Iran has fired missiles into Israel in response to the Israeli military’s campaign against Tehran’s ally Hezbollah.
Explosions could be heard in Jerusalem and the Jordan River valley after Israelis sought shelter in bomb shelters as scores of missiles rained down.
Sky News has correspondents reporting from Israel and the Lebanese capital Beirut during this significant escalation in the conflict.
Here’s what they witnessed.
People trying to ‘take some cover’
“We are talking probably in excess of 50, 60, 70 missiles,” said Middle East correspondent Alistair Bunkall as he gazed up at the sky from Tel Aviv.
He explained that there was a “huge amount of activity in the air above us” and it was hard to distinguish between an incoming missile and one launched by Israel to intercept.
Bunkall said the Iranian missiles were heading towards central Tel Aviv.
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3:01
‘Iran has sophisticated weapons’
Bunkall says tonight’s strikes appears to be part of a “far larger attack than April” – when Iran fired weapons at Israel after the Israeli military attacked the Iranian embassy in Syria.
Iran appears to have fired ballistic missiles this time, which take 10 to 12 minutes to reach Israel.
Back in April it was drones – much slower and easier to intercept.
“A lot of people” are out in the open air at the moment, Bunkall said tonight.
Some decided to try to continue their journeys home, he added, while others have tried to “get to the side of the road and take some cover, whether that’s under a bridge or in a lay-by somewhere”.
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Rocket lands on Israeli motorway
‘We saw them intercept’
Our security and defence editor Deborah Haynes described the moment she had to take cover from missiles being launched at the Israel-Lebanon border.
She said: “It was actually a rocket that was fired in our direction, because we’re very close to the Lebanese border – and you’ve obviously got simultaneously this Israeli ground offensive that is taking place.
“We’ve been hearing gunfire from one direction – missile fire from the other direction. We first realised that the attack was actually under way was when we saw these streaks of orange high up in the sky above us.
“Clearly the missiles we saw were intended to go much deeper into Israel.
“We then also witnessed intercepts taking place where you could see the glow of an orange ball moving up to impact the missile coming in the other direction.”
Image: Deborah Haynes near the Israeli border with Lebanon
She says there was then an “explosion” when it eventually hit.
“But we did also see some missiles getting through and continuing their route further, deeper into Israel where you would imagine air defences would be deployed.”
“It’s an incredibly difficult operation to try to intercept ballistic missiles anyway, let alone some 200 of them,” she added.
‘An incredibly dangerous moment’
Sirens were going off in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem as our lead world presenter Yalda Hakim reported from Beirut in Lebanon.
She said “thuds and bangs were blaring across” Israel.
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0:59
Missiles rain down on Jerusalem
Hakim added that she had been speaking to some Israeli people who told her they had been “taking shelter in bunkers at the moment, that they are hearing some interceptions, but they are also unclear about what projectiles have managed to get through”.
“This is an incredibly dangerous moment for Israel, for this region,” she said. “An incredibly tense, frightening moment for the citizens of Israel as we wait and see what damage has actually been done.”
US Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost has been chosen as the new pope.
Senior cardinal Dominique Mamberti came out onto St Peter’s balcony to announce the new pope to cheering crowds as thousands of people gathered in the square below, saying the famous Latin words: “Habemus Papam”, meaning “we have a pope”.
The 69-year-old will take the name Leo XIV – and greeted thousands of faithful from the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica as the new head of the Catholic Church.
Speaking in Italian, the pontiff says Pope Francis was always “courageous and blessed Rome”.
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Moment new pope emerges on balcony
“The pope that blessed Rome gave his blessing to the whole world on that Easter morning,” he says.
“Together we must try to find out how to be a church that builds bridges, establishes dialogue and is open to receives everybody.
“Let us follow up that blessing. God loves us and God loves all of you.
“Sin will not prevail, we are all in the hands of God.”
Image: Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost poses after being elevated to the rank of cardinal at the Vatican, September 30, 2023 REUTERS/Yara Nardi
The pope went on to speak in Spanish, nodding to his time as a missionary, and said: “I would particularly like to say hello to my compatriots from Peru.
“It was a great pleasure for me to work in Peru.”
The new pontiff was chosen on the second day of the conclave after white smoke emerged from the Sistine Chapel at just after 5pm (UK time) on Thursday.
Some 133 cardinals gathered in Rome before being led into the Sistine Chapel on 7 May to start the conclave – the secretive process to decide the new pontiff.
They handed over their phones before entering the building, which had been swept for hidden cameras, recording equipment, and bugs.
The windows were also covered to keep the outside world out and to stop drones from spying.
Each cardinal swore an oath of secrecy. They did not emerge from the Vatican until the new pope was chosen.
