Tag: Gaza

  • Again, Israeli army asks population in north Gaza to evacuate

    Again, Israeli army asks population in north Gaza to evacuate

    The Israeli army has again called on civilians in the northern Gaza Strip to evacuate to the south of the coastal enclave.

    They made the call after denying reports of a planned ceasefire with Gaza’s rulers Hamas.

    The Israeli army would not attack a corresponding escape corridor between 8 and 12 a.m. (0500 and 0900 GMT), an army spokesman said in a post in Arabic on the platform X, formerly Twitter.

    He also published a map with a marked route.

    The announcement came after the Israeli army continued to shell Hamas targets in the Gaza Strip overnight.

    Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in the densely populated coastal enclave were seeking shelter in the south in response to a looming Israeli ground offensive.

    Attacks on the Gaza Strip have continued over the past 24 hours, the Israeli military said early on Monday morning.

    According to the news website Ynet, citing Palestinians, last night’s was the heaviest bombardment to date.

    The Israeli army on Monday denied reports of a planned ceasefire with Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

    “There is no ceasefire,’’ the office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in the morning.

    Earlier, there had been reports that a ceasefire would be implemented for several hours to allow foreign nationals to leave the Gaza Strip for Egypt.

    Also as well as the entry of aid via the Rafah border crossing.

    The Israeli military has been bombarding targets in Gaza since the unprecedented attacks on Israeli civilians carried out by Hamas fighters on Oct. 7.

    Hamas, which rules Gaza, is classified as a terrorist organisation by the European Union, the U.S. and Israel.

    The heavy bombardment has caused severe devastation in Gaza, where the death toll has now risen to 2,670.

    According to the Gaza Health Ministry on Sunday evening, around 9,600 people have been injured.

    The coastal enclave on the Mediterranean Sea is one of the most densely populated areas in the world, with about 2.2 million people living on around 45 square kilometres.

    The Israeli military is preparing a possible ground offensive against Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

    Hundreds of thousands of reservists have been moved to the Gaza border.

    Meanwhile in northern Israel, following repeated attacks by the pro-Iranian Hezbollah militia from southern Lebanon, Israel has ordered the evacuation of settlements up to 2 kilometres from the border area.

    The office of Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said on Monday that 28 towns on Israel’s northern border were affected.

    The residents were to be taken to safety at state expense and housed in guest houses.

    The Israeli army had already declared a 4-kilometre-wide strip in the border area a restricted zone on Sunday.

    There have been increasingly violent incidents on the border between Israel and Lebanon in recent days, fuelling concerns of a further regional escalation of the conflict.

  • Israel denies reports of ceasefire in Gaza Strip

    Israel denies reports of ceasefire in Gaza Strip

    Israel has denied reports of a planned ceasefire with the Palestinian extremist organisation Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

    “There is no ceasefire,’’ the office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday morning.

    Earlier, there had been reports a ceasefire with Hamas would be implemented for several hours to allow foreign nationals to leave the Gaza Strip for Egypt.

    Also as well as the entry of aid via the Rafah border crossing.

    The Israeli military has been bombarding targets in Gaza since the unprecedented attacks on Israeli civilians carried out by Hamas fighters on Oct. 7.

    Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in the densely populated coastal enclave ruled by Hamas and has been completely sealed off following the attacks over a week ago.

    They are seeking shelter in the south of Gaza to avoid an expected Israeli ground invasion.

  • Israel gives 1.2m people in Gaza 24 hours to relocate

    Israel gives 1.2m people in Gaza 24 hours to relocate

    Israel on Friday called for all civilians in the northern half of the Gaza Strip, to relocate south within 24 hours, as it amassed tanks for an expected ground assault in response to an attack by the militant group Hamas.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports there are more than 1 million people living in the northern half of the Gaza Strip.

    Hamas, which controls the strip, told residents to stay put and vowed to fight to the last drop of blood.

    By Friday afternoon there was no sign of any mass exodus as Israel prepared its onslaught.

    “Death is better than leaving,” said Mohammad, 20, standing in the street outside a building reduced to rubble in an Israeli air strike two days ago near the centre of Gaza.

