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Middle East crisis: Jordan says some Israeli settlers attacked aid convoys on way to Gaza - as it happened

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Jordan says Israeli settlers attacked aid convoys on way to Gaza

Jordan said some Israeli settlers attacked two of its aid convoys that were on the way to Gaza on Wednesday, the state news agency reported.

In the report it said:

The convoys were en route to the Beit Hanoun and Karam Abu Salem crossings when the attack occurred, resulting in the dumping of some of their cargo, which included food, flour, and other necessities, in the streets.

The ministry said the Israeli government's failure to safeguard the aid convoys and allowing the attack to occur is a flagrant breach of its legal obligations as the occupying power and its duty to facilitate aid access to Gaza.

Sufian Qudah, the ministry's official spokesperson, remarked that the assault and Israel's failure to provide protection undermine its claims and commitments to allowing aid into Gaza via the Beit Hanoun crossing.

Qudah squarely held Israeli authorities responsible for the attack, urging the international community to condemn it unequivocally.

Israel had been boasting that convoys from Jordan were increasing the amount of aid being delivered to the Gaza Strip. The Petra news agency said the convoys was able to complete its mission, despite the attack.

Israeli demonstrators have repeatedly tried to prevent aid being delivered to Gaza, contesting that supplies should be cut until all the hostages seized on 7 October by Hamas and other groups in Gaza are returned.

Arrests were made last week on a counter-demonstration where a group of rabbis attempted to make a symbolic delivery of food to the Gaza Strip during the Passover holiday period.

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Citing, Honenu, an Israeli legal aid agency, Reuters reports that four men who had "blocked aid trucks going to Gaza" as they were passing near the West Bank settlement of Ma'ale Adumim were arrested by Israeli police.

Earlier, Jordan's state news agency said some Israeli settlers attacked two of the country's aid convoys that were on the way to Gaza.

Sally Weale

A fresh wave of student demonstrations and encampments are under way at UK universities in protest over the war in Gaza.

Protests were due to take place in at least six universities on Wednesday, including Sheffield, Bristol, Leeds and Newcastle, with others expected to follow suit, in a show of solidarity with Palestinians.

Protesting students are also calling for their individual universities to divest from arms firms that supply to Israel and in some cases sever links with universities in Israel.

Read more of our education correspondent Sally Weale's report: UK students begin new wave of protests against Gaza war after US arrests

France's foreign minister Séjourné: France calls on Israel to 'pull back on this offensive in Rafah'

French foreign minister Stéphane Séjourné has spoken briefly to the media after meeting his Egyptian counterpart Sameh Shoukry in an unscheduled extension to Séjourné's trip to the region.

"We came to coordinate our efforts for a truce. The messages given by France and its Arab partners in the region is that Israel pulls back on this offensive in Rafah," said Séjourné, adding "It is a question of life and death for many people on the ground."

Reuters reports he declined to say how optimistic he was of a deal being concluded or give details of where the negotiation stood.

France has three dual-nationals still held hostage by Hamas after the group's assault on Israel on 7 October. "We would like them to be on this list if a truce were to happen," he said.

He also stressed that a French proposal to defuse conflict between Israel and Lebanon's Iran-backed Hezbollah needed to be high on the agenda should a Gaza ceasefire be agreed.

French foreign minister Stéphane Séjourné attends a meeting with his Egyptian counterpart Sameh Shoukry, at the New Administrative Capital (NAC) east of Cairo, Egypt, 1 May. Photograph: John Irish/Reuters

As well as meeting Israel's prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and president Isaac Herzog, the US secretary of state Antony Blinken has met Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid.

In a social media post Lapid said "I told him that Netanyahu has no political excuse not to go to the deal for the return of the abductees. He has a majority in the people, he has a majority in the Knesset and if necessary I will make sure he has a majority in the government. They must be brought home. Every hour is critical."

שוחחתי לפני זמן קצר עם מזכיר המדינה אנתוני בלינקן, דנו במאמצים הבינלאומיים לקידום עסקת חטופים. אמרתי לו שאין לנתניהו שום תירוץ פוליטי לא ללכת לעיסקה להחזרת החטופים. יש לו רוב בעם, יש לו רוב בכנסת ואם צריך אדאג שיהיה לו רוב בממשלה. חייבים להחזיר אותם הביתה. כל שעה קריטית. pic.twitter.com/cDY6J5y27e

— יאיר לפיד - Yair Lapid (@yairlapid) May 1, 2024

Jordan says Israeli settlers attacked aid convoys on way to Gaza

Jordan said some Israeli settlers attacked two of its aid convoys that were on the way to Gaza on Wednesday, the state news agency reported.

