The New York Times 2024-09-03 00:10:17


Live Updates: Brief Labor Strike in Israel Lays Bare Anger Over Hostage Killings

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Here are the latest developments.

Thousands of primary schools and several municipalities, transport networks and hospitals slowed or suspended operations across Israel on Monday, as work stoppages and protests formed the broadest expressions of anti-government dissent since the war in Gaza began.

A day after the Israeli military announced that it had recovered the bodies of six hostages from Gaza, union chiefs and business leaders joined forces in an effort to pressure Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to agree to a truce in Gaza that could facilitate the release of dozens of hostages still held there. President Biden added to the pressure when, in response to questions from reporters about whether Mr. Netanyahu was doing enough to bring the hostages home, he replied: “No.”

Still, it was not clear if the brief strike, or Mr. Biden’s terse criticism, had done anything to persuade Mr. Netanyahu to change his longstanding position that Israel must keep fighting in Gaza until Hamas is destroyed. The Israeli leader was expected to give a news conference at 8:15 p.m. local time (1:15 p.m. Eastern).

Union leaders agreed to halt the strike at 2:30 p.m. local time, more than eight hours after it began, after a court said they had not given enough notice for the work stoppage to go ahead. Disruptions were widespread, even as the strike’s effects appeared to be limited in some sectors. Many schools and banks and some municipal offices closed or cut services. Departing flights were disrupted as workers went on strike at Ben-Gurion International Airport, the nation’s largest, and medical staff at several hospitals cut back some non-urgent services.

But many municipalities continued work as normal, according to the representative body for local authorities, and some transport services returned by the afternoon. Some workers appeared reluctant to engage in a complete strike, while others rejected the premise of the strike altogether.

Here are the latest developments:

  • National fury: The work stoppage reflected the national outpouring of grief, anger and protest after the bodies of the six hostages were recovered in Gaza over the weekend. Advocates for the hostages and critics of Mr. Netanyahu argued that a cease-fire agreement could have saved their lives. Huge street protests across Israel erupted on Sunday night in which hundreds of thousands of demonstrators, according to organizers, called for a hostage release and a cease-fire.

  • Netanyahu’s calculations: The last strike on this scale, in March 2023, succeeded in forcing Israel’s prime minister to halt his deeply contentious effort to overhaul Israel’s judicial system. But his coalition partners generally oppose a compromise with Hamas, and Mr. Netanyahu has refused to agree to a truce that would involve Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza or lead to a permanent halt to the fighting, saying that either move could allow Hamas to survive and endanger Israel’s long-term security. Hamas has also refused to compromise, saying that it will not release more hostages without a permanent cease-fire.

  • Cease-fire talks: The Biden administration has mounted diplomatic pressure to break a deadlock in the negotiations involving Israel, Hamas and Egyptian and Qatari mediators. President Biden and Vice President Harris met at the White House on Monday morning with the team representing the United States in the talks.

  • Hostages killed: The Israeli military said on Sunday that the six bodies found in Gaza were those of hostages who had been “brutally murdered” by Hamas. The Israeli Health Ministry later said that a forensic examination showed the hostages had been shot at close range. Hamas claimed, without providing evidence, that the hostages had been killed by the Israeli military. A funeral for one of hostages, Hersh Goldberg-Polin, an Israeli American dual citizen whose parents were among the most prominent campaigners for their release, was held in Jerusalem.

  • Polio in Gaza: Polio vaccinations continued for a second day in Gaza, after the Gazan Health Ministry said that more than 72,600 children had been vaccinated on Sunday in the central part of the territory. (United Nations agencies gave a higher figure, saying that nearly 87,000 had received the vaccine.) After Gaza last month recorded its first polio case in 25 years, Israeli forces and Hamas agreed to brief pauses in fighting to allow for a staggered, three-phase vaccination drive.

Britain announced that it will suspend the exports of some weapons to Israel, a significant hardening of its position on the war in Gaza under a new Labour government. Foreign Secretary David Lammy announced the decision, which he said was based on a legal review that concluded there was a “clear risk” the weapons could be used in a way that would breach international law. The suspension would affect 30 of 350 British export licenses and was “not an arms embargo,” Lammy said. But the decision further distances Britain from the United States, which has rejected calls to suspend arms shipments to Israel.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will give a news conference at around 8:15 p.m. (1:15 Eastern), his office said. It will be the first time he has taken questions from reporters since the six dead Israeli hostages were found in Gaza over the weekend.

Asked if Netanyahu is doing enough to free hostages, Biden says: ‘No.’

President Biden issued a one-word rebuke on Monday of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s commitment to reaching a cease-fire and hostage release deal, in the latest iteration of the White House’s monthslong effort to cajole and censure the Israeli leader.

As he exited Marine One on the White House lawn, Mr. Biden was asked a series of questions by waiting reporters about whether Mr. Netanyahu was doing enough to achieve a deal to get the hostages back. The president responded simply: “No.”

He then turned away from the reporters and headed for a meeting in the Situation Room. He told reporters he would have more to say after the meeting, which was expected to include his top national security advisers, Vice President Kamala Harris and American officials involved in the Gaza cease-fire talks. Later, he and Ms. Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee, were scheduled to appear at a campaign event together in Pennsylvania.

Mr. Biden and Mr. Netanyahu have clashed often in the past 10 months or so, but with particular intensity since the spring. White House officials thought they were near a hostage deal in mid-July, one of several moments in which they believed — and Mr. Biden publicly declared — that the negotiations mediated by the United States, Qatar and Egypt would result in a temporary cease-fire, with hopes of a longer-lasting one.

But Mr. Biden’s hopes have been continually dashed. The latest disagreement with Mr. Netanyahu has arisen over his insistence that Israel maintain a military presence in Gaza along the Egyptian border after a cease-fire agreement comes into effect, a demand that Hamas and Egypt both oppose.

Other obstacles to a deal have come from Yahya Sinwar, the Hamas leader, who has been engaged in the negotiations remotely as he hides out, presumably underground in Gaza.

Hersh Goldberg-Polin’s mother, Rachel Goldberg, said at his funeral that she was put through unimaginable distress worrying about him. Speaking alongside his father, Jon Polin, she called her experience “an odyssey of torture.” Holding back tears, she expressed some relief that her son was no longer in danger. “Finally, you’re free,” she said.

Thousands of people have gathered at Har HaMenuchot, a large cemetery in Jerusalem, for the funeral of Hersh Goldberg-Polin, a dual Israeli American citizen and one of six hostages who were found dead in a tunnel in southern Gaza on Saturday. President Isaac Herzog of Israel is among those attending. He is expected to deliver a eulogy, according to his office.

In his eulogy, President Herzog expressed remorse that Israel had failed to protect Goldberg-Polin during the Hamas-led attacks last October and to bring him home alive. “I ask you for forgiveness,” he said.

Peter Lerner, an official with the Histadrut labor union, said it might attempt to call another strike. But it could face further legal challenges. The injunction ordering an end to the work stoppage on Monday called it “a political strike” rather than one based on economic grievances, which would have been entitled to special protections. Lerner said the union rejected that characterization.

Here’s how the strike and protests unfolded in Israel on Monday.

Scenes of protest mingled with business as usual on Monday across much of Israel, as a brief work stoppage in protest of the government’s war strategy in Gaza led thousands to walk off their jobs for several hours, while in some sectors the strike’s effects were less noticeable.

Scores of people staged a peaceful protest at an entrance to the town of Rehovot in central Israel in the morning as police officers directed traffic — significantly lighter than usual — around them. Many of the passing cars honked in support.

In Rehovot’s main street, several hundred protesters marched, many holding Israeli flags, others with yellow flags and yellow balloons. Most of the shops and cafes were closed. Almost all displayed posters of Nimrod Cohen, a soldier from Rehovot who was taken hostage in the Oct. 7 attacks and remains captive in Gaza.

In Jerusalem, signs of the strike were less apparent, with many markets, restaurants and stores open.

At Mahane Yehuda, a large open-air market in the city, nut purveyors, fruit and vegetable hawkers and bakeries were serving customers. Only a few shops were closed.

Yaakov Levi, 60, an owner of a wine store, said he identified with the protests in support of freeing the hostages and agreed that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hadn’t done enough to secure their freedom. But he argued that striking was ineffectual.

“Shutting down the market won’t change the opinion of the government’s decision makers,” he said, surrounded by bottles of wine from Israel and abroad. “It will only make us as business owners suffer.”

The war, Mr. Levi said, had already exacted a major cost from businesses, especially with so many Israelis serving as reservists in Gaza.

Down the street at Nocturno, a popular restaurant, people were sipping hot coffee and biting into tomato-and-cucumber salads and shakshuka, eggs cooked in tomato sauce.

Near Mr. Netanyahu’s residence, dozens of protesters hoisted Israeli flags and signs bearing photos of hostages.

Shai Leifer, 37, a director of a Hebrew-language education program, said she was skipping work on Monday to demand that Mr. Netanyahu bring the hostages home.

