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Australians seeking to flee Israel have been warned there may only be one more chance to escape the conflict zone.

Foreign Minister Penny Wong reported on Monday that Australians have been flown to Dubai on two RAAF flights and a privately contracted service.

About 1200 Australians had so far received help to leave Israel, she added.

There were 255 people on three Sunday flights, with the majority of those Australians, some accompanied by non-citizen family members.

Australian officials at Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion Airport. A final repatriation flight is being planned

Senator Wong said officials were trying to arrange another flight on Monday to bring Australians home and urged people to leave if they wanted to.

‘(This) may be our last opportunity to conduct an assisted departure flight for the foreseeable future,’ she told the Senate on Monday.

‘We can’t know how the security situation will unfold.’

The chartered and defence planes left on Sunday after scheduled repatriation flights were cancelled the previous day.

But seats on the plane remained empty despite all being allocated.

The foreign affairs department continues to assist more than 1000 registered Australians and handle 39 consular cases.

Not all those registered want to leave and some have just put their names down for information, Senator Wong said.

Foreign Minister Penny Wong said: ‘(This) may be our last opportunity to conduct an assisted departure flight for the foreseeable future’

Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil said it was legal for Australians to go to a foreign country and fight with that nation’s armed forces but it was unlawful to fight for a terrorist organisation such as Hamas.

‘What is happening in the Middle East now is not a war between two nation states,’ she told the ABC’s RN.

‘It is a war between a nation state and a terrorist organisation, a terrorist organisation that has just in the most inhuman way murdered innocent men, women and children.’

Defence Minister Richard Marles backed the call for people to leave when they can, warning ‘it could all change at a moment’s notice’.

This includes if Israel closes its airspace as it prepares for ground invasion.

The government is working with commercial carriers to help Australians get home from Dubai after leaving Israel.

Senator Wong is also trying to secure safe passage of citizens out of occupied Palestinian territories.

A proposed window to allow for approved foreign nationals to leave didn’t eventuate.

Senator Wong said she was in discussions with Egypt and Israel to establish a safe humanitarian corridor.

The foreign minister called on humanitarian law to be protected as she reaffirmed Australia’s support for Israel to defend itself after the attack.

Mr Marles said he would not cast judgment about how Israel retaliated with Tel Aviv’s blockade of food, water and fuel to Gaza condemned as collective punishment against innocents by international humanitarian groups.

While it was important Israel acted within the rules of war, he believed they were doing so.

Pro-Palestine protests continued across the weekend calling for an end to Israeli occupation of Gaza.

Senator Wong said Australians had a right to protest peacefully but condemned hate speech in any form.

‘Vile anti-Semitism and Islamophobia, which is its bedfellow, undermines some of our greatest strengths, our diversity, our tolerance, our values.’

Anthony Albanese condemns protest after ‘gas Jews’ chant 

The prime minister has condemned attacks by Hamas against Israel, calling the organisation an enemy of peace in the Middle East.

In a speech to parliament, Anthony Albanese said Australians had been shocked by the scale of the attacks earlier this month.

‘This was not just an attack on Israel, this was an attack on Jewish people. Hamas is an enemy not just of Israel, Hamas is an enemy of all peace-loving Palestinian people who are left to pay a devastating price for this terrorism,’ the prime minister told parliament on Monday

‘We have learned of acts of violation and humiliation so grotesque they should be beyond imagination, but have been made reality by Hamas.’

Mr Albanese reiterated comments that Israel had the right to defend itself following the attacks.

He also said anti-Semitic comments following the attacks, as well as Islamophobia, had no place in the country.

‘The awful anti-Semitism chanted by some of the protesters at the Sydney Opera House is beyond offensive, it is a betrayal of our Australian values,’ Mr Albanese said.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Dailymail.co.uk

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