42 Palestinians killed in Gaza, West Bank

Netanyahu fires defence minister over 'crisis of trust'

A displaced Palestinian child, fleeing Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip, walks on a road in Gaza City. pHOTO: AFP

CAIRO/JERUSALEM:

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu fired Defence Minister Yoav Gallant on Tuesday citing a "crisis of trust" and replaced him with Israel Katz, previously the foreign minister.

Earlier on Tuesday, Israeli forces issued new evacuation orders in the north of the Gaza Strip and carried out military strikes which Palestinian medics and media said had killed at least 35 people since Monday night.

The prime minister named Gideon Saar as the new foreign minister, Netanyahu's office said in a statement. Gallant and Netanyahu, both in the right-wing Likud party, have clashed for months over the objectives of Israel's 13-month-old war in Gaza against Hamas.

Netanyahu said Gallant has made statements that "contradict the decisions of the government and the decisions of the cabinet". In response, Gallant said: "The security of the state of Israel always was and will always remain my life's mission."

Reports appeared in September that Netanyahu, under pressure from far-right coalition partners, was considering firing Gallant. France's foreign minister will travel to Israel and the Palestinian territories on Wednesday, a day after US elections, to press Israel to engage diplomatically to end the conflicts in Gaza and Lebanon.

In northern Gaza, an airstrike late on Monday damaged two houses in the town of Beit Lahiya, killing at least 20 people, the Palestinian official news agency WAFA and Hamas media said. Ten were killed in central areas of the Palestinian enclave - six in separate airstrikes on Gaza City and the town of Deir Al-Balah, and four in the town of Al-Zawayda around midnight on Monday, medics and health officials said.

At least five others were killed in an Israeli strike on a house in Jabalia north of Gaza City, medics said later on Tuesday.

Later on Tuesday, Israeli planes dropped leaflets over Beit Lahiya ordering residents who have not yet left their homes and shelters housing displaced families to quit the town completely. "To all those who remained at homes and shelters, you are risking your lives. For your safety you have to head south," said the leaflet, which was written in Arabic.

Announcing plans for a rare transfer of patients out of Gaza, a World Health Organization official said more than 100 people would be evacuated from Gaza on Wednesday, including children suffering from trauma injuries and chronic diseases. In the Israeli-occupied West Bank, the Palestinian health ministry said at least seven people were killed on Tuesday during an Israeli military raid and airstrikes.

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