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Israel-Gaza live updates: White House condemns 'horrific' attack on Golan Heights

Hezbollah denied involvement in Saturday's strike, which Israel said killed 12.

Last Updated: July 30, 2024, 3:19 PM EDT

As the Israel-Hamas war continues, efforts to secure the release of hostages taken by the terrorist organization are ongoing and tensions along Israel's northern border continue to escalate.

3:19 PM EDT

85 sick and injured evacuated from Gaza in largest medical evacuation in 9 months

Eighty-five sick and severely injured people, including 35 children, have been evacuated from Gaza to get care in Abu Dhabi, said Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization.

Children look on from the back of a truck as Palestinians flee the al-Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, July 28, 2024.
Eyad Baba/AFP via Getty Images

This was Gaza’s largest medical evacuation since October 2023, according to the WHO.

The evacuees’ illnesses include cancer, neurological conditions, cardiac disease and liver disease, Tedros said.

Sixty-three family members and caregivers accompanied the patients, the WHO said.

"We hope this paves the way for the establishment of evacuation corridors via all possible routes. Thousands of sick people are suffering needlessly," Tedros said. "Above all, and as always, we call for a cease-fire."

-ABC News’ Will Gretsky

11:23 AM EDT

IDF withdraws from Khan Younis after weeklong raid killing 226

The Israel Defense Forces announced that it has “completed operational activity in the area of Khan Younis” in the southern Gaza Strip on Tuesday morning, more than a week after it began bombarding the eastern part of the city -- a designated humanitarian zone.

At least 226 people have been killed by Israeli forces in and around Khan Younis since the IDF raid began early on July 22, according to Gaza’s Hamas-run Ministry of Health.

-ABC News' Diaa Ostaz, Jordana Miller and Samy Zyara

11:22 AM EDT

1 dead in Israel, 1 dead in Lebanon amid rising tensions

At least one person is dead in northern Israel following a rocket salvo from Lebanon this afternoon, according to Israel’s national emergency service. One person was also killed in southern Lebanon following a drone strike targeting a house in the town of Beit Lif early Tuesday, according to Lebanon's National News Agency.

The Israel Defense Forces said its fighter jets conducted strikes in southern Lebanon earlier Tuesday.

Approximately 10 projectiles crossed from Lebanon into Israeli territory, with the majority of the projectiles being intercepted, according to the IDF. A direct hit was identified in the area of HaGoshrim in northern Israel.

Jul 29, 2024, 12:33 PM EDT

US meetings with Netanyahu were 'very constructive,' Kirby says

U.S. officials’ meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu in Washington, D.C., last week were "very constructive and certainly nothing that discouraged us in terms of trying to close the remaining gaps" while trying to secure the hostage deal, National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told reporters Monday.

"We still believe those gaps can be narrowed ... and we can move forward. But obviously, as I said earlier, it's going to take compromise, it's going to take leadership," he said.

Israeli troops on the ground in the Gaza Strip during operations amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, July 26, 2024.
Israel Defense Forces/AFP via Getty Image

"There's no indication that we see, at this point in time, the weekend strike by Hezbollah into the Golan [Heights] area is going to negatively affect those discussions," Kirby added.

Kirby also pushed back on the suggestion that Vice President Kamala Harris had a different message for Netanyahu from President Joe Biden, saying there was "no daylight" between their messages, and that reporting suggesting otherwise was "unfortunate and inaccurate."

"There was no daylight between anything, the president, the vice president told the prime minister. Same points, same emphasis -- the commitment and reaffirmation to help Israel continue to defend itself against these threats. Same reaffirmation by both the president and the vice president, that we want to see the cease-fire deal get enacted because of what it can do to improve the humanitarian situation. And of course, getting those hostages home with their families," Kirby said.

Pressed on why Harris had her own meeting if their message was the same, Kirby defended Harris.

"The vice president couldn't be in town for the meeting in the Oval [Office], and as she has been a full partner in all our foreign policy, but certainly in particular, the policy that this administration has pursued with respect to the Middle East, she felt it was important to also sit down with Prime Minister Netanyahu,” Kirby said.

-ABC News’ Molly Nagle

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