‘We are winning’, Netanyahu says, warning Iran that there’s no place Israel cannot reach
“There is no place in Iran that the long arm of Israel cannot reach, and that’s true of the entire Middle East,” Netanyahu said at the UN general assembly.
“We are winning,” he declared, showing a map he termed “the curse” of Iran’s influence and another which he described as a blessing.
Netanyahu also called for an end to the “appeasement” of Iran. Everything must be done to ensure Iran doesn’t get nuclear weapons, the Israeli leader added.
Key events
-
Netanyahu calls for peace agreement with Saudi Arabia
-
‘We won’t rest until our citizens can return safely to their homes’, Netanyahu says
-
‘We are winning’, Netanyahu says, warning Iran that there’s no place Israel cannot reach
-
Lebanon facing deadliest period ‘in a generation’, says UN official
-
Gunmen shoot and kill aid worker in Gaza, charity and family say
-
Yemen’s Houthis say they attacked Israel’s Tel Aviv and Ashkelon
-
Saudi Arabia forms global alliance to push for Israeli-Palestinian two-state solution
-
UK PM calls on Israel and Hezbollah ‘to stop the violence’ and ‘step back from the brink’
-
More than 30,000 people have crossed into Syria from Lebanon in last 72 hours, says UNHCR
-
Japan to dispatch military planes for possible Lebanon evacuations
-
Nearly 700 people killed in Lebanon this week, says health ministry
-
Philippines says it will evacuate thousands from Lebanon if Israel invades
-
Israel strike kills 5 Syrian soldiers near Lebanon: state media
-
Nine people killed in Israeli strike on Shebaa town in southern Lebanon, mayor says
-
Israeli teams will continue meetings on US ceasefire proposals, Netanyahu says
-
Australian PM urges Netanyahu to ‘listen to the international community’ amid fears of escalating conflict with Hezbollah
-
Israeli and US officials meet to discuss US-backed ceasefire proposal with Hezbollah
In his speech at the UN general assembly, Benjamin Netanyahu insisted that Israel doesn’t want to see a single innocent person die.
“No army has done what Israel is doing to minimise civilian casualties: we drop fliers, we send text messages, we make phone calls by the millions to ensure that Palestinian civilians get out of harm’s way,” he said.
Maya Yang
Outside the luxury Loews Regency hotel on Park Avenue, a small group of anti-Benjamin Netanyahu protestors gathered across the street. Some waved Israeli flags while others held signs with Netanyahu’s face imprinted with a red handprint.
One protestor, Yehuda Cohen, 55, condemned Netanyahu’s speech at the UN.
“While there is intense war in Israel, he’s dealing with himself…he thinks he’s the great speaker, he will save Israel by speaking, he’s actually destroying Israel. He’s responsible for the events of 7th of October,” Cohen said.
“He must put everything aside, stop the war and go for a hostage deal. I want my son back home. I sent my son to the army so he can protect Israel. On the 7th of October, they were outnumbered, he was neglected and kidnapped… The Israeli government, it’s not that they’re doing nothing for a hostage deal, they’re doing everything to prevent a hostage deal,” Cohen added.
Netanyahu calls for peace agreement with Saudi Arabia
Netanyahu also stressed the need to achieve a peace agreement with Saudi Arabia, citing the experience of the Abraham Accords.
“I say to you, what blessing such a peace with Saudi Arabia would bring – it would be a boon to the security and economy of our two countries, it would boost trade and tourism across the region, it would help transform the Middle East into a global juggernaut,” he said.
“Such a peace, I’m sure, would be a true pivot of history: it would usher in a historic reconciliation between the Arab world and Israel, between Islam and Judaism, between Mecca and Jerusalem,” the Israeli leader said.
“One of the best ways to foil Iran’s nefarious designs is to achieve the peace,” he added.
‘We won’t rest until our citizens can return safely to their homes’, Netanyahu says
Speaking of Hezbollah, Benjamin Netanyahu said the group has murdered the citizens of many countries and attacked Israel unprovoked.
“Enough is enough,” he said. “We won’t rest until our citizens can return safely to their homes,” he added. “We will not accept a terror army perched on our northern border, able to perpetrate another October 7-style massacre,” he said.
“Hamas has got to go,” Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu said at the UN general assembly.
Israel seeks a demilitarised and deradicalised Gaza, he stressed.
