The Sydney Morning Herald logo
Advertisement

This was published 2 years ago

Israel-Hamas conflict as it happened: IDF escalate bombardment of Gaza; Hamas say at least 5700 Palestinians have been killed

David Estcourt, Caitlin Fitzsimmons and Latika Bourke
Updated ,first published

Wrapping up

By Latika Bourke

And we will end our live coverage of Day 19 of the Israel-Hamas conflict.

Recapping today’s events:

  • Australia called for a humanitarian pause on hostilities in Gaza. Wong said that the way Israel chose to defend itself against Hamas’ attack on October 7 mattered, and it should not lead to the suffering of innocent Palestinian civilians
  • Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad and Hamas figures met in Beirut and agreed on a goal of “total victory” in the West Bank and Gaza
  • Qatar said negotiations on freeing hostages were making progress
  • Israeli officials have demanded the resignation of the UN secretary-general over “shocking” comments in which he suggested that the October 7 attack was provoked by the “suffocating occupation” of the Palestinian territories
  • Israel’s ambassador to Australia, Amir Maimon, addressed the National Press Club and said Israel was the victim in the war with Hamas, not the aggressor
  • Violence between Israel and Syria has raised fears of wider regional conflict
  • The United Nations says the humanitarian need in Gaza would require about 100 aid trucks a day, instead of the 10 or 20 a day that have been arriving from Egypt since the weekend

Thank you for joining us today. Our coverage will resume in the morning.

Palestinian flag flies outside Sydney council

By Latika Bourke

Canterbury-Bankstown Council in Sydney’s south-west has voted, unanimously, to fly the Palestinian flag until a ceasefire is declared in Gaza.

Our colleagues at Nine were there to capture the scenes.

Loading

S&P downgrades Israel’s outlook to negative

By Latika Bourke

In another sign of the Israel-Hamas war is taking an economic toll on the Jewish state, ratings agency S&P has downgraded its ‘AA-’ long-term foreign and local currency ratings on Israel to negative from stable.

In a statement, S&P said it predicted that the war would last no more than three to six months.

But it warned that it could lower the ratings on Israel if the security situation worsened.

“In our view, an additional risk could come from the potential for rising tensions between the Jewish majority and Arab-Israeli minority within Israel, as happened during a previous war with Hamas in May 2021, but this risk appears to be contained at the moment,” primary credit analyst Maxim Rybnikov said.

“Even though we assume the conflict will not spread beyond Gaza, we expect it will still hurt Israel’s economic performance.”

S&P expects Israel’s economy to rebound after contracting by five per cent in the next quarter.

Advertisement

Turkey calls for ceasefire, warns of new world war

By Latika Bourke

Turkey’s Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan is speaking in Doha alongside Qatar’s Prime Minister.

Qatar is a supporter of Hamas and has been helping negotiations over freeing hostages.

However, Hamas has so far only agreed to release four of the citizens it snatched from Israel on October 7 and Israel says more than 200 people were taken and are being held hostage.

Qatar’s Prime Minister said that some progress was being made in the hostage negotiations.

Fidan called for an immediate ceasefire and said that a new world war could break out.

Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad and Hamas seek ‘real victory’ in Gaza

By Latika Bourke

Just in from the Associated Press.

The leaders of Lebanon’s Hezbollah has held talks with senior Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad figures in Beirut.

According to a statement run by Hezbollah-run and Lebanese state media, Hezbollah’s leader Hassan Nasrallah agreed with Hamas’ Saleh al-Arouri and Islamic Jihad’s leader Ziad al-Nakhleh on the next steps that the three — along with other Iran-backed militants — should take at this “sensitive stage.”

“An assessment was made of the international positions being taken and what the parties of the Axis of Resistance must do ... to realise a real victory for the resistance in Gaza and Palestinian and to halt the brutal aggression,” Hezbollah said.

“There was agreement on continuing the coordination.”

Penny Wong gives Gaza updates on X

By Latika Bourke

Good evening.

Latika Bourke logging on from London to take you through developments in the Israel-Hamas war this evening.

The time in Tel Aviv is approaching 11am.

Foreign Minister Penny Wong has turned to the social media platform owned by Elon Musk to give further updates about the Australians being evacuated from the West Bank.

Wong said Australia had helped eight more Australians leave the West Bank, which borders Israel and Jordan, which is not controlled by Hamas and is separate from The Gaza Strip.

Advertisement

The headlines so far

By Caitlin Fitzsimmons

This is Caitlin Fitzsimmons and I’m handing over the reins to Latika Bourke for the rest of the evening. Thank you for joining me this afternoon.

Here’s a briefing on what happened today:

  • Foreign Minister Penny Wong has joined international allies and called for a humanitarian pause on hostilities in Gaza. Wong said that the way Israel chose to defend itself against Hamas’ attack on October 7 mattered, and it should not lead to the suffering of innocent Palestinian civilians.
  • Israeli officials have demanded the resignation of the UN secretary-general over “shocking” comments in which he suggested that the October 7 attack was provoked by the “suffocating occupation” of the Palestinian territories.
  • Israel’s ambassador to Australia, Amir Maimon, addressed the National Press Club and said Israel was the victim in the war with Hamas, not the aggressor.
  • Violence between Israel and Syria has raised fears of wider regional conflict.
  • The United Nations says the humanitarian need in Gaza would require about 100 aid trucks a day, instead of the 10 or 20 a day that have been arriving from Egypt since the weekend.

Clarifying the water shortage in the Gaza Strip

By Caitlin Fitzsimmons

I promised earlier that we would try to fact-check the Israeli ambassador’s claims that Israel is not responsible for water and electricity in Gaza.

Amir Maimon, Israel’s ambassador to Australia, told the National Press Club this afternoon that the humanitarian situation in Gaza was “fair” and not wholly Israel’s fault.

Maimon claimed Israel provided less than 10 per cent of Gaza’s water via a pipe, and supply was resumed last week. He said the remaining water came from two desalination plants that he believed were still operating.

The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in its daily briefing from yesterday (its most recent update) paints a different picture.

Humanitarian aid arrives through the Rafah land crossing into the Gaza Strip.Getty

Conflict between Israel and Syria fuels fears of violence spreading

By Caitlin Fitzsimmons

It is now 9.30am in Israel and the Palestinian territories.

The Syrian state news agency has reported that an Israeli attack on military positions in southwest Syria today killed eight soldiers and wounded seven more.

Israel’s military said earlier that its jets had struck Syrian army infrastructure and mortar launchers early today, in what it described as a response to rocket launches from Syria toward Israel.

View post on X

The conflict with Syria will fuel the fears of US and other officials that the Israel-Hamas war could spill over into a wider regional conflict.

Advertisement

Refresher on the Palestinian territories

By Caitlin Fitzsimmons

With all the posts quoting the two diplomats this afternoon, it might be worth a bit of a refresher on who is who and where they come from.

Australia has recognised the state of Israel since it was set up in 1948. Israel’s ambassador to Australia, Amir Maimon, addressed the National Press Club today.

Australia’s foreign policy is also to support a two-state solution that would mean the establishment of an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel.

Dr Izzat Abdulhadi is head of the General Delegation of Palestine to Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific. This means he represents the Palestinian Authority, which rules the West Bank.

Advertisement