Emmanuel Macron calls on Israel to 'stop bombing babies' in Gaza

Emmanuel Macron calls on Israel to ‘stop bombing babies’ in Gaza as French President urges Joe Biden and Rishi Sunak to follow his call for a ceasefire

  • President Emmanuel Macron has called for Israel to agree to a ceasefire in Gaza

Israel must stop bombing Gaza and killing civilians, French President Emmanuel Macron told the BBC in an interview published this evening.

Macron said there was ‘no justification’ for the bombing and saying a ceasefire would benefit Israel.

He said that France ‘clearly condemns’ the ‘terrorist’ actions of Hamas, but that while recognising Israel’s right to protect itself, ‘we do urge them to stop this bombing’ in Gaza.

When asked if he wanted other leaders – including in the United Sates and Britain – to join his calls for a ceasefire, Macron said: ‘I hope they will.’

French President Emmanuel Macron said there was ‘no justification’ for Israel’s continued bombing of Gaza and saying a ceasefire would benefit Israel

In this video still, a projectile, seen top-right, can be seen flying through the air, seconds before an explosion hit the Al-Shifa hospital overnight


Footage from Al-Shifa hospital’s courtyard overnight appeared to show one of the strikes, although it was impossible to verify its origin from the footage

A map showing the locations of the three hospitals that Hamas officials claimed were attacked by Israeli strikes overnight

Israel has faced growing calls for restraint in its month-long war with Hamas but says the Gaza-based militants, who attacked Israel on October 7 and took hostages, would exploit a truce to regroup.

READ MORE: MOMENT MISSILE HITS AL-SHIFA HOSPITAL IN GAZA CITY 

Speaking the day after a humanitarian aid conference in Paris about the war in Gaza, Macron said the ‘clear conclusion’ of all governments and agencies present at that summit was ‘that there is no other solution than first a humanitarian pause, going to a ceasefire, which will allow to protect… all civilians having nothing to do with terrorists’.

‘De facto – today, civilians are bombed – de facto. These babies, these ladies, these old people are bombed and killed. So there is no reason for that and no legitimacy. So we do urge Israel to stop,’ he said.

Yesterday, Benjamin Netanyahu ruled out a ceasefire in Gaza and accused Democratic Rep Rashida Tlaib of calling for the ‘genocide’ of the Jewish people as he promised to win the war against Hamas.

The Israeli Prime Minister tore into anti-Israeli demonstrators at US colleges accusing them of ‘moral depravity’, and vowed to pursue the war in Gaza for ‘however long it takes’.

Speaking on Fox News the Israeli leader dismissed suggestions of a rift with the White House after agreeing to Joe Biden’s call for a second humanitarian corridor away out of northern Gaza.

But he insisted there would be no ceasefire after the Hamas terror attack on October 7 that killed more than 1,400 Israelis and saw hundreds more taken hostage.

‘A ceasefire with Hamas means surrender to Hamas and surrender to terror,’ he added.

President Joe Biden said there were no hopes at all for a ceasefire in Gaza as he left the White House for a trip to Illinois on Thursday

The fighting continued in Gaza yesterday as the Palestinian death toll approached 11,000 

‘We’re going to continue until we eradicate Hamas and nothing will stop that.’

President Joe Biden was equally dismissive of the chances for a ceasefire, insisting there was ‘no possibility, none’ as he left the White House for Illinois earlier today.

But the White House revealed on Thursday that Israel agreed to open a second corridor for civilians to flee northern Gaza – along the territory´s coastal road – joining the first that has been in place along its main north-south highway. 

A series of daily four-hour humanitarian pauses in its assault on Hamas in northern Gaza will take effect as part of an effort to get hostages out.

And Netanyahu hinted that freeing the 239 hostages seized by Hamas could make a difference.

‘There won’t be a ceasefire without the release of the Israeli hostages, that’s not going to happen,’ he said.

Indirect talks were taking place in Qatar – which also played a role in the freeing of four hostages by Hamas last month – about a larger release of hostages.

