Canadians across the country mark Remembrance Day
Today Canadians will remember and honour the sacrifice of men and women in uniform who gave their lives in service of the country's values and principles.
Israel says it has brought in special forces to try to wrest control of four sites from Hamas fighters in response to the militant group's unprecedented incursion into Israel.
Israel formally declared war on Sunday and gave the green light for "significant military steps" to retaliate against Hamas for the surprise attack a day earlier. The Israeli military has tried to crush fighters still in southern towns and intensified its bombardment of the Gaza Strip. More than 1,000 people have been killed and thousands wounded on both sides.
The fighting continued in several locations Monday morning.
Indonesian officials are urging an end to the fighting between Hamas and Israel and blaming the occupation of the Palestinian territories for the conflict.
The world's most populous Muslim-majority nation, Indonesia does not have formal diplomatic relations with Israel and there is no Israeli embassy in the country. It has long been a strong supporter of the Palestinians, and President Joko Widodo has condemned the airstrikes that Israel has launched in response to Hamas' unprecedented attack on Israel on Saturday.
"The occupation of the Palestinian territories by Israel, as the root of the conflict, must be resolved, according to the parameters agreed upon by the UN," said the statement from Indonesia's foreign ministry.
The ministry also said the government continues to monitor the situation of its 13 nationals residing in the Gaza area.
Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey was in Israel when Hamas attacked Israel, he announced Sunday in a video statement posted to X, formerly known as Twitter.
Booker said he was jogging in the Old City of Jerusalem on Saturday when he received a call from his chief of staff telling him to return to his hotel immediately. He sheltered in the stairwell of his hotel with other guests. Booker wrote that he is now safe. It is unclear if he has returned to the U.S..
"We who believe in peace and freedom and human rights for Palestinians, for Israelis, for all humankind must reject those who use terror as their weapon," Booker said.
The United Nations says the number of displaced Gazans has risen to more than 123,000 as a result of the fighting between the Israeli military and Hamas following the militant group's unprecedented attack on Israel.
As of late Sunday, retaliatory Israeli airstrikes had destroyed 159 housing units across Gaza and severely damaged 1,210 others, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The UN agency for Palestinian refugees said a school sheltering more than 225 people took a direct hit. It did not say where the fire came from.
Several Israeli news outlets, citing rescue service officials, said at least 700 people have been killed in Israel, including 44 soldiers. The Gaza Health Ministry said 413 people, including 78 children and 41 women, were killed in the territory. About 2,000 people have been wounded on each side. An Israeli official said security forces have killed 400 militants and captured dozens more.
One of Israel's goals as it battles Hamas fighters is to remove the militant group from power in the Gaza Strip, a military spokesperson said Monday.
Jonathan Conricus made the statement in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter. His words appeared to go further than those of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Netanyahu said Sunday that his security cabinet had made the decision to destroy Hamas' ability to govern in a way that posed a threat to Israeli civilians.
A thousand Hamas militants took part in the initial, unprecedented attack on Israel on Saturday, Conricus said.
"It is by far the worst day in Israeli history," Conricus said.
The UN Security Council held an emergency meeting behind closed doors Sunday to address the unprecedented attack by Hamas on Israel, during which the U.S. demanded that all 15 members strongly condemn the incursion. The council didn't take immediate action on the request.
U.S. deputy ambassador Robert Wood said after the meeting that "a good number of countries," but not all, denounced Saturday morning's attack. He said the support of at least one member could be counted out.
Russia's UN ambassador, Vassily Nebenzia, told The Associated Press that the U.S. was trying to say at the meeting that Russia isn't condemning the attacks, but "that's untrue."
"It was in my comments," Nebenzia said. "We condemn all the attacks on civilians."
He said Russia's message is: "It's important to stop the fighting immediately, to go to a ceasefire, and to meaningful negotiations which were stalled for decades."
China's UN ambassador, Zhang Jun, expressed a similar position as he headed into the meeting.
But Wood said the international community must strongly condemn "this unprovoked invasion and the terrorist attacks" until Hamas ends its "violent terrorist activity against the Israeli people."
Former U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said there is bipartisan unity in Congress "in support of what we need to do" to support Israel.
