Israel’s military has released a video of what it claims is a 55-metre tunnel used by Hamas beneath Gaza’s largest hospital.
The footage, purportedly filmed at al Shifa, begins with images of what is described as an “operational tunnel shaft”, which looks like a circular hole in the ground.
The shaft is said to drop 10m, negotiated using a three-metre ladder and a spiral staircase for the other seven metres, the IDF said.
At the bottom is a tunnel in two sections of five metres and 50m, the IDF added.
The shaft was uncovered after a controlled explosion was carried out on a vehicle the IDF said belonged to Hamas.
“The tunnel entrance contains various defence mechanisms, such as a blast-proof door and a firing hole, in an attempt by Hamas to block Israeli forces from entering,” the IDF said on X, formerly known as Twitter.
“For weeks we’ve been telling the world about Hamas’s cynical use of the residents of Gaza and patients of Shifa Hospital as human shields. Here is more proof.”
There are blurry images of the “blast door” and its firing hole.
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The tunnel itself has flat sides and a concave roof.
The video was filmed on Friday 17 November, according to a date stamp on the footage, and the tunnel has been investigated over the “last few days”, said IDF spokesman Daniel Hagari.
He added: “The truth is clear. Hamas wages war from hospitals, wages terror from hospitals.”
Sky News military analyst Sean Bell said robots had been used to access the tunnel, because it was a potentially dangerous environment for troops.
A tunnel is “not coherent with any form of normal hospital infrastructure”, Bell said, adding that it appeared to be evidence that Hamas had been operating underground.
The IDF has said Hamas has a command centre beneath the hospital – a claim denied by Hamas and by hospital staff.
Richard Brennan, regional emergency director with the World Health Organisation, said the WHO was “very clear that any use of a medical facility for military purposes is a violation of international humanitarian law”.
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0:45
Babies evacuated from al-Shifa arrive in Rafah
Earlier, the WHO said al Shifa hospital – previously the largest, most advanced and best-equipped hospital in Gaza – had essentially stopped functioning as a medical facility.
A team of UN and WHO experts conducted a “high-risk operation” on Saturday to get inside the hospital, despite heavy fighting reported to be ongoing nearby and a mass exodus of patients, doctors and other displaced people sheltering there.
A WHO spokesperson said: “Due to time limits associated with the security situation, the team was able to spend only one hour inside the hospital, which they described as a ‘death zone’ and the situation as ‘desperate’.
“Signs of shelling and gunfire were evident. The team saw a mass grave at the entrance of the hospital and were told more than 80 people were buried there.”
They said the facility had effectively stopped functioning as a hospital.
Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally party will get the biggest vote share in the first round of France’s parliamentary elections, according to exit polls.
As polls closed on the first round of voting on Sunday, National Rally had a strong lead at 33%, followed by the left-wing New Popular Front coalition on 28.5%.
President Emmanuel Macron’s Renaissance party are polling third with an estimated 22%.
Addressing supporters in Henin-Beaumont, northern France, Ms Le Pen said: “For the moment nothing is won, and the second round will determine the outcome.”
She warned voters to “be careful” in the coming days, and urged them to “mobilise” ahead of the second round on 7 July.
The result is almost double the 18% National Rally achieved in the 2022 elections and puts them in good stead to become the largest party in France’s lower house.
France has a semi-presidential system – these elections are for the 577 seats in the National Assembly.
Mr Macron is the president and was elected in a separate presidential vote.
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The system means there is both a president and prime minister – who have separate powers.
Mr Macron called an early parliamentary election after his Renaissance party was decimated by Ms Le Pen’s anti-immigration one in the European elections.
Her 29-year-old protégé and party leader Jordan Bardella has enjoyed a spike in popularity, particularly among younger voters on TikTok, amid increasing discontent with Mr Macron.
He told supporters in Paris on Sunday evening: “Three weeks after the European elections the French people have given a verdict and they have confirmed their clear hopes for change.
“This is giving us hope throughout the country.”
He warned of the “dangers” of the second-place left-wing coalition and said its leader Jean-Luc Melenchon could put France in “existential peril”.
Mr Bardella therefore urged his supporters to rally ahead of the next vote and said “victory is possible” on 7 July.