“I came today to scream for the hostages,” she said. “We’ve had enough. We’re tired of it.”

A few dozen demonstrators also gathered near Kibbutz Be’eri, one of the Israeli communities hit hardest in the Oct. 7 attacks. Carmel Gat, one of the six Israeli hostages whose bodies were brought back from Gaza over the weekend, was abducted from Be’eri along with her sister-in-law Yarden; her mother, Kinneret, was killed. One of the demonstrators on Monday carried a sign begging forgiveness from Ms. Gat for Israel’s failure to save her.

In the city of Ra’anana in central Israel, dozens of protesters blocked a major intersection, holding signs bearing the faces of hostages. Tal Mayzels Atlas, an activist at the junction, shared a video of the protest showing Ruth Strum, the mother of hostages Yair and Eitan Horn addressing Israel’s leaders through a megaphone.

“I want my sons back,” she says in the video. “Why are you doing this to us? Bring them all back, now.”

An Israeli judge just issued a temporary injunction ordering a halt to the strike by Histadrut, Israel’s largest labor union, by 2:30 p.m. (7:30 a.m. Eastern). The judge, Hadas Yahalom, wrote that Israeli law obligated the union to provide prior notice of a strike — often as much as 15 days — rather than simply announcing it a day in advance.

The Histadrut union has said it will abide by the court’s decision. The strike will officially end in a few minutes.

Israel’s main labor union has a long history in national politics.

The labor union that called for the strike in Israel on Monday, Histadrut, has played a key role in recent Israeli politics. Most notably, it led strikes last year that challenged Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, forcing him to back off a contentious judicial plan.

Histadrut, or the General Organization of Workers in Israel, was also pivotal to the founding of the State of Israel. It was set up in 1920, at a time when trade unions were a critical vector of political and economic influence in many countries.

Its purpose in its early decades was both to serve the needs of workers at a time of Jewish immigration to what was then British-administered Palestine, and to lay the groundwork for the foundation of Israel as a state. It helped to establish the industrial, financial and economic institutions from which the nation emerged in 1948. The union’s leader in the early years, David Ben-Gurion, became Israel’s first prime minister.

The organization, the largest of its kind in Israel, now represents about 800,000 workers from 27 separate unions, according to its website. Its chairman, Arnon Bar-David, has held the post since 2019.

Mr. Bar-David, a longtime member of the union who also served as a major in the military reserves, in early 2023 joined other union chiefs, business leaders and military reservists to oppose a plan put in place by Mr. Netanyahu’s far-right government to limit the Supreme Court’s ability to strike down decisions by elected officials.

Histadrut organized a major strike that — along with disquiet in the military and mass protests that destabilized the economy — contributed to one of the biggest domestic upheavals in Israel in decades. The unrest prompted Mr. Netanyahu to suspend the judicial plan.

The deadly attack led by Hamas on Israel months later, and the ensuing Israeli military offensive in Gaza, moved the judicial issue to the background. But Histadrut again showed its influence by calling for the general strike on Monday, which, along with large street demonstrations the night before calling for a deal to free hostages from Gaza, amounted to the broadest expression of anti-government dissent since the war began.

A protracted Israeli military raid continued in the occupied West Bank, where soldiers remained deployed in the flashpoint city of Jenin. Many residents were still stuck in their homes without electricity or running water on the sixth day of the raid, and Israeli bulldozers had torn up roads, said Kamal Abu al-Rub, the city’s Palestinian governor. Israeli troops were also surrounding the main public hospital and inspecting people entering and leaving, he added.

A resident of Jenin reached by phone, Omar Obeid, 62, said he had fled the city Sunday evening with his children and many of his neighbors, walking through damaged streets. Eventually, they reached a relative’s home in nearby Ya’abad. “We tried to take a path that would avoid the army, but we still were risking our lives,” he said.

The Palestinian Health Ministry in Ramallah said that 29 people had been killed across the occupied West Bank since the raids began last Wednesday. It said those killed included five minors. Militant groups have claimed some of the dead as members.

In Gaza, a polio vaccination campaign entered its second day, after no major disruptions were reported on Sunday. The Gazan Health Ministry said more than 72,600 children had been vaccinated in the central part of the territory. The World Health Organization and UNRWA, the main U.N. agency aiding Palestinians in Gaza, gave higher figures, saying that nearly 87,000 children had received the vaccine on the first day of the drive.

U.N. agencies and others are attempting to vaccinate nearly 640,000 children under 10 in a three-phase campaign, after Gaza last month recorded its first polio case in 25 years. Israeli forces and Hamas have agreed to pause fighting for several hours each day in the areas where vaccinations are going on.

Bus drivers, port workers, a dance company: Here’s who is striking in Israel.

Israel’s main labor union, Histadrut, called for a general strike on Monday to put pressure on the Israeli government to make a cease-fire deal with Hamas in order to secure the release of the dozens of hostages remaining in Gaza.

By early afternoon, it appeared to be the largest work stoppage in Israel since the war began, though not as widespread as some previous strikes the union had organized. Here are some sectors of the economy that are participating in the work stoppage, and some that aren’t:

Ben-Gurion International Airport

Workers at Ben-Gurion International Airport, the nation’s largest, went on strike for part of the day, reducing the number of departing flights. Shortly after noon local time (5 a.m. Eastern), a spokesperson for the airport said departures had resumed.

Public transit

Egged, Israel’s largest public bus transit company, said services were disrupted as some employees walked off. The company itself was not on strike, but some of its drivers were members of the Histadrut union, which is spearheading the work stoppage, said Inbal Klein Sova, an Egged spokeswoman.

Staff of the Jerusalem light rail network walked off the job in the morning, but the network said shortly after noon that it had returned to regular operations.

Schools

Thousands of primary schools ended their classes at 11:45 a.m. as a result of the strike, according to Gali Gabay, a media consultant for the Israel Teachers’ Union. Teachers were not striking, but other staff members stayed home, forcing the schools to close early, Ms. Gabay said.

Banks

Bank Hapoalim, one of the largest banks in Israel, said it was joining the strike and closed its branches on Monday. It said online transactions could still be made and that its telephone banking service was working in a limited capacity.

Bank Leumi, another major bank chain, took a similar approach.

Hospitals

Some hospitals have reduced non-urgent and outpatient services, while maintaining full emergency treatment and care for urgent cases. “We never, ever have a full-scale strike where we close the hospital — that would never happen,” said David Ratner, a spokesman for Rambam Medical Center, a major hospital in northern Israel.

Two hospitals in Jerusalem run by the Hadassah Medical Center have not joined the strike. “We don’t want to make it difficult for people who have been waiting weeks for appointments,” said Hadar Elboim, a spokeswoman for the hospitals.

Municipalities

Most local municipalities in Israel have chosen not to join the strike, according to Sivan Bahat, the spokeswoman for the Federation of Local Authorities. The decision not to strike, or to participate only partially, stemmed largely from a desire to avoid disruption to the education system a day after schools reopened following the summer break, she said. Tel Aviv City Hall was striking until noon, while Jerusalem’s municipal services were working as usual.

Instead of striking, many local councils are holding special sessions in solidarity with the families of hostages still held in Gaza, inviting the relatives of captives to come and speak at council meetings marking the day of protest.

Haifa port

Workers at the Haifa port, one of the five major ports in Israel, have joined the strike. They have stopped loading and unloading ships at the port until this evening, according to Zohar Rom, a spokesman for the Haifa Port Company. The effect of the strike will be limited unless it extends into a second day, Rom said.

Entertainment companies

Several entertainment companies have joined the strike, including Israel’s largest zoo, the Ramat Gan Safari, and the Batsheva Dance Company, a world-famous dance troupe that shut its offices in Tel Aviv.

While most of those protesting or striking on Monday are critical of the Israeli government, some of its supporters are also taking to the street. A few dozen right-wing activists and relatives of Israeli soldiers who have been killed in battle rallied this morning outside the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem. Led by members of an organization known as the Forum for Families of Fallen Heroes, they called for increased military pressure on Gaza “until victory” and chanted that the strike called by the Histadrut labor union was “a prize for Hamas.”

Protesters blocked a road near Kibbutz Yakum in central Israel, calling for a deal for the release of hostages held in Gaza.

A hearing is underway at Israel’s national labor court, after the government asked for a temporary injunction against the general strike called by Histadrut, the country’s largest labor union. The government said in its petition that the strike was political and not related to a labor dispute.

At noon local time, Israel’s Supreme Court will hear a separate petition against the strike by a group representing some pro-government families of hostages in Gaza.

The strike will likely bring widespread disruptions. Schools, hospitals and municipal offices across the country are set to close or cut services. In Jerusalem, the light-rail network will be closed until noon. And workers at Ben-Gurion International Airport, the nation’s largest, have said they will strike for part of the day.

The hostage killings have added pressure on Israel and its allies to reach a deal with Hamas over hostages that remain in Gaza. On Monday morning in Washington, President Biden and Vice President Harris are scheduled to meet in the White House Situation Room with the team representing the United States in hostage-deal negotiations.