Speaking at an event in San Francisco on Sunday organized by the Jewish Community Relations Council Bay Area, Pelosi condemned the attacks on Israel as "acts of cowardice."
"I want you to know that in the Congress of the United States ... there is unity, bipartisan unity in support of what we need to do, whether it's militarily, whether it's diplomatically, whether it's financially to help our friends, the Israelis," Pelosi said, according to a recording of her remarks provided by her office.
Pelosi said the surprise attack from the Gaza Strip was "outside the circle of civilized human behaviour."
"This assault on these children, on these grandmas, on these families, is something that takes us to a different threshold of how we deal with this subject," she said.
New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins said he "condemns unequivocally" the attacks led by Hamas. "We are appalled by the targeting of civilians, and the taking of hostages which violate fundamental international humanitarian law principles," he said in a statement.
New Zealand, which has previously designated the military wing of Hamas a terrorist organization, urged restraint but said it recognized Israel's right to defend itself.
Pro-Palestinian students waved flags, chanted and held signs calling for an end to U.S. support for Israel during a rally held a block from the United Nations on Sunday that erupted into a skirmish with supporters of Israel.
As the students left, a small group of men waving Israeli flags crossed over metal barricades erected to keep the protesters confined to the sidewalks. The action prompted students to rush back, with one grabbing an Israeli flag and throwing it to the sidewalk and stomping on it. He was joined by other pro-Palestinian protesters.
Police stepped in to push the crowds apart and pulled the Israeli faction away.
A separate pro-Palestinian rally was held Sunday in New York City's Time Square. That protest was condemned before it began by New York Gov. Kathy Hochul.
"The people of Israel are facing violent terrorist attacks and civilian kidnappings," she said in a statement Saturday. "The planned rally is abhorrent and morally repugnant."
Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong on Monday denounced the attack by Hamas and said that her government is warning Australians not to travel to Gaza or near its border.
"We unequivocally condemn the indiscriminate rocket fire, the targeting of civilians and the taking of hostages, a particularly distressing and egregious act," Wong told reporters at Melbourne Airport.
Wong said she had spoken to Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen over the weekend and expressed Australia's solidarity and support for Israel's right to defend itself.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese remarked to the Australian Broadcasting Corp. that the Hamas attack "was obviously very well planned."
A spokesperson for British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak says Sunak has spoken with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and offered any support Israel needs.
The spokesperson said Sunday that Sunak reaffirmed that the U.K. will stand with Israel "unequivocally against these acts of terror."
The Carter Center issued a statement saying it strongly condemns the targeting of Israeli and Palestinian civilians and is calling for dialogue and action from the international community to halt hostilities in the region.
The statement says fundamental human rights of all residents in the region must be protected, land claims and security concerns addressed, and the sanctity of Muslim and Christian holy sites preserved.
The statement added that "the urgency for a robust and renewed peace process has never been greater" and that "there is not a military solution to the crisis -- only a political one."
The Atlanta-based Carter Center is a U.S.-based non-governmental organization founded in 1982 by former U.S. president Jimmy Carter and his wife, Rosalynn.
A senior Hamas official says the militant group is holding more than 100 people captive after its unprecedented assault on Israel.
Mousa Abu Marzouk made the remarks to Arabic language news outlet al-Ghad on Sunday. The figure is in addition to more than 30 people said to be held by the Palestinian Islamic Jihad militant group.
During their rampage through southern Israel, militants dragged back into Gaza dozens of captives, among them women, children and the elderly. Their precise number hadn't been clear until the two militant groups made their announcements.
The UN Security Council is holding an emergency meeting behind closed doors with the United States demanding that all 15 members strongly condemn "these heinous terrorist attacks committed by Hamas."
U.S. deputy ambassador Robert Wood told reporters as he headed into Sunday's meeting that the United States has always condemned violence against innocent civilians, whether Israeli or Palestinian. But he said "there should be no false equivalency" about what Hamas is doing and what Israel needs to do to ensure its security, territorial integrity and sovereignty.
China's UN Ambassador Zhang Jun, as he headed into the meeting, said Beijing condemns all attacks against civilians, and it's important that the Security Council, which is charged with maintaining international peace and security, "to have its voice heard."
