Tag: Israel

  • Israel renews bombing of Hamas positions in the Gaza Strip

    Israel renews bombing of Hamas positions in the Gaza Strip

    The Israeli Army has again attacked several suspected terrorists, and the infrastructure of the Palestinian Islamist organisation Hamas in the Gaza Strip, it said on Wednesday.

    The military said that tunnels, headquarters, weapons depots and weapons themselves were targeted.

    Positions of the so-called security apparatus of Hamas, which controls the coastal region, were also attacked, it said.

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    The security apparatus is responsible for surveillance and the imprisonment of opponents of Hamas in the Gaza Strip, the Israeli military said.

    Militant Palestinians from the Gaza Strip again fired rockets at Israel during the night and in the morning.

    There were several rocket alerts in the border area.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Israel deploys weapons capable of melting skin, Palestinian authorities allege

    Israel deploys weapons capable of melting skin, Palestinian authorities allege

    The Palestinian authorities have raised the alarm that Israelis has deployed weapon capable of melting the skin in its attack on Gaza.

    The Palestinian authorities, in its account of the ongoing airstrike on Gaza Strip, said those wounded now needed special treatment outside Gaza.

    The Palestinian authorities, in a statement, also alleged that the Israeli force executed 91 Palestinian since October 7th, many of them children.

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    It challenged the media on the need to be neutral and present the facts as it were.

    No fewer than 5,791 people, including 2,360 children, 1,421 women and 217 elderlies have been killed in Gaza since October 7 Israeli airstrike, Palestine authorities also said.

    According to the Palestine Embassy in Abuja, 16,297 persons sustained various level of injuries as of October 24.

    Giving the breakdown, the Palestinian Embassy said as of October 24, 68 health workers have been killed with 100 injured.

    It also noted that 12 hospitals and 32 health centres were out of service due to direct attacks or running out of fuel.

  • Israel/ Palestine: we’re going to get all hostages out, says U.S.

    Israel/ Palestine: we’re going to get all hostages out, says U.S.

    United States National Security Council’s Coordinator of Strategic Communication John Kirby, at a briefing organised by the Washington Foreign Press Center, speaks on the situation in Middle East. United States Bureau Chief OLUKOREDE YISHAU, who attended the briefing, reports that the United States will continue to work for peace in the region.

    American hostages

    Very busy few days here with respect to the Israel-Hamas conflict. We started off going into the weekend with the very good news that we got two American hostages out and will be reuniting with their families here. That’s terrific news. But we’re not resting on laurels; we know we have additional Americans that are being held hostage, as well as dozens more from other countries and obviously from Israel. So we’re going to stay lashed up with our partners to do everything we can to get hostages out. They should be released immediately; there’s no reason for them to be held in the first place.

    The President had a very active weekend. He was briefed throughout the course of the weekend by his national security team. And of course, as I think you saw, he had an opportunity to reconnect with Prime Minister Netanyahu, get an update from the prime minister on how things were going on the ground, as well as to talk, as he has always, about the continued need for humanitarian assistance to get in, and certainly the – our hostage recovery efforts.

    He also had a chance to speak with the pope, and of course he had a chance to speak with some of our key European allies, the leaders of – I’m sorry, European and Western Hemisphere allies, the leaders of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, and of course the United Kingdom.

    Humanitarian assistance

    On humanitarian assistance, I think you’ve all seen the reports that two convoys of humanitarian assistance got in over the weekend. That was good news. But we know there’s an awful lot more work to do; it’s not enough. Another convoy is being processed as we speak. Hopefully that will be able to get in and get delivered to the people of Gaza today, and then we’re working very, very hard to keep that flow going, to keep a sustainable level of humanitarian assistance getting into Gaza.

    Again, we know the needs are acute; we know they are significant; we know that two convoys of trucks is not enough. We are working on this very, very hard with our partners, and of course with the UN, to make sure that the people of Gaza don’t suffer any more than they already have. So again, we’re still that – still doing that coordination.

    We are also still working hard with partners on the ground to see what we can do to get civilians out. It’s great that we’re getting humanitarian assistance in. We also want to provide a vehicle of safe passage for innocent civilians who want to leave Gaza to get out, and that includes, of course, several hundred American citizens that we’re tracking that want to leave. That safe passage has not been finalized, but again, we’re working very, very hard at that.

