We begin in cyprus, where a Spanish Charity ship carrying vital supplies is preparing to set sail for gaza, along a new maritime aid corridor. The vessel operated by The Open Arms Charity has been repositioning itself in the harbour in larnaca, while another, smaller boat, towed a Barge Carrying Aid Supplies out onto the water. Over the last two days, its been loaded with around two hundred tonnes of food and medical supplies. The aid will be overseen by the world central kitchen organisation. But without a working port, its not clear yet where the ship will actually dock, or how its cargo will be distributed inside gaza. Meanwhile, talks involving mediators, aimed at establishing a pause in the fighting before the start of the muslim holy month of ramadan, have so far failed to reach a deal. Both israel and hamas are accusing the other of preventing any progress. Now, the stakes are high. The Hamas Run Health Ministry says more than 31,000 palestinians have now been killed since israe
instructing residents to evacuate as the hostilities resume. more than 170 people have been killed, say hamas, in the first 12 hours of the bombardment. we will get the response of the israeli government tonight and why the negotiations have collapsed. also tonight, charles iii addresses the cop summit in dubai wearing a tie sporting greek flags. and expelled from the us house of representatives, only the sixth member in history to be thrown out. good evening. the us secretary of state antony blinken says the seven day truce in gaza came to an end because hamas reneged on commitments it had made. the idf would resumed bombing this morning and has struck more than 200 targets in the territory. the hamas run health ministry says 170 people were killed. palestinian aid agencies say the new offensive will be disastrous for the 1.5 million people already displaced. this was a map published by the israeli military showing the evacuation zones in the gaza strip. the map, labelled in
but some died in air strikes by the saudi led coalition. if peace comes, and many yemenis have their doubts, the young will carry this war forever. 0 rla 0rla guerin, bbc news. backlash continues in israel after the passing ofjudicial reforms that demonstrators see as a power grab by prime minister benjamin netanyahu. protests on the streets have subdued, but public objections continue. major israeli newspapers printed an all black front page ad, placed by a group that s worried about the reforms. critics of the bill worry that it weakens the supreme court s ability to review state decisions, endangering democracy. on tuesday, the israel medical association called for a 24 hour strike, but a court ordered the doctors union back to work. the doctors compiled, but said they would not remain silent. and protest leaders report that growing numbers of military reservists would not report for duty. israel s military took its first known disciplinary action over the protests
nathaniel, great to have you on the show, thank you. pleased to be with you. the show, thank you. pleased to be with you, thank the show, thank you. pleased to be with you, thank you. - the women s world cup continues in austraila and new zealand. the group stages continue with japan taking on costa rica, spain play tournament debutants zambia, and olympic gold medallists canada face off against ireland. live now to our correspondent katie silver in sydney. katie, great to see you. i want to start with a big upset, the philippines besting new zealand. how are new zealand fans reacting? fans reacting? there is a lot of disappointment - fans reacting? there is a lot of disappointment as - fans reacting? there is a lot of disappointment as you i fans reacting? there is a lot| of disappointment as you can imagine. as the host country and given their win last week to norway, there has been a lot of buzz around the football ferns, the new zealand team, in the country, but the fact that
children have been killed or seriously injured during years of war in the arab world s poorest country. and 11 million children are in need of one more forms of humanitarian assistance, with millions facing risk of malnourishment. 0ur senior international correspondent 0rla guerin brings us this special report from inside yemen on the children of a forgotten war. yemen s young know nothing but war. eight years on, the guns are quieter, but a generation bears the scars. and if there s one place that shows their suffering, it s al rasheed street, a front line neighbourhood in the city of taiz. it s home to bader al harbi, who s seven. he and his brother hashim were hit by houthi shelling last october coming