Israel's UN Ambassador Gilad Erdan called the Hamas attack's "Israel's 9/11," referring to the 2001 terrorist attacks in the United States that killed nearly 3,000 people. He said he didn't want to imagine what is happening now to the hostages being held captive in Gaza, but "Israel will do everything to bring our sons and daughters back home."
U.S. Rep. Dan Goldman and his family were in Tel Aviv when Hamas attacked Israel on Saturday and were forced to shelter in a hotel stairwell until Sunday morning when they could safely leave the country, according to his office.
The New York Democrat's office released a short statement on Sunday saying Goldman, his wife and their three youngest children were in Israel for a Bar Mitzvah at the time of the attack.
"Congressman Goldman is grateful for the assistance of the State Department and Israeli authorities, and he hopes all Americans can come together to support Israel's right to defend herself from terrorism and war crimes," the statement reads.
The U.S. House is preparing a bipartisan resolution that it "stands with Israel" and condemns "Hamas' brutal war."
The resolution from the leaders of the House Foreign Affairs Committee is expected to be among the first items considered for voting once the House elects a new Speaker.
"Now is the time to show the world the United States firmly stands with our friend and ally Israel in our condemnation of this heinous attack by Iran-backed terrorists," said the committee chairman, Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas.
"I expect this bipartisan resolution to be one of the first, if not the first, items considered on the floor once we elect a new Speaker. And I expect it to receive overwhelming bipartisan support."
House business is currently at a standstill after the historic ouster of Speaker Kevin McCarthy.
The resolution says the House of Representatives "stands with Israel as it defends itself against the barbaric war launched by Hamas and other terrorists."
The Israeli rescue service Zaka says its paramedics removed about 260 bodies from a music festival attended by thousands that came under attack by Hamas militants.
The total figure is expected to be higher as other paramedic teams were working in the area.
Video aired on social media and by Israeli news outlets showed dozens of festivalgoers running through an open field as gunshots rang out. Many hid in nearby fruit orchards or were gunned down as they fled.
The husband of a French-Israeli woman who vanished while at a desert music festival pleaded tearfully on French television for authorities to do all they could to learn if his wife was dead or one of the captives Hamas says it is holding.
Idor Nagar's desperation to know the fate of Celine Ben David Nagar, 26, reflected the torment of Israelis whose loved ones disappeared amid the surprise attack Saturday morning by Hamas militants and the ensuing violence. Dozens of people are being held captive in the Gaza Strip.
The couple's six-month-old daughter sat on Nagar's lap during the video interview with France's BFM-TV. She is still being breast-fed, he said tearfully.
At 7:11 a.m. Saturday, shortly after the start of the Hamas attack, Nagar's wife messaged that "All is well," he recounted. At 7:15 a.m., she messaged that "Soldiers are coming."
However, he said through a translator, he now believes the soldiers were not Israeli but assailants. "Was she taken hostage? Killed?" he asked.
Nagar geo-localized the car his wife had travelled in. He went to the area near the Gaza border and found it full of bullet holes but with no signs of blood -- a reason to hope she is alive.
France has said it is looking into several reports of missing French nationals. One French woman has died, the Foreign Ministry said Sunday, without elaborating.
French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna called on Sunday for the "immediate liberation and without conditions" of Israeli captives. "The odious hostage takings by Hamas of men, women and children recalls the terrorist character of this movement," a ministry statement said.
Two Mexicans, a man and a woman, are believed to be held hostage by Hamas in Gaza, Mexico's Foreign Minister Alicia Barcena said Sunday.
She did not name them and gave no details about whether they are resident in Israel or were visiting the area.
On a message on X, formerly known as Twitter, Barcena said that the Mexican government is in contact with their relatives and the Israeli authorities.
Mexico's Foreign Affairs Ministry has condemned the attacks against the Israeli people.
The leader of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad group says militants in Gaza are holding dozens of Israeli prisoners, including more than 30 held by his group
Ziad Nakhaleh said in a televised speech Sunday night that the captives will not be released until all Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails are set free.
The Palestinian Islamic Jihad group took part in the operation that Hamas carried out Saturday in which hundreds of Israelis were killed.
"The prisoners that are being held are in the tens and I can say that they are much more than that," said Nakhaleh, who usually lives in Beirut.