In the report it said:

The convoys were en route to the Beit Hanoun and Karam Abu Salem crossings when the attack occurred, resulting in the dumping of some of their cargo, which included food, flour, and other necessities, in the streets.

The ministry said the Israeli government's failure to safeguard the aid convoys and allowing the attack to occur is a flagrant breach of its legal obligations as the occupying power and its duty to facilitate aid access to Gaza.

Sufian Qudah, the ministry's official spokesperson, remarked that the assault and Israel's failure to provide protection undermine its claims and commitments to allowing aid into Gaza via the Beit Hanoun crossing.

Qudah squarely held Israeli authorities responsible for the attack, urging the international community to condemn it unequivocally.

Israel had been boasting that convoys from Jordan were increasing the amount of aid being delivered to the Gaza Strip. The Petra news agency said the convoys was able to complete its mission, despite the attack.

Israeli demonstrators have repeatedly tried to prevent aid being delivered to Gaza, contesting that supplies should be cut until all the hostages seized on 7 October by Hamas and other groups in Gaza are returned.

Arrests were made last week on a counter-demonstration where a group of rabbis attempted to make a symbolic delivery of food to the Gaza Strip during the Passover holiday period.

As well as the protests at BAE Systems factories in the UK [see 10.50 BST], there is also a pro-Palestinian camp set up outside Scotland's parliament in Edinburgh.

As well as the camp itself, one protester has undertaken a hunger strike, which is now in its fifth day. In a statement they said:

After much time thinking and praying through this decision I have decided to partake in a hunger strike outside the Scottish parliament in protest to UK and Scotland's complicity to the crimes of genocide happening in Gaza.

The decision to do this has come from a place of deep unresolvable grief. After 6 months of destruction and death, I've only wanted to scream, fight, and destroy in rage of the injustices in Gaza. Even with all this desire to rage I have always only found myself in a spaces of silence.

Not silence of inaction, that is not what I am meaning. But a silence of disbelief. Of disbelief of the overwhelming magnitude of the reality that is happening in Gaza.

A hunger strike protest in Edinburgh in support of Gaza. Photograph: Gaza Solidarity Encampment Scotland

Among the campaign's demands are that the Scottish government apply pressure on the UK government to enact an embargo on all Israeli arm sales, and that local pensions funds and local Universities in Scotland divest from links to Israel.

Antony Blinken has posted to social media about his earlier visit today with Israel's president Isaac Herzog. The US secretary of state said the meeting was to "discuss our support for Israel's security and efforts to reach a ceasefire that secures the release of hostages," adding "we also discussed the urgent need to get more humanitarian aid into Gaza."

I met with President @Isaac_Herzog in Tel Aviv to discuss our support for Israel's security and efforts to reach a ceasefire that secures the release of hostages. We also discussed the urgent need to get more humanitarian aid into Gaza. pic.twitter.com/8JF2m5yRUc

— Secretary Antony Blinken (@SecBlinken) May 1, 2024

The court of King Abdullah II of Jordan has announced that he has departed for Italy and then the US. It said, in a post on social media, "the working visits comes within the framework of Jordan's efforts to reach an immediate and lasting ceasefire in Gaza, and stop the humanitarian catastrophe in the Strip."

Three arrests have been made in London at a demonstration against UK arms sales to Israel. PA Media reports as Metropolitan police statement said: "We are policing a protest in Admiralty Place and Horse Guards Parade. Officers have made three arrests after protesters blocked access to a building. Protesters must stay within the law."

Organisers have said more than 1,000 workers and trade unionists demonstrated outside BAE Systems sites in three locations, as well as the London offices of the Business and Trade department, with the aim of showing solidarity with Palestinian workers.

Demonstrators hold placards as they take part in a "Free Gaza" protest, near Admiralty Arch in central London, on 1 May. Photograph: Adrian Dennis/AFP/Getty Images

Speaking in Glasgow demonstrator Jamie - who did not wish to give a surname, said: "Our fundamental aim is for the UK Government to introduce an arms embargo, it's the morally right thing to do. It's been almost seven months of death and destruction in Palestine, and the idea that that is being committed by weapons that are being produced in our neighbourhoods is horrifying."