The labor strike in Israel has started, said Peter Lerner, a senior official at Histadrut, the nation’s largest labor union.

Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III said on social media that he had called his Israeli counterpart to convey his “deepest condolences and outrage at Hamas’s vicious murder of six hostages.” He also called for a deal “to secure the release of the remaining hostages.”

The strike reflects a dispute within Israel over Netanyahu’s Gaza strategy.

The expected labor strike in Israel on Monday reflects the scale of a dispute within Israeli society about whether Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should continue to prioritize the destruction of Hamas over the release of Israeli hostages held in Gaza.

Through months of cease-fire negotiations, Mr. Netanyahu has refused to agree to a truce that would involve Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza or lead to a permanent halt to the fighting, saying that either move could allow Hamas to survive and endanger Israel’s long-term security. As a result, Hamas has also refused to compromise, saying that it will not release more hostages without a permanent cease-fire.

That standoff has prompted fury among many Israelis who want the hostages to be released even if it keeps Hamas in power in Gaza, fearing that the hostages will most likely die if they stay in the enclave for much longer.

The dispute reached a crescendo over the weekend after that fear came to pass: The Israeli military said it had found the bodies of six hostages who were killed recently by their captors as Israeli soldiers advanced toward the underground jail where they were held. Israel’s health ministry said that a forensic examination showed the hostages had been shot at close range sometime between Thursday and Friday morning.

Hamas said in a statement that the hostages were killed by the Israeli military.

It was unclear what effect, if any, the protests and planned strikes would have on Mr. Netanyahu. His right-wing base and far-right coalition allies say that it is better to avoid what they see as a flawed cease-fire deal, even if it would save the lives of some of the hostages. Some members of Mr. Netanyahu’s coalition have threatened to collapse the government if the deal goes ahead, and only one senior minister, Yoav Gallant, has pressed for an agreement.

Still, the last strike on this scale, in March 2023, succeeded in forcing Mr. Netanyahu to halt his deeply contentious effort to overhaul Israel’s judicial system. Seventeen months later, protesters hoped to achieve a similar result.

Roughly 250 people were abducted and taken to Gaza during Hamas’s raid on Israel at the start of the war on Oct. 7.

More than 100 of them were freed in a temporary cease-fire in November, while eight have been rescued alive during Israeli rescue operations that have cost the lives of hundreds of Palestinians.

The bodies of several hostages have also been found and repatriated by the Israeli military. Israeli soldiers shot and killed three others in December, after the hostages waved a white flag.

More than 60 living hostages, and the bodies of about 35 other hostages believed to be dead, are still in Gaza, according to the Israeli authorities.

Protesters across Israel demand a deal for the release of hostages.

Protesters flooded the streets of Israeli cities on Sunday in mass demonstrations demanding that the government immediately accept a deal for the release of hostages held in Gaza. The furious protests, some of the largest the country has seen over months of failed negotiations, came after the Israeli military announced that six of the hostages had recently been killed in Gaza.

In Tel Aviv, protest organizers put the number of people in the hundreds of thousands. Hostage families and a crowd of supporters carried six prop coffins in a march through the city. They swarmed in front of the Israeli military headquarters and clashed with the police on a major highway.

In Jerusalem, the Israeli police fired skunk water, a noxious crowd control weapon, and forcefully removed a crowd of hundreds who rallied at the city’s main entrance. In smaller cities too, including Rehovot, in central Israel, people blocked traffic and chanted, “We want them back living, not in coffins!”

The national uproar built on months of protests and increasingly aggressive actions by the families of many hostages, who have been attempting to pressure Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel to accept a deal to little avail.

The frustration of the families, who have accused Mr. Netanyahu of sacrificing their loved ones for his own political gain, appeared to reach a boiling point on Sunday after the Israeli military said it had recovered the bodies of six hostages killed in Gaza. The Israeli health ministry said they had been shot at close range sometime between Thursday and Friday morning.

Their blood was on the hands of the Israeli government, said the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, a group that represents some of the relatives, and it called on the public to “bring the nation to a halt.”

The message was echoed by Israel’s largest labor union, which declared a strike beginning Monday morning, and by Yair Lapid, the Israeli opposition leader.

The Families Forum said hundreds of thousands of people were protesting around the country on Sunday evening, but it was not possible to verify the figure. The Israeli police declined to provide any estimates of crowd sizes.

More protests were planned for Monday, the Families Forum said on social media.

Several family members of the hostages directed their anger squarely at Mr. Netanyahu as they agitated for public action.

“Whoever accepts the murder of civilians for the Prime Minister should stay home,” Gil Dickmann, whose cousin Carmel Gat was one of the hostages found dead over the weekend, said on the social media platform X. “Those who don’t: in memory of Carmel, take to the streets — stop the abandonment, bring the state to a halt, get a deal.”

Jonathan Dekel-Chen, whose son Sagui is still held in Gaza, said in an interview that Mr. Netanyahu was “not only endangering our national security by refusing to complete this negotiated settlement, he’s also tearing apart this country by its seams. The country is aware that this government doesn’t exist for the service of the country but the service of itself.”

In Tel Aviv, where some of the largest crowds gathered, tensions escalated as night fell. Protesters blocked the main highway, pushed through security barricades and lit bonfires in the streets while the Israeli police carried out violent detentions and fired water cannons into the crowd. Naama Lazimi, a member of the Israeli Parliament, said on social media that the police had also thrown stun grenades at a close range, knocking her to the ground.

After hours of demonstrations, the Israeli police said it had arrested 29 people in Tel Aviv and cleared the highway. Five protesters were also arrested in Jerusalem, and two in Haifa, according to police officials.

Protesters expressed a mix of grief and rage, many carrying photos of the hostages and waving yellow ribbons in solidarity.

Shiraz Angert, a 23-year-old design student who was protesting in Jerusalem, wore a shirt bearing the photo of Hersh Goldberg-Polin, one of the hostages whose bodies were recovered on Saturday. “It was possible to save them in a deal,” she said. “These are people who were sacrificed because we didn’t do enough.”

In Tel Aviv, Dan Levinson, a 59-year-old high school teacher, said he hoped the night’s protest would be a watershed moment.

“I feel that tonight is the last chance for a turning point — people out in the streets tonight understand that what we have not been able to achieve so far into the war, we will not be able to ever reach unless a decision is made,” he said.

“If it does not happen now,” he added, “it never will.”

Here’s what to know about the six hostages killed in Gaza.

Tributes poured in on Sunday for the six hostages who were found dead in southern Gaza over the weekend.

The hostages, who the Israeli military said had been “brutally murdered” by Hamas, ranged in age from 23 to 40. Five had been at a dance music festival in southern Israel when they were taken captive during the Oct. 7 attack on Israel by Hamas and its allies; a sixth was taken from the village of Be’eri.

The Hostages and Missing Families Forum, a group of their relatives, identified the dead as Carmel Gat, Eden Yerushalmi, Hersh Goldberg-Polin, Alexander Lobanov, Almog Sarusi and Ori Danino. It also provided ages.

More than 60 living hostages, and the bodies of about 35 other hostages believed to be dead, are still in Gaza, according to Israeli authorities.

Here is what we know about the six whose deaths were confirmed on Sunday.

Hersh Goldberg-Polin, 23

Mr. Goldberg-Polin was a dual Israeli American citizen who was taken hostage from the festival in southern Israel on Oct. 7. His mother, Rachel Goldberg-Polin, had traveled the world since, advocating the release of the hostages.

“Hersh is a happy-go-lucky, laid-back, good-humored, respectful and curious person,” she said last month, when she spoke at the Democratic National Convention with her husband, Jon.

“He is a civilian,” she added. “He loves soccer, is wild about music and music festivals, and he has been obsessed with geography and travel since he was a little boy.”

Mr. Goldberg-Polin was born in Berkeley, Calif. His family moved to Israel when he was in elementary school. Grievously injured during the attack, Mr. Goldberg-Polin lost part of his left arm and was last seen in a video released by Hamas in April.

President Biden was among those who expressed condolences to Mr. Goldberg-Polin’s family. “I am devastated and outraged,” Mr. Biden said in a statement, adding, “He planned to travel the world.”

Carmel Gat, 40

Ms. Gat lived in Tel Aviv but was staying at her parents’ house in Be’eri, a kibbutz near the Gaza border, when she was taken hostage on Oct. 7. Her mother, Kinneret Gat, was killed in the attacks.

“Carmel was an occupational therapist, full of compassion and love, always finding ways to support and help others,” the forum wrote in a post on X. “She loved solo travel, meeting new people, live rock music concerts, and was particularly fond of Radiohead.”

Haaretz published a profile of Ms. Gat in January that said her closest friends had been holding regular yoga classes in her honor in Tel Aviv in what has become known as “Hostage Square.”

They also created a Spotify playlist of her favorite songs, Haaretz reported, calling it “a humorous, eclectic mix.”

“I remember us coming back to the kibbutz on weekends, putting music on and dancing,” Adi Zohar, a classmate, told the news outlet. “That’s her. Making a party out of things. Taking it easy.”

