Battles rage in Rafah as Biden blames Hamas for truce delay
Children queue with pots to receive food aid from a kitchen at the Abu Zeitun school run by the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) in the Jabalia camp for Palestinian refugees in the northern Gaza Strip on June 13, 2024 amid the ongoing conflict in the Palestinian territory between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
Ceasefire push
Efforts to reach a truce stalled when Israel began ground operations in Rafah, but Biden in late May launched a new effort to secure a deal. On Monday the UN Security Council adopted a US-drafted resolution supporting the plan, and on Thursday German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said G7 leaders “call on Hamas in particular to give the necessary consent”. Some Gazans have also called on Hamas to do more to secure an agreement. “What are you waiting for? The war must end at any cost,” said a man called Abu Shaker. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, in Doha on Wednesday to promote Biden’s roadmap, said Washington would work with regional partners to “close the deal”. The plan for the first Gaza truce since a week-long pause in November includes a six-week ceasefire, a hostage-prisoner exchange and Gaza reconstruction. Hamas responded to mediators Qatar and Egypt late Tuesday. Blinken said some of its proposed amendments “are workable and some are not”. Senior Hamas official Osama Hamdan said the group sought “a permanent ceasefire and complete withdrawal” of Israeli troops from Gaza, demands repeatedly rejected by Israel. Blinken said Israel was behind the plan, but Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose far-right government allies strongly oppose the deal, has not publicly endorsed it. In Jerusalem, a student-led protest near Israel’s parliament urged the government to secure a hostage release deal. “Ceasefire now,” said one banner as demonstrators marched with portraits of some of the hostages.‘No Eid spirit’
The war has caused widespread destruction in Gaza, with hospitals out of service and the UN warning of famine. A UN investigation concluded Wednesday that Israel had committed crimes against humanity during the war, while Israeli and Palestinian armed groups had both committed war crimes. The World Health Organization said more than 8,000 children aged under five have been treated for acute malnutrition in Gaza. As Muslims worldwide prepare to celebrate Eid al-Adha beginning Sunday, displaced Gazan Umm Thaer Naseer said “we do not have anything to prepare for Eid”. “The children ask their father to buy clothes” for the holiday, she said in Beit Lahia in northern Gaza, adding that prices of anything from basic commodities to toys have soared. “Where will their father buy them from? He has been unemployed for eight months and moves from one tent to another… Their father can barely feed himself.” Another displaced Gazan, Fadi Naseer, told AFP that “in normal times” homes and streets are decorated for the festival, but “today we don’t even have a house anymore, and there is nothing to decorate”. “There is no Eid spirit,” he added.Regional ‘danger’
Israel’s military on Thursday said troops carried out “targeted operations in the area of Rafah”, where they found weapons and killed several militants “in close-quarters encounters”. It said at least 10 militants were killed in central Gaza, where the Palestinian civil defence agency reported three dead after an Israeli strike on a home in Nuseirat. Fallout from the Gaza war is regularly felt on the Israeli-Lebanon frontier, where deadly cross-border exchanges have escalated. Hezbollah on both Wednesday and Thursday said it attacked military targets in Israel with barrages of rockets and drones, in retaliation for an Israeli strike that killed one of its commanders. The Israeli military said most launches had been intercepted while others ignited fires. A government spokesman said “Israel will respond with force to all aggressions by Hezbollah”. Iraqi Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein said the potential “expansion of the war is a danger, not only for Lebanon but for the entire region”. In the occupied West Bank, where violence has also soared during the war, Palestinian officials said an Israeli military raid killed three people in the northern town of Qabatiyah. The army said its latest “counterterrorism operation” targeted “two senior wanted suspects”.
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