He added that the Palestinian Islamic Jihad has more than 30 prisoners.
Nakhaleh added that Israel should acknowledge defeat.
The Pentagon has ordered the Ford carrier strike group to be ready to assist Israel, two US officials said. The carrier was already in the Mediterranean conducting naval exercises with Italy.
The USS Gerald R. Ford is the United States' newest and most advanced aircraft carrier.
The vessel and its approximately 5,000 sailors and deck of warplanes will be accompanied by cruisers and destroyers in a show of force that is meant to be ready to respond to anything, from possibly interdicting additional weapons from reaching Hamas and conducting surveillance.
The large deployment, which also includes a host of ships and warplanes, underscores the concern that the United States has in trying to deter the conflict from growing.
U.S. President Joe Biden spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday morning, the White House said, and told the Israeli prime minister that "additional assistance for the Israeli Defence Forces" is now on the way to Israel.
There will be more assistance in the coming days, Biden told Netanyahu, according to the White House. It was their second call since the surprise Hamas attack.
Biden and Netanyahu plan to remain in touch, and the two leaders also discussed "ongoing efforts to ensure that no enemies of Israel believe they can or should seek advantage from the current situation."
The Palestinian Ministry of Health said Sunday that 378 people had died in the violence that followed the surprise Hamas attack on Israel. The vast majority, 370, were in the Gaza Strip, where 2,200 were also wounded, the ministry said.
Eight people were killed in parts of the West Bank including two each in Ramallah, Jericho and Hebron. A child was killed in Qalqilya, and another person died in Nablus.
The number of wounded in the West Bank governorates stood at more than 60 on Sunday, the ministry said.
The UN agency for Palestinians refugees says 74,000 people in Gaza Strip have taken shelter in dozens of its schools following calls from Israel for residents of border areas to evacuate. The number of displaced increased by nearly 50,000 overnight, when about 20,000 first moved into UN-operated schools.
UNRWA said Sunday the number is likely to increase amid heavy shelling and airstrikes in different parts of the overpopulated besieged territory of two million people.
The agency confirmed that one of its schools was directly hit earlier Sunday and said it suffered severe damage but there were no casualties. Associated Press video shot Sunday showed a large crater in the middle of the Gaza school that sheltered 225 people.
"Schools and other civilian infrastructure, including those sheltering displaced families, must never come under attack," UNRWA said in a statement.
In New York, Governor Kathy Hochul condemned a rally in support of Palestinians taking place Sunday in Times Square.
"The people of Israel are facing violent terrorist attacks and civilian kidnappings. I condemn plans to rally in Times Square tomorrow in support of the perpetrators of these horrific actions. The planned rally is abhorrent and morally repugnant," Hochul said in a statement on Saturday.
Three British men were said to either be dead or missing after the Hamas attack on Israel.
Nathanel Young, 20, was killed while serving in the Israel Defence Forces, his sister, Gaby Shalev, said on Facebook. His death was later confirmed by the Israeli Embassy in London.
British photographer Danny Darlington, who lived in Berlin, and his German girlfriend, Carolin Bohl, had not been heard from after hiding out in a bunker at kibbutz Nir Oz, according to Sam Pasquesi, who is Bohl's brother-in-law.
Pasquesi said his family learned later Sunday from a man working at the kibbutz that the bodies of the two had been identified.
Jake Marlow, 26, had been providing security at a music festival near kibbutz Re'im when he called his mother, Lisa, before dawn to say rockets were flying overhead.
He texted her an hour later but that was the last she heard from him, she told Jewish News. The Israeli Embassy in London did not know if Marlowe "is taken hostage or dead or in a hospital," a spokesperson said.
The U.K. Foreign Office did not immediately return messages seeking comment on the three.
A French woman in Israel has died "in the context of the terrorist attacks," France's foreign ministry said Sunday, without providing details. French teams in Israel and Paris are trying to clarify the situations of several citizens who have not been located, the statement said.
Germany's Foreign Ministry says it has to assume that German citizens are among those kidnapped by Hamas on Saturday. It didn't say how many people that might be, but said they are all believed also to be Israeli citizens.
Ukraine's Foreign Ministry spokesperson Oleg Nikolenko said two Ukrainian women had been killed. Both had lived in Israel for a long time, he said without elaborating on the circumstances of their death.
