jazeera journalists who were killed in an overnight Israeli strike on their tent in Gaza City on Monday.

Amnesty International said Monday that it “strongly condemns Israel’s deliberate killing of journalists in an air strike on a media tent in occupied Gaza City,” following the deaths of six journalists in Gaza late Sunday.

The human rights organization called for “an independent and impartial investigation into the killings of Palestinian journalists, with justice and full reparation for their families.”

Al Jazeera correspondent Anas Al-Sharif – a prominent journalist who has extensively covered the war from inside Gaza – was killed, along with correspondent Mohammed Qreiqeh and photojournalists Ibrahim Al Thaher and Moamen Aliwa, according to the network.

Mohammed Noufal, another staff member, was also killed in the strike, Al Jazeera said.

“No conflict in modern history has seen a higher number of journalists killed,” it added.

The Israeli military said it targeted and killed reporter Al-Sharif after accusing him of leading a Hamas cell, an allegation Al-Sharif and his network previously denied.

The latest from Gaza: Journalists mourned at funeral as war expansion plan condemned

If you’re just joining our coverage of events in Gaza and the Middle East, here are some of the latest developments we’re covering:

• Crowds mourn reporters: Mourners gathered in Gaza to mourn Al Jazeera journalists who were among seven people killed by Israel in Sunday’s military strike.

• UN calls killing of Gaza journalists a “grave breach”: The United Nations Human Rights Office condemned the killing of the journalists in Gaza by Israeli forces, calling it a “grave breach of international humanitarian law.”

• UK “gravely concerned” by targeting of journalists: The UK government said it was “gravely concerned by the repeated targeting of journalists in Gaza,” the prime minister’s official spokesperson said in a briefing to journalists today.

• Key Middle Eastern nations condemn Gaza City takeover plan: Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar have condemned Israel’s controversial plan to seize control of Gaza City.

Netanyahu defiant: It came after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stood by the plan, claiming it offered the fastest path to ending the crisis.

At least 180 journalists killed in Israel-Gaza war since October 2023

The chart below, produced by CNN, shows the unprecedented scale of journalist deaths in the Israel-Gaza war.

The purple bars represent fatalities in Israel and the Palestinian territories - well above other conflicts shown in the chart, including Ukraine, Syria and Iraq.

An Israeli strike in Gaza City on Sunday killed seven people including at least four journalists from the news network Al Jazeera, as we’ve been reporting today.

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said 186 journalists have been killed since the beginning of the war nearly two years ago, adding: “178 of those journalists are Palestinians killed by Israel.”

"Every journalist in Gaza is writing his own obituary," Al Jazeera director of news says

Al-Jazeera's Salah Negm speaks to the press on May 6, 2024.

Al Jazeera English’s director of news, Salah Negm, has just said the Israeli strike that killed several of the network’s journalists amounted to “killing the messenger and trying to eliminate any eyewitness to atrocities and genocide.”

The Israeli strike in Gaza City late last night killed seven people including at least four journalists from the news network Al Jazeera.

“They have been working for two years under very difficult circumstances, risking their lives in order for one thing to happen, to bring the truth about what is happening in Gaza to the outside world,” Negm told CNN’s Christina Macfarlane on Connect the World. “Our correspondents died doing this.”

He said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had previously “promised to secure” the journalists.

“He promised to secure them,” he said. “And this is how he secured journalists, killing five of them.”

“Every journalist in Gaza is writing his own obituary,” he added. “Because if you are in Gaza, you are not safe anywhere.”

Israel has consistently argued that it is acting in accordance with international law and that its war in Gaza following the deadly Hamas attacks on October 7, 2023 is one of self-defense.

France warns Israel that expanding war in Gaza won’t improve security. Here's what other countries are saying

A boy sits among rubble after an Israeli airstrike in Gaza City on August 8.

We’ve been reporting on reaction to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s plan to expand the war in Gaza by taking control of Gaza City.

France was among several countries on Friday to criticize the plan.

The European country “condemns in the strongest terms” the Israeli government’s war expansion plan, which would “in no way” contribute to the security of Israelis, including the hostages in Gaza, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a Friday press release.

“These actions would constitute further serious violations of international law and lead to an absolute stalemate. They would undermine the legitimate aspirations of the Palestinians to live in peace in a viable, sovereign, and contiguous state, and pose a threat to regional stability,” the ministry said.

Ireland: Irish Prime Minister Micheál Martin, known as the Taoiseach, said Ireland “unreservedly condemns” Israel’s plans, and called for a “peaceful resolution on the basis of a two-state solution.”

“This shows a complete disregard for international law and will have catastrophic consequences for the civilian population of Gaza,” Martin said in a statement.

Ireland formally recognized Palestinian statehood in May 2024 and has held a long-standing position of solidarity with the Palestinian cause.