The hostages must be returned to their families, he said.
‘We are winning’, Netanyahu says, warning Iran that there’s no place Israel cannot reach
“There is no place in Iran that the long arm of Israel cannot reach, and that’s true of the entire Middle East,” Netanyahu said at the UN general assembly.
“We are winning,” he declared, showing a map he termed “the curse” of Iran’s influence and another which he described as a blessing.
Netanyahu also called for an end to the “appeasement” of Iran. Everything must be done to ensure Iran doesn’t get nuclear weapons, the Israeli leader added.
In a speech at the UN general assembly, Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, said his country will not rest until the remaining hostages are brought home.
Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu is speaking of the “curse” of October 7 and the atrocities committed that day.
Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, says at the UN general assembly that he didn’t intend to come this year, but after he heard the “lies and slander” levelled at Israel he decided to come and “set the record straight.”
“Israel seeks peace, Israel yearns for peace,” he said, adding that Israel must defend itself against “savage murderers.”
Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, is about to speak at the UN general assembly. The chair is calling for order in the chamber.
Yoav Gallant, the Israeli defence minister, has said that Israel will continue to use all means at its disposal to return the north’s residents to their homes safely.
UK defence secretary John Healey is looking at a rumoured Israeli ground invasion into Lebanon “really carefully”, reports the Press Association (PA).
Healey said on Friday airstrikes and rocket fire exchanged between Israel and Hezbollah present a “risk that this escalates into something that is much wider and much more serious”.
The PA reports that Healey faced questions about a possible ground invasion after Israeli army chief Lt Gen Herzi Halevi told troops on Wednesday that ongoing airstrikes were “to prepare the ground for your possible entry and to continue degrading Hezbollah”.
Speaking to broadcasters, Healey said his “first concern remains the safety of British nationals in Lebanon”.
He added:
The travel advice remains the same – don’t go to Lebanon. If you are in Lebanon, then get out and there are still commercial flights leaving so people can do that.
But I left Labour conference earlier this week to chair a Cobra committee in government because we are making the preparations you’d expect of government ahead of any potential developments in the future.”
The PA news agency understands the UK government has successfully asked airlines to increase capacity on routes out of Lebanon, with Foreign Office teams in Beirut to support British consulate services.
It is thought they are ready to facilitate evacuations by sea or air, which could be triggered if the security environment degrades further and British nationals are no longer able to leave the Middle East through other routes.
Asked about the rumoured ground invasion, the PA reports Healey as replying:
We’re watching this really carefully. That will be a matter for the Israelis.
At the moment, it’s airstrikes. At the moment, there are missiles from the Lebanese Hezbollah directed at Israel. This conflict serves no one.”
The defence secretary said Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu would “hear about the calls from many countries led by the United States and Britain for an immediate ceasefire in Lebanon – 21 days in which the fighting should stop on both sides” when he attends the UN general assembly in New York on Friday.
“That gives everyone a chance to concentrate on the peace plan that is on the table, that the Israelis themselves say would allow them to get their citizens back into northern Israel and the Lebanese to return to their homes in southern Lebanon,” he added.
Lebanon facing deadliest period ‘in a generation’, says UN official
The UN said on Friday that a “catastrophic” intensification of Israeli attacks targeting Hezbollah militants had left Lebanon facing its deadliest period in years, with its hospitals overwhelmed by casualties, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP).
“The recent escalations in Lebanon are nothing short of catastrophic,” said Imran Riza, the UN’s humanitarian coordinator in Lebanon.
“We are witnessing the deadliest period in Lebanon in a generation, and many express their fear that this is just the beginning,” Riza told reporters in Geneva via video link from Beirut, reports AFP.
He pointed out that on Monday alone, the death toll was equal to around half of the 1,200 killed during 34 days of war between Israel and Hezbollah in 2006.
“The level of displacement, the level of trauma, the level of panic, has been huge,” he said. At the same time, Riza warned that Lebanon’s “health sector is completely overrun”.
“The events of last week, including the explosions of communication devices, have nearly depleted health supplies,” he said. Riza added: “With the recent escalations and hospitals reaching capacity, the system is struggling with limited resources to meet the growing demands.”
The hospitals in Lebanon “are overwhelmed”, agreed Margaret Harris, spokesperson for the World Health Organization (WHO).
