Tag: Israel

  • Gaza ground offensive: Russia sends strong warning to Israel

    Gaza ground offensive: Russia sends strong warning to Israel

    Russia has warned Israel against a ground offensive against the Islamist group Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, in comments were reported by Russian state media, said on Tuesday that there was a threat of an expansion of the conflict in the Middle East.

    The threat would be terrible consequences for the entire region and with a greater humanitarian catastrophe.

    Peskov was speaking in Beijing, where President Vladimir Putin is making a two-day visit.

    The Kremlin says that Putin intends to discuss the situation in the Middle East with China’s party and state leader Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the Belt and Road Forum.

    Putin himself spoke on the phone with several leaders in the Middle East on Monday, including Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

    The Kremlin chief, who was waging a destructive war against Ukraine, called for a ceasefire to protect civilians.

    Peskov once again confirmed that Abbas is expected to visit Moscow, though no date has been set.

    Russia advocated the creation of an independent Palestinian state while supporting security guarantees for Israel.

    The people of Israel must live in peace; Peskov stressed, but said the most important task now is to end the war in the Middle East.

  • War: America’s president, Joe Biden set to make solidarity visit to Israel amid conflict with Hamas

    War: America’s president, Joe Biden set to make solidarity visit to Israel amid conflict with Hamas

    America’s President, Joe Biden is billed to visit crisis ridden Israel on Wednesday, a show of “ironclad” support as Washington tries to prevent the escalating war in Gaza from spilling over into regional conflict.

    The visit is  coming  just days after Gaza-based Hamas fighters broke through Israel’s heavily fortified border, shooting, stabbing and burning to death more than 1,400 people, most of them civilians.

    Shell-shocked Israel has responded with withering air strikes on Hamas-controlled Gaza and by deploying tens of thousands of troops to the border in preparation for a full-scale ground offensive.

    Biden’s visit has been described as a show of solidarity with Israel and an “ironclad commitment to its security”.

    Washington has already sent two aircraft carrier strike groups to the eastern Mediterranean “to deter hostile actions against Israel.”

    Recall that Iran on Monday warned of a possible “pre-emptive action” against Israel “in the coming hours” and has repeatedly warned against a ground invasion of Gaza.

    “The resistance leaders” will not allow Israel “to do whatever it wants in Gaza” said Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian.

    On Tuesday, Israel said its troops had killed four militants attempting to infiltrate from Lebanon and launched strikes on Hezbollah “terrorist” targets in the country.

    While signalling support, Biden will also try to quietly steer Israeli’s military response, as critism grows about the devastating impact of the war on Palestinian civilians.

    Israeli air strikes have killed several senior Hamas figures and targeted the organisation’s headquarters, according to the military.

    But at least 2,750 Palestinians — mostly civilians — have also been killed, entire neighbourhoods have been razed and survivors are left with dwindling supplies of food, water and fuel.

    Israel has demanded that residents of north Gaza leave for the south, hoping to clear the area of civilians in preparation for a perilous urban ground assault.

    An Israeli military spokesman said it was unclear how Biden’s visit might change the timing of that operation.

  • Gaza aid stuck as Egypt says Israel not cooperating

    Gaza aid stuck as Egypt says Israel not cooperating

    Egypt on Monday said Israel was not cooperating with the delivery of aid into Gaza and evacuations of foreign passport holders via the only entry, leaving hundreds of tonnes of supplies stuck.

    Cairo said the Rafah crossing, a potentially vital opening for desperately needed supplies into the besieged Palestinian enclave, was not officially closed but inoperable due to Israeli air strikes on the Gaza side.

    Egypt’s Foreign Minister, Sameh Shoukry, told reporters that, “there is an urgent need to alleviate the suffering of Palestinian civilians in Gaza,” adding that talks with Israel had not been fruitful.

    “Until now the Israeli government has not taken a position on opening the Rafah crossing from the Gaza side to allow the entrance of assistance and exit of citizens of third countries,” said Shoukry.

    More than two million Gazans have been under siege since Israel launched an intense bombardment and blockade in retaliation for an assault by the Hamas Islamist militants.

