00:00 Gaza's health ministry blames Israel's ban on fuel and medical supplies for the deaths of at least 34 hospital patients.
00:09 UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak replaces Home Secretary Suella Braverman with James Cleverley,
00:15 and former Premier David Cameron makes a surprise return as Foreign Secretary.
00:20 The Icelandic town of Grindavik braces for a volcanic eruption,
00:24 after evacuated residents were allowed back to collect their belongings.
00:30 Five weeks after Israel imposed a total blockade,
00:36 the Gaza Health Ministry says the territory's largest hospital can no longer operate.
00:42 It doesn't have the fuel, electricity or medical supplies it needs to treat the influx of people injured in the Israel-Hamas conflict.
00:51 The health ministry says seven premature babies and 27 intensive care patients have died at Al-Shifa Hospital in the past three days.
01:01 The entire fuel supply system has been exhausted.
01:08 If the fuel is not supplied immediately,
01:16 we will be in the throes of death for all the residents,
01:23 and the total number of people in Gaza is 2.3 million.
01:32 Israel's military is urging civilians still in northern Gaza to move south,
01:39 as its offensive against Hamas militants and commanders continues.
01:43 It's set a seven-hour deadline for them to evacuate.
01:47 Shells and bullets are making it difficult to leave without getting caught in the crossfire.
01:52 The Palestine Red Crescent Society says it's given up on trying to move patients from Khan Yunis to the Al-Quds Hospital.
02:00 Meanwhile, the United Nations is holding a day of mourning for the 101 colleagues killed in Gaza since October 7.
02:08 They paused for a minute's silence.
02:11 Hamas says more than 11,000 Palestinians have been killed.
02:15 Israel says its death toll stands at 1,200.
02:19 A political earthquake in the UK is Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sacks his home secretary, Suella Braverman,
02:29 and brings former Prime Minister David Cameron back as foreign secretary.
02:36 Sunak fired the divisive hardliner after a series of controversies.
02:41 The latest was an unsanctioned newspaper article in which she suggested police had been more lenient
02:46 on pro-Palestinian demonstrators than on right-wing counter-protesters.
02:50 As part of a wider reshuffle, Braverman will be replaced by James Cleverley, who leaves his job as foreign secretary.
03:00 Braverman's departure is likely to anger the right-wing within the Conservative Party and reignite a simmering faction battle.
03:07 No longer a member of Parliament, Cameron will have to be appointed to the House of Lords in order to take up his position.
03:15 He's considered a moderate who campaigned against Brexit during the 2016 referendum when he was Prime Minister.
03:22 [Spanish]
03:23 [Spanish]
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03:33 A decisive week has begun here in the Congress of Deputies so that Spain can finally have a government
03:40 after four months of elections and after the failure of the winner's investment, the popular Alberto Núñez Feijó.
03:45 Pedro Sánchez's Socialist Party comes here with the absolute majority, guaranteed after reaching an agreement with the Catalan independentist parties.
03:54 As a condition, a controversial amnesty law for those involved in the process will be passed, which the Socialist Party and its partners will register in the next few hours in Congress.
04:04 The deputies will finally be able to read the small letter of the law that will allow the return of Carles Puigdemont to Spain without being judged
04:12 and that has unleashed a wave of protests in the streets.
04:15 It is expected that in the middle of the week the investiture plenary will be held, which will re-elect Pedro Sánchez as president of the government.
04:24 A plenary surrounded by great security measures in the face of possible new protests.
04:30 1,500 police officers will shield the parliament to avoid altercations.
04:34 In Madrid, Jaime Velázquez, Euronews.
04:44 Ukraine appears to be intensifying attacks against Russian military logistics and other high-profile assets in rear areas in occupied Ukraine and in Russia.
04:55 The Ukrainian main military intelligence directorate reported that Ukrainian partisans attacked Russian military headquarters in occupied Melitopol in the region of Zaporizhia on the 11th of November,
05:09 killing at least three Russian Federal Security Service and Roskvartia officers.
05:14 A day earlier, the military intelligence directorate said an attack by Ukrainian surface drones sank two Russian high-speed landing crafts off the western coast of occupied Crimea.
05:26 On the 8th of November, Ukrainian partisans attacked a Moscow-installed proxy official in the Russia-occupied so-called Luhansk People's Republic.