On Sunday, a cousin, Gil Dickmann, posted a photograph on X of a young Ms. Gat, wearing a pink shirt and holding a young baby, grinning at the camera. “Sorry Carmeli,” he wrote, adding, “If only you saw how your friends fought to get you back alive.”

Alexander Lobanov, 32

Mr. Lobanov, who went by Alex, lived in the southern Israeli city of Ashkelon, according to the forum.

It said that he was working as a bar manager at the festival when the attack began and that witnesses said Mr. Lobanov helped evacuate people.

He and his wife, Michal, had two children: Tom, who is 2, and Kai, who is 5 months old and was born when Mr. Lobanov was in captivity in Gaza, Haaretz reported.

Mr. Lobanov also held Russian citizenship, according to Russia’s ambassador to Israel, Anatoly Viktorov.

“We mourn together with the entire family,” he said in a statement.

Ori Danino, 25

Ori Danino was from Jerusalem and was planning to study electrical engineering, Haaretz reported.

The oldest of five children, Mr. Danino had escaped the music festival but had gone back to help other people when he was captured, the Hostages and Missing Families Forum wrote on X.

“He was a fighter,” his partner, Liel Avraham, said on Israeli radio after learning of his death, The Jerusalem Post reported Sunday. She called him a “hero” who “excelled in everything he did.”

Ms. Avraham had posted about Mr. Danino on social media during his captivity. On April 7, she shared a picture of him kissing her on Instagram and in the caption teased him for losing to her at Backgammon and for letting his morning alarm ring.

Four weeks ago, she posted a photo of the two of them with the caption: “I’m waiting for you.”

Almog Sarusi, 27

Mr. Sarusi was from Ra’anana, a city north of Tel Aviv, according to Haaretz. It said he was at the music festival with his longtime girlfriend and had stayed by her side after she was wounded in the attack.

She died, and he was captured.

The Hostages and Missing Families Forum described him on X as “a vibrant, positive person who loved traveling around Israel in his white jeep with his guitar.”

Eden Yerushalmi, 24

Ms. Yerushalmi was “a vibrant young woman with many friends and hobbies,” the Hostages and Missing Families Forum wrote on X. “Eden loved spending summer days at the beach playing paddleball, attending parties, and was studying to become a Pilates instructor.”

In November, Ms. Yerushalmi’s sisters lit candles for her in New York City at the gravesite of a major spiritual leader in Judaism. They giggled at the time, trying to explain her nickname — “Opossum” — an old inside joke the sisters could no longer recall. Relatives of Ms. Yerushalmi had also traveled to Paris and Washington to press for the release of the hostages.

In a video posted in April, Ms. Yerushalmi’s sisters said she was a waitress in Tel Aviv who loved to make TikTok videos, rode a motorcycle and was “always the life of the party.”

“She’s very friendly,” they said in another video, posted in July. “She lives life to the fullest.”

Aaron Boxerman, Gabby Sobelman and Myra Noveck contributed reporting.

Israel’s military says the hostages were killed by Hamas shortly before being found.

The Israeli military said on Sunday that six bodies found in Gaza were hostages who had been “brutally murdered” by Hamas, setting off a wave of nationwide grief mixed with anger.

Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, the military’s chief spokesman, said the bodies had been recovered a day earlier from a tunnel underneath the city of Rafah, in southern Gaza, close to where a seventh hostage, Farhan al-Qadi, was found alive last week.

“They were brutally murdered by Hamas terrorists a short time before we reached them,” Admiral Hagari said.

Israel’s health ministry said later on Sunday that a forensic examination showed the hostages had been shot at close range sometime between Thursday and Friday morning.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was “shocked to the depths” of his soul by what he called the “coldblooded murder” of the hostages.

“The heart of the entire nation is torn,” he said in a statement.

In an initial statement, Hamas did not directly address the accusations, but said responsibility for the deaths lay with Israel, which it blamed for the lack of an agreement to stop the fighting in Gaza. Hamas later claimed in a separate statement, without providing evidence, that the hostages were killed by the Israeli military’s bullets.

Some people in Israel also angrily blamed the government for the deaths, calling for protests over the government’s inability to secure a deal to bring the hostages home.

Israeli military officials had said on Saturday that six bodies were found during a military operation, without specifying whether they were hostages’ bodies.

Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani, a spokesman for the Israeli military, said Sunday on CNN that the grim discovery was not the result of a “specific mission to release hostages,” but that Israeli forces had “some idea of hostages being held in the area.”

The dead were identified as Carmel Gat, Eden Yerushalmi, Hersh Goldberg-Polin, Alexander Lobanov, Almog Sarusi and Ori Danino. They ranged in age from 23 to 40, according to a group representing families of hostages.

Five of those captured had been at a dance music festival in southern Israel. The sixth, Ms. Gat, was taken from the nearby village of Be’eri.

Before the Israeli military’s announcement, President Biden issued a statement saying that Israel had found the bodies of six hostages, identifying one as Mr. Goldberg-Polin, a dual Israeli American citizen whose parents had campaigned around the world for the release of the captives.

“I am devastated and outraged. Hersh was among the innocents brutally attacked while attending a music festival for peace in Israel,” Mr. Biden said. “He lost his arm helping friends and strangers during Hamas’s savage massacre. He had just turned 23.”

Mr. Biden vowed to keep working toward an agreement to secure the release of the hostages. But he also issued a warning: “Make no mistake, Hamas leaders will pay for these crimes.”

Mr. Goldberg-Polin was among the roughly 250 people who were abducted by Hamas and its allies during the Oct. 7 attack on Israel. He was last seen in a video released by Hamas in April.

On Sunday, the Goldberg-Polin family confirmed his death “with broken hearts.”

The Israeli military said that the bodies of the six hostages were returned to Israeli territory.

More than 60 living hostages, and the bodies of about 35 other hostages believed to be dead, are still in Gaza, according to Israeli authorities.

Adam Rasgon contributed reporting.

‘Moving in the Dark’: Hamas Documents Show Tunnel Battle Strategy

Hamas’s handbook for underground combat describes, in meticulous detail, how to navigate in darkness, move stealthily beneath Gaza and fire automatic weapons in confined spaces for maximum lethality.

Battlefield commanders were even instructed to time, down to the second, how long it took their fighters to move between various points underground.

The 2019 manual, which was seized by Israeli forces and reviewed by The New York Times, was part of a yearslong effort by Hamas, well before its Oct. 7 attack and current war with Israel, to build an underground military operation that could withstand prolonged attacks and slow down Israeli ground forces inside the darkened tunnels.

Just a year before attacking Israel, Yahya Sinwar, the leader of Hamas in the Gaza Strip, approved spending $225,000 to install blast doors to protect the militia’s tunnel network from airstrikes and ground assaults.

The approval document said that Hamas brigade commanders had reviewed the tunnels below Gaza and identified critical places underground and at the surface that needed fortification.

The records, along with interviews with experts and Israeli commanders, help explain why, nearly a year into the war, Israel has struggled to achieve its objective of dismantling Hamas.

Israeli officials spent years searching for and dismantling tunnels that Hamas could use to sneak into Israel to launch an attack. But assessing the underground network inside Gaza was not a priority, a senior Israeli official said, because an invasion and full-scale war there seemed unlikely.

All the while, officials now realize, Hamas was girding for just such a confrontation.

Were it not for the tunnels, experts say, Hamas would have stood little chance against the far superior Israeli military.

The underground-combat manual contains instructions on how to camouflage tunnel entrances, locate them with compasses or GPS, enter quickly and move efficiently.

“While moving in the dark inside the tunnel, the fighter needs night-vision goggles equipped with infrared,” the document, written in Arabic, reads. Weapons should be set to automatic and fired from the shoulder. “This type of shooting is effective because the tunnel is narrow, so the shots are aimed at the kill zones in the upper part of the human body.”

Israeli officials knew before the war that Hamas had an extensive tunnel network, but it has proved to be more sophisticated and extensive than they realized.

Early in the war, they estimated that it stretched for about 250 miles. Now they believe it is up to twice as long.

And they continue to discover new tunnels. Just last week, Israeli commandos rescued a Bedouin Arab citizen of Israel who was found alone in an underground warren. The government said on Sunday that six hostages had been found dead in another tunnel.

Mr. Sinwar, Israel’s highest-value target, has been suspected of managing the war and evading capture from a tunnel.

The records show how both sides have had to adapt their tactics in the war. Just as Israel underestimated the tunnels, Hamas prepared for subterranean battles that have not materialized. Israel was reluctant, especially early in the war, to send troops underground where they might face combat. Hamas has primarily ambushed soldiers near tunnel entrances, while avoiding direct confrontations.

That has left Hamas to use the tunnels to launch aboveground hit-and-run attacks, hide from Israeli forces and detonate explosives using remote triggers and hidden cameras, according to Israeli military officials and a review of battlefield photos and videos.