    “I was born here, and I will die here. Leaving is a stigma,” he added.

    The United Nations said evacuating everyone was impossible with power supplies cut and food and water in the Palestinian enclave running short after a week of retaliatory air strikes and a full Israeli blockade. The U.S. called it a “tall order”.

    The northern half of the Gaza Strip includes the enclave’s biggest settlement, Gaza City.

    The UN said it had been told that Israel wanted the entire population to move across the wetlands that bisect the enclave.

    “Civilians of Gaza City, evacuate south for your own safety and the safety of your families and distance yourself from Hamas terrorists who are using you as human shields,” the Israeli military said, accusing Hamas of hiding in and under civilian buildings.

    Mahmoud Abbas, President of the Palestinian Authority and a rival of Hamas, told U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Jordan that the forced displacement of Palestinians in Gaza would constitute a repeat of 1948 when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians fled or were driven from what is now Israel.

    Most Gazans are the descendants of such refugees.

    Abbas called for aid to be allowed into Gaza immediately.

    Israel has said it will not lift its blockade until scores of hostages captured by Hamas are set free.

    The Red Cross has said hospitals could soon run out of emergency fuel.

    International talks are focused on providing aid and safe zones in Gaza amid fears that the conflict could spread, with Iran warning of a response from its allies, which include Hamas and the powerful Hezbollah movement in Lebanon.

    Pro-Palestinian protests were held around the world and in some places, Jewish communities feared they could be targeted after Israel’s military response to the unprecedented weekend attacks that killed more than 1,300 people, mostly civilians.

    Israel has already responded with the most intensive air strikes of its 75-year conflict with the Palestinians.

    Gaza authorities say more than 1,500 people have been killed.

    “We are ready to join the fight and rid the Palestinians of the Israeli atrocities,” said Muntadhar Kareem, 25, a teacher among thousands of Iraqis protesting in Baghdad.

    The Israeli military pledged to operate “significantly” in the coming days.

    “We are fighting for our home. We are fighting for our future,” Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said.

    “The path will be long, but ultimately I promise you we will win,” the minister added.

    Israel says the horrific attack on its civilians means it must annihilate the militant group and others must get out of the way.

    Hamas tunnels, military compounds, senior operatives’ residences and weapons storage warehouses were among 750 military targets struck overnight, it said.

    The military wing of Hamas said the latest air strikes had killed 13 of the captives it brought back from Israel and that it had fired 150 rockets at Israel in response.

    The United Nations said Israel’s call for Gaza civilians to leave could not happen “without devastating humanitarian consequences”, prompting a rebuke from Israel which said it should condemn Hamas and support Israel’s right to self-defence.

    A ground invasion of the narrow and densely populated Gaza Strip, home to 2.3 million people, poses a serious risk, with Hamas threatening to kill its hostages.

    Hours after the Israeli evacuation call, there were no signs people were leaving Gaza City, where dozens gathered at the al-Shifa Hospital, vowing to stay put.

    Palestinians in southern and central areas of the enclave, where people were expected to flee, said air strikes had hit there overnight, with central parts also hit on Friday morning.

    “No place is safe in the entire Gaza Strip,” the Palestinian Red Crescent Society said.

    The UN Humanitarian Office (OCHA) said more than 400, 000 people had already been made homeless in Gaza and 23 aid workers had been killed.

    “Mass displacement continues,” it said.

    The UN Palestinian Refugee Agency (UNRWA) said it had moved its central operations centre and international staff to Gaza’s south and urged Israel to spare its shelters.

    Seeking to build support for its response, Israel’s government showed U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and NATO defence ministers graphic images of those killed.

    “It’s simply depravity in the worst imaginable way,” Blinken said, joining others in urging Israel to show restraint while also reiterating America’s support, saying: “We will always be there by your side.”

    On Friday he met Jordan’s King Abdullah as well as Abbas, whose Palestinian Authority exercises limited self-rule in the Israeli-occupied West Bank but lost control of Gaza to Hamas in 2007.