CIA Director William Burns was in Doha on Thursday to discuss efforts to win the release of hostages in Gaza with the Qatari prime minister and the head of Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dismissed calls for a ceasefire and vowed to pursue the war in Gaza for ‘however long it takes’ as he slammed western protests 

The Israeli Defense Force claimed to have found a rocket and drone production site next to a child’s bedroom in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood of northern Gaza

Amal al-Robayaa’s children eating their meals amid the ruins of the family home destroyed in an Israeli strike in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip

Palestinians continue to flee the epicenter of the fighting in northern Gaza for the relative  safety of the south 

The Israeli government has agreed to White House demands for a second humanitarian corridor from the north of Gaza to the south 

But the Israeli PM insisted Hamas would be destroyed before the war ends with a Gaza ‘demilitarized and deradicalized’.

And he praised Congress for voting to censure Michigan Rep Rashida Tlaib over her repeated calls for a free Palestine ‘from the river to the sea’. 

She also accused Biden of supporting ‘genocide’ in Gaza and ‘complicity’ in the deaths of children in the Middle East.

‘From the river to the sea means there’s no Israel, from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean, which is a tiny area, by the way, that encompasses Israel, there is no Israel,’ Netanyahu responded.

Israel says 1,400 people, mostly civilians, were killed and about 240 taken hostage by Hamas in the October 7 raid that triggered the Israeli assault.

Israel says it has lost 35 soldiers in Gaza.

Palestinian officials said 10,812 Gaza residents had been killed as of Thursday, about 40 percent of them children, in air and artillery strikes.

Israel’s military advance on central Gaza City, which brought tanks within a mile of Al Shifa, according to residents, has raised questions about how Israel will interpret international laws on protecting medical centres and displaced people there.

Deadly air strikes on refugee camps, a medical convoy and near hospitals have already prompted fierce arguments among some of Israel’s Western allies over its military’s adherence to international law.

Meanwhile, Israel has agreed pauses in its offensive in northern Gaza that will allow some civilians to flee heavy fighting, but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ruled out any broader ceasefire as a ‘surrender’ to Hamas. 

Asked if there would be a ‘stoppage’ in fighting, Netanyahu said on the Fox News Channel: ‘No. The fighting continues against the Hamas enemy, the Hamas terrorists, but in specific locations for a given period of a few hours here or a few hours there, we want to facilitate the safe passage of civilians away from the zone of fight and we’re doing that.’

Palestinians sit by the bodies of the Hijazi family that was killed in the Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip in Rafah on Friday, November 10

Israeli army flares illuminate the sky over west Gaza, November 9

The Israeli military has allowed some wounded Palestinian civilians to cross into Egypt for treatment.

US President Joe Biden said in a post on Thursday that Israel has ‘an obligation to distinguish between terrorists and civilians and fully comply with international law.’

The White House confirmed on Thursday that Israel had agreed to pause military operations in parts of north Gaza for four hours a day.

The pauses, which would allow people to flee along two humanitarian corridors and could be used for the release of hostages, were significant first steps, White House national security spokesperson John Kirby said.

Aid groups have pleaded for a full ceasefire, warning of a humanitarian ‘catastrophe’ in Gaza, where food, water and medicine are in short supply.

‘It’s the first thing I think about when I wake up: how am I going to feed the children today,’ Amal al-Robayaa told AFP in Rafah, where she was sheltering with her husband, six children, daughter-in-law and two grandchildren at a UN school.

Oxfam France director Cecile Duflot said staff were reporting ‘the worst, the most tragic situation that they have ever seen’ in the territory.

Complicating Israel’s military push is the fate of around 240 hostages abducted on October 7.

CIA director Bill Burns and David Barnea, head of Israel’s Mossad spy agency, were in Doha for talks on pauses that would include hostage releases and more aid for Gaza, an official told AFP.

Palestinian militant group Islamic Jihad released a video Thursday claiming to show two hostages – a woman in her 70s and a 13-year-old boy – which, if verified, would suggest not all captives are held by Hamas.

Israel’s military slammed the video as ‘psychological terrorism’.

Four hostages have been freed so far, and the desperate relatives of those still held have piled pressure on Israeli and US authorities to secure the release of their loved ones.

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