jackie ibañez. tensions of the israel hamas war outgrowing us tens of thousands of people across the globe take to the streets demanding cease-fire. cease-fire now! palestinian marches, rallies happening now in major cities including london, paris, new york and washington d.c. protesters demanded less and less countries stop sending military aid to israel. they are pretty much bombing everything. this is not a war, or is military against military but this is against humanity. there round of protests, as u.s. secretary of state antony blinken met with middle eastern leaders, leaders from egypt and jordan are struggling condemning israel s defensive demanding immediate cease-fire. the u.s. opposes cease-fire, he pushes for israel to allow positive in its assault on gaza. the united states believes all will be facilitated by humanitarian causes. we believe posits can be a critical mechanism protecting civilians and giving aid and foreign nationals out while still enabling
people were reportedly killed in an israeli bombing at a refugee camp in central gaza. the camp is located in the evacuate zone where israel s military is urging palestinian civilians to seek refuge. israel s military says it s looking into the incident. it also comes as the us works to prevent the war from escalating. countries across the middle east and beyond have played an essential role in preventing its spread. we all agreed on the importance of using our respective influence and capabilities to deter any state or non-state actor from opening another front in this conflict or taking other destabilizing actions. all of us have a direct interest in this. saturday marks one month since the deadly attacks by hamas on israel sparked the conflict. i m jackie ibanez. now back to fox news saturday night. i m kat timpf and this is fox news saturday news.com. i m kat timpf and this is fox news saturday night. as you might know, new york city marathon. [cheering] if you are
ethnically motivated violent extremists promoting white supremacy are, quote, the most lethal threats right now here in the united states. let s start our coverage this hour in atlanta. our national correspondent ryan young is joining us. ryan this, s new information emerging now about the suspects in these terrible killings. translator: i want to show you something here, wolf. this growing memorial has been building here in atlanta, a city that s known as being too busy to hate, but right now a lot of people have questions about why this shooter opened fire. shock and outrage in atlanta, georgia, and across the nation after a shooting spree left eight people dead, six of whom were asian women. police say the suspected shooter, 21-year-old robert aaron long has admitted to the attacks on three separate atlanta-area spas, but they say it s too soon to call his crimes a hate crime. he claims it was not racially motivated. reporter: according to investigators the suspect d
nearly $2 trillion covid relief plan into law, meaning millions of dollars will flow into bank accounts and the hands of americans. another 12,000 americans filed for first-time unemployment claims, lost their jobs just last week. tonight s prime time speech is a new time for the president. look behind with sorrow, look ahead with hope. we re one year into the start of the new world. sports stopped, offices and schools began closing. the world health organization one year ago today called covid-19 a pandemic. one year. nearly 30 million cases here in the states, 118 million plus globally, soon to be 530,000 american deaths. the president will outline his two-track path to post-pandemic life tonight. a spring surge in the covid vaccine rollout and a surge in economic help to families, small businesses and to schools. but the president s hope does come with a messaging challenge. telling folks if there are ball games or a family picnic coming up, mask up and be extra careful ju
being overly cautious, particularly when it comes to air travel. we re learning about what into the decision by the cdc. joining me now is jeremy diamond at the house with much more on this. what are you learning? reporter: well it appears that the cdc did consider the possibility of changing these travel restrictions, but ultimately decided not to do that. two federal health officials telling kaitlan collins that the possibility of changing travel recommendations was discussed but there was never really any real momentum behind the idea of changing those travel restrictions right now. but right now really is the operative word here because these are interim guidelines by the cdc. and the cdc director rashiel walensky made that very clear yesterday as she announced the new guidelines. we saw new guidelines here in terms of how individuals who have been vaccinated could interact with one another as well as others in low risk settings in terms of removing masks but they did n