    I can also reaffirm that, over the course of the weekend, additional security assistance continued to flow into Israel. It’s almost on a near-daily basis, and every day is a little bit different, obviously, based on the needs of the Israelis. And we’re being careful not to quantify or get into too much detail about what they’re getting – for their own operational security purposes, of course. But that security assistance continues to flow.

    Preventive measures

    And then lastly – and I think you saw from the Secretary of Defense – we have taken additional steps over the course of the weekend to increase our force posture and our readiness in the region to deter any other actor from attempting to widen this conflict, or – and certainly to continue to protect and defend our troops on the ground, and our own national security interests in the region. The Secretary of Defense announced that the USS Eisenhower will be moving through the Mediterranean and into the central command area of responsibility, that is to the Gulf region. He has added additional air defense systems, including a Patriot battery and some theater air defense batteries into the region. And of course, we continue to bolster the naval presence now by ordering the Bataan – the USS Bataan amphibious ready group with their embarked Marines, will now be heading into the eastern Mediterranean out of the central command, the Middle East region. So that will be coming in future days here. But it’s all part and parcel of making sure we got the right force posture, making sure we’re sending a strong deterrent signal to any other actors in the region that might want to widen the conflict.

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    Chances of releasing American and Israeli hostages in Gaza

    From the very beginning, in the early hours of this conflict, we have been in touch with our Israeli counterparts – as we would anyway, but certainly in light of the conflict and the violence that Hamas visited upon the Israeli people, we were in early in touch with our Israeli counterparts and trying to get a sense from them – and the President did this too when we went to Tel Aviv last week – try to get a sense from them about their intentions, their strategy, their aims, trying to get a sense of their answers to the tough questions that any military needs to ask itself before it conducts any major operations.

    I’m not going to get ahead of the Israelis and what they will or won’t do. That would be completely inappropriate. But of course, we are talking to them about all the kinds of consequences, third – second- and third-order effects that come from making decisions on the battlefield and what that means, and we’ll continue to do that. But – and this is an important “but” – the Israeli Defense Forces, they will make the decisions. They and their political leadership will make the decisions about what they do, when they do it, and how they do it. But obviously we’re curious as to understand as best we can the how and the aims and the strategy that they’re putting into the effort. And that – those conversations will absolutely continue.

    Hamas militants

    Let me just make it crystal clear the number of appropriate civilian causalities in this or any other conflict is zero. We don’t want to see any innocent lives hurt; we don’t want to see any innocent people injured or cast from their homes. Of course, we don’t want to see any civilian causalities, and that’s one of the reasons why we have continued to work very closely with our Israeli counterparts about – talking to them about their aims, their strategy, their intentions, the manner in which they are conducting operations. And again, those conversations will absolutely continue.

    One of the things that separates Israel and the United States – vital democracies – from groups like Hamas is that we actually do make every attempt to abide by the laws of war, and we actually do try to minimize civilian causalities. Hamas, on the other hand, because they’re nothing but a terrorist group – they’re certainly not a responsible governing power – they could care less about the laws of war and they could care less about the people of Gaza, using them as human shields, tunneling under their homes, headquartering themselves in hospitals and schools, encouraging them to stay home right there in northern Gaza and putting them literally in harm’s way because they don’t care. That’s the big difference between Israel and the United States, and groups like Hamas. So there’s a big difference in approach here.

    Motivation for hostage-taking

    On the question about hostages, I certainly can’t speak for Hamas’s motivations. This is out of the playbook, right? They’ve done this hostage-taking thing before to either gain leverage or simply to continue to terrorize a population or both. We have said clearly – we’ll say it again today – they need to release every single hostage they are holding. They all should be released and back with their families where they belong.

    Now, we’re glad we got two Americans out on Friday, and we’re still going to continue to work to try to get the remaining Americans out. We’re doing that through consultations and conversations that we’re having with partners in the region. That’s how we got those two, and we hope that we can follow that up with more success in coming days.

    But again, what the motivation is in terms of them trying to eke it out over time to delay a potential ground invasion, I can’t verify that. And I certainly, as I said earlier, won’t speak for the Israelis and what they will or won’t do on the ground. All I can tell you is that we have been working – and I don’t mean – and this is not an exaggeration – we’ve been working by the hour since the moment we found out that Americans were being held hostage to get them released. That work continues. And again, certainly grateful that we got two, but we want to get the rest as well.