    Blinken is also set to visit Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and the United Arab Emirates – some of the countries with influence on Hamas, which is backed by Iran.

    Iran’s foreign minister met the head of Hezbollah, Hassan Nassrallah in Lebanon, where there have been cross-border clashes with Israel since the weekend, according to Lebanese media outlets reported.

    “The continuation of war crimes against Palestine and Gaza will receive a response from the rest of the axis,” Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian said.

    The foreign minister of Turkey, which has offered mediation, talked with his counterpart from the UAE, a Turkish foreign ministry source said, and will visit Egypt on Friday.

    The U.S. military is placing no conditions on its security assistance to Israel, U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said, adding Washington expected it to “do the right things”. Austin was due to meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel on Friday.

    The United States and Japan were among countries offering charter flights for their citizens wanting to leave Israel while police in Paris used tear gas and water cannon to break up a banned rally in support of the Palestinians.

    Some Jewish schools in Amsterdam and London were set to close temporarily due to safety concerns and police in New York and Los Angeles stepped up their presence around synagogues and Jewish community centres.

    Abbas and the Palestinian Authority say they oppose killing civilians but have stopped short of directly condemning the Hamas attacks, blaming the escalation on Israel having strengthened extremists by ignoring Palestinian grievances.

    Gazans have suffered economic collapse and repeated Israeli bombardment under a blockade since Hamas seized power there 16 years ago.

    Talks to create a Palestinian state collapsed a decade ago and Israel’s right-wing government has cracked down in the West Bank and talked of seizing more land. Israel says it has had no reliable partner for negotiations.

  • Israel Army advises Gaza City residents to flee to South

    Israel Army advises Gaza City residents to flee to South

    Following the crisis ravaging Israel and Hamas, Israel’s army has advised all Gaza City residents to evacuate their homes and head south of the territory “for their safety”

    .“The IDF (Israeli Defense Forces) calls for the evacuation of all civilians of Gaza City from their homes southwards for their own safety and protection and move to the area south of the Wadi Gaza as shown on the map,” the army said in a statement.

    “In the following days, the IDF will continue to operate significantly in Gaza City and make extensive efforts to avoid harming civilians.”

    “The Hamas terrorist organisation waged a war against the State of Israel and Gaza City is an area where military operations take place,” the army said

    “Hamas terrorists are hiding in Gaza City inside tunnels underneath houses and inside buildings populated with innocent civilians,” the statement said.

    Meanwhile, Hamas on Friday rejected an Israeli order for 1.1 million residents to evacuate northern Gaza ahead of an expected ground incursion into the overcrowded Palestinian territory.

    “Our Palestinian people reject the threat of the occupation (Israeli) leaders and its call for them to leave their homes and flee from them to the south or Egypt,” the Islamist militant group said in a statement.

    “We are steadfast on our land and in our homes and our cities. There will be no displacement,” it said.

    The United Nations said an order by Israel to flee within 24 hours risked a “calamitous situation”.

    Israeli strikes on the coastal enclave have killed more than 1,530 people since Saturday, in retaliation for Hamas militants killing around 1,200 people in attacks in Israel.

    Egypt’s Rafah crossing is the only route out of Gaza not controlled by Israel and has been bombed on several occasions this week.

    President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said Egypt remains committed to ensuring the delivery of aid to Gaza, but urged Palestinians to “remain on their land” in a speech Thursday.

  • 13 hostages killed by Israeli airstrikes – Hamas Military

    13 hostages killed by Israeli airstrikes – Hamas Military

    Al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas, on Friday said at least 13 hostages captured by Hamas were killed in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza in the past 24 hours.

    In a statement, it said “foreigners and Israelis were killed during the intense Israeli attacks in northern Gaza and inside Gaza City during the past 24 hours.’’

    Six were killed in the northern Gaza Strip, while seven were killed in separate places in Gaza City, according to the statement.

    The Israeli army announced that it attacked about 750 targets Thursday night in the Gaza Strip, including underground tunnels, military compounds and sites.

    It added that the attack had also been on homes of officials, weapons depots and communication rooms in attempting to eliminate activists.

