-
Twenty wickets fall on day one as Australia gain edge in 4th Ashes Test
-
'No winner': Kosovo snap poll unlikely to end damaging deadlock
-
Culture being strangled by Kosovo's political crisis
-
Main contenders in Kosovo's snap election
-
Australia all out for 152 as England take charge of 4th Ashes Test
-
Boys recount 'torment' at hands of armed rebels in DR Congo
-
Inside Chernobyl, Ukraine scrambles to repair radiation shield
-
Bondi victims honoured as Sydney-Hobart race sets sail
-
North Korea's Kim orders factories to make more missiles in 2026
-
Palladino's Atalanta on the up as Serie A leaders Inter visit
-
Hooked on the claw: how crane games conquered Japan's arcades
-
Shanghai's elderly waltz back to the past at lunchtime dance halls
-
Japan govt approves record 122 trillion yen budget
-
US launches Christmas Day strikes on IS targets in Nigeria
-
Australia reeling on 72-4 at lunch as England strike in 4th Ashes Test
-
Too hot to handle? Searing heat looming over 2026 World Cup
-
Packers clinch NFL playoff spot as Lions lose to Vikings
-
Guinea's presidential candidates hold final rallies before Sunday's vote
-
BondwithPet Expands B2B Offering with Custom Pet Memorial Product
-
Best Crypto IRA Companies (Rankings Released)
-
Eon Prime Intelligent Alliance Office Unveils New Brand Identity and Completes Website Upgrade
-
Villa face Chelsea test as Premier League title race heats up
-
Spurs extend domination of NBA-best Thunder
-
Malaysia's Najib to face verdict in mega 1MDB graft trial
-
King Charles calls for 'reconciliation' in Christmas speech
-
Brazil's jailed ex-president Bolsonaro undergoes 'successful' surgery
-
UK tech campaigner sues Trump administration over US sanctions
-
New Anglican leader says immigration debate dividing UK
-
Russia says made 'proposal' to France over jailed researcher
-
Bangladesh PM hopeful Rahman returns from exile ahead of polls
-
Police suspect suicide bomber behind Nigeria's deadly mosque blast
-
AFCON organisers allowing fans in for free to fill empty stands: source
-
Mali coach Saintfiet hits out at European clubs, FIFA over AFCON changes
-
Last Christians gather in ruins of Turkey's quake-hit Antakya
-
Pope Leo condemns 'open wounds' of war in first Christmas homily
-
Mogadishu votes in first local elections in decades under tight security
-
'Starting anew': Indonesians in disaster-struck Sumatra hold Christmas mass
-
Cambodian PM's wife attends funerals of soldiers killed in Thai border clashes
-
Prime minister hopeful Tarique Rahman arrives in Bangladesh: party
-
Pacific archipelago Palau agrees to take migrants from US
-
Pope Leo expected to call for peace during first Christmas blessing
-
Australia opts for all-pace attack in fourth Ashes Test
-
'We hold onto one another and keep fighting,' says wife of jailed Istanbul mayor
-
North Korea's Kim visits nuclear subs as Putin hails 'invincible' bond
-
Trump takes Christmas Eve shot at 'radical left scum'
-
3 Factors That Affect the Cost of Dentures in San Antonio, TX
-
Leo XIV celebrates first Christmas as pope
-
Diallo and Mahrez strike at AFCON as Ivory Coast, Algeria win
-
'At your service!' Nasry Asfura becomes Honduran president-elect
-
Trump-backed Nasry Asfura declared winner of Honduras presidency
Israel recovers hostage bodies from Gaza tunnel as West Bank violence rages
Israel announced Sunday its troops had found six dead hostages in a Gaza tunnel, while Israeli police said a "shooting attack" in the occupied West Bank killed three officers.
In the besieged Gaza Strip, "humanitarian pauses" in the nearly 11-month war between Israel and Hamas were set to take hold on Sunday to facilitate a massive polio vaccination drive which a health official told AFP had begun.
The deadly shooting near the city of Hebron added to surging violence in the West Bank, which is separated from Gaza by Israeli territory and where Israeli forces pressed on with a large-scale military operation that sparked international concern.
