Middle East conflict live: US bombs Yemen, Pentagon says; dozens killed in Israeli strike on Gaza home, officials say | Israel-Gaza war


Opening summary

Hello and welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of Israel’s wars on Gaza and Lebanon.

US warplanes staged multiple airstrikes Saturday night on advanced weapons storage facilities in Yemen belonging to the Houthi militant group, the Pentagon has said.

The facilities contained various weapons used to target military and civilian vessels navigating international waters throughout the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden, according to information provided to AFP by the Pentagon.

The Houthi-run Al Masirah television network reported three American and British raids that targeted the capital Sana’a’s southern Al Sabeen district.

Elsewhere, Wafa, the Palestinian news agency, reports that 13 children were among 33 civilians who were killed early this morning by an Israeli airstrike that targeted a densely populated home in Jabalia, northern Gaza. The area in northern Gaza has been under a total Israeli siege for weeks and the UN has described conditions there as “apocalyptic”. According to Wafa, a significant number of people injured in the Israeli attack have been transferred to the al-Ahli Baptist hospital for urgent medical care.

Locals continue searching for potential survivors or victims at the scene of the horrific Israeli massacre targeting the Alloush family home in Jabalia, northern Gaza, earlier today. The attack resulted in 33 civilians killed, including 13 children. pic.twitter.com/ye9asOa9B8

— Quds News Network (@QudsNen) November 10, 2024

Al Jazeera reporter Anas al-Sharif posted a report from the scene of Sunday’s pre-dawn strike on X, saying that the massacre was one of the biggest so far in Jabalia and that the victims were mostly women and children. It was not possible to independently verify the report as Israel does not allow foreign journalists into Gaza.

Israel claimed in a post on X that it had “eliminated dozens of terrorists and destroyed terrorist infrastructures and a warehouse of weapons” in Jabalia, without providing any evidence.

More on those developments soon. In other news:

  • At least 40 people were killed in strikes across Gaza late on Friday and into Saturday, including two journalist siblings, Ahmad Abu Sakhil and Zahra Abu Sakhil, who were killed together with their father, Muhammad, and three others when Israeli warplanes bombed a school sheltering displaced people in Gaza City, Al Jazeera reported. Gaza’s media office said their deaths raised the number of journalists killed by Israeli attacks to 188 since 7 October 2023. A day earlier, the local radio journalist Khaled Abu Zir was killed, according to Palestinian media reports.

  • Others killed in Israeli attacks included two Palestinians who had been sheltering in the grounds of al-Aqsa hospital in Deir el-Balah and three men who had been released from Israeli detention moments before, Al Jazeera and Palestinian media reported, as well as children who were reportedly targeted by an Israeli airstrike as they tried to collect water in Jabalia, northern Gaza.

The site of overnight Israeli airstrike that targeted the southern Lebanese city of Tyre on 9 November.
The site of overnight Israeli airstrike that targeted the southern Lebanese city of Tyre on 9 November. Photograph: Kawnat Haju/AFP/Getty Images
  • In Lebanon five siblings, three of whom were deaf and mute, were among at least 40 people killed by Israeli strikes late on Friday and on Saturday, local authorities and media reported. Youssef Jundi, a local resident, told the Associated Press that his longtime neighbour and friend, Ghazwa Dabouk, was among the seven people killed in an Israeli strike on the port city of Tyre late on Friday. Dabouk’s sisters Elissar, Rabab and Fidaa, who were deaf and mute, were also killed in the airstrike, together with Dabouk’s brother Ali, who had autism.

  • Fifteen people were killed in a raid on the civil defence centre affiliated to the Islamic Message Scouts Association in the Lebanese town of Derqim Ras al-Ain, according to the state-run national news agency. Five people were killed and a number of others injured in an Israeli attack on a house in Hanawiya, southern Lebanon, according to reports.

  • The Qatari government has informed the US and Israel it will stop mediation efforts to halt the conflict in Gaza because it no longer thinks the parties are negotiating in good faith. The Gulf state has concluded that talks have become a political football, and its efforts to facilitate them were generating criticism towards it, according to a diplomatic source briefed on the situation. “As long as there is a refusal to negotiate a deal in good faith, they cannot continue to mediate,” the source said.

