Israeli protesters demand return of hostages, early elections

Families of hostages and supporters protest to call for the release of hostages kidnapped on the deadly October 7 attack by Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in Tel Aviv, Israel, January 20, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 21 January 2024
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Israeli protesters demand return of hostages, early elections

  • Israel’s retaliatory bombardment and ground offensive have killed at least 24,927 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas government’s health ministry

TEL AVIV: Thousands of people demonstrated in central Tel Aviv on Saturday, calling for the return of hostages held in Gaza and early elections to oust Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Demonstrators marched through the city’s Habima Square, a frequent protest site, with some carrying signs calling Netanyahu “the face of evil” and demanding “elections now.”
Protesters demanding the return of hostages also gathered in Haifa and outside the premier’s Jerusalem residence.
Netanyahu is under intense pressure to secure the return of the hostages seized by Hamas on October 7, with the militant group on Monday announcing the deaths of two more of its captives.
Avi Lulu Shamriz, the father of Alon Shamriz, a hostage mistakenly killed by Israeli troops earlier in the war, told AFP in Tel Aviv Netanyahu’s war cabinet was heading for disaster.
“The way we’re going, all the hostages are going to die. It’s not too late to free them,” he said.
In a briefing on Saturday evening, military spokesman Daniel Hagari said troops had found a tunnel in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip where some hostages had been kept.
“We found evidence indicating the presence of hostages,” he said. This evidence included paintings, including by a five-year-old captive.
He said “about 20 hostages” had been held in the tunnel at different times “in difficult conditions without daylight... with little oxygen and terrible humidity.”
Soldiers entered the tunnel where they encountered militants and fought a battle in which “the terrorists were eliminated,” Hagari said.
Netanyahu’s coalition has increasingly come under attack from rival politicians and critics over his handling of the war.
Another protester, Yael Niv, said Israel desperately needed a new government to correct the country’s course.

The 50-year-old said “the messianic elements in our government” were a major danger to Israel, as she handed out stickers urging the return of the hostages.
“Eliminating Hamas is not going to happen through war and the escalation of violence,” she added.
Demonstrator Dor Endov, a lawyer, said the war needs to stop and hostages be brought back.
“He’d really like this war to continue,” Endov said of Netanyahu.
“We already lost the war on 7th of October when those people were kidnapped ... We want our family, our kidnapped people back home.”
Netanyahu has vowed to destroy Hamas in response to the Palestinian group’s unprecedented October 7 attacks which resulted in the deaths of about 1,140 people in Israel, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
During the attacks militants seized about 250 hostages, around 132 of whom Israel says remain in Gaza. At least 27 captives are believed to have been killed, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.
Israel’s retaliatory bombardment and ground offensive have killed at least 24,927 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas government’s health ministry.
Netanyahu has vowed not to end Israel’s war in Gaza until Hamas militants are “eliminated,” drawing criticism from his rivals and even from within his war cabinet that his goals are unclear.
“Everybody in the country apart from his poisonous coalition knows that his decisions are not for the good of the country, he is only trying to stay in office,” 69-year-old demonstrator Yair Katz said.
“We all want to see him resign, but he’ll never do it by his own means.”
Even before the war began, Netanyahu faced regular mass protests against the legal reforms his government was trying to push through.
The reforms aimed to curb the powers of the judiciary, a move seen by opponents as a threat to Israel’s democracy.
 

 


Iranian hardline clerics seek swift naming of new supreme leader

Updated 3 sec ago
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Iranian hardline clerics seek swift naming of new supreme leader

  • Calls by the clerics suggest that at least some in the clerical establishment are uncomfortable with leaving a three-man council in charge
DUBAI: Two influential and ‌hardline Iranian clerics have called for the swift selection of a new supreme leader to help guide the nation amid a new wave of US and Israeli strikes, Iranian media reported on Saturday.
The calls by the clerics suggest that at least some in the clerical establishment are uncomfortable with leaving a three-man council in charge, even temporarily under constitutional rules, after the killing of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali ‌Khamenei.
US President ‌Donald Trump has said the ‌US ⁠should have a role ⁠in choosing the new leader, a demand Iran has rejected.
Naser Makarem Shirazi, a grand ayatollah, which means he commands a broad following for his religious rulings, said an appointment was needed swiftly to “help better organize the country’s affairs,” state media reported.
Last ⁠week, two senior Shi’ite religious authorities ‌also issued fatwas, or religious ‌decrees, calling on Muslims around the world to avenge ‌the killing of Khamenei. Makarem Shirazi said it was ‌a religious duty for Muslims “until the evil of these criminals is eradicated from the world.”
Grand Ayatollah Hossein Nouri Hamedani also urged members of the Assembly of Experts, ‌a clerical body charged with choosing the new leader, to accelerate the process ⁠of ⁠picking Khamenei’s successor, state media reported.
Following rules laid out in Iran’s constitution, a three-man council comprising the president, a senior cleric and the head of the judiciary, has taken on the supreme leader’s role until the Assembly of Experts decides.
The constitution states a supreme leader should be chosen within three months, although with war raging, it is not immediately clear how quickly the 88-member Assembly of Experts can convene. Sources have said some clerics have held some consultations online.