    And then on the Iran threat, I would just say that we have never been blind to Iran’s destabilizing behaviors and the threats they pose in the region since coming into office. That’s why we have added additional sanctions regimes – 40 of them since we came into office, 30 in just the last year alone. That’s why we bolstered our military presence in the region. Even before the conflict built with Hamas, we had bolstered naval and air capabilities in the Gulf region, and it’s why we are working so much closer in a more integrated way with our allies and partners in the region, trying to pursue, for instance, a regional integrated air and missile defense. What do you think that’s about? It’s all about Iran.

    So again, we have been very focused on what Iran is doing. We are not blind to the fact that they continue to support groups like Hamas and Hizballah and these militia groups in Iraq and in Syria that have been recently, over the course of the last weekend, attacking some of our facilities and our troops as well as our diplomats. We are certainly mindful of the impact that they have and the encouragement that they give to these groups. So again, without getting ahead of where we are right now and what ways in which we might continue to hold Iran accountable, I can tell you that we are certainly not blind at all to what Iran is doing.

  • World Court to hold public hearings over Israel’s occupation Feb. 19

    World Court to hold public hearings over Israel’s occupation Feb. 19

    The International Court of Justice (ICJ) will hold public hearings to allow parties to give their views on the legal consequences of Israel’s occupation of the Palestinian territories before eventually issuing a non-binding legal opinion, it said yesterday.

    Hearings in the Dutch city of The Hague will open yesterday, Feb. 19, the court said.

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    The 193-member United Nations General Assembly in December had asked the ICJ, also known as the World Court, to give its view on the on-going conflict between Israel and Palestinians.

    The request for a so-called advisory opinion had been made before the current escalation in the region, so the ICJ’s opinion will focus solely on the Israeli occupation. It was made in a resolution adopted by the General Assembly with 87 votes in favour. Israel, the United States and 24 other members voted against, while 53 abstained.

  • Israel should spare civilians in targeting Hamas

    Israel should spare civilians in targeting Hamas

    The candidate of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) in the 2023 presidential election, Prince Adewole Adebayo, has said that until peace is restored in the Middle East, the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) will continue to launch offensive attacks on Gaza with a sole target to decimate and degrade the Hamas.

     Adeboye stated this in his Twitter handle, @Pres_Adebayo while acknowledging that Israel has a legitimate right to seek to degrade Hamas, it should be cautious not to cause collateral damage to the entire Gaza because of the innocent civilians living there.

    He said he had earlier made his position clear to world leaders and bodies like the American President, Joe Biden; the Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu; the British Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak; the French President, Emmanuel Macron; the Canadian Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, as well as the United Nations and the European Union Commission, that the intense military campaign currently going on in Gaza is not targeted against terrorists alone.

    He said: “Until peace is achieved, it is perfectly legitimate for the IDF to seek to degrade Hammas, but as I have made it clear to @Joe Biden, @Benjamin Netanyahu, @Rishi Sunak, @Emmanuel Macron, @Justin Trudeau, @UN @EU Commission, what is on now is blitzkrieg on Gaza, not targeted action against the terrorists.”

    Adebayo had earlier last week stated that ensuring peace in the Middle East was a debt that the international community owes the region, and insisted that getting the Oslo Accord to work again would be a master stroke that would bring enduring peace in the troubled region.

    He had described as dastardly and heinous the surprised attack on Israel by Hamas on October 6, which led to the death of many Israeli; a development that eventually led to the current conflict in the Middle East.

    This is coming as Israeli evacuation order for hospitals in northern Gaza has been rejected by the World Health Organisation (WHO).

    WHO reasoned that there are patients who cannot be simply moved because of their health conditions.

    The world health body, therefore, urged Israel to withdraw its evacuation order.

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    “There are patients who are there that cannot simply be moved, many they are on mechanical ventilators.

    “There are also newborns on incubators, people in unstable conditions, and it’s very difficult to move them,” WHO spokesman, Tarik Jašarevic said yesterday.

    He said the task was “almost impossible”.

    “We are calling on Israel to reconsider this order,” Jašarevic said.

    Also, a group of UN agencies have called for a humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza as conditions worsen in the territory.