  • Benjamin Netanyahu is set to stay in power in Israel until elections due in 2026 and possibly longer, analysts and officials now believe, after a tumultuous week in which the 75-year-old veteran politician successfully fired his defence minister and was boosted by the results of the US election. Netanyahu’s newly reinforced position could lead to further intensification of Israel’s assault on Lebanon, and prolong its war in Gaza, critics fear – although the incoming US president Donald Trump has said he wants to swiftly end both wars.

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Key events

Israeli airstrike kills 20 people in northern Lebanon, health ministry says

Lebanon’s health ministry says an Israeli airstrike in the northern Lebanese village of Alamat, north of Beirut, has killed at least 20 people.

“The Israeli enemy strike on Almat in the Jbeil district killed 20 people including three children and injuring six, in an updated toll,” the ministry said in a statement.

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In a video post shared on X, the Palestine Red Crescent Society has said its teams transported 14 people injured by an Israeli airstrike on a tent near al-Qarara port, south of Deir al-Balah in central Gaza.

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Death toll from Israeli airstrikes in Gaza reaches 43,603, says health ministry

At least 43,603 Palestinian people have been killed and 102,929 injured in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza since 7 October 2023, the Gaza health ministry said in a statement on Sunday.

Of those, 51 Palestinians were killed and 164 injured in the latest 24-hour reporting period, the ministry said.

Gaza’s health ministry has said in the past that thousands of other dead people are most likely lost in the rubble of the territory..

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Lebanese official media has reported an Israeli airstrike on a house in the main eastern city of Baalbek on Sunday (see post at 09.05), which was not preceded by an Israeli army evacuation warning.

“Enemy aircraft launched a strike on a house in the Al-Laqees neighbourhood” of the city, the state-run National News Agency (NNA) said.

Earlier, NNA had reported a rare Israeli airstrike north of the Lebanese capital, Beirut, on the Shiite-majority village of Almat, which is located in a mostly Christian region.

People check the damage a day after Israeli airstrikes that targeted the eastern Lebanese village of Knaisseh near Baalbek in Lebanon’s eastern Bekaa Valley. Photograph: Nidal Solh/AFP/Getty Images
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Qatar halts Israel-Gaza ceasefire mediation over lack of ‘good faith

The Qatari government has informed the US and Israel it will stop mediation efforts to halt the conflict in Gaza because it no longer thinks the parties are negotiating in good faith.

The Gulf state has concluded that talks have become a political football, and its efforts to facilitate them were generating criticism towards it, according to a diplomatic source briefed on the situation.

“As long as there is a refusal to negotiate a deal in good faith, they cannot continue to mediate,” the source said.

Qatar’s move is the latest major blow to a faltering effort to end fighting in Gaza which has not produced significant results since a temporary ceasefire and hostage release deal nearly a year ago.

US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, and Qatari ministry of foreign affairs chief of protocol, Ibrahim Fakhroo, shake hands in Doha, Qatar, on 24 October 2024. Photograph: Nathan Howard/Reuters

But with a new US administration taking power in just over two months, the Qataris have also made clear to US contacts that they would be willing to resume mediation if both sides showed a “sincere willingness” to reach a deal.

Qatar informed Israel, Hamas officials, the US and Egypt of the decision after a US delegation including the CIA director, Bill Burns, visited Doha for inconclusive meetings in late October.

You can read the full story by my colleagues, Emma Graham-Harrison and Jason Burke, here:

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The Israeli military has reportedly attacked in several locations in Lebanon’s north-eastern Bekaa Valley, including in the city of Baalbak and in the Saraain area.

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Deadly Israeli airstrikes reported in Jabalia and Gaza City

In the opening summary, we mentioned reports of over 30 people being killed in an Israeli airstrike on Jabalia this morning.

In another deadly airstrike, on the Sabra neighbourhood of Gaza City, five people were killed, with others still missing in the aftermath, Gaza’s civil defence agency said.

“A number of civilians are still under the rubble,” the agency said.

Contacted by Agence France-Presse (AFP), the Israeli military said it was “looking into the reports” of the airstrikes.

A renewed Israeli assault was launched on the northern part of the Gaza Strip last month, with the Israeli military claiming it was to stop Hamas fighters regrouping there.

The blockage of aid and food deliveries and the targeting of civilian infrastructure, however, have led to accusations that Israel is committing the war crime of seeking to forcibly displace the remaining population.

The entirety of northern Gaza is under Israeli evacuation orders but it is unclear how many people remain. Last month, the UN estimated there were about 400,000 civilians unable or unwilling to follow Israeli evacuation orders to the south.

