With 400,000 Gaza residents already displaced, the Israeli Defense Forces called early Friday for 1.1 million people in the strip to relocate south. The United Nations said Israel had given Gazans only 24 hours to make the move, with many roads within the strip already reduced to rubble, and pleaded for Israel to rethink the order, warning of a humanitarian disaster.
Here’s what you need to know this morning:
• An Israeli embassy worker in Beijing was stabbed Friday. China’s foreign ministry said the attack happened outside embassy grounds; the victim is in stable condition.
• The former leader of Hamas called for Muslims to join a “day of rage” with global protests against Israel, sparking fears at Jewish institutions of the potential for further violence. In the U.S. and across the world, some Jewish schools closed for the day in preparation, while others have heightened security.
• The Gaza Health Ministry said that 1,537 Palestinians, 500 of them children, had been killed since Israel began counterstrikes after the Hamas attack.
• Secretary of State Antony Blinken is on a whirlwind tour of the Middle East as the U.S. aims to prevent the conflict, which has already seen military engagement from Syria and Hezbollah in Lebanon, from spreading. Today, Blinken met with King Abdullah II of Jordan before meeting with Mahmoud Abbas, the head of the Palestinian Authority; he is also scheduled to stop in Qatar, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates. On a Thursday visit to Israel, Blinken affirmed U.S. support for Israel and met with the families of Americans taken hostage by Hamas.
• Jewish Republicans issued a rare rebuke to former President Donald Trump after he bashed Israel in a Wednesday speech. While Trump was perceived as a champion of Israel while in office, one Republican Jewish Committee board member said, “He’s speaking as a candidate again and he’s giving all of us a clear reason not to support him.”