Israel faces growing pressure over Gaza ceasefire

Israeli soldiers drive towards the Gaza Strip, in southern Israel, Tuesday, Feb. 13, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 14 February 2024
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Israel faces growing pressure over Gaza ceasefire

  • At least 28,473 people, mostly women and children, have been killed in Israel’s relentless bombardment and ground offensive in Hamas-run Gaza since then, according to the health ministry in the Palestinian territory
  • As smoke was seen rising over Rafah, Al Jazeera said two of its journalists were severely wounded in an Israeli strike there

GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories: Israel faced growing international pressure Tuesday to agree to a ceasefire with Hamas, as it prepared for an incursion into the crowded southern Gaza city of Rafah where more than a million Palestinians are trapped.
CIA director William Burns met Mossad chief David Barnea in Cairo for a new round of talks on a Qatari-brokered plan to temporarily halt fighting in exchange for Hamas freeing hostages.
The negotiations, which also involved Qatar’s prime minister and Egyptian officials, were “positive” and would continue for three more days, said Egypt’s Al-Qahera News, citing a senior Egyptian official.
A day after Israeli forces rescued two hostages from Gaza, the families of the remaining captives made an emotional plea to Barnea and the Israeli delegation ahead of the Cairo talks: “Do not return until everyone comes home — the living and the dead.”
The Israeli campaign group, Hostages and Missing Families Forum, has been urging the government to exhaust every option to return some 130 hostages still believed to be in Gaza. Israel says 29 of them are presumed dead.
The group called it a “once-in-a-lifetime mission” and said they must “not return without a deal.”
Militants took about 250 people hostage in an unprecedented Hamas attack on October 7 that resulted in the deaths of about 1,160 people in Israel, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
At least 28,473 people, mostly women and children, have been killed in Israel’s relentless bombardment and ground offensive in Hamas-run Gaza since then, according to the health ministry in the Palestinian territory.
The Cairo meeting came after the United States and United Nations warned Israel against a ground offensive into Rafah without a plan to protect civilians, who say they have nowhere left to go.
With Rafah on edge, some residents began dismantling their makeshift tents and prepared to move on again.
“We are sleeping in the street, (the tent) doesn’t have a roof, it’s made of nylon — if it gets hit by a missile, you will die instantly,” said Gazan Fayez Abed.
After White House talks with Jordan’s King Abdullah II on Monday, US President Joe Biden said civilians in Rafah “need to be protected,” calling them “exposed and vulnerable.”
King Abdullah pushed for a “lasting ceasefire” to end the more than four-month-old war, warning that an Israeli attack on Rafah would “produce another humanitarian catastrophe.”

After rejecting Hamas’s terms for a truce last week, Israel conducted a pre-dawn raid in Rafah on Monday that freed two hostages — Fernando Simon Marman, 60, and Luis Har, 70 — and killed around 100 people.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hailed the operation as “perfect,” while the Palestinian foreign ministry called the deaths of dozens of Gazans a “massacre.”
The rare rescue mission came hours after Netanyahu spoke with Biden, who reiterated his opposition to a major assault on Rafah.
But Netanyahu said “complete victory” cannot be achieved without the elimination of Hamas’s last battalions there.
The United States has angered some Middle East allies by repeatedly refusing to back a full ceasefire, with Washington saying it supports Israel’s drive to eradicate Hamas and calling for shorter pauses with hostage-prisoner swaps instead.
A Hamas official told AFP they were waiting for the outcome of the Cairo meeting but were “open to discussing any initiative that achieves an end to aggression and war.”
More than half of Gaza’s 2.4 million people have sought refuge in Rafah, pressed up against the Egypt border in makeshift camps where they face outbreaks of hepatitis and diarrhea, and a scarcity of food and water.
AFP saw some families, already displaced several times, dismantling their tents and leaving in cars, vans or using horse-drawn carts.