  • Bring Bibi’s Head – By Azu Ishiekwene

    Bring Bibi’s Head – By Azu Ishiekwene

    This is the moment the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu always feared with great anxiety. Yet when Hamas launched a deadly attack on Southern Israeli border towns in the early hours of October 7, Bibi and Israel’s elite security forces were unprepared.

    In a bizarre fabrication intended to complete Bibi’s humiliation a few days into the war, social media claimed, falsely, that an antisemitic crow had given the victory to the Palestinians in a mystic moment of avian fury.

    The truth is more nuanced and complicated. After over five decades of bloody conflicts, the Israeli-Palestinian war has not produced winners or losers. Only a cycle of senseless violence that appears totally avoidable to everyone except the combatants and those who occasionally use them for their proxy war.

    The current war, which Hamas claimed was to avenge Israeli attacks on the Al Aqsa Mosque, is one of the bloodiest in a long time, but will not produce a result different from all the rest.

    Bibi’s war?

    In the popular imagination, no thanks to the Israeli left-wing press, Bibi is a warmonger. The popular view is that he will make war even when peace would cost him nothing, to gratify his anti-Palestinian obsession and deflect from his ruthless control of power and domestic woes. An omen of his just desserts was summed up by the video of a crow tearing up an Israeli flag from a pole on a building in the occupied territories. It didn’t matter that it was an old video which had gone viral nearly six months before the recent outbreak of hostilities. All is fair in war.

    Bibi can hardly escape some responsibility for the present state of affairs in the Middle East. After 35 years of being a part of the Israeli political establishment and 16 years as Prime Minister, it is fair to say that if he genuinely wanted a different outcome in Israeli-Palestine relations, there would be no need for the parable of the crow to achieve one.

    Within the first four days, the current conflict claimed over 1,500 lives on both sides, with thousands more injured or displaced, and communities leveled in the most brutal ways. In figures that seem very conservative, the UN reports that about 6,400 Palestinians and 300 Israelis have been killed in the conflict since 2008. And that is discounting casualties in the ongoing clashes.

    Anatomy of anger

    But every story has at least two sides. While the world struggles for a ceasefire to bring relief to millions of innocent victims trapped in this conflict and hopefully, drag the parties back to the forlorn two-state road map for peace, those who want Bibi’s head on a platter might also do well to hear his side of the story.

    Perhaps he might never have been prime minister or he might have been a different one if his brother, Yonathan, had not been brutally killed in 1976 in Entebbe when Yonathan led Israeli special forces to rescue mostly Jewish passengers who were taken hostage and their plane hijacked to Uganda by Arab terrorists. Bibi was only 27-years-old then.

    Perhaps he might not have been prime minister or he might have been a different one, if Egypt, Syria and Jordan did not join hands in a single-minded pledge to wipe out Israel in the Six Day War in 1967 or in Yom Kippur six years later. Israel has mended fences with Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and a number of other Arab countries since, but one or two old foes in the region have become implacable enemies, too.

    Perhaps Bibi might never have been a prime minister or he might have been a different one altogether, if the Palestinian leadership from Yasser Arafat’s PLO to the current leaders of Hamas were not sworn to the destruction of Israel, at all costs. Sadly, the PLO has either become irrelevant or at best is playing second fiddle to Hamas, while the chaos in Lebanon has given Hezbollah free reign.

    Is it about Gaza?

    If the Israeli occupation of Gaza was its worst crime all these years, then Ariel Sharon’s withdrawal from there in 2005, in defiance of Bibi and other doubters at the time, might have changed the course of that region’s history. Maybe it might even have forestalled Bibi’s emergence as prime minister many years later. Unfortunately, what Bibi said then, that withdrawing to escape terror is inviting terror to chase you, appears to have been proved right.

    Author and syndicated columnist, Jonathan Power, holds a clearly different view, of course. In an article entitled, “Government supporters in Israel are dangerously ignorant of their own history,” he suggests that the same painful memories that radicalised Bibi also radicalised a significant number of five million Palestinians over the years, admonishing those who always talk about the blood libel and the Holocaust not to also forget biblical “genocides” committed by Moses on the journey to the Promised Land or the kindness of Muslim Turks or medieval Spain.