These maneuvers have slowed Israel’s assault, but its military has still decimated Hamas’s ranks, routed them from strongholds and forced them to abandon huge swaths of the tunnel network that they invested so heavily to build.

Members of the Israeli military discovered the tunnel warfare document in Gaza City’s Zeitoun District in November, officials said. A letter from Mr. Sinwar to a military commander was found that same month south of the city. The documents were made available by to The Times by Israeli military officials.

A military spokesperson said that “the fact that Hamas is hiding in tunnels and managing much of the fighting from there prolongs the war.” A senior Hamas official declined to comment on the tunnel strategy.

The markings on the documents are consistent with other Hamas materials that have been made public or been examined by The Times. And Israeli soldiers have described details, like camouflaged tunnel entrances and recently installed blast doors, that are consistent with the Hamas documents. The documents also describe the use of gas detectors and night-vision goggles, equipment that Israeli forces have found inside tunnels.

“Hamas’s combat strategy is based on underground tactics,” said Tamir Hayman, a former head of Israel’s military intelligence. “This is one of the primary reasons they have managed to withstand the I.D.F. thus far.”

Since the war started, much has been revealed about the subterranean network, which has been called the “Gaza Metro.” Hamas uses some rudimentary tunnels simply to mount attacks. The fighting manual describes how people should maneuver these narrow passages in darkness: with one hand on the wall and the other on the fighter in front.

Others tunnels are sophisticated command-and-control centers or arteries connecting underground weapons factories to storage facilities — concealing Hamas’s entire military infrastructure. In some cases, Hamas has used solar panels installed on the roofs of private homes to provide power underground.

Photographs taken during an escorted visit on Feb. 9 to a tunnel under the United Nations agency for Palestinians in Gaza City show a telecomunications system set up in a climate-controlled room.Credit…Ronen Bergman/The New York Times

Some tunnels also serve as communication hubs. This past winter, Israeli forces discovered a Nokia telecommunications system underneath the headquarters of the U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees.

Such Nokia systems provide voice and data services, according to the manual obtained by The Times, and could have functioned as a switchboard for an underground communication network. But the features require additional hardware and it is not clear what abilities Hamas had.

Hamas has been known to hold Israeli hostages underground, so every tunnel needs to be investigated and cleared, Israeli officials say.

Destroying a tunnel section can take dozens of soldiers about 10 hours, according to a senior Israeli officer who is an expert on tunnel warfare. Last year, the Israeli Army discovered a tunnel that had a depth of 250 feet — about the height of a 25-story building. The army said it took months to destroy it.

“I cannot overstate that in any way. The tunnels impact the pace of the operations,” said Daphné Richemond-Barak, a tunnel warfare expert at Reichman University in Israel. “You can’t advance. You can’t secure the terrain.”

“You’re dealing with two wars,” she added. “One on the surface and one on the subsurface.”

One Israeli special operations officer, who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss military activities, said that as soldiers approached the tunnels, Hamas sometimes blasted the ceilings, causing cave-ins that would block the path.

An Israeli military official said that it could take years to destroy the entire tunnel network.

Israel’s military leadership has made the tunnels its main target. But the campaign has come at a steep cost for Palestinian civilians. Many of the tunnels snake beneath densely occupied areas. Israel has publicized videos of the military destroying tunnels with more than 16 tons of explosives per kilometer.

The Israeli military estimates that it costs Hamas about $300,000 to build roughly a half-mile-long rudimentary tunnel. Ms. Richemond-Barak said that the letter from Mr. Sinwar highlighted the expense and sophistication behind the effort.

The letter was written to Muhammad Deif, the group’s military commander, who is believed to have been an architect of the Oct. 7 attack. It is not clear when Hamas completed its review of tunnel fortifications or whether it was done in connection to the attack planning. Mr. Sinwar wrote that “the brigades will be given the money according to the level of importance and necessity.”

The letter could indicate where the group anticipated the toughest fighting. Mr. Sinwar authorized the most money for doors in northern Gaza and Khan Younis. Indeed, some of the heaviest fighting during the war has taken place in those areas.

“The Hamas tunnel system was an essential, if not existential element of their original battle plan,” said Ralph F. Goff, a former senior C.I.A. official who served in the Middle East.

It is not clear when Hamas started using the doors, but Ms. Richemond-Barak said the group’s heavy reliance on them was new. She was not aware of Hamas using them during a 2014 war with Israel.

Blast doors seal tunnel segments from each other and from the outside, protecting against bombings and breaches. They also hamper the army’s use of drones to inspect and map tunnels.

The Israeli military has repeatedly encountered blast doors as they cleared tunnels. Despite the tactics described in the tunnel-fighting manual, once those doors have been breached, Israeli officials say, soldiers seldom find Hamas fighters behind them. They have fled, reflecting an attack-and-retreat strategy that has become commonplace.

Eric Schmitt contributed reporting from Washington.

In a Kyiv Classroom, Cries for Help From Children Scarred by War

When the Russian invasion of Ukraine began in February 2022 and some of her students fled abroad, Iryna Kovaliova, a literature teacher, decided it was time to retire.

“I wrote my resignation letter and took my things from school,” she said. But the children in her sixth-grade class, 6H, in a Kyiv school, begged her to stay, “at least for the duration of the war,” she recounted in a recent interview.

Two years later, she is still teaching at 63, three years past the retirement age for teachers, torn by the heartbreak of watching her students grapple with the trauma of air raids, bombings and the loss of loved ones. She worries for those who have been displaced, forced to study online, as well as for former students who have already enlisted in the army and are fighting on the front lines.

She begins every morning by checking the social media accounts of two former students who are in the army, relieved when she sees they have been online, knowing that at least they are alive.

Maria Lysenko, the principal of the school, said she was worried for a whole generation of children, but also for her teachers.

“Children are like tuning forks, a reflection of what is happening in our lives,” Ms. Lysenko said. “There is a reason that a child is lying on the desk, maybe he has not slept all night, because he was waiting for news from someone close.”

“But what about the teachers?” she added. “They are holding on, no breakdowns, no panic, doing their best.”

Children and teachers across the country began their first day of classes for the new academic year on Monday at a time when Russia has been stepping up bombardments of Ukrainian cities.

Class 6H is the most troubled group of the sixth grade in Ms. Kovaliova’s school. The children, she says, dislike discipline and cannot sit still after going through lockdown during Covid and then two years of disruption with the outbreak of war.

They often ignore teachers, Ms. Kovaliova said: “It’s a difficult group.”

But, she added, she could see reasons behind their behavior.

“These children are loud. They want to shout something. But we never asked what they are shouting about,” she said.

“These children are crying for help,” she added. “They are like a bleeding wound, and no one sees it.”

So instead of checking their homework on a recent morning, she surprised the class with a sudden question. She invited a reporter from The New York Times along to listen in.

“What changed inside you in these two years?” she asked the class. “And how would you reflect it in a collective painting?”

Since the Russian invasion began, she said she had been pushing the school to consider displaying in the school’s bomb shelter a giant mural, painted by the children, in which they could express their experience of the war. The school prevaricated, so she decided to plunge ahead, asking her students to start thinking about the project.

The first to speak was Danya, 11, a student who was displaced from his home in the Ukrainian city of Luhansk in 2014, when fighting first broke out between Moscow-backed separatists and government forces in the eastern regions of Luhansk and Donetsk.

“Before, I thought of my house as a wardrobe where I could hide, where nothing worries you,” he said. “And it’s not like that.”

Then Yehor, 11, from Kyiv, said he had fled the capital with his mother at the time of the full-scale Russian invasion in February 2022.

“I wanted to stay, but my parents thought that soldiers were already approaching,” he said. “We left. My dad stayed, and he saw with his own eyes a missile flying and hitting.”

Yehor’s family fled to a town west of the capital. He kept a religious icon with him, which he thinks helped them to make the trip safely. He said he wanted to depict that icon on the painting.

Ms. Kovaliova explained her idea: “Imagine, a student comes to the school in 20 years’ time,” she told the class. “The war is over. We live in a happy country. And he sees this mural signed, ‘Class 6-H.’ He sees a wardrobe and an icon on a wardrobe. And he starts thinking.”

“What changed inside you in these two years?” she said. “And how would you reflect it in a collective painting?”

Nazariy, 12, replied, “For me, war is death, in the first place. It’s very painful.”

Nervous laughter broke out in the classroom.

“My uncle died,” he said.

Ms. Kovaliova hushed the class. “How old was he?” she asked.

“Thirty-two,” Nazariy said.

“I want to cry,” Ms. Kovaliova said. “What would you paint?” she asked him.

“A fortress. Knights entering the fortress. And a lot of blood all around,” he said.

“How were you changed?” the teacher asked, turning to the class.

“I became less ashamed to voice my opinion,” Nazar, 12, said. “Before, I was thinking: ‘Damn, why was I born in Ukraine?’ After the war started, I began to feel cool that I’m from Ukraine. I would paint a mirror on the wardrobe — to see how I changed.”

Some of the children spoke about the Ukrainian language.