France's foreign minister said on Wednesday that there was still work to be done to secure a truce between Israel and Gaza after he was updated by Egyptian officials in Cairo on the status of negotiations.

"We came to coordinate our efforts for a truce. The messages given by France and its Arab partners in the region is that Israel pulls back on this offensive in Rafah," Stéphane Séjourne said after meeting his Egyptian counterpart Sameh Shukri.

He declined to say how optimistic he was of a deal being concluded, but added that if there were a truce he hoped that three French-Israeli dual nationals being held by Hamas would be on the list for release.

Here are the latest images coming across the wires from Gaza and Israel:

Palestinians, including children, collect remaining belongings from the rubble of destroyed houses after Israeli attacks on the house belonging to the Abu Gali family as Israeli attacks continue on Gaza Strip. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty ImagesThe destruction caused by the Israeli attacks on Gaza is viewed from the Nir Am region in southern Israel. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty ImagesPalestinian children walk past a house damaged in an Israeli strike. Photograph: Hatem Khaled/Reuters

The US secretary of state Antony Blinken has met with Israeli leaders in his push for a cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas to impress on them that "the time is now" for an agreement that would free hostages and bring a pause in the nearly seven months of war.

Blinken, on his seventh visit to the region since the war erupted, said that Hamas would bear the blame for any failure to achieve a deal.

Antony Blinken, centre, is welcomed by Israeli Ambassador to the US. Mike Herzog, as he arrives at Ben Gurion Airport near Tel Aviv, Israel on Tuesday. Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein/AP

A truce could avert an Israeli incursion into the southern Gaza city of Rafah, where hundreds of thousands of Palestinians are sheltering. Blinken on Wednesday also told families of hostages held in Gaza that Hamas needs to say yes to the deal.

Julian Borger

The US and Saudi Arabia have drafted a set of agreements on security and technology-sharing which were intended to be linked to a broader Middle East settlement involving Israel and the Palestinians.

However, in the absence of a ceasefire in Gaza and in the face of adamant resistance from Benjamin Netanyahu's Israeli government to the creation of a Palestinian state - and its apparent determination to launch an offensive on Rafah - the Saudis are pushing for a more modest plan B, which excludes the Israelis.

Under that option, the US and Saudi Arabia would sign agreements on a bilateral defence pact, US help in the building of a Saudi civil nuclear energy industry, and high-level sharing in the field of artificial intelligence and other emerging technologies.

Violent clashes between pro-Palestinian protesters and counter demonstrations broke out at the University of California in Los Angeles. Here is our video report.

Fireworks thrown at Gaza protesters as tensions rise at UCLA - video report

My colleague Chris Michael is live blogging the latest on that situation here.

A US vascular surgeon who left Gaza after a stint as a volunteer said on Wednesday nothing had prepared him for the scale of injuries he had faced there.

Speaking to Reuters, Shariq Sayeed, from Atlanta said he saw dozens of patients a day, telling the news agency:

Vascular surgery is really a disease for older patients and I would say I had never operated on anybody less than 16, and that was the majority of patients that we did this time around. Most were patients 13, 14, 15, 16 and 17 years of age. Mostly shrapnel wounds, and that was something I have never dealt with, that was something new. And unfortunately there is a very high incidence of infection as well so once you have an amputation that doesn't heal, you end up getting a higher amputation.

Ismail Mehr, an anaesthesiologist from New York state, who led the Gaza mission, told Reuters the volunteer medics were "speechless at what we saw" when they arrived in southern Gaza in April.

Truly everywhere I saw was destruction in Khan Younis, not a single building standing. I hope and I pray that Rafah is not attacked. The health system will not be able to take care of that. It will be a complete catastrophe.

Media in Israel and Lebanon are publishing outline details of the deal on the table for hostage releases and a pause in fighting in Gaza. It was initially published in the Lebanese newspaper Al Akhbar daily.

The details are quite intricate, and the Guardian has not independently verified the source of the document, but in an initial phase, three female hostages would be released every three days for the first 33 days, including soldiers. 40 Palestinain female detainees would be released by Israel in return for each female soldier. The IDF would agree to keep Gaza clear of all air traffic for between eight and ten hours on the days of the hostage release.

A second phase would start on the 34th day as living hostages, including male soldiers would be released in exchange for further prisoners. A third phase would involved the release of the bodies of dead hostages, and a five-year rehabilitation plan under which there would be a commitment for Palestinians not to build infrastructure for military purposes in Gaza or receive raw materials that could be used for such purposes.

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