The Belarusian Foreign Ministry said two Belarusians were injured during the shelling of the city of Ashkelon, and one of them was in serious condition.
In Atlanta and Chicago, Palestinian Americans planned to rally Sunday afternoon outside of Israeli consulates to call for an end to U.S. aid to Israel and for the release of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel. Hatem Abudayyeh, the national chair of the U.S. Palestinian Community Network and a spokesperson for the Chicago Coalition for Justice in Palestine, told The Associated Press that Palestinians "have been living under an apartheid regime."
"In recent years, we have seen the unified Palestinian resistance grow stronger," said Abudayyeh, who has family in the region. "It really should be no surprise that this is happening."
Rallies were also planned Sunday in Anaheim, California, Chicago, Dallas, New York, San Francisco and in Washington, at the White House.
Israel's minister for strategic affairs, Ron Dermer, said American citizens are among those who were taken captive but gave no details about them, nor about Americans who might have been killed.
"Unfortunately I can't. We have a lot of dual citizens in Israel. I suspect there are several, but we're still trying to sort through all of all this information after this horrific surprise attack and we'll make sure to put that information out so that the loved ones of these people who were killed and who are held hostage, they know as quickly as possible," Dermer told CNN's "State of the Union."
Germany's development minister says her country will review its aid for the Palestinian areas following the attack by Hamas on Israel.
The development ministry says Germany does not finance the Palestinian Authority directly, but a total of 250 million euros (US$265 million) is currently pledged in German aid -- half of that for bilateral projects via Germany's overseas aid agency and development bank, and the other half for the UN agency for the Palestinians, UNRWA.
Development Minister Svenja Schulze said in a statement Sunday that Germany already took great care that its aid for Palestinians "serves peace and not the terrorists."
"But these attacks on Israel are a terrible watershed, so we will review our whole commitment to the Palestinian areas," she added.
Schulze noted that Israel also has an interest in Palestinians being able to live in long-term stability, and said Germany will also co-ordinate with its international partners.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the U.S. is looking at additional requests for assistance that the Israelis have made, and there could be developments on that front later Sunday.
He told CNN President Joe Biden's "direction was to make sure that we're providing Israel everything it needs in this moment to deal with the attacks from Hamas."
Blinken, who gave interviews to multiple U.S. television news shows Sunday, also talked about how the Hamas attack could have been motivated in part to derailed an emerging diplomatic deal between Israel and Saudi Arabia.
"It's no surprise that those who are opposed to the talks, those who are opposed to Israel normalizing relations with its neighbours and the countries beyond the region are Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran. And so it's entirely possible that one of the motivations for this attack was to try to derail these efforts to advance normalization," Blinken said.
He said Washington had seen reports that Americans were missing or had been killed and "we're working overtime to verify that."
German Chancellor OIaf Scholz is stressing the need to avoid a wider "conflagration" in the Middle East after Hamas attacked Israel.
Scholz said he spoke Sunday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and assured him that Israel's security is a cornerstone of German policy. He pledged that "we will act accordingly." He said he plans to speak to Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi and will support Egypt in efforts to mediate and de-escalate.
Scholz said he also will talk by phone with the leader of the U.S., France and the U.K. to evaluate the situation.
He added: "It is clear that we condemn the actions of Hamas in the strongest terms, but above all we are doing everything so that this attack doesn't turn into a conflagration with incalculable consequences for the whole region -- and we warn everyone in this situation against fuelling terrorism."
The Israeli flag was raised Sunday at the chancellery, the German parliament's Reichstag building and the German president's office. Germany has increased protection for Jewish and Israeli facilities.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office says his Security Cabinet has declared the country at war following a deadly Hamas assault in southern Israel.
The decision, announced on Sunday, formally authorizes "the taking of significant military steps," it said it a statement.
"The war that was forced on the State of Israel in a murderous terrorist assault from the Gaza Strip began at 06:00 yesterday," it said.
It gave no further details. But Netanyahu had previous declared the country at war, and the military has promised a harsh response in Gaza.
Israeli media say at least 600 people have been killed in the surprise cross-border incursion by Hamas militants from the Gaza Strip.
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Alex Sanz reported from Atlanta
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