    Two Egyptian security sources had told Reuters a ceasefire in southern Gaza to last several hours had been agreed for Monday morning to facilitate aid and evacuations at Rafah.

    However, Israel denied that.

    “There is currently no truce and humanitarian aid in Gaza in exchange for getting foreigners out,” a statement from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said.

    Hamas official, Izzat El-Reshiq, told Reuters the same.

    On the ground at Rafah, one source said there had been no bombardments on Monday and that the Egyptian side of the crossing was ready.

    Shoukry said Egypt aimed to allow normal flow through the crossing, including for Palestinians seeking medical treatment or normal travel.

    Hundreds of tonnes of aid from NGOs and several countries were waiting on trucks in the nearby Egyptian town of Al-Arish for conditions to allow entry to Gaza, according to two sources there and a witness.

    Separately, Reuter’s video showed UN-flagged fuel trucks appearing to leave Gaza for Egypt through the Israeli-controlled Kerem Shalom crossing.

  • Ceasefire plans stall, as Israel intensifies strikes on Gaza

    Ceasefire plans stall, as Israel intensifies strikes on Gaza

    Hopes for a brief ceasefire in southern Gaza to allow foreign passport holders to leave the besieged Palestinian enclave and aid to be brought in were dashed on Monday.

    This came up as Israeli bombardments were intensifying ahead of an expected ground invasion.

    Residents of Hamas-ruled Gaza said the overnight strikes were the heaviest yet in nine days of conflict. Many houses were flattened and the death toll rose inexorably, they said.

    Diplomatic efforts have been underway to get aid into the enclave, which has endured unrelenting Israeli bombing since the Oct. 7 attack on Israel by Hamas militants that killed 1,300 people, the bloodiest single day in the state’s 75-year history.

    Israel has imposed a full blockade and is preparing a ground invasion to enter Gaza and destroy Hamas, which has continued to fire rockets at Israel since its brief cross-border assault.

    On Monday, rocket-warning sirens sounded in several towns in southern Israel, the Israeli military said.

    Israeli troops and tanks are already massed on the border.

    Authorities in Gaza said at least 2,750 people had so far been killed by the Israeli strikes, a quarter of them children, and nearly 10,000 wounded. A further 1,000 people were missing and believed to be under rubble.

    As the humanitarian crisis deepened, with food, fuel and water running short, hundreds of tons of aid from several countries have been held up in Egypt pending a deal for its safe delivery to Gaza and the evacuation of some foreign passport holders through the Rafah border crossing.

    Earlier on Monday, Egyptian security sources had told Reuters that an agreement had been reached to open the crossing to allow aid into the enclave.

    However, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said in a statement,  “there is currently no truce and humanitarian aid in Gaza in exchange for getting foreigners out.”

    Chief military spokesperson Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari also said there was no Gaza ceasefire and that Israel was continuing its attacks.

    Hamas official Izzat El Reshiq told Reuters that there was “no truth” to the reports about the opening of the crossing with Egypt or a temporary ceasefire.

    Egypt has said the crossing remained open from the Egyptian side in recent days but was rendered inoperable due to Israeli bombardments on the Palestinian side.

    Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry said on Monday that the Israeli government had yet to take a stance that allowed the crossing to open. He called the situation faced by the Palestinian people in Gaza “dangerous”.

    The situation remained unclear at the Rafah crossing, the only one not controlled by Israel. Reuter’s journalists said a small crowd of people had gathered there waiting to enter Egypt.

    The United States had told its citizens in Gaza to get close to the crossing so they could move out. The U.S. government estimates the number of dual-citizen Palestinian-Americans in Gaza at 500 to 600.

    Washington is also seeking to secure the release of 199 hostages that Israel said were taken by Hamas back into Gaza. Among them are elderly people, women and children and foreigners, including Americans.

    U.S. President Joe Biden has sent military aid to Israel but also stressed the need to get humanitarian aid to Palestinian civilians and urged Israel to follow the rules of war in its response to the Hamas attacks.

  • Israel evacuates 28 locations bordering Lebanon

    Israel evacuates 28 locations bordering Lebanon

    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 four kilometre-wide strip in the border area a restricted zone on Sunday.