Canada: Prime Minister Mark Carney said Canada believes the decision is the “wrong” move for Israel, will not contribute to the humanitarian situation in Gaza, and “is going to put the lives of the hostages at greater risk.”

Carney joined France and Britain last month in announcing plans to recognize a Palestinian state in September.

Netanyahu is a "slave to his own rhetoric" says analyst

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during a press conference at the Prime Minister’s office in Jerusalem on Sunday.

Israeli polling shows growing dissatisfaction with the country’s military campaign in Gaza, columnist and geopolitics analyst Bobby Ghosh told CNN today.

“There’s a sense among many Israelis that the campaign has run its course, and there’s not much more to be gained,” Ghosh said, adding that some believe it is “endangering those hostages and that it is hurting Israel’s image worldwide.”

“He set the bar so high by saying he wants to completely eliminate Hamas,” Ghosh said, on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. “Once he set that goal, he is to some degree a slave to his own rhetoric.”

If Netanyahu is “unable to to satisfy the extreme right wing of that coalition who are behind this strategy,” Ghosh said, “they will withdraw their support for him, and his government will collapse.”

Amid intense internal and international criticism, Netanyahu defended his plan for a military takeover of Gaza City at a news conference yesterday, calling it “the best way to end the war and the best way to end it speedily.”

UK government "gravely concerned" by repeated targeting of journalists in Gaza

Palestinians inspect the site of an Israeli strike where Al Jazeera journalists were killed, in Gaza City, on Monday.

We’re getting some global reaction now to the killing of seven journalists by Israel in a strike on Gaza City.

The UK government said it is “gravely concerned by the repeated targeting of journalists in Gaza,” the prime minister’s official spokesperson said in a briefing to journalists today.

“What we’re focused on is a ceasefire, a surge in humanitarian aid, the release of hostages and a negotiated solution,” they added. “This action will do nothing to bring an end to the conflict. It will only bring more bloodshed.”

Suspect arrested after "there is a Holocaust in Gaza" sprayed on Jewish holy site in Jerusalem

A 27-year-old has today been arrested by Israel Police for allegedly spraying graffiti in Hebrew on Jerusalem’s Western Wall reading, “There is a Holocaust in Gaza.”

The graffiti was sprayed near the Mughrabi Gate on the Western Wall, one of the holiest sites in Judaism, Israel Police said. The gate is the only entrance for non-Muslim visitors to the Temple Mount, the holiest place in Judaism, known to Muslims as Al Haram Al Sharif

The Western Wall Heritage Foundation, an organization dedicated to preserving Western Wall sites, said the graffiti was discovered on the stones of the Western Wall in its southern section, describing it as “a grave act constituting desecration and harm to the sanctity of the site sacred to the Jewish people.”

Rabbi Shmuel Rabinowitz, rabbi of the Western Wall and holy sites, condemned the graffiti, saying that “a holy place is not a venue for expressing protests — whatever they may be — and all the more so when it is done at the holiest site to the entire Jewish people.”

Israel Police said the suspect in custody was a “Jerusalem resident,” without elaborating. The area lies in East Jerusalem, which has been occupied by Israel since the 1967 war and where a large number of Palestinians live.

Asked about the suspect’s identity, Israel Police told CNN, “The core issue here is the criminal act of defacing a holy site,” adding, “The Israel Police investigates and holds criminals accountable regardless of religion, ethnicity or background.”

The suspect “will be brought before the court” on Monday for a hearing, “where police will request that his detention be extended,” police said.

Police said the suspect had also sprayed similar graffiti on the wall of the Great Synagogue in central Jerusalem.

Crowds at funeral processions in Gaza mourn journalists killed in targeted Israeli strike

These pictures coming into us show crowds gathering for the funeral processions of the journalists killed in an overnight Israeli strike.

Al Jazeera correspondents Anas al-Sharif and Mohamed Qraiqea, photojournalists Ibrahim Dahir and Moumin Alaywa, and assistant photojournalist Mohammed Noufal were among the seven who died in the strike.

The bodies of the reporters, wrapped in flags and press insignia, were carried on the shoulders of mourners as they marched to the Sheikh Radwan cemetery in Gaza City this morning.

Mourners march with the bodies of the Al Jazeera journalists who were killed in an overnight Israeli strike on their tent in Gaza City, from Al-Shifa hospital to their burial at the Sheikh Radwan cemetery in Gaza City, on Monday.
Relatives and colleagues of the Al Jazeera correspondents Anas al-Sharif and Mohamed Qraiqea, photojournalists Ibrahim Dahir and Moumin Alaywa, and assistant photojournalist Mohammed Noufal mourn during the funeral ceremony.
Mourners attend the funeral of Al Jazeera journalists in Gaza City.
Colleagues of the Al Jazeera correspondents who were killed in an Israeli airstrike mourn during the funeral ceremony.

