Four people were injured in a knife attack in Tel Aviv, one seriously, and the attacker was killed. This was reported by Israeli media, bTV reported.
This is the second stabbing attack in Tel Aviv in the past few days.
On Saturday, January 18, another attacker seriously injured a man with a knife before being shot by an armed citizen.
The perpetrator was never identified, but the police announced that it was probably a terrorist act.
The police only said that the attacker was “neutralized“, without providing information about the nature of the attack and whether it was terrorism.
According to information from one of the most popular Israeli newspapers “Maariv“ the attacker was killed by a local resident who was passing by.
Israeli Army Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi said he would resign on March 6. He will take responsibility for the failure of Hamas's attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, when Palestinian militants from the Gaza Strip stormed across the border, Reuters reports, quoted by FOCUS.
Halevi, who was expected to resign after the day with the highest number of casualties in Israel's history, said he would complete the Israel Defense Forces' (IDF) investigation into October 7 and strengthen the IDF's readiness for security challenges.
Halevi did not reveal who he would hand over the post to.
In his letter to Israeli Defense Minister Katz Halevi, he wrote: "On October 7, under my command, the IDF failed in its mission to protect the citizens of Israel.".
He added that many Israelis paid with their lives because of him, and those who were captured are wounded "in body and spirit".
"My responsibility for the terrible failure haunts me every day, hour after hour, and will be so until the end of my days," Halevi added.
In a televised address to the nation, he promised a full investigation, the results of which would be handed over to the country's defense minister, and then the details that could be made public would be revealed to the public.
About 900 trucks carrying humanitarian aid entered the Gaza Strip on Thursday, the third day of a ceasefire between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist movement "Hamas", the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said, Reuters reported, quoted by BTA.
This brings the total number of arrivals in the three days since the ceasefire agreement came into effect to more than 2,400. trucks entered the Palestinian enclave.
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said 897 aid trucks entered the Gaza Strip yesterday, citing information received from Israel and the guarantors of the ceasefire agreement - the United States, Egypt and Qatar.
For comparison, there were 630 on Sunday and 915 on Monday. The agreement requires at least 600 aid trucks to be allowed into Gaza each day of the initial six-week ceasefire, including 50 fuel trucks. Half of those trucks are to go to the northern part of Gaza, whose population experts warn is at risk of mass starvation.