Here are Thursday’s latest updates from Israel, Gaza, the West Bank and the Middle East:
■ Israel Police said that they attribute the offense of murder to a Palestinian bus driver who ran over an ultra-Orthodox protester in Jerusalem the day prior, after retracting their previous intention to attribute aggravated murder to him.
■ Searches for the deceased hostage Ran Gvili resumed in the Zeitoun neighborhood, after being halted due to weather conditions, according to reports from Gaza.
■ The commissioner of the Israel Police is delaying the publication of the investigation results into the leak of a video showing Israeli soldiers abusing a Palestinian detainee at an Israeli facility, in which the IDF’s former top legal adviser, Military Advocate General Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi, is a suspect.
■ Hundreds of demonstrators blocked a major junction in Jerusalem in protest of the government’s actions against the Supreme Court, following the arrest of four anti-government protesters and the strip-search of one of them earlier on Wednesday.
■ The IDF said it targeted a “key Hamas terrorist who advanced terror attacks against IDF troops” after Hamas militants fired at “an area where IDF troops are operating” in northern Gaza.
■ Iran’s top judge warned protesters there would be “no leniency for those who help the enemy against the Islamic Republic,” while accusing Israel and the U.S. of pursuing hybrid methods to disrupt the country.
■ The Israeli military said it struck and killed a Hezbollah militant in one of the group’s aerial units in Jouaiyya, southern Lebanon.
■ The police officer who fatally shot a Bedouin citizen of Israel in the country’s south was questioned again and shown body-camera footage of the shooting, recorded by another officer at the scene, saying it supports his account.
■ Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara is expected to announce that, in her view, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s request for a pardon in his criminal trial does not meet the legal requirements.