Netanyahu has said Israel would provide “safe passage” to civilians trying to leave, but foreign governments, Gazans and aid groups have questioned where they could go.
“There is no place that is currently safe in Gaza,” said UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric.
A report in the Wall Street Journal Tuesday said Israel was proposing to create 15 campsites of around 25,000 tents each in southwestern Gaza as part of an evacuation plan.
The newspaper cited Egyptian officials saying the camps and field hospitals would be installed and administered by Egypt, although there has been no confirmation.
As smoke was seen rising over Rafah, Al Jazeera said two of its journalists were severely wounded in an Israeli strike there.
Two other journalists with the broadcaster have been killed in the war, and its Gaza bureau chief Wael Al-Dahdouh was wounded.
Israel’s military said Tuesday that three more soldiers had been killed in Gaza, taking its losses to 232 since ground operations began on October 27.
It also said its forces had killed more than 30 “terrorists” in Khan Yunis — southern Gaza’s largest city that has seen heavy fighting in recent weeks.
On a visit to the Gaza border, army chief Herzi Halevi said Israel’s military was “preparing for the fighting to continue for a long time.”
“If we do not continue to strike Hamas with determination, it will be difficult to bring back the hostages,” he said.
UN humanitarian chief Martin Griffiths warned that Israel’s planned military push into Rafah “could lead to slaughter.”
The war’s impact has been felt widely, with violence involving Iran-backed allies of Hamas surging across the Middle East.
Lebanon’s Hezbollah has traded near-daily fire with Israel since the war began.
On Tuesday the head of the Iran-backed movement, Hassan Nasrallah, said the cross-border fire would stop only “when the attack on Gaza stops.”
 

 


Gazans struggle to retrieve bodies as storms lash war-damaged buildings

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Gazans struggle to retrieve bodies as storms lash war-damaged buildings

  • Gaza Civil Defense spokesman Mahmoud Basal called on the international community to provide mobile homes and caravans for displaced Palestinians rather than tents
  • UN and Palestinian officials said at least 300,000 new tents are urgently needed for the roughly 1.5 million people still displaced. Most existing shelters are worn out or made of thin plastic and cloth sheeting

GAZA: Authorities in Gaza warned on Monday that more war-damaged buildings may collapse because of heavy rain in the devastated Palestinian enclave. 

They said the weather was making it hard to recover bodies still under the rubble.
Two buildings collapsed in Gaza on Friday, killing at least 12 people according to local health authorities, amid a storm that has also washed away and flooded tents, and led to deaths from exposure.
Israel and Hamas agreed to a ceasefire in October after two years of intense bombardment and military operations. 
However, humanitarian agencies say there is still very little aid getting into Gaza, where nearly the entire population is homeless.
Gaza Civil Defense spokesman Mahmoud Basal called on the international community to provide mobile homes and caravans for displaced Palestinians rather than tents.
“If people are not protected today, we will witness more victims, more killing of people, children, women, entire families inside these buildings,” he said.
Mohammed Nassar and his family were living in a six-story building that was severely damaged by Israeli strikes earlier in the war, and then collapsed on Friday.
His family had struggled to find alternative accommodation and had been flooded out while living in a tent during a previous severe weather event. Nassar went out to buy some necessities on Friday and returned to a scene of carnage with rescue workers struggling to pull bodies from the rubble.
“I saw my son’s hand sticking out from under the ground. The scene affected me the most. My son is under the ground, and we are unable to get him out,” Nassar said. His son, 15, died, as did a daughter, aged 18.
Later on Monday, the head of the UN Palestinian refugee agency said more aid must be allowed into Gaza without delays to prevent putting more displaced families at serious risk.
“With heavy rain and cold brought in by Storm Byron, people in the Gaza Strip are freezing to death,” UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini posted on X.
“The waterlogged ruins where they are sheltering are collapsing, causing even more exposure to cold,” he added.
Lazzarini said they have supplies that have been waiting for months to enter Gaza and would cover the needs of hundreds of thousands of the population of over 2 million.
UN and Palestinian officials said at least 300,000 new tents are urgently needed for the roughly 1.5 million people still displaced. Most existing shelters are worn out or made of thin plastic and cloth sheeting.
Gaza authorities are meanwhile still digging to recover around 9,000 bodies they estimate remain buried in rubble from Israeli bombing during the war, but they lack the machinery needed to expedite the work, spokesman Ismail 
Al-Thawabta said.
On Monday, rescue workers retrieved the remains of around 20 people from a multi-story building bombed in December 2023, where around 60 people, including 30 children, were believed to be sheltering.
Gaza authorities say Israel is not allowing in as much aid as promised under the truce. 
Aid agencies say Israel is blocking essential items. 
Israel says it is meeting its obligations and accuses agencies of inefficiency and failing to prevent theft by Hamas, which the group denies.