    Who owns the land? This is where Bibi’s story gets even more interesting. In his book, Bibi: My story, he accuses an Arab Knesset member of twisting historical facts, in answering the question.

    “The first thousand years or so,” he writes, “are covered in the Bible, and are attested to by archeological and the historical records of other contemporaneous peoples.”

    He traces the history of the Jews from Ur in the Chaldeans through Abraham’s burial in a cave he bought in Hebron, to Egypt and from there to the wilderness where the children of Israel received a moral code that would change the world on their journey to the Promised Land. He recalls the conquests by Joshua and how after Solomon built the Temple in Jerusalem, David and his siblings in the battle for control split the realm in two.

    “The northern kingdom, Israel, is destroyed, its ten tribes lost to history,” Bibi writes. “The southern kingdom, Judea, is conquered and Solomon’s temple destroyed by the Babylonians by whose rivers the exiled Judeans weep as they remembered Zion.”

    He then traces the history of the Jews from Roman rule and the destruction of Herod’s Temple in 70 CE to the times of the Byzantines when the Jews were finally reduced to an insignificant minority. “It is not the Jews who usurp the land from the Arabs,” Bibi writes, “but the Arabs who usurp the land from the Jews…the Jews are the original natives; the Arabs the colonialists.”

    Lion and the lamb

    This is a story that is hardly told, understood or believed. And perhaps the course of history might also have been completely different if Britain, which maintained control over Palestine under the League of Nations mandate, had implemented the two-state solution instead of dumping the problem at the doorstep of the UN in 1948.

    Anyone familiar with Britain’s legacy of elegantly concealed systematic violence against its colonies which watered the seed of apartheid in South Africa and created the Kashmiri and Cypriot problems, will not waste time blaming that country for the 75-year-old problem in the Middle East. To adapt Max Siollun, the whole object of British occupation was not only to protect the people from themselves, but also to set them against each other.

    Yet, the choices made by Palestinians and Israelis over the years have mostly worsened a bad legacy. Blighted as the region may be from its colonial legacy, it cannot be hostage to the hate or personal injuries of its present elite. After the depredations of COVID-19 and the serious supply chain problems caused by the Russia-Ukraine war, the world could use some respite.

    Bibi is right to feel that his worst fears about Gaza and the West Bank under the current Hamas leadership and a weakened PLO was confirmed by the recent unprovoked attack of innocent civilians at a peace concert in Israel.

    But his current objective of “wiping out Hamas” even if it succeeds, which is improbable, is not a guarantee that a worse mutation of Hamas will not rise again in Gaza. A stubborn pursuit of his goal might produce in young, innocent Palestinians today the same sentiments that pushed him to the far right.

    The lion and the lamb must find a common ground in their shared, chequered history.

  • WAR: EPL releases emotional statement on Israel-Palestine conflict

    WAR: EPL releases emotional statement on Israel-Palestine conflict

    The English Premier League, known as  the EPL, has released an emotional  statement amid the ongoing crisis between Israel and Palestine.

    The EPL called for peace, while condemning the horrific and brutal acts.

    It was gathered that the crisis has led to the death of over 2000 persons while many are also left critically injured.

    Israel reports that 1200 people have been killed by Hamas’s deadly attacks, while Gaza claims over 1300 have died following the retaliatory strikes.

    However, in its reaction, the EPL via a statement on Thursday, sympathized with the victims and their families:

    The statement reads partly: “The Premier League is shocked and saddened by the escalating crisis in Israel and Gaza, and strongly condemns the horrific and brutal acts of violence against innocent civilians. We hope for peace, and our heartfelt sympathies are with the victims, their families and the communities impacted.”

    Meanwhile, the English Football League have also announced that a period of silence will be observed across fixtures in League One and League Two this weekend.

    The crisis in Israel and Palestine already taking its toll on football as UEFA already postponed the match between Switzerland and Israel meant to take place this weekend.