    The World Food Programme (WFP), UN’s Development Programme (UNDP), Population Fund (UNFPA), International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF) and WHO were among five agencies who described the situation in Gaza as “catastrophic” in a joint statement.

    The UN’s plea for a de-escalation of the conflict comes as Israel warns of intensified strikes on Gaza.

    The UN agencies highlighted that children, pregnant women and the elderly were the most vulnerable – and that nearly half of the population of the Gaza Strip were children.

  • Israel’s offensive on Gaza

    Israel’s offensive on Gaza

    Sir: It is no longer news that Israel has been launching air strikes against Hamas who they blame for firing hundreds of rockets resulting in the killing of their soldiers and hundreds of their citizens. It accused Hamas for crossing its border, killing and kidnapping its citizens on October 7.

    The war has so far claimed thousands of innocent lives from both sides. No matter what triggered the renewed hostilities leading to humanitarian catastrophe, Israel should be blamed. It has been pursuing expansionist agenda in West Bank, Gaza and many villages, ignoring UN resolutions barring it from further occupation.

    In the last 16 years, Palestinians in Gaza have been living in horror and bondage. Israeli blockade of Gaza has made lives unbearable to the pauperized Palestinians. Attempts in 1948 to provide two-states solution did not materialize. The effort has not yielded the expected or fruitful result as Israel has refused or neglected to commit to the agreement. Instead, what the world continues to witness is Israel’s illegal occupation and killing of unarmed Palestine women and children on daily basis. 

    The economically strangulated Palestinians have had to resort to guerrilla fighting in order to free themselves from the shackles of Israeli domination and illegal occupation.

    While helpless Palestinians are being subjected to all manner of hardship by its oppressor, (Israel), the Western powers, US, UK, France etc. looked the other way. The Palestinians are only allowed to live in squalor in a land that belongs to them.

    In Ukraine, armed rebels are considered freedom fighters while group such as Hamas, fighting for their rights are being labelled as terrorists. This is hypocrisy. The war between Israel and Palestine will not end so long as Israel continues its land encroachment and illegal building of settlements for its people. The US president, Joe Biden’s visit to Israel neither helped the call for immediate cessation of fire nor doused tension in the war-torn Gaza. President Biden’s message of sending more weapons to fight Hamas is unfortunate and will aggravate tension in the Middle East countries. 

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    One had expected that Biden would prevail on Israel to stop air strikes, stop the human rights violations, and get the Israelis to desist from attacking and killing of innocent women and children in Gaza and in other Palestinian territories. One had wished that President Biden’s visit would have provided an avenue for lasting solution on the Israel/Palestinian war, including the need for UN to summon an emergency meeting aimed at resolving the century-long two-state solution.

    Rather, President Biden only met with Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu and they discussed on how United States of America (USA) and its allies could help the country. President Biden did not extend such visit to Gaza to see how children and women are being massacred by Israel’s aerial bombardment. With the death toll said to be more than five thousand in Gaza and Israel’s decision to cut off electricity, water and aids, Palestinians are being mercilessly punished or annihilated by Israel while the world leaders’ watch.

    While many countries continue to condemn the war, civilian casualties continue to increase every passing day. There is urgent need for both the warring parties to drop their arsenal and embrace peace. The war in Gaza can only be resolved through two-state solution as mooted by United Nations and other conflict resolution experts.

    • Ibrahim Mustapha, Pambegua, Kaduna State.
  • Israel and Palestine war: I didn’t support Israel – Wike

    Israel and Palestine war: I didn’t support Israel – Wike

    Minister of Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Barr. Nyesom Wike, has provided clarifications on his October 3 meeting with the Israeli Ambassador to Nigeria.

    Wike described as baseless and untrue, insinuations that he expressed support for Israel against Palestine.

    The minister, at a recent meeting with the leadership of the Abuja National Mosque Management Board, said he had no constitutional powers to determine Nigeria’s diplomatic relations with other countries, as such powers lies absolutely with the President and Commander-in-Chief.

    He said: “I have heard from various social media platforms that we had a meeting that we are doing this and that with Israel. I am here acting on delegation of powers on behalf of Mr. President.

    “I cannot determine a relationship between a country and another country. So, it is difficult for anybody to say I am doing this, I am doing that. 

    “Any foreign body that wants to have anything to do with Nigeria, it is the Minister of Foreign Affairs who will write to me and state that these people want to see me; it is simple. And when they come, it is in my position to say look, we want to partner with you. Take for instance, you are going into agriculture and we want to partner, then we tell you where exactly”.