UN Human Rights Office calls Israel’s killing of Gaza journalists a "grave breach" of international law

The United Nations Human Rights Office has just condemned the killing of Palestinian journalists in Gaza by Israeli forces, calling it a “grave breach of international humanitarian law.”

“We condemn the killing by Israeli military of 6 Palestinian journalists by targeting their tent, in grave breach of international humanitarian law,” the UN said on X, adding that “Israel must respect & protect all civilians, including journalists.”

At least 242 Palestinian journalists have been killed in Gaza since 7 Oct 2023, the UN said, calling for immediate and safe access for all journalists to Gaza.

An Israeli strike in Gaza City killed seven people including at least four journalists from the news network Al Jazeera, as we’ve been reporting today.

The Israeli military said it killed Al Jazeera correspondent Anas Al-Sharif, a prominent journalist who has extensively covered the war from inside Gaza, after accusing him of leading a Hamas cell, an allegation Al-Sharif had previously denied.

Foreign Press Association "outraged" by Israel’s killing of Palestinian journalists in Gaza City

The Foreign Press Association (FPA) has said it is “outraged” by what it called the Israeli military’s “targeted killing” of Palestinian journalists in Gaza City on Sunday night.

“These colleagues were carrying out their duty as journalists and reporting on events as they occurred,” the FPA said in a statement. “According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, at least 179 journalists and media workers have been killed since October 7. This must stop.”

“The Israeli government also continues to accuse Palestinian journalists, who have been bravely reporting throughout the war despite the great personal risk involved,” the group added. “It has also vilified foreign press reporting.”

The statement called on Israel to “cease its attacks on journalists in Gaza and allow journalists to enter and report freely.”

Analysis: No one but Netanyahu appears to be satisfied with his Gaza takeover plan

Palestinians walk along a street near war-damaged buildings in Gaza City on August 8.

Nearly two years into the war in Gaza, the Israeli security cabinet voted for yet another military expansion: the proposed takeover of Gaza City.

The plan, which was initiated and pushed by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu himself, arguably reveals more about his domestic political maneuvering than evidence of any well-thought-out military strategy.

The plan was adopted despite the Israeli military leadership’s fierce objection and grave warnings it could both deepen the humanitarian crisis and endanger the remaining 50 hostages in Gaza.

The major expansion of the war also comes against the backdrop of a fundamental erosion of support for Israel around the world, and a decline in internal public backing for the continuation of the war.

And yet, Netanyahu pushed his plan forward, as it has at least one unstated benefit: it gives him time to fight for his political survival.

And with his current far-right coalition partners, that means prolonging the war.

Time and again, Netanyahu’s allies, Itamar Ben Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich, have thwarted and aborted progress in ceasefire negotiations by threatening to collapse his government if the war were to end.

Read more here

Key Middle Eastern countries condemn Israel's move to take control of Gaza City

We reported earlier on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s press conference, in which he defended his planned military takeover of Gaza City.

Here’s how several Middle Eastern countries reacted on Friday to the plan.

Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it condemns Israel’s “adamancy to commit the crimes of starvation of civilians, beastly conduct, and ethnic cleansing against our Palestinian brethren.”

“The inhumane ideas and decisions often gratuitously adopted by the Israeli occupation authorities prove, once again, that they do not understand the existential, historic, and legal relationship that our Palestinian brethren have to that land and that the Palestinian people have a right to it in accordance with international law and human rights,” the Saudi ministry said.

The United Arab Emirates’ ministry said the decision would lead to “catastrophic consequences, including further loss of innocent life and a worsening of the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.”

Saudi Arabia and the UAE both called on the United Nations to take action.

Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs also condemned the move while calling for “firm opposition to Israel’s continued violations of international humanitarian law.”

All three countries reaffirmed their support for a two-state solution to be reached.

Journalists killed in Israeli strike, Australia recognizes Palestinian state: The latest on Gaza

If you’re just joining our coverage of events in Gaza and the Middle East, here are the key things to know from the last 24 hours:

Israeli strike kills journalists: A late Sunday night strike in Gaza City killed seven people, including at least four Al Jazeera journalists who were sheltering in a press-marked tent near Al-Shifa hospital, according to the hospital director.

Australia plans Palestinian recognition: Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Australia will formally recognize a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly next month, as global condemnation and pressure over Israel’s actions continue to mount.

• Netanyahu defends Gaza City operation: Amid intense internal and international criticism, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu defended his plan for a military takeover of Gaza City at a news conference yesterday, calling it “the best way to end the war and the best way to end it speedily.”

United Nations reaction: At the UN on Sunday, the United Kingdom, Russia, China, France and others voiced strong opposition to Netanyahu’s Gaza City takeover plan, warning that the move would lead to “another calamity” and amount to “further violations of international law.”

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