week-long pause ended. israeli strikes have already killed at least 32 people in gaza this morning. an eyewitness tells cnn, trucks with that desperately needed humanitarian aid at this moment have stopped going into gaza. israel is accusing gaza of breaking the truce by firing rockets near the gaza strip. the big question, what happens now? this is a conflict, a region, a world at an inflection point. negotiations, they are still technically ongoing, according to the foreign ministry of qatar. but whether or not they can actually reach any type of resolution, whether or not they re engaged in a fullsome manner, it s unclear at this time. stakes could not be higher. the remaining hostages is a significant question across the world. israel says 137 are still believed to be in gaza. a senior u.s. official tells me before the truce fell apart, hamas claimed it did not have any more women or children hostages to exchange that s been critical to the deal up to this point. israel
bill: these are scenes on the streets of jerusalem. watch here now. you see the gunmen get out of that white car. identified as palestinians in jerusalem getting car and opening fire at a bus stop. it wounded half a dozen and killed three. the measure of the level of tension within israel as we continue our focus on the gaza strip and elsewhere. a big day of news today. bill hemmer live in new york city. good morning. dana: good morning. i m dana perino and this is america s newsroom. one of the reasons that we have all this video now is because cameras are everywhere and you get to see what they re up against. the deadly attack in jerusalem comes as israel and hamas agreed to extend the truce for another day. it allowed more than 70 israeli hostages to return home and we re starting to learn the harrowing details of their captivity. bill: there are many. the youngest american freed by hamas, 4-year-old abigail edan. terrorists murdered her parents in front of her and
there were the strong personalities within downing street and the strong personalities that went on to dominate and the toxicity within the whole decision making process at the time. he didn t defend that, per se, but he did note some kind of defence about how the strong personalities were needed and it is not surprising they were there at the time because it is those people that i got the government to where it was in the first place. he government to where it was in the first lace. . ~ government to where it was in the first place- government to where it was in the first lace. ., ~ ., , ., first place. he talked about his own decision making first place. he talked about his own decision making process first place. he talked about his own decision making process and - first place. he talked about his own decision making process and how . first place. he talked about his own i decision making process and how that was influenced by people outside government and he changed
yes, yes. happy monday, everybody. you look fantastic. lyin!g. so let s talk about derek chauvin. you remember that minneapoli s c cop convicted for killing george floyd? chauvin was just stabbedtee . in federal prison, likely by some inmate wantingme to gain street cred with his cell block or msnbc. now, i m not easy to shock. you re talking to a guy, after all, who once saw cavuto without makeup. but what an eerie coincidence that chauvin gets stabbed just as aw docu new documentary examines his arrest and prosecutionme comes out and the documentary comes out and the documentary and if they re accurate, could expose a pretty big lie. a liexbig e that cost lives,ones including black ones and billions of dollars in damages, and is at the heart of the breakdown of law and order. and the reason it s a why drugstoreason w deodorant is locked up, but criminals are as free as a s of coke in the west wing. so let s do a quick recap of the facts in case you were in a coma or you r
giving. yes, no doubt about that. that was inevitable. i giving. yes, no doubt about that. that was inevitable. i want - giving. yes, no doubt about that. that was inevitable. i want to - giving. yes, no doubt about that. that was inevitable. i want to be | that was inevitable. i want to be clear about this. principal decision makers in government, prime minister, the then secretary of state for health, duchy of lancaster, for example, nor in my view did that apply to the majority of political leaders, but there were some who chose their sites they wanted to hear, put it that way, and there were optical commentators whose view of the site started with what was my political position and then derive from that. in terms of decision makers in the decisions taken during covid in the uk, my view is, they were not intending to cherry pick, they may have done so by accident, it was not by design. you obviously spent a great deal of time in you obviously spent a great deal of time