    Wike further clarified that his meeting with the Israeli Ambassador was purely for agricultural partnership in the interest of farmers in the FCT.

    He said: “In Abuja here, most of them have cultural farms and we say look, it is our own desire to help anybody who wants to invest in Abuja particularly in agriculture in order to employ our people and in order to get more revenue. It has nothing to do with another country. It doesn’t work that way.

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    “When our people begin to now think different angles and people may not understand that it is not correct. So I will like to use this opportunity to say look we have to talk to our people. In fact we must live harmoniously. We must live together to make sure that development is promoted”.

    The Israeli Ambassador to Nigeria, Michael Freeman, had on Tuesday October 3 visited the FCT minister, days before the Hamas’ attack on Israel and continued retaliation by the Jewish nation.

    However, in spite of the gap between the visit and the eruption of conflict between the group and Israel, some elements had accused Wike of offering Nigeria’s support to Israel.

    Freeman had during the visit expressed his country’s willingness to work with Nigeria to generate employment opportunities for the unemployed population, transform Abuja into a technology hub, and engage in agricultural partnerships.

    In response, Wike conveyed Nigeria’s commitment to partnering with Israel in the field of Information Technology with a plan to establish a technology village in Abuja.

    He also highlighted the favourable climate in Abuja, suggesting a collaborative effort to create a large technology-driven farm that could employ many youths.

    Wike sought Israel’s assistance in enhancing Nigeria’s technological security measures to strengthen national security.

  • Israel, Hamas fight over public opinion

    Israel, Hamas fight over public opinion

    • By Keren Setton

    It was only a matter of time before a tragic incident in the war between Israel and Hamas would become a battle of versions between the two adversaries and their supporters.

    Israel and Hamas have continued to trade blame on the explosion that rocked a hospital in Gaza on Tuesday.

    The terrorist group blamed the blast on an Israeli airstrike. The Israeli military said a rocket that was misfired by the Palestinian Islamic Jihad landed in Gaza rather than in Israel. The Health Ministry in the Gaza Strip, which is run by Hamas, reported that 500 people were killed in the strike. Israeli officials did not immediately deny Israel’s involvement, saying, instead, that they would review the incident. They came up with proof of their non-involvement only hours later. For many Palestinian supporters, Israel’s investigative efforts made no difference; the adoption of the Hamas version of events was almost immediate.

    Hamas and similar terrorist organizations are quick to accuse Israel. Israel takes more time and, in the meantime, the narrative sticks.

    “Hamas and similar terrorist organizations are quick to accuse Israel,” Prof. Motti Neiger, from the School of Communication at Bar-Ilan University, told The Media Line. “Israel takes more time and, in the meantime, the narrative sticks.”

    He added: “Israel sees its credibility at stake. Because the fighting is expected to be long, it wants to maintain credibility.”

    According to Neiger, Israel learned this lesson from the killing of Palestinian American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh over two years ago when it immediately denied involvement in the shooting and later had to admit she was likely killed by Israeli military fire. The incident led to widespread condemnation of Israel.

    Following the hospital blast, several Arab nations declared national days of mourning, with the Palestinian Authority announcing three such days. Demonstrations were held in several Arab cities in the West Bank, Lebanon, and Jordan. In Lebanon, protestors rallied in front of the US and French embassies, criticizing them for their support of Israel. They also tried to break into UN offices in Beirut. In Jordan, angry citizens tried to storm the Israeli Embassy.

    “Gaza is considered an underdog by the Arab world,” Wadea Awawdy, a Nazareth-based political analyst from Radio Anas, told The Media Line. “The years of a blockade imposed by Israel and Egypt have led to a lot of anger, even though there are reservations about what Hamas did to civilians in Israel.”

    According to Awawdy, “Israel’s attempts to explain the hospital incident are ridiculed in the Arab world. They claim the missiles in Gaza cannot cause such damage. There is no chance for Israel’s explanations to be accepted, there is no belief,” he added.

    Israeli media interviewed experts who said Israeli bombs would create a major crater in the ground, one that is not visible in drone or satellite imagery.

