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Official: 400 passengers left Israel via US-assisted flights

A senior State Department official stated on Tuesday that the United States had helped around 400 U.S. Citizens and others fly out of Israel amid conflict with Iran since Saturday. They hope to accommodate even more in the days to come.

"We are very aware that there is still capacity and that U.S. citizens still want to leave Israel. The airspace has not been reliably opened. The official stated that the situation is "extremely dynamic".

An official stated that the State Department now shares information with 27,000 people about safety and security in the region, as well as leaving it. This is up from the 25,000 who received the same information last week.

On Saturday, the U.S. began limited assisted departure flights for U.S. Citizens, Lawful Permanent Residents and their immediate families.

Officials said that thousands of Israelis had left Israel by land for Jordan and several hundred others had left via Egypt in the last two days. A few thousand Americans have travelled to Cyprus by ship, mostly through Birthright and other private groups.

The official confirmed that hundreds of Iranians have left through Azerbaijan. Turkmenistan had been preventing U.S. citizens from entering the country, but has now allowed them to enter after diplomatic efforts over the weekend.

The State Department has heard reports that a few Americans have been detained by Iranian authorities in this case, but the official did not provide any additional information.

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, announced on Monday Israel and Iran reached a ceasefire agreement despite violations being reported.

Israel launched a surprise strike on Iran's nuclear sites on June 13 and killed the top military commander.

In Israel, 28 people have been killed by retaliatory rocket strikes. Reporting by Daphne Psaledakis, Editing by Kevin Liffey

(source: Reuters)