     

     

  • Israel death toll rises over 1200 due to terrorist attacks – IDF Spokesman

    Israel death toll rises over 1200 due to terrorist attacks – IDF Spokesman

    The Israeli air force continued its counter-attacks in the Gaza Strip after the weekend’s large-scale attack by the Islamist group Hamas.

    Dozens of fighter jets attacked more than 200 targets in the Al-Furqan area, the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) said early on Wednesday morning.

    It was the third time in 24 hours that large-scale attacks were carried out in the Gaza Strip.

    In total more than 450 targets have been hit, according to the IDF.

    The Isaeli military said Al-Furqan, a neighbourhood in the northern Gaza Strip, is used by Hamas as a terror centre.

    Israel said the area was the base for numerous terrorist attacks which were carried out against Israel.

    The number of people killed in Israel during large-scale attacks by Hamas which began on Saturday has now risen to at least 1,200, IDF spokesman Jonathan Conricus said in a situational update on Wednesday morning.

    The overwhelming majority of the fatalities were civilians, Conricus said, characterising the number as staggering and unimaginable.

    More than 2,700 people were injured.

    “Sadly, something tells me that these numbers are not the final numbers,’’ the spokesman added.

    According to the Gaza Health Ministry, by Tuesday night at least 900 people had died in the Gaza Strip as a result of the Israeli air force’s counter-attacks, and 4,500 others were injured.

    In a large-scale attack on the border area on Saturday, Hamas which is classified as a terrorist organisation by the U.S.

    Israel said that the EU and Israel had caused the worst bloodshed among civilians since the founding of the Israeli state.

  • UN commission says ‘clear evidence’ of war crimes in Gaza and Israel

    UN commission says ‘clear evidence’ of war crimes in Gaza and Israel

    A United Nations commission monitoring conflict on Tuesday said there is “clear evidence” of war crimes committed by both sides during the intense violence in Israel and Gaza, including the targeting of civilians.

    All those who violated international humanitarian law or targeted civilians must be held accountable, demanded the Commission of Inquiry, which was established by the UN Human Rights Council in 2021.

    The UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem and Israel, said on Tuesday.

    “Reports that armed groups from Gaza have gunned down hundreds of unarmed civilians are abhorrent and cannot be tolerated. Taking civilian hostages and using civilians as human shields are war crimes.”

    The commission also said it is “gravely concerned with Israel’s latest attack on Gaza and Israel’s announcement of a complete siege on Gaza involving the withholding of water, food, electricity and fuel which will undoubtedly cost civilian lives and constitutes collective punishment.”

    The commission has begun collecting evidence of war crimes since the Islamist militant group Hamas launched massive attacks on Israel on Saturday and Israel responded with airstrikes in Gaza.

    It said it would collect evidence to identify the attackers themselves as well as those who ordered attacks.

  • WAR: Crisis escalate as Israel bombs more than 200 targets in Gaza

    WAR: Crisis escalate as Israel bombs more than 200 targets in Gaza

     

    More than 200 targets have been hit by strikes from Israel, Weapon depot and facilities belonging to Islamic Jihad  a separate Palestinian Islamist group were also not left out, the Israeli military said on Tuesday.

    Recall that hundreds of Palestinian attackers crossed the border into Israel on Saturday.

    The death toll in the crisis between Israel and Hamas has increased to over 1,000.

    In Be’eri, a kibbutz in southern Israel, more than 100 bodies were found on Monday after the army regained control of the area.

    Findings show that Hamas militants took at least 150 people captive and brought them back to Gaza, including women, children, and the elderly, according to an assessment by Israel.

    However, Hamas has threatened to execute one hostage for every unannounced Israeli strike on civilians in Gaza.

    According to the Israeli army, the bodies of 1,500 militants have been found in Israeli territory so far.

    Massive Israeli counter-attacks have killed at least 687 people and injured more than 3,800 in the Gaza Strip.
    Hostitilities began between both countries when the Hamas an Islamic militant group launched an attack on Israel on Saturday killing a security chief in the process.