    “The more technology there is, the easier it is to fabricate things,” Professor Hillel Frisch, a senior fellow at the Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security, told The Media Line. According to Frisch, the number of casualties reported by the Hamas Health Ministry does not align with footage streamlined live from Gaza, which showed no increased traffic of ambulances in the immediate aftermath of the explosion or movement of bodies from the site.

    The incident occurred just hours before US President Joe Biden landed in Tel Aviv on a visit to show support for Israel. After landing on Wednesday, Biden met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and said he “was deeply saddened and outraged by the explosion at the hospital in Gaza yesterday. Based on what I’ve seen, it appears it was done by the other team, and not you.” Biden added that he had viewed intelligence shown to him by the Pentagon, alluding to the fact that the US had its own information.

    Denying responsibility, the Israeli military provided what it said was proof that it was not behind the deadly incident.

    The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said in a video statement released hours after the incident that “an analysis of IDF operational systems indicates that a barrage of rockets was fired in Gaza passing in close proximity to the Ahli hospital in Gaza at the time it was hit.”

    He added: “Intelligence from multiple sources that we have in order hands indicates that Islamic Jihad is responsible for the failed rocket launch that hit the hospital in Gaza.”

    The IDF later released a recording and transcript of a conversation between Hamas operatives it had intercepted in which they acknowledged it was their own rocket that hit the hospital.

    “They are saying that the shrapnel from the missile is local shrapnel and not like Israeli shrapnel,” said one of the participants in the conversation, as quoted by the IDF.

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    “There are two sides in the struggle. On the one hand, we have a state whose interest is not to hurt uninvolved citizens because that hampers its efforts to hit Hamas and continue the fighting. Such incidents only harm this effort,” Neiger said. “On the other hand, we have a terrorist organization that, just a week ago, committed a heinous massacre and is trying to destabilize the whole region-why should we believe their narrative?”

    There was some criticism in Israel as to whether the army should have refuted the claims quicker, in an attempt to counter the claims that it was responsible for the incident.

    “The IDF’s main goal is to win the battle and reach its goals. Propaganda is secondary in importance, and the army shouldn’t be preoccupied with that,” said Frisch.

    After visiting Israel, Biden was scheduled to stop in Jordan for a summit with leaders from the Arab world. The meeting was canceled shortly after the hospital strike before its circumstances were known.

    Biden was to meet with Jordan’s King Abdullah, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.

    The anger among Arab leaders towards the US is so great. The repeated declarations of friendship by Biden for Israel and the almost complete adoption of Israel’s position, make them believe there will be no benefit in speaking with Biden. They don’t see him as someone able to extricate the region from this catastrophe.

    Immediately after images of the hospital explosion began streaming, Abbas said he was withdrawing from the summit, and Jordan announced its cancellation.

    For now, the reaction among Arab countries that have relations with Israel has been mainly condemnation. As the war persists and public opinion in Israel becomes harsher, this could shift.

    “The room for maneuvering will become smaller,” Awawdy said. “If the fighting intensifies, especially if there will be a ground invasion of Gaza, this will change the positions of these countries. Until now, they have acted only to fulfill what they see is their obligation.”

    The war comes after weeks of reports that there had been significant progress in normalization talks between Israel and Saudi Arabia. The fighting has put a hold on that process and could derail it completely, along with recent relations that Israel forged with the United Arab Emirates, Morocco, and Bahrain. After Hamas’ opening offensive last week, Bahrain and the UAE condemned the terrorist organization. After the incident at the hospital, though, the UAE, together with Russia, asked to convene a special UN Security Council meeting, which was held on Wednesday.

    “Even those who believed in normalization, have now lost hope. This conflict has killed the chance for compromise, distancing any opportunity for peace,” Awawdy summarized.

    •This article was first published in www.themedialine.org

  • Israel’s bombing hits ‘safe zones’ as Palestinians trapped in Gaza

    Israel’s bombing hits ‘safe zones’ as Palestinians trapped in Gaza

    • Guterres seeks immediate humanitarian ceasefire

    Israeli airstrikes pounded locations across the Gaza Strip yesterday, including parts of the south that Israel had declared as safe zones.

    It heightened fears among more than 2 million Palestinians trapped in the territory that nowhere was safe.

    This is as United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza.

    “Gaza needs aid at scale and on a sustained basis,” Guterres said during a press conference in Cairo with Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry.

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    He called on Hamas to release the hostages it seized on Oct. 7, and on Israel to give unrestricted access for aid.