“Before the war, most people spoke Russian,” said Liudmyla, 11. “And many switched to Ukrainian when the war started.”

“I would paint a lock, meaning our language was locked in a wardrobe, almost not used,” she said. “And now people understand that you need to value it, because it’s your country. It was let out.”

“I was more depressed before the war,” Makar, 11, said. “And I started to speak more Ukrainian. I would draw a shield.”

But war and violence kept crowding in on their thoughts.

“I would draw an ordinary girl in front of the mirror. And in the reflection, a girl in a military helmet,” said Maria, 11, who fled from Donetsk.

Many families have been torn apart as grandparents or other relatives were left behind and ended up on the Russian-controlled side of the front line.

Stories of personal separation and loss began to emerge.

“I didn’t appreciate my relatives, my grandma or great-grandma,” said Maria, 11, who is from the Kyiv region. “I didn’t care about spending time with them. But when my grandma and great-grandma were under occupation, I realized that they could be gone.”

“I would draw a big dome which would protect the whole painting,” she added.

Vira, 12, described running to a bomb shelter on the first day of the war as parts of a missile fell on her neighborhood in Kyiv. “I would draw a missile flying over the dome,” she said.

Liza, 11, said, “I realized I want to live.” She added: “I would draw an angel and a village with half-destroyed houses. Because Russians were in a village where we have a cottage, and now half of the village is destroyed. The angel covers the sky and rebuilds houses from the pieces.”

Arina, 11, revealed that she had been displaced from eastern Ukraine and separated from her grandparents who remained in Russian-occupied territory. She began to weep, and several of her classmates rushed to embrace her.

“I would paint a person crying,” Arina said. “Because people die, and you can’t even visit their grave.”

“It’s a very important conversation,” their teacher said. “Thank you. I understand you better. You understand each other better.”

Stories were tumbling out now.

“My brother died recently, he was 24,” a boy called Sasha said. “I didn’t value those moments of life with him. I would paint arms holding coffins.”

“Our painting is getting complicated,” he added.

Another classmate, Kyryl, spoke up.

“When the war began, it was much scarier than I expected,” he said. “I would paint fear.”

“How would you paint fear?” Ms. Kovaliova asked him.

“Darkness,” Kyryl replied.

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Russia Hits Ukraine With Wave of Strikes as School Year Opens

Russia carried out its third large-scale bombardment of Ukraine in a week on Monday, with explosions ringing out early in the morning in Kyiv and several other cities after a volley of missiles was fired on the first day of the school year.

The attacks extended Russia’s terrorizing assaults on cities across Ukraine that began a week ago, even as it pushes forward with fierce attacks along the frontline in Ukraine’s East.

Ukraine has responded by launching drones at refineries and electrical plants in Russia, including one near Moscow on Sunday, causing fires and other damage. The Monday attack came around 5:30 a.m., after a countrywide air alert, and after a missile the night before had struck an orphanage in the northeastern city of Sumy, wounding two children and 11 adults, according to the city council and Ukraine’s public broadcaster, Suspilne.

The attack stood out for the number of ballistic missiles fired at Kyiv, said Serhiy Popko, the military administrator in Kyiv, but early reports suggested that casualties and damage were minor.

The Air Force said it had shot down nine ballistic missile but did not specify where, and that in total Russia had fired 58 missiles and one-way attack drones. Ballistic missiles pose a greater risk of breaking through air defenses as they fly much faster than cruise missiles.

The Russian attack prompted Poland, a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, to scramble fighter jets along its southeastern border, but there were no reports of missiles crossing into Polish airspace.

The bombardment came amid a rising tempo in the war on the ground and in the air. Near the threatened eastern Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk, Russian troops attacked 63 times in the past 24 hours, Ukraine’s general staff said. In the air, Ukraine lost a prized Western-supplied F-16 fighter jet — one of only a half-dozen or so they possess — in a crash a week ago, amid the swirl of a major Russian drone and missile attacks.

Just hours after the explosions, children in Ukraine began returning to classes. In cities near the front, nearly all education takes place online, but many schools are open in Kyiv.

“My first fear was that Russians may target the educational institutions because it’s the beginning of the school year,” said Anna Pantyukhova, a mother of two boys, who are 11 and 14. The family waited out the air raid and “when it was over, I quickly got them ready, and they were glad to be going back to school,” she said.

Nikita Deyev, 13 and in the ninth grade, said he spent the early morning in a bomb shelter, then got ready for school. “I had no doubt I would go, even though there were strikes in the morning,” he said.

Schools in Ukraine must provide bomb shelters for students or operate only online, under a law that came into force after Russia invaded the country in 2022.

Last year, only about half of Ukrainian school children had access to in-person education, with the remainder displaced by the war or enrolled at schools without bomb shelters.

Teachers escort children to the shelter, often the basement of a school, during air alerts. If an alert is in effect at the start of the school day, parents are asked to wait until it is over before dropping off their children.

On Monday, the authorities announced an all-clear around 6:30 a.m., allowing schools to open nationwide for the first day of the school year, when children traditionally wear embroidered shirts and bring flowers for their teachers.

Mr. Popko, the military administrator, said that in addition to the ballistic missiles fired at Kyiv, Russia had fired more than 10 cruise missiles.

The cruise missiles, which are slower than ballistic missiles but can change direction during flight, maneuvered for about two hours before setting a course toward Kyiv, arriving simultaneously with the ballistic missiles, he said in a post on social media.

Debris from intercepts by antiaircraft missiles over the city fell in four districts, setting four cars on fire and damaging commercial buildings, Kyiv’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko, said in a statement. Mr. Klitschko wrote that two people had been wounded.

The authorities also reported explosions in Kharkiv, not far from the Russian border in northeast Ukraine, following bombardments there on Friday and Sunday.

The regional prosecutors said Monday that they had recovered wreckage of a type of North Korean missile, a Hwasong-11, from the site of one early morning strike in the city. The office said the identification was preliminary, based on an early examination of debris. The Ukrainian authorities have earlier reported finding debris from North Korean-made missiles in the city.

Before the attack on Monday, President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine said that over the previous week Russia had fired more than 160 missiles of various types, 780 guided aerial bombs and 400 attack drones at Ukrainian targets.

Ukrainian officials have appealed to allies to allow the use of long-range weapons provided by the West, such as rockets and cruise missiles, to strike back at targets in Russia.

Ukraine’s military is stepping up strikes with domestically produced drones. On Sunday, Russia’s military claimed to have thwarted a major Ukrainian drone attack, but fires at refineries and power plants suggested that at least some had gotten through.

Maria Varenikova, Natalia Novosyolova and Anna Lukinova contributed reporting from Kyiv.

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Takeaways From East Germany’s State Elections

The far-right Alternative for Germany, or AfD, had a very successful night in two East German states on Sunday, with nearly a third of voters voting for the party, whose state chapters have been classified as “confirmed extremist” by German domestic intelligence.

But while a far-right party doing so well in two German states less than eight decades after the end of Nazi Germany is symbolically fraught, it will likely have only limited impact on Germany’s national politics. Although a record number of voters turned out on Sunday in the two states, only about 7 percent of all Germans were eligible to vote.

Nor is the AfD expected to find allies easily. All the other parties that won statehouse seats on Sunday have committed themselves to not collaborating with the far right, in a strategy that will further alienate far-right voters but that is intended to ensure democratic stability in government.

Still, the elections will have ripple effects that are hard to predict, not least on the success of a far-left party that did not exist last year. In Thuringia, the smaller of the two states, nearly half of the voters chose extremist parties, which will force parties to make difficult compromises in the coming weeks if their leaders are to create a stable, working government.

In Saxony, where the mainstream Christian Democratic Union, or C.D.U., came in first, things are slightly more straightforward, in part because Greens and Social Democrats could retain a role in a minority government.

Here are some takeaways from the election:

With nearly 33 percent of the vote in Thuringia and 31 percent in Saxony, the AfD had its best statewide showing since it was founded as a euroskeptic party 11 years ago.

The AfD’s first-place finish in Thuringia could make governing the state messy. Björn Höcke, the AfD’s state leader, announced on Sunday that as the largest party, the AfD would be looking for coalition partners — what will probably be a futile, if time-consuming stunt.

But more important, AfD has probably won enough seats in Thuringia’s statehouse to block certain critical votes that require the assent of two-thirds of legislators, including to change the state’s Constitution.

While the AfD has done well in eastern states, it tends not to in the west of Germany. In the European Union’s parliamentary election this June, the party got 15.9 percent of the vote across the country.

Still, the surge in the AfD could help push mainstream parties to adopt positions associated with the far right, and many politicians have already shifted on some issues, including rules on deportations.

The upstart Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance, known by its German initials B.S.W., had a historic night.

The party, which was not founded until January, garnered nearly 16 percent of the vote in Thuringia and almost 12 percent in Saxony. Those results, coupled with the fact that no one is willing to work with the AfD, mean it will likely play a part in one or both state governments — which is unheard-of for a party that is less than a year old.