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Conclave: Behind the scenes
To be elected, the new pontiff had to win a two-thirds majority (89 votes). Afterwards, he was asked whether he accepted the papacy and by which name he wished to be known.
When the pope was chosen, the ballots were burned in a stove with an additive to produce white smoke that billowed from a chimney to alert onlookers that the decision had been made.
Previously, the ballots were burned with an additive to produce black smoke, indicating that the pope had not yet been chosen.
The election comes after Pope Francis died on 21 April at the age of 88 from a stroke and heart failure.
More than 250,000 people gathered at the Vatican for his funeral on 27 April.
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He was made a cardinal by Pope Francis in 2023 and appointed head of the dicastery for bishops, a powerful position responsible for selecting new bishops.
As cardinal, he said little on key issues of the church, but some of his positions are known.
Image: Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost in September 2023. Pic: Reuters
He is reportedly very close to Francis’s vision regarding the environment, outreach to the poor and migrants. He said in 2024 “the bishop is not supposed to be a little prince sitting in his kingdom”.
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He also supported Pope Francis’s stance on allowing divorced and remarried Catholics to receive Holy Communion. However, he only showed mild support for Francis allowing priests to bless same-sex couples.
Pope Leo has years of experience in leadership roles within the church.
He was twice elected to the top position of the Augustinian religious order and Francis clearly had an eye on his progress – moving him from the Augustinian leadership back to Peru in 2014, where he served as administrator and later archbishop of Chiclayo.
He acquired Peruvian citizenship in 2015 and remained in that role until 2023, when Francis brought him to Rome.
While there has long been a taboo against an American pope – given the geopolitical power the US already wields – Leo was being promoted as a “compromise candidate” ahead of the conclave. The amount of time he has spent in Peru also allows him to be seen as a more universal candidate rather than American.
The world learned a new pope had been chosen at around 6.08pm local time (5.08pm UK time) on Thursday as white smoke suddenly emerged from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel.
India’s airstrikes on Pakistani-controlled Kashmir after last month’s deadly militant attack on the Indian-administered side of the disputed region have raised fears of a dangerous escalation in the conflict.
It is not yet known what specific weapons were used in Wednesday’s early morning strikes which Delhi said targeted “terrorist camps”, though Islamabad said civilian infrastructure, including mosques, was hit.
However, India is reported to have deployed Rafale jets equipped with SCALP air-to-ground cruise missiles.
The nuclear-armed neighbours have been boosting their military capabilities since they clashed in a series of border skirmishes in 2019.
As of 2024, India has 36 Rafale jets, eight two-seat variants and 28 single-seat variants, according to the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS).
The aircraft were acquired under a 2016 inter-governmental agreement between India and France, which included a weapons package. This package featured MICA and SCALP missiles.
Between 2020 and 2024, around a third of India’s arms imports came from France, said the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).
Pakistan claimed to have shot down five Indian aircraft, including three Rafale jets, on Wednesday following the Indian attack.
If this was the case, the Pakistani military would have used surface-to-air missiles (SAMs). According to IISS, Pakistan has more than 200 SAMs. Although, for context, India has well over 800 across their armed forces.
How do India and Pakistan rank?
India’s overall military capability significantly exceeds that of Pakistan.
It ranks fourth in the world compared to Pakistan’s 12th place, according to Global Firepower’s index, which considers a range of factors to assess military strength.
In terms of personnel, India has 1,237,000 active personnel in its army, 75,000 in the navy and 149,900 air force.
Pakistan has fewer than half that with 560,000 active personnel in the army, 30,000 in the navy and 70,000 in the air force.
Image: Soldiers from the Indian army (left) and Pakistani army (right). Pic: Reuters
India’s armed forces twice the size of Pakistan’s
Sky’s security and defence analyst Professor Michael Clarke said: “The Indian forces are about double the size of Pakistan’s forces… if it came to a war, India will win.”
He added: “If it’s below the level of a war, if it’s some sort of military confrontation, then Pakistan might think it could get something out of it.”
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The two forces have similar nuclear capabilities. India has an estimated 180 nuclear warheads, while Pakistan has around 170, according to US thinktank the Federation of American Scientists.
However, experts agree that it is unlikely that either side will use their nuclear powers at this stage.
Professor Clarke said: “Nuclear weapons would only be used by any country if its existence is at stake. Nothing that happens in Kashmir threatens the existence of Pakistan or India.”
The Data and Forensics team is a multi-skilled unit dedicated to providing transparent journalism from Sky News. We gather, analyse and visualise data to tell data-driven stories. We combine traditional reporting skills with advanced analysis of satellite images, social media and other open source information. Through multimedia storytelling we aim to better explain the world while also showing how our journalism is done.