    Since the unprecedented surprise of attack by Hamas on Israel and the counter-attacks by the Israeli army on the Gaza Strip, there has been increasing violent on the border between Israel and Lebanon in recent days.

    This has fueled concerns of a further regional escalation of the conflict.

  • 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.

  • Middle East on ‘verge of abyss’ – UN chief

    Middle East on ‘verge of abyss’ – UN chief

    UN Secretary-General António Guterres said on Sunday that the Middle East was on the “verge of the abyss” as he urged Islamist Hamas to immediately release the hostages it took.

    Guterres in a statement also called for swift humanitarian access to the Gaza Strip.

    “Each one of these two objectives are valid in themselves.

    “They should not become bargaining chips and they must be implemented because it is the right thing to do.

    “Gaza is running out of water, electricity, and other essential supplies,” the UN chief said.

    Guterres added that the UN has stocks of food, water, non-food items, medical supplies, and fuel available in Egypt, Jordan, Israel, and the West Bank which could be sent to Gaza “within hours” if staff could deliver them safely and without impediment.

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

    The Palestinian militant organisation, which rules Gaza, launched thousands of rockets toward Israel while hundreds of its fighters breached border defences in an unprecedented surprise attack over a week ago in a massacre that left more than 1,300 dead.

    It also abducted more than 150 people.

    One week after the start of the latest conflict, the number of dead in the Gaza Strip has risen to 2,670, the Ministry of Health in Gaza said on Sunday.

    Following Hamas’ large-scale attack, Israel tied the basic provision of services to the civilian population in the Gaza Strip to the release of Israeli hostages held by the Islamist organisation.

    Gaza was on edge on Sunday evening as Israel’s expected ground offensive was delayed to allow more civilians in Gaza to move south to avoid the incursion by the Israeli military.

    Israel’s repeated instructions to Gazans to leave the area have been widely criticized, including by the UN which has warned of the danger of a “humanitarian catastrophe.”

    Israel’s stated goal is to wipe out the political and military leadership of Hamas.

  • Israeli army kill another ringleader of Hamas attacks

    Israeli army kill another ringleader of Hamas attacks

    The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) say they have killed another man in Gaza suspected of masterminding the large-scale attacks carried out by Islamist Hamas.

    Billal Al Kedra, commander of Hamas units in southern Khan Younis, was killed in airstrikes the previous evening, according to an IDF statement on Sunday morning.

    Other Hamas and Islamic Jihad terrorists were also killed, the IDF said.

    The latest news came after the IDF said it had killed two other men they suspect of masterminding the Hamas attacks.

    The IDF attacked more than 100 Hamas military targets in Zeitoun, Khan Younis and western Jabalia, it said, hitting operational command centers, military facilities, dozens of launching pads for anti-tank missiles and observation posts.

    Command centres of the Islamic Jihad terrorist organisation were also hit, the IDF said.

    Hamas is classified as a terrorist organization by the EU, the United States and Israel.

  • Stocking the fires in the time of human slaughter – By Owei Lakemfa

    Stocking the fires in the time of human slaughter – By Owei Lakemfa

    THE human slaughter going on in Israel and Palestine are horrendous. In the first five days of the conflict, over 2,500 human beings were slaughtered. That is 500 per day. The Israelis tried to find their feet with many taking shelter in bunkers while the Palestinians whose food, fuel, water and electricity supplies have been cut off, have plenty supply of bombs from the skies.

    Such a time of mass suffering and sorrow calls for empathy and demands of all to work for peace. Tragically, this is the time chosen by some political and religious leaders to take sides in the conflict and pour petrol in the raging fires.

    The Bible proclaimed in Mathew 5:9 “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.” It is a declaration that anybody who wants to be Christ-like must work for the peaceful resolution of conflicts whenever they occur. The peacemaker is the one working to reconcile human beings with others and with God. It is an emphasis that He we serve is “The God of peace” (Romans15:33). While men like Pope Francis mourned the many killed and prayed for their families, and the Christian Association of Nigeria, CAN, took a similar line for peace, men of God like Dr. Enoch Adeboye who leads the Redeemed Christian Church of God, RCCG, took sides, praying for one of the sides in the conflict to triumph.