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Opening summary

Hello and welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of Israel’s wars on Gaza and Lebanon.

US warplanes staged multiple airstrikes Saturday night on advanced weapons storage facilities in Yemen belonging to the Houthi militant group, the Pentagon has said.

The facilities contained various weapons used to target military and civilian vessels navigating international waters throughout the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden, according to information provided to AFP by the Pentagon.

The Houthi-run Al Masirah television network reported three American and British raids that targeted the capital Sana’a’s southern Al Sabeen district.

Elsewhere, Wafa, the Palestinian news agency, reports that 13 children were among 33 civilians who were killed early this morning by an Israeli airstrike that targeted a densely populated home in Jabalia, northern Gaza. The area in northern Gaza has been under a total Israeli siege for weeks and the UN has described conditions there as “apocalyptic”. According to Wafa, a significant number of people injured in the Israeli attack have been transferred to the al-Ahli Baptist hospital for urgent medical care.

Locals continue searching for potential survivors or victims at the scene of the horrific Israeli massacre targeting the Alloush family home in Jabalia, northern Gaza, earlier today. The attack resulted in 33 civilians killed, including 13 children. pic.twitter.com/ye9asOa9B8

— Quds News Network (@QudsNen) November 10, 2024

Al Jazeera reporter Anas al-Sharif posted a report from the scene of Sunday’s pre-dawn strike on X, saying that the massacre was one of the biggest so far in Jabalia and that the victims were mostly women and children. It was not possible to independently verify the report as Israel does not allow foreign journalists into Gaza.

Israel claimed in a post on X that it had “eliminated dozens of terrorists and destroyed terrorist infrastructures and a warehouse of weapons” in Jabalia, without providing any evidence.

More on those developments soon. In other news:

  • At least 40 people were killed in strikes across Gaza late on Friday and into Saturday, including two journalist siblings, Ahmad Abu Sakhil and Zahra Abu Sakhil, who were killed together with their father, Muhammad, and three others when Israeli warplanes bombed a school sheltering displaced people in Gaza City, Al Jazeera reported. Gaza’s media office said their deaths raised the number of journalists killed by Israeli attacks to 188 since 7 October 2023. A day earlier, the local radio journalist Khaled Abu Zir was killed, according to Palestinian media reports.

  • Others killed in Israeli attacks included two Palestinians who had been sheltering in the grounds of al-Aqsa hospital in Deir el-Balah and three men who had been released from Israeli detention moments before, Al Jazeera and Palestinian media reported, as well as children who were reportedly targeted by an Israeli airstrike as they tried to collect water in Jabalia, northern Gaza.

The site of overnight Israeli airstrike that targeted the southern Lebanese city of Tyre on 9 November. Photograph: Kawnat Haju/AFP/Getty Images
  • In Lebanon five siblings, three of whom were deaf and mute, were among at least 40 people killed by Israeli strikes late on Friday and on Saturday, local authorities and media reported. Youssef Jundi, a local resident, told the Associated Press that his longtime neighbour and friend, Ghazwa Dabouk, was among the seven people killed in an Israeli strike on the port city of Tyre late on Friday. Dabouk’s sisters Elissar, Rabab and Fidaa, who were deaf and mute, were also killed in the airstrike, together with Dabouk’s brother Ali, who had autism.

  • Fifteen people were killed in a raid on the civil defence centre affiliated to the Islamic Message Scouts Association in the Lebanese town of Derqim Ras al-Ain, according to the state-run national news agency. Five people were killed and a number of others injured in an Israeli attack on a house in Hanawiya, southern Lebanon, according to reports.

  • The Qatari government has informed the US and Israel it will stop mediation efforts to halt the conflict in Gaza because it no longer thinks the parties are negotiating in good faith. The Gulf state has concluded that talks have become a political football, and its efforts to facilitate them were generating criticism towards it, according to a diplomatic source briefed on the situation. “As long as there is a refusal to negotiate a deal in good faith, they cannot continue to mediate,” the source said.

  • Benjamin Netanyahu is set to stay in power in Israel until elections due in 2026 and possibly longer, analysts and officials now believe, after a tumultuous week in which the 75-year-old veteran politician successfully fired his defence minister and was boosted by the results of the US election. Netanyahu’s newly reinforced position could lead to further intensification of Israel’s assault on Lebanon, and prolong its war in Gaza, critics fear – although the incoming US president Donald Trump has said he wants to swiftly end both wars.

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