05:36 They recently also struck a Russian military base in occupied Skadovsk, this is the region of Kherson, and Black Sea Fleet assets in Crimea.
05:46 The Institute for the Study of War says Ukrainian forces have conducted a strike campaign specifically targeting occupied Crimea since summer 2023.
06:01 Ukrainian troops are being put through their paces at a French military base before being sent to the front line.
06:07 The soldiers are there for an intensive four-week training course aimed at getting them ready for a second winter, defending their country from the Russian invasion.
06:29 France is on course to train 7,000 Ukrainian soldiers this year, as part of a EU military assistance mission that launched a year ago this week.
06:52 With a frozen front line in the war, Ukraine is looking to develop its tactics and maneuvering schemes in order to bust through Russian defenses.
07:01 The key point for us is to teach our troops how to maneuver, to get in position, to approach the objective in order to avoid fratricidal fire.
07:11 This is really the key point, especially on a complex terrain like here, with a network of trenches that go in several directions.
07:18 This was rather successful this morning.
07:21 Meanwhile, President Zelensky has warned Ukrainians to ready themselves for a potential Russian assault on the nation's energy infrastructure.
07:30 Last year, persistent attacks on the nation's power grid have resulted in hundreds of thousands being deprived of heating or electricity during the coldest month of the year.
07:45 Poland's President Andrzej Duda tells the nation he's given Mateusz Morawiecki of his own right-wing Law and Justice Party the mission to form the government.
07:54 But there's a hung parliament, with no individual party winning a majority of seats.
07:59 And as parliament met for the first time, more liberal parties that had been in opposition before October's general election announced they'd formed a majority coalition.
08:09 We are ready to sign a traditional agreement that will be a means of communication and recommendation for us.
08:22 It concerns both entrepreneurs and workers. It concerns education and health care. It concerns villages, agriculture and large metropolises. It concerns women's rights, it concerns the family's ideas.
08:37 The coalition pledges a return to more liberal policies, protecting values such as individual freedoms, a separation of government and church, but above all restoring the rule of law.
08:47 We must start by rebuilding our relations with the EU institutions, understood as the moment of launching the EU funds, which are now blocked for Poland.
08:59 This is related to the rules of law and order in Poland. The European Commission wants to see changes in the law that affect the independence of Polish judges and courts.
09:13 However, Razem, which is part of the coalition, decided not to sign the agreement, although it declares its full support for the government emerging from the opposition factions.
09:23 Unfortunately, during the negotiations, we have not been able to obtain guarantees for the standard programs for us, such as housing, health care, or even employment rights.
09:41 The Law and Justice Party will most likely not be able to form a majority in the new parliament. However, due to the procedural reasons, Poland will have to wait a few more weeks for the transfer of power to the more liberal coalition.
09:54 Magdalena Chodovnik for Euronews from Warsaw.
10:00 From midnight to early afternoon on Monday, more than 590 earthquakes were recorded in Iceland. The country is preparing for a major volcanic eruption, which could occur "within hours or days".
10:11 During the weekend, the Icelandic road authority closed all roads in and out of the harbour town of Grídovik and evacuated its population.
10:19 Of course, this is not a great situation, but I can say that I am as calm as possible. It's just that I don't know what will happen next. And that's probably the worst.
10:33 Last year we bought a house. We put it up for sale, we sold the apartment in Poland. We wanted to start a new life here. It turned out as it turned out. But we have no information, we have a high credit. We don't know if the banks will help us somehow. And we would like to get this information from the insurance company.
10:51 On Monday, residents were allowed back for five minutes to collect essential belongings. Experts from the South Iceland Volcanology and Natural Hazards Group suspect that magma is already seeping underneath the town and fear it will be destroyed by the volcanic eruption.
11:06 A celebratory light show graced the newest towers of Barcelona's Sagrada Familia Basilica on Sunday, a decade away from completion.
11:17 The final two of the four towers of the Evangelist, 135 metres high and dedicated to Matthew and John, were finished in September. The two other dedicated to Luke and Mark were completed last year.
11:29 The final tower, designed by famous Catalan architect Antony Gaudí, will be finished in 2026, moving closer to completion 141 years after construction started.
11:41 (whooshing)
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