She pointed out that the pager and walkie-talkie blasts had caused large numbers of serious injuries, especially to eyes and hands, which require specialised treatment.
A full 777 injured remain in hospitals after those blasts, “and 152 of those are critical cases,” Harris said, according to AFP. “That means they’re not leaving the hospital for quite some time, and so every day of bombing and blasts fills up beds that can’t be unfilled.”
At the same time, she said, 37 health facilities had been closed across Lebanon due to events. Harris stressed that aid agencies had done a lot to prepare for possible mass-casualty events in Lebanon in case the past year of cross-border fire were to escalate.
The WHO had helped “train most of the health workers in most of the hospitals for mass casualty”, she said. But “in our planning scenarios, we didn’t have anything like the numbers that have actually been affected”.
“It was way beyond anything that normal planning, even for a horrific event like this, would have expected”.
Daniel Hurst
Australia has suggested the world should set “a clear timeline for the international declaration of Palestinian statehood” in a sign of increasing frustration about the stalled peace process.
The foreign affairs minister, Penny Wong, will float the idea in a speech to the UN general assembly in New York on Saturday Australian time (Friday US time). Benjamin Netanyahu was also due to address the gathering amid mounting concern about an escalating regional war.
Wong will tell the general assembly that “every country in this room” must abide by the rules of war, and Israel “must comply with the binding orders of the international court of justice”, according to speech remarks distributed to media in advance.
Wong will say the Hamas-led attacks on Israel nearly one year ago “cannot and should not be justified” and the group must release all Israeli hostages.
But she will say 11,000 Palestinian children have been killed and two million people in Gaza face acute food insecurity in the resulting war. “This must end,” Wong will say.
“All lives have equal value.”
One of the most significant parts of Wong’s speech is her offer for Australia to “contribute to new ways to break the cycle of conflict”.
She will say Australia “shares the frustration of the great majority of countries” about a lack of progress, more than 77 years after UN general assembly resolution 181 outlined “a plan for two states side by side”.
You can rerad the full piece here:
Gunmen shoot and kill aid worker in Gaza, charity and family say
Palestinian gunmen in the Gaza Strip shot and killed an aid worker from a US based charity, firing on her car in what government officials told her family was a case of mistaken identity, reports Reuters.
The car in which Islam Hejazy, Gaza programme manager at HEAL Palestine, was travelling was intercepted on Thursday in the area of Khan Younis in the south of the Gaza Strip. Gunmen riding in three cars sprayed the vehicle with dozens of bullets, according to residents and the woman’s family.
“She was the mother of two small children and a humanitarian with the highest ethics and professionalism,” HEAL Palestine, posted on its Facebook page. “HEAL Palestine is more dedicated than ever to serving Gaza, in her honor. Ceasefire now,” it added.
Reuters reports that her family issued a statement on Friday, saying they were told by government parties at the hospital where her body was taken that she was killed by mistake. Her killers, whose identity was not immediately clear, had failed to identify the vehicle she was driving, they said.
There has been no immediate comment from Hamas, according to Reuters.
“That was a bigger shock … How would an innocent soul be wasted and 90 bullets fired at her car just for mistaken identification?” the family said in a statement published by Palestinian media. Reuters was not able to verify the number of bullets fired.
The incident highlights growing chaos and anarchy in Gaza almost a year into Israel’s military offensive, which has weakened the ability of Hamas-run security services to police the streets, according to the group.
Yemen’s Houthis say they attacked Israel’s Tel Aviv and Ashkelon
Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthis said on Friday they had targeted Israel’s cities of Tel Aviv and Ashkelon with a ballistic missile and a drone in support of Gaza and Lebanon, reports Reuters.
The Israeli army said it had intercepted a missile that was fired from Yemen after sirens and explosions were heard early in the day.
The Houthi’s military spokesperson said their operations will not halt in the coming days until Israel’s offensives in Gaza and Lebanon stop.
“We will carry out more military operations against the Israeli enemy in victory for the blood of our brothers in Palestine and Lebanon,” Yahya Sarea said in a televised speech.
Israeli strikes have killed more than 600 people in Lebanon since Monday, with the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah at its most intense in more than 18 years.
Hezbollah has been firing rockets into Israel for almost a year in support of its ally Hamas, which is fighting Israel in Gaza.