Sahra Wagenknecht, the former communist who founded the party, has said that she would not join a coalition with parties that support arming Ukraine. It remains to be seen to what extent she insists on that stance, which is one of her party’s main planks, or whether the C.D.U., which has consistently pushed Chancellor Olaf Scholz to help Ukraine and is hoping to run both state governments, will change its course on the issue.

In either case, Sunday’s elections could help temper Germany’s willingness to support Ukraine militarily.

Although Mr. Scholz’s Social Democratic Party garnered enough voter support on Sunday to remain in both statehouses, the same could not be said of his two governing partners. With less than the 5 percent needed to sit in the statehouse, the Greens and the Free Democratic Party, or F.D.P., were both kicked out of the state parliament in Thuringia. The F.D.P. also failed to win enough seats to enter Saxony’s state parliament.

While the results of the election don’t immediately affect the coalition, it could drive some members to reconsider sticking with it until the next federal election a year from now.

But even if the coalition does hold, the election results are expected to stymie new progressive laws, as coalition partners become ever more nervous about a right-wing backlash in next year’s election.

The only mainstream party to come out on top on Sunday was the C.D.U., which has been in the opposition in Berlin since Angela Merkel, its longtime leader, did not run again for chancellor in 2021.

The results on Sunday will likely benefit Friedrich Merz, the C.D.U.’s leader. Analysts said the results suggest that, under his more conservative leadership on issues like immigration, the party has a chance against populist rivals.

And while there are weeks to go before the states form governments, it is likely that both Thuringia and Saxony will be lead by a C.D.U. governor, which would give the party added power in Berlin through the Federal Council of States, which comprises state leaders.

“We are the bulwark,” Carsten Linnemann, the C.D.U. secretary general, told reporters on Sunday.

Pope, 87, Embarks on ‘Physical Test’ in Grueling Asia Tour

Pope Francis leaves Monday on an 11-day trip to Southeast Asia and Oceania, the longest and among the most complicated of his tenure. It could be particularly challenging for Francis, 87, who has been using a wheelchair and battling health problems.

But the trip, which includes a stop in Indonesia — the world’s largest Muslim majority country — also signals he has no intention of slowing down his outreach to faraway Catholics.

Francis will visit four countries for a total of about 20,000 miles by plane. From Indonesia he goes to Papua New Guinea, then East Timor and Singapore, as he deepens his engagement with Asia, one of his priorities.

The trip will include more than 43 hours of air travel and meetings with local faithful, clergy and politicians in cities with tropical climates or high levels of pollution on the other side of the world from Rome.

“It’s a physical test,” said Massimo Faggioli, a professor of theology at Villanova University, “and a sign that this pontificate is far from being over.”

The pope chose four island nations as he extends his outreach to what he calls “the peripheries,” a term for overlooked, faraway places with small, minority or persecuted Catholic communities. The trip is also one of Francis’ boldest engagements with Asia, a fast-growing part of the world, which the pope has always regarded as a strategic objective.

Francis made a largely secretive deal with China in 2018 for the appointment of bishops, but not all issues have been resolved, as China’s government still exerts strong political control over religious life, said Gianni Criveller, dean of studies at the PIME International Missionary School of Theology in Milan.

While no pope has been able to visit China, Francis has taken trips, such as to Mongolia, that have basically put him on China’s doorstep. This time as well, Mr. Faggioli said, the trip is seen as an attempt to “talk to countries he can’t go to.”

He said the trip also showed Francis’ ambition to make the Roman Catholic Church truly global — drawing attention to areas not traditionally of Christian culture and where Catholicism coexists with other religions, relying on the communities’ devotion rather than on wealth, endowments or a historical hegemony.

Unlike in Europe, the Catholic church in Asia does not “rest on its laurels,” said Mr. Faggioli, and believing is in some cases still an act of resistance.

“He sends a message to all the Catholics,” Mr. Faggioli said. “That the future of the church looks more like these churches in which we are a minority than those in which we are a majority.”

The pope’s first stop, Indonesia, also reflects Francis’ commitment to promoting dialogue between Muslims and Christians. He was the first pope to visit the Arabian Peninsula, in 2019.

He is also likely to urge global action to protect the environment, in a part of the world that is particularly vulnerable to climate change, including rising sea levels and severe weather events like droughts and typhoons.

The Vatican originally had considered the trip for 2020 but canceled it because of the pandemic. Despite being older now, the pope is committed to showing that despite his age and ailments he is “still alive though some wanted me dead,” as he once joked.

In recent years, Francis’ health has been a source of concern. Within three years, he underwent a hernia operation, had colon surgery and was hospitalized for a respiratory infection. Last year, he did not attend a summit in Dubai because of health problems.

Still, the pope has been seen walking in recent weeks, instead of using a wheelchair, as he has increasingly done.

In the 11-day trip, he will be accompanied by his medical team (two nurses and a doctor) and, in a first, by his secretaries. Matteo Bruni, the Vatican’s spokesman, said at a news briefing on Friday that no extra precautions were taken for this trip, as the measures they normally adopt were considered sufficient.

Still, the ambitious itinerary for the octogenarian leader of the world’s Roman Catholics inevitably has stirred questions about the impact on his health.

Reporters questioned Mr. Bruni about the 92 percent humidity that the pope would face in Vanimo, a town tucked between Papua New Guinea’s rainforest and the Pacific Ocean. Markus Solo, an Indonesian priest who focuses on interfaith dialogue at the Vatican, said he worried about the impact that Jakarta’s high pollution could have, partly because Francis lost part of a lung to infection as a teenager.

“Hopefully, the government will do something in order to reduce the pollution during the visit,” he said.

The head of the Environmental Service of Jakarta, Asep Kuswanto, said no specific plans for curbing air pollution had been made for the pope’s visit.

Still, it appeared that some measures had been taken to protect the pope’s health. Francis was not expected to visit Flores, a predominantly Catholic Indonesian island.

“His health condition doesn’t permit him to go all that way,” said Father Solo, originally from Flores. “We have to be very prudent.”

Ismail Cawidu, a senior official at Istiqlal Mosque in Jakarta, an important stop on the visit, said that the pope would not tour the inside of the mosque but instead meet other religious leaders at a plaza outside.

Mr. Ismail said they had asked the Vatican if the pope could cross the “tunnel of friendship” that connects the mosque, Southeast Asia’s largest, with a Catholic cathedral but were still awaiting a response.

  • Indonesia has a large Christian population, with a lively Catholic community. The country has been considered an example of interfaith tolerance but is still facing challenges to its image, as extremist Islamic groups have exerted growing pressure on other religions.

    The pope’s visit to the Istiqlal mosque will include a meeting with representatives of the country’s officially recognized religions — Islam, Buddhism, Confucianism, Hinduism and Catholic and Protestant Christianity. He will also celebrate Mass at a stadium in the city, where tens of thousands are likely to attend.

  • Papua New Guinea, where more than 800 languages are spoken, is one of the world’s poorest countries, and Pope Francis “wants to send a message that he can reach everyone, that nobody is too faraway,” Father Criveller said. After spending most of next weekend in Port Moresby, the capital, Francis will fly north to the coastal town of Vanimo, and he may address the issue of protecting nature from extractive businesses and the effects of climate change.

  • In East Timor, Asia’s newest nation and the only predominantly Catholic country on the trip, Francis is to follow in the footsteps of John Paul II, who also visited the conflict-scarred nation. Francis may face questions over the scandal involving Carlos Ximenes Belo, a Nobel-winning bishop and independence hero who the Vatican acknowledged had sexually abused young boys.

  • In Singapore, an economic powerhouse with a blend of Asian ethnicities and religions, Francis will witness one of the world’s most diverse societies up close, as well as a small but dynamic Catholic community, where the faithful still crowd pews.

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Bad Weather Caused Helicopter Crash That Killed Iran’s President, Report Says

The helicopter crash that killed Iran’s president in May was mainly caused by bad weather, including dense fog, Iranian state media reported, citing the conclusions of a final investigation report.

The president, Ebrahim Raisi, was a hard-line religious cleric and a protégé of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. His death shook Iran at a strained moment for the country — facing a volatile conflict with Israel, economic struggles at home, and complex diplomacy over its nuclear program.

The state news agency, IRNA, had reported in June that “technical failure” had contributed to the crash. But on Sunday, it said the final report from an investigation by Iran’s armed forces had determined that “the accident was primarily caused by weather conditions, including thick fog.”

The investigation found that “all major repairs and replacement of critical parts” for the helicopter had been “carried out in accordance with standard regulations,” IRNA reported, and the debris showed “no defects” that could have contributed to the crash. IRNA added that the report found “no signs of sabotage or tampering.”

On the day of the crash, the president, along with the influential foreign minister, Hossein Amir Abdollahian, and other officials, had been returning in a convoy of three helicopters from an event in Azerbaijan.

Shortly after takeoff, around 1 p.m., the helicopters flew into a heavy fog in a region of mountains and valleys, not far from Iran’s northern border.