A military statement said the remains of six hostages were recovered Saturday "from an underground tunnel in the Rafah area" in southern Gaza and formally identified in Israel.
The were named as Carmel Gat, who was taken from a kibbutz community near the Gaza border, and Hersh Goldberg-Polin, Eden Yerushalmi, Almog Sarusi, Ori Danino and Alexander Lobanov -- a dual Russian-Israeli national -- who were seized by Palestinian militants from the site of a rave party.
Military spokesman Daniel Hagari said all six "were abducted alive on the morning of October 7" and "brutally murdered by Hamas terrorists shortly before we reached them".
US President Joe Biden, whose administration has been involved in mediation efforts to secure a Gaza truce and hostage release deal, said he was "still optimistic" that a deal can be reached.
"It's time this war ended", Biden told reporters, and in a statement said he was "devastated and outraged" by the deaths of the six hostages, including US-Israeli Goldberg-Polin.
The six were among 251 hostages seized during Hamas's October 7 attack that triggered the ongoing war, 97 of whom remain captive in Gaza including 33 the Israeli army says are dead. Scores were released during a negotiated one-week truce in November.
- 'Delays and excuses' -
Campaign group the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said a negotiated "deal for the return of the hostages" was urgently needed.
"Were it not for the delays, sabotage and excuses" in months of mediation efforts, the six hostages "would likely still be alive".
Critics in Israel have accused Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of prolonging the war for political gain.
Senior Hamas official Izzat Rishq, without elaborating on the circumstances of the six hostages' death, blamed the Israeli "occupation... which continues its genocidal war" and "runs away from a ceasefire deal".
Netanyahu said Hamas leaders were the ones "who kill hostages and do not want an agreement", vowing to "settle the score" with them.
US Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic candidate in upcoming elections to replace Biden, said Goldberg-Polin -- seen alive in a video released by his captors in April -- "was murdered by Hamas".
Hamas's October 7 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,205 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures.
Israel's offensive has killed at least 40,691 people in Gaza, according to the Hamas-run territory's health ministry. The UN rights office says most of the dead are women and children.
The fighting has devastated Gaza, repeatedly displaced most of its 2.4 million people and triggered a humanitarian crisis. Water, sanitation and medical facilities have been ravaged, contributing to the spread of preventable disease.
Following the first confirmed polio case in 25 years, a Gaza health official said vaccinations began Saturday ahead of a wider campaign.
The World Health Organization has said Israel agreed to a series of three-day "humanitarian pauses" to facilitate the vaccination drive.
On Sunday, the campaign was formally launched at three health centres in central Gaza with Palestinians arriving with their children for a dose of the vaccine, said Yasser Shaabane, director of Al-Awda hospital.
"We hope this vaccination campaign for children will be calm," said Shaabane, noting there were "a lot of drones flying over" the area.
The civil defence agency said an Israeli air strike killed two people in Gaza City, further north, where an AFP correspondent reported artillery shelling early Sunday.
- West Bank violence -
As fighting rages on in Gaza, Israeli forces and Palestinian militants were battling in the West Bank, five days into major coordinated Israeli raids which the military has described as "counter-terrorism" operations.
A "shooting attack" near Tarqumiya checkpoint in the Hebron area in the southern West Bank killed three people on Sunday, said Israel's emergency medical service. The police force later said they were all officers.
In the northern West Bank, an AFP photographer saw Israeli bulldozers in Jenin's city centre, a day after a local official said soldiers had destroyed most of the streets while power and water had been cut off in the adjacent Jenin refugee camp.
Israel's military said a 20-year-old soldier was killed Saturday.
Britain, France and Spain have all expressed concerns about Israel's West Bank operation.
Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi said that "Israel alone is responsible for the dangerous escalation", urging an end to "its bloody aggression on the occupied West Bank".
The United Nations said Wednesday that at least 637 Palestinians had been killed in the territory by Israeli troops or settlers since the Gaza war began.
Twenty-three Israelis, including soldiers, have been killed in Palestinian attacks or during army operations over the same period, according to Israeli official figures.
burs-ami/hkb
O.Karlsson--AMWN