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American doctor trapped in Gaza discusses challenges of treatment amid war: “This is an intentional disaster”

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Nearly half a million people with no place to go have left Rafah in southern Gaza ahead of Israel’s long-anticipated offensive, but the Israeli military has continued striking all areas of the Gaza Strip.

Israeli warplanes targeted a building in the Nueseirat refugee camp in central Gaza, killing several people — including women and children — while survivors had to be dug out of the rubble.

In another strike nearby, the Israeli Defense Forces said it struck a “Hamas war room” at a U.N. school. Israel said it killed more than 10 fighters, although CBS News could not independently verify that claim.

The carnage comes as aid agencies say hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have fled Rafah since Israel began targeting areas there last week. One of those who fled is 81-year-old Mustafa al-Gazzar, now displaced and living in a temporary camp.

“I live in extreme fear,” he told CBS News.

All crossings out of Gaza are now blocked, leaving 20 American medics trapped inside. 

“It’s been very difficult, leaving my wife and my two kids and surrounding family. It was something that I had to do,” Dr. Mohammed Abdelfattah, from California, told CBS News. “I felt like the efforts back home were not going anywhere, they were falling on deaf ears.”

Abdelfattah was originally scheduled to leave Gaza on Monday, but now he’s stuck inside the strip’s European Hospital in Al-Fukhari, near Khan Yunis. He said the imminent operation in Gaza has led to fear among local residents.

“The locals have told me multiple times that there’s no safe place in Gaza. They’ve seen over the past six, seven months, hospitals have been targeted, mosques have been targeted, churches, bakeries,” he said. “Currently we are in a green zone, a ‘safe zone,’ but the population know there is no safe zone in Gaza.”

Abdelfattah said many of the patients in the ICU are young children with “severe burns and explosive injuries that will pretty much lead to a guaranteed death here, and that’s what I’ve seen because of the lack of resources, the lack of supplies.”

“This is all intentional,” he added. “This is not a natural disaster. This is an intentional disaster that’s being inflicted on these people with the backing of my government.”

President Biden has become increasingly critical of how Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has carried out the war and Gaza, going so far as to pause shipments of some weapons to Israel because of concerns about the IDF’s plans in Rafah. But Abdelfattah told CBS News it’s not enough. 

“There’s American weapons being dropped on the people of Gaza every single hour, and our American government — President Biden —  has the power to stop all of this with just one phone call,” he said.

Abdelfattah said multiple people have told him, “The one thing that is giving us hope right now is the student protests that are occurring across the nation back home.”

Meanwhile, Israel on Tuesday celebrated 76 years since the nation’s founding. But amid the subdued commemorations, thousands of Israeli settlers marched toward Gaza, blocking aid from entering and demanding the right to build settlements inside the Palestinian territory.

Aid agencies are warning that over a million Palestinians now face catastrophic levels of hunger. A floating pier Mr. Biden ordered built to help ramp up the distribution of aid could become operational soon, allowing for more food and supplies to enter the territory.



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Explosion at Louisville plant leaves 11 employees injured

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At least 11 employees were taken to hospitals and residents were urged to shelter in place on Tuesday after an explosion at a Louisville, Kentucky, business.

The Louisville Metro Emergency Services reported on social media a “hazardous materials incident” at 1901 Payne St., in Louisville. The address belongs to a facility operated by Givaudan Sense Colour, a manufacturer of food colorings for soft drinks and other products, according to officials and online records.

Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg said emergency teams responded to the blast around 3 p.m. News outlets reported that neighbors heard what sounded like an explosion coming from the business. Overhead news video footage showed an industrial building with a large hole in its roof.

An image capture from aerial footage shows the aftermath of an explosion in Louisville, Kentucky, Nov. 12, 2024.
An image capture from aerial footage shows the aftermath of an explosion in Louisville, Kentucky, Nov. 12, 2024.

WLKY-TV


“The cause at this point of the explosion is unknown,” Greenberg said in a news conference. No one died in the explosion, he added.

Greenberg said officials spoke to employees inside the plant. “They have initially conveyed that everything was normal activity when the explosion occurred,” he said.

The Louisville Fire Department said in a post on the social platform X that multiple agencies were responding to a “large-scale incident.”

The Louisville Metro Emergency Services first urged people within a mile of the business to shelter in place, but that order was lifted in the afternoon. An evacuation order for the two surrounding blocks around the site of the explosion was still in place Tuesday afternoon. 



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Briefing held on classified documents leaker Jack Teixeira’s sentencing

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Briefing held on classified documents leaker Jack Teixeira’s sentencing – CBS News


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Joshua Levy, acting U.S. attorney for the District of Massachusetts, held a press conference Tuesday after the Pentagon classified documents leaker Jack Teixeira was sentenced to 15 years in prison. The former Air National guardsman admitted to illegally posting sensitive military information online.

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Aga Khan emerald, world’s most expensive green stone, fetches record $9 million at auction

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A rare square 37-carat emerald owned by the Aga Khan fetched nearly $9 million at auction in Geneva on Tuesday, making it the world’s most expensive green stone.

Sold by Christie’s, the Cartier diamond and emerald brooch, which can also be worn as a pendant, dethrones a piece of jewelry made by the fashion house Bulgari, which Richard Burton gave as a wedding gift to fellow actor Elizabeth Taylor, as the most precious emerald.

In 1960, Prince Sadruddin Aga Khan commissioned Cartier to set the emerald in a brooch with 20 marquise-cut diamonds for British socialite Nina Dyer, to whom he was briefly married.

Dyer then auctioned off the emerald to raise money for animals in 1969.

SWITZERLAND-LUXURY-JEWELLERY-AUCTION
A Christie’s employee poses with The Aga Khan Emerald, a cartier emerald and diamond brooch made with a square-shaped emerald of 37.00 carats, marquise-shaped diamonds, platinum and 18k yellow gold during a press preview in Geneva, on Nov. 7, 2024. 

FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP via Getty Images


By chance that was Christie’s very first such sale in Switzerland on the shores of Lake Geneva, with the emerald finding its way back to the 110th edition this year.

It was bought by jeweler Van Cleef & Arpels before passing a few years later into the hands of Harry Winston, nicknamed the “King of Diamonds.”

“Emeralds are hot right now, and this one ticks all the boxes,” said Christie’s EMEA Head of Jewellery Max Fawcett. “…We might see an emerald of this quality come up for sale once every five or six years.”

Also set with diamonds, the previous record-holder fetched $6.5 million at an auction of part of Hollywood legend Elizabeth Taylor’s renowned jewelry collection in New York.



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