When the lead helicopter emerged from the fog, the people onboard realized that they had lost track of the president’s helicopter behind them, and that it was not responding to radio calls, Mehrdad Bazrpash, the minister of transportation, later told state television.

The disappearance of the president’s helicopter set off a frenzied, difficult search through rain, fog and forests. There were no survivors at the crash site when the wreckage was found.

The helicopter had exploded on impact, Iran’s Armed Forces said in a statement, later adding that a preliminary investigation showed no signs of foul play or bullets on the aircraft. Some officials questioned whether security protocols were observed and why the president traveled by helicopter into bad weather conditions.

In addition to the president and the foreign minister, the helicopter was also carrying Ayatollah Mohammad-Ali Al-Hashem, who was an imam in the northern city of Tabriz; Malek Rahmati, the governor of East Azerbaijan Province; and Gen. Seyed Mehdi Mousavi of the Ansar unit of the Revolutionary Guards Corps, Iran’s equivalent of the Secret Service, who was the chief of presidential security.

While some Iranians mourned Mr. Raisi, others welcomed the loss of a man they viewed as a central figure in a corrupt regime who oversaw the execution of dissidents, used violence to suppress and kill protesters, and arrested journalists and activists.

The death of Mr. Raisi, 63, prompted a special election that was won by a reformist candidate who advocated moderate policies at home and improved relations with the West.

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France Confronts Horror of Rape and Drugging Case as 51 Men Go on Trial

For years, she had been losing hair and weight. She had started forgetting whole days, and sometimes appeared to be in dreamlike trances. Her children and friends worried she had Alzheimer’s.

But in late 2020, after she was summoned to a police station in southern France, she learned a far more shattering story.

Her husband of 50 years, Dominique Pelicot, had been crushing sleeping pills into her food and drink to put her into a deep sleep, the police said, and then raping her. He had ushered dozens of men into her home to film them raping her, too, they said, in abuse that lasted nearly a decade.

Using the man’s photographs, videos and online messages, the police spent the next two years identifying and charging those other suspects.

On Monday, 51 men, including Mr. Pelicot, went on trial in Avignon, in a case that has shocked France and cast a spotlight on the use of drugs to commit sexual abuse and the broader culture in which such crimes could occur.

The accused men represent a kaleidoscope of working-class and middle-class French society: truck drivers, soldiers, carpenters and trade workers, a prison guard, a nurse, an I.T. expert working for a bank, a local journalist. They range in age from 26 to 74. Many have children and are in relationships.

Most are charged with raping the woman once. A handful are accused of returning as many as six times to rape her.

The victim, who has divorced her husband and changed her surname since his arrest, is now in her 70s.

Since his arrest, Mr. Pelicot, 71, has “always declared himself guilty,” said Béatrice Zavarro, his lawyer. “He is not at all contesting his role.”

Other defendants have denied the rape charges, with some arguing that they had the husband’s permission and thought that was sufficient, while others claimed they believed the victim had agreed to be drugged.

When the police showed the victim some of the photographs they say her husband had carefully classified and stored, she expressed deep shock. She and her husband had been together since they were 18. She had described him to the police as caring and considerate.

She had no memory of being raped, by him or the other men, only one of whom she recognized, she told the police, as a neighbor in town.

The first time she will consciously witness the rapes, her lawyer Antoine Camus says, will be in the courtroom when the video recordings are played as evidence.

The trial comes at a moment of heightened scrutiny of the handling of sexual crimes in the country. Rape is defined in French law as an “act of sexual penetration” committed “by violence, coercion, threat or surprise.” A number of feminist lawmakers want to amend that wording to say explicitly that sex without consent is rape, that consent can be withdrawn at any time, and that consent cannot exist if sexual assault is committed “by abusing a state impairing the judgment of another.”

“There is a kind of naïveté on the topic of predators in France, a kind of denial,” said Sandrine Josso, a lawmaker who led a parliamentary commission into what is known in France as “chemical submission” — drugging someone with malicious intent. She started the commission after she says she became the victim of a drugging last year. A senator is being investigated on accusations that he slipped ecstasy into her Champagne.

Ms. Josso hopes that the Avignon trial will draw attention to the use of drugs to prey on women, and also shed light on the wide profile of predators. “They could be your neighbors, without falling into paranoia,” she said.

Mr. Pelicot seemed like a classic man next door. He was a trained electrician, an entrepreneur and an avid cyclist. His middle child and only daughter, Caroline Darian, her pen name, described him as a warm and present father in a book published in 2022 about the case, “And I Stopped Calling You Papa.” She tried to turn her family trauma into action, forming a nonprofit association, “Don’t Put Me to Sleep,” to publicize the dangers of drug-facilitated crimes.

Her father, she wrote, was the one who drove her to school, picked her up late from parties, encouraged her and consoled her. Her mother was the stable breadwinner, working as a manager in a Paris-area company for 20 years.

When she retired, they moved to a house with a big garden and pool in Mazan, a small town northeast of Avignon. The couple regularly hosted their three children and grandchildren for summer vacations peppered with late dinners on the terrace, where the family debated, held dance competitions and played Trivial Pursuit.

“I think of us as happy,” his daughter wrote. “I thought my parents were.”

None of them harbored any suspicions. Then, in 2020, three women reported Mr. Pelicot to the police for trying to use his camera to film up their skirts in a grocery store, and he was arrested.

The police seized his two cellphones, two cameras and his electronic devices, including his laptop, before releasing him on bail.

On the devices, the police say they found 300 photographs and a video of an unconscious woman being sexually assaulted by many people. They said they also found Skype messages in which the man boasted of drugging his wife and invited men to join him in having sex with her while she was unconscious.

Over the course of their investigation, the police found more than 20,000 videos and photographs, many of them dated and labeled, in an electronic folder titled “abuse.” The timeline they built began in 2011. The list of suspects grew to 83.

Two months after his initial arrest, Mr. Pelicot was arrested again and charged with aggravated rape, drugging and a list of sexual abuse charges. He is also accused of violating the privacy of his wife, daughter and two daughters-in-law on suspicion of illegally recording, and at times distributing, intimate photos of them.

If he is found guilty, he faces up to 20 years in prison.

During interviews with the police, the details of which were included in an overview of the case by the investigative judge, Mr. Pelicot said he began drugging his wife so he could do things to her, and dress her in things, that she normally refused. Then he started inviting others to participate. He said he never asked for or accepted money.

He met most of the men, the investigating judge’s report stated, in a chat room on a notorious, unmoderated French website implicated in more than 23,000 police cases in France alone from 2021 to 2024. It was finally shut down, and its owner arrested, in June after an 18-month investigation stretching across Europe.

The chat room where most of the men met Mr. Pelicot was called “a son insu,” which means “without their knowledge.”

Over the years, Mr. Pelicot told the police, he developed rules for the visitors to ensure that his wife did not wake: no smoking or cologne; undress in the kitchen; warm hands under hot water or on a radiator, so their cold touch would not jolt her. At the end of each night, according to the investigating judge’s report, he cleaned his wife’s body.

Of the 83 suspects, the police identified and charged 50.

Only one of the men is not charged with rape, assault or attempted rape of Mr. Pelicot’s wife. Instead, that man is accused of following the same model, and drugging his own wife to rape her. Mr. Pelicot is also charged with raping the man’s wife while she was drugged.

Five of the men also face charges for possessing child sexual abuse imagery.

Mr. Pelicot is also being investigated in the rape and murder of a 23-year-old woman in 1991 and the attempted rape of a 19-year-old in 1999. He admitted to the attempted rape, according to Florence Rault, the lawyer representing the victims in both cases, but denies any involvement in the 1991 homicide.

The story has prompted some soul-searching among doctors, since Mr. Pelicot’s wife had visited gynecologists and neurologists over a series of mystifying symptoms, but had received no diagnosis, according to her daughter.

“What I found disturbing for us doctors was that no doctor considered this hypothesis,” said Dr. Ghada Hatem-Gantzer, a well known obstetrician-gynecologist and expert in violence against women. She and a pharmacist, Leila Chaouachi, have now developed training for doctors and nurses on the symptoms that victims of drug-facilitated assault can experience.

Contrary to popular belief, most cases occur at home, not at bars, said Ms. Chaouachi, who runs annual surveys on such offenses in France. Most victims are women, the surveys show, and around half of the victims do not remember the attack, because of blackouts, she said.

In the case going to court in Avignon, some of the accused admitted guilt to the police. According to the investigating judge’s report, many claimed that they were tricked into having sex with a drugged woman — lured by a husband for a three-way encounter and told she was pretending to sleep, because she was shy.

Several said they believed that she had consented to being drugged and raped as part of a sex fantasy. Some said they did not believe it was rape, because her husband was there and they believed he could consent for both of them.

“It sends shivers down the spine regarding the state of affairs in French society,” said Mr. Camus, who is also representing Ms. Darian and many other members of the family. “If that’s the conception of consent in sexual matters in 2024, then we have a lot, a lot, a lot of work to do.”

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