    Adeboye with a PhD in Mathematics said he and his followers are praying for the victory of their ”Beloved Brothers in Israel”. What gibberish is this? Who are his beloved brothers in Israel; the 73.6 per cent that are Jewish, the 18.1 per cent that are Muslims, 1.9 per cent that are Christians or the 1.6 per cent Druze? Who told him that Israelites are Christians or that it is a Christian State? Adeboye prayed that: “The Almighty God, the only one of Israel will give you absolute victory and give you permanent peace from now…” Can there be permanent peace anywhere? In all these, I am ashamed that Adeboye did not consider the Palestinians or rather, does not think they and their children are human beings.

    With thousands dying and many more injured, Adeboye said: “We are praying we will get very, very good results very soon…” What good results can he be praying for? The annihilation of the Palestinians? Can the mass slaughter of human beings over land and politics bring ”good results”? Adeboye needs to ask for forgiveness and pray for peace for all humans impacted by this unnecessary conflict, be they Israelis or Palestinians.

    He should also realise that as the General Overseer of the RCCG, his words carry weight, therefore, he needs to weigh  before uttering them. These were times that call for statesmen who can work for a quick ceasefire, bring both sides to the table and fashion out a programme to end the 80-year conflict. Tragically, what we find mainly are leaders whose primary objectives are taking sides and stocking the fires.

    When renewed hostilities broke out on September 7, 2023, the first reaction of President Joe Biden was not how to bring the conflict which is eight decades old, to an end, but how to further prolong it. He assured Israel of rock solid support and military supplies. An old man like him ought to have learnt the good lessons of one of his predecessors, President Bill Clinton for whom the eruption of fresh conflicts between the two sides meant that there was little or no time to resolve the conflict. That was why he convened the 2000 Camp David Peace negotiations.

    One of the men stoking the fires is American Republican politician, David Bog whose mainly false claims “Five times Palestinians rejected Israel’s olive branch –Time to rethink?” have gone viral. He purports to be a researcher but  his main book ‘Standing With Israel’ has been found to be quite unreliable.  In a review of the book in the Journal of Church and State, Nikolas  K. Gvosdev wrote that the book: “suffers from the fact that its author wants to make definitive statements on a variety of issues while ignoring inconvenient details.”

    In the said video, Bog claims that Israel has offered the Palestinians a state of their own five times and that five times have the Palestinians turned it down. He claimed the first time was in 1936 when Arabs rebelled against the British colonialists who had seized the areas from the Ottoman Empire. If the areas were colonised by the British, and there was no Jewish state, how could the Jews have been in a position to offer the Palestinians a state of their own?

    The second instance he claimed, was in 1947 when the United Nations suggested a two-state solution. In other words, such an offer came either from the UN or the British colonial masters, certainly not from Israel. Any one conversant with the history of the Middle East knows that at that time, Jewish immigrants who came from Europe and were trying to set up a Jewish State, were involved in armed conflicts against their Palestinian neigbours and the British colonialists. One of the most infamous acts of this group was the July 22, 1946 bombing of the King David Hotel in which 91 died, including 25 Britons, 41 Arabs and 17 Jews. The bombing was by the Irgun terror group led by Menachem Begin who became the Prime Minister of Israel from 1977 to 1983.

    At the time of the bombing, the hotel’s southern wing housed the headquarters of the British Colonial administration. The bombing was part of the attempt by the Jewish group to force the British out. So how could Israel have offered the Palestinians a state and how could the latter have declined the offer? He said that after the 1967 war, the Arab states ruled out negotiations with Israel. How does this tantamount to an offer and rejection of statehood by Palestinians.

    Bog claimed the fourth time was the Camp David Accord. Anyone can google this. There was no agreement at Camp David so there could have been neither an offer nor rejection of statehood. The only Bog claim that is correct is that in 2008, Israel offered the Palestinians statehood, but their leader Mahmoud Abass declined on the basis that he should be given the chance to study the map produced by Israel before accepting the offer. This to me was a sensible demand.

    It is not surprising that Iran supports Hamas. Can this be a justification for Britain, which created the problems in the Middle East, to support Israel? Children, women, the elderly are dying in this conflict; the immediate task of humanity is to stop the slaughter.