Although the two-round vote means the final result may not be totally clear until next week, if National Rally ends up as the largest party, Mr Macron would be compelled to make him prime minister.
The French president and prime minister have been from different political parties only three times in its history.
A new political reality has been revealed in France, it has a new face and a new name – 28-year-old Jordan Bardella.
Frontman of the hard-right, he has helped propel National Rally to a clear-cut lead in the first round of parliamentary elections.
Bardella, the party’s choice for prime minister, stands on the brink of power if National Rally secures a majority in the second round of voting.
“I want to tell our supporters to mobilise so that they carry out a final effort next Sunday – next Sunday’s vote will be one of the most important in the history of modern France,” he said.
With roots in the collaborationist regime of Vichy France, National Rally has been re-engineered by Marine Le Pen as she has worked to make it electable – and acceptable – to the public.
A key part of that scheme rests with Le Pen’s fresh-faced prodigy. Bardella told the media that a National Rally government would respect the country’s traditional republican values.
“I will always be the guarantor of your rights and freedoms and our republican values which unite us all. I promise you freedom, equality and fraternity,” he said.
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They were challenged from the left by the New Popular Front, a hastily organised alliance of socialists, communists, greens and hard-left grouping France Unbowed.
Early results suggest they have finished a strong second, around 28% of the vote.
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There is no doubt about losers here. Emmanuel Macron‘s centrist coalition, Ensemble, performed poorly, gaining just 21% of the vote.
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2:51
Extreme right is at ‘gates of power’
Now a case of damage control
When he called this snap election, Macron was taking a gamble the drubbing his alliance received in recent European elections would not be repeated. He was wrong.
Macron’s prime minister, Gabriel Attal, said it’s now a case of damage control: “Our goal is clear, we must stop the right from gaining an absolute majority in the first round.”
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What happens next? Well, we will see a feverish week of campaigning as those candidates who have entered the final round seek to cement their advantage.
In constituencies where three people advance into the second round, parties will engage in frantic horse-trading to give their candidate the advantage.
Protesters and police clash
The country’s new political reality is also a moment of instability – both politically and on the streets.
After the results were announced, protesters erected barricades and broke windows in cities around the country.
Police responded with tear gas and baton charges.
The hard-right now have the national assembly within their grasp – but the implications of their success are unpredictable.
The search for Jay Slater in an area of Tenerife has been called off, police have said, nearly two weeks after his disappearance.
The British teenager, from Oswaldtwistle, near Blackburn in Lancashire, has been missing in Tenerife since 17 June, when he vanished the morning after a rave.
The Civil Guard called for volunteers to join a new search in the Masca area – near his last-known location – on Saturday.
It has now confirmed to Sky News that the search has ended. Police are keeping the investigation open and could yet open up searches in the south of the island, but have not provided an update.
A handful of volunteers turned up to help rescue teams on Saturday, forming a total group of 30 to 40 people scouring a huge area of rugged and hilly terrain.
Mr Slater, 19, had been on holiday with friends on the Spanish island and was last pictured at Papayago, a nightclub hosting the end of the NRG festival, late on 16 June.
After the event ended, he got in a car travelling to a small Airbnb in Masca with two men, who police said on Saturday are “not relevant” to the case.
His last known location was the Rural de Teno Park in the north of the island – which is about an 11-hour walk from his accommodation.
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0:49
‘I just want him back’
A local cafe owner told Sky News he tried to catch a bus back to Los Cristianos, where he was staying.
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Ofelia Medina Hernandez said she spoke to the teenager at 8am on 17 June, telling him a bus was due at 10am – but he set off walking and she said she later drove past him “walking fast”.
The apprentice bricklayer called a friend holidaying with him at around 8.30am on 17 June and said he was going to walk back after missing the bus.
He also told his friend he was lost and in need of water, with only 1% charge on his phone.
On Friday, Mr Slater’s friend Brad Hargreaves told ITV’s This Morning he had been on a video call with him before his disappearance when he heard him go off the road.
He said he could see his friend’s feet “sliding” down the hill and hear he was walking on gravel.
Meanwhile, Mr Slater’s family shared a blurry image of what they believe could be the missing teenager captured on CCTV in a nearby town 10 hours after he was first reported missing.
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