    In the nearly two weeks since a devastating Hamas rampage in southern Israel, the Israeli military has relentlessly attacked Gaza in response. Even after Israel told Palestinians to evacuate the north and head to what it called “safe zones” in the south, strikes continued across the territory overnight and Palestinian militants continued firing rockets into Israel.

    A residential building in Khan Younis, a city in southern Gaza where hundreds of thousands of Palestinians had sought shelter, was among the places hit. Medical personnel at Nasser Hospital said they received at least 12 dead and 40 wounded.

    The bombardments came after Israel agreed Wednesday to allow Egypt to deliver limited humanitarian aid to Gaza, the first crack in a punishing 11-day siege. Many of Gaza’s residents were down to one meal a day and drinking dirty water.

    The announcement of a plan to bring water, food and other supplies into Gaza came as fury over a Tuesday night explosion at Gaza City’s al-Ahli Hospital spread across the Middle East. There were conflicting claims of who was behind the blast, which health authorities in Hamas-run Gaza said had killed hundreds of Palestinians.

    Hamas officials in Gaza blamed an Israeli airstrike. Israel denied it was involved and released a flurry of video, audio and other information that it said showed the blast was caused by a rocket misfire by Islamic Jihad, another militant group operating in Gaza. Islamic Jihad dismissed the Israeli claim.

    The Associated Press has not independently verified any of the claims or evidence.

    U.S. President Joe Biden, who visited Israel on Wednesday, said data from his Defence Department showed the explosion was not likely caused by an Israeli airstrike. The White House later said an analysis of “overhead imagery, intercepts and open-source information” showed Israel was not behind the attack. But the U.S. continues to collect evidence.

    Following airstrikes early yesterday, sirens wailed as emergency crews rushed to rescue survivors from a building in Khan Younis, where many residents were believed trapped under misshapen bed frames, broken furniture and cement chunks.

    A small, soot-covered child, unconscious and dangling in the arms of a rescue worker, was taken out of a damaged building and rushed toward a waiting ambulance.

    Gaza’s Hamas-led government said several bakeries in the territory were hit in the overnight strikes, making it even harder for residents to get food.

    The Israeli military said it killed a top Palestinian militant in Rafah, near the Egyptian border, and hit hundreds of targets across Gaza, including militant tunnel shafts, intelligence infrastructure and command centres. It said it also hit dozens of mortar-launching posts, most of them immediately after they launched shells at Israel. Palestinians have launched barrages of rockets at Israel since the fighting began.

    Israel has said it is attacking Hamas militants wherever they may be in Gaza, and accused the group’s leaders and fighters of taking shelter among the civilian population, leaving Palestinians feeling in constant danger.

    In northern areas that Israel warned to evacuate, airstrikes also hit three residential towers in al-Zahra, the Hamas-led Interior Ministry in Gaza said, as well as homes along the border with Israel. Israel has massed troops in the area and is expected to launch a ground invasion into Gaza, though military officials say no decision has been made.

    The Gaza Health Ministry said 3,785 people have been killed in Gaza since the war began, the majority of them women, children and older adults. Nearly 12,500 others were injured, and another 1,300 people were believed buried under the rubble, health authorities said.

    More than 1,400 people in Israel have been killed, mostly civilians slain during Hamas’ deadly incursion on Oct. 7. Roughly 200 others were abducted. The Israeli military saidyesterday it had notified the families of 203 captives.

    Violence between Israel and Hezbollah militants in Lebanon has also flared in recent days amid fears the Hamas-Israel conflict could spread across the region. In the West Bank, where scores of Palestinians have been killed since the war started, 10 Palestinians were killed over last two days, nine by Israeli forces and one by a settler, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry.

    The deal to get aid into Gaza remained fragile, while hospitals in the sealed territory say they are on the verge of collapse.

    Biden said Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi agreed to open the Rafah crossing to let in an initial group of 20 trucks with humanitarian aid. If Hamas confiscates aid, “it will end,” he said. The aid was expected to start moving Friday at the earliest, White House officials said.

    Egypt must still repair the road across the border, which was cratered by Israeli airstrikes. More than 200 trucks and some 3,000 tons of aid are positioned at or near the crossing, Gaza’s only connection to Egypt, said the head of the Red Crescent for North Sinai, Khalid Zayed.

