Israel revises down death toll from Oct. 7 attack to about 1,200

The Israeli government has dropped the death toll from Hamas’s surprise attack that sparked the war in the region to 1,200 — down 200 from the 1,400 originally estimated.

The spokesperson for Israel’s foreign ministry, Lior Haiat, told Reuters and Agence France-Presse in a written statement that “around 1,200 is the official number of victims of the October 7 massacre.”

According to Haiat, the figure was updated Thursday, but he did not provide a justification for the death toll change. 

The death count, which includes foreigners, “is not a final number. It [is] an updated estimate,” he told Reuters. “It might change when [they] identify all the bodies.”

In response to the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas — a Palestinian militant group that controls the Gaza Strip and has been designated a terrorist organization by the U.S. — Israel has been carrying out airstrikes and shelling Gaza, an operation that has killed thousands of Palestinians living in the area and displaced more than a million people. 

The strikes, which have created what’s been called a humanitarian crisis in Gaza, have also prompted calls from activists and progressive lawmakers for an immediate cease-fire. President Biden and his administration have shot down those calls, arguing it would help out Hamas. 

Instead of a cease-fire, the administration has argued for temporary humanitarian pauses to allow aid into Gaza for civilians.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has also said a cease-fire would not happen until the more than 200 hostages were released. Israel has, however, complied and allowed limited pauses for aid in some parts of Gaza.

Tags Benjamin Netanyahu death toll Hamas Israel Israel-Hamas war Joe Biden

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