    Supplies will go in under supervision of the UN, Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry told Al-Arabiya TV. Asked if foreigners and dual nationals seeking to leave would be let through, he said: “As long as the crossing is operating normally and the (crossing) facility has been repaired.”

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said the decision was approved after a request from Biden. It said Israel “will not thwart” deliveries of food, water or medicine from Egypt, as long as they are limited to civilians in the south of the Gaza Strip and don’t go to Hamas militants. The statement made no mention of fuel, which is badly needed for hospital generators.

  • Gaza’s innocent victims

    Gaza’s innocent victims

    By Kene Obiezu

    Sir: In Gaza, Palestine, war continues to rage between Israel and Hamas with catastrophic consequences for children and conscience.

    On October 7, Hamas militants broke into Israel from its southern frontier, slaughtering hundreds and abducting hundreds more. At the end of the operation, more than 1400 Israelis lay dead with about 200 abducted and taken into Gaza by the militants.

    The attack which has generated an outpouring of support and sympathy the world over has provoked Israel into action. It was in furtherance of an age-old conflict between Israel and Palestine.

    It has also provoked Israel into responding with a bombardment of Gaza which many fear is only preparatory to a ground invasion. Israel has asked Palestinians living in the south of the country to move to the north as it prepares to strike. That is about 1.1 million people.

    Following the attacks, many countries have harshly condemned Hamas for the killing of innocent people as it should be. But it must be said that what has happened in Gaza for many years, well before this latest escalation, is the death of innocence.

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    For years, as the so-called two-state solution has failed to take hold, conflict and confrontation have become increasingly attractive but savagely costly options.

    The cost can never really be quantified, but the 724 children killed so far in the latest escalation gives a glimpse of just how much has been lost. Killing women and children may send a message of crushing might. But the terrible injustice would not be forgotten or forgiven in a hurry

    Israel is striking Gaza hard. Hamas, the Palestinian Resistance Movement, is its target. But it is raining bombs on the entire strip, its message heavily punctuated by vengeance and powered by deterrence.

    The October 7, Hamas attacked Israel. The attack has rightly been described as a pogrom. Children beheaded. Party goers mowed down. Octogenarians kidnapped.

     Israel, a country where paranoia is official, was caught off guard, its sophisticated security apparatus rendered impotent by rebel fury.  In the aftermath of the attack, Israel has vowed to avenge the deaths; to deter further and future attacks.

    It has continued to pound the Gaza Strip, home to some 2.3 million Palestinians, huddled together by an undying sense of justice.

    The humanitarian toll has mounted. With hundreds killed, thousands injured or displaced, a humanitarian catastrophe is looming.

     Fuel, food, and water have been caught off as Gazans prepare for the might of an enraged nation.

    As these things have happened, the international community has recognized Israel’s right to defend itself, which is itself an ominous sight.

    Yet, there is wide recognition that if Israel is left to feed its thirst for vengeance in the region, women and children will disproportionately suffer.

    On Monday,  October 17, , the Al Ahli hospital in Gaza was bombed. About 500 people were said to have died. Israel and Hamas have expectedly traded blame over the attack.

    What is unfolding in the war is as expected. That women and children would become pawns in a conflict they know very little about was clear. There is no gainsaying that a decades-long conflict has cost women, but especially children, disproportionately. It begs the question of the essence of war. If innocence and innocents are the greatest casualties of war, why war, then?  Why this one? Why Russia’s war in Ukraine? To what end is the terrible suffering of innocent people?

     There is really no alternative to peace. That is why people should strive to live in peace everywhere. Every country should also speak the language of peace. Since women and children are the biggest casualties of conflict.

    Israel has every right to defend itself. But that right must not be used wrongly. It should target Hamas and no more. Every precaution must be taken to spare women and children.  The most vulnerable must not be made victims. The most insidious thing about war is that it does not discriminate. It claims the guilty as well as the innocent. The urgency of peace must be emphasized to the warring parties. There is no other way.

     With every child killed, anguish mounts. Anguish at the toll of war. But also at the terrible failure of diplomacy to distil an age-long dispute between Israel and Palestine.

    A lasting solution must be found. Two cannot walk together unless they agree. Never has a failure to agree been more ruinous. Never has it been this murderous.

    • Kene Obiezu, keneobiezu@gmail.com