Stabroek News

Israeli PM says UN agency for Palestinia­ns must close, Israeli warplanes strike Gaza

- JERUSALEM/GAZA/DOHA, (Reuters) -

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called yesterday for the closure of the U.N. Palestinia­n refugee agency (UNRWA) as his forces conducted more air strikes in Gaza amid diplomatic efforts for a ceasefire and release of hostages in the enclave.

Israel has accused some UNRWA staff of involvemen­t in the Oct. 7 Hamas assault in southern Israel that triggered the war in Gaza. Donors including the United States have paused funding pending an investigat­ion, but aid agencies say ending UNRWA operations would wreck humanitari­an efforts in devastated Gaza.

The Palestinia­ns have accused Israel of falsifying informatio­n to tarnish UNRWA, which was set up to help refugees of the war at Israel’s founding in 1948 and to which more than half Gaza’s population look to for day-to-day assistance.

“It’s time the internatio­nal community and the U.N. itself understand that UNRWA’s mission has to end,” Netanyahu told visiting U.N. delegates, according to his office.

He said UNRWA should be replaced by other aid agencies “if we are going to solve the problem of Gaza as we intend to do”.

Earlier, U.N. SecretaryG­eneral Antonio Guterres described UNRWA as “the backbone of all humanitari­an response in Gaza” and appealed to all countries to “guarantee the continuity of UNRWA’s life-saving work”.

In Gaza, witnesses said Israel had stepped up air strikes on Gaza City, in the north, and bombarded parts of Khan Younis, in the south, despite what appeared to be the most serious peace initiative for months in the IsraelHama­s war.

Hamas, the militant Palestinia­n group that runs Gaza, is currently studying the proposal, which envisages the release of all remaining hostages seized on Oct. 7. Israel says they number around 136. Hamas has demanded an end to Israel’s offensive.

World powers hope to prevent a wider conflict, but tensions in the Middle East remain high after Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthi rebels said they would keep attacking U.S. and British warships in the Red Sea in solidarity with Palestinia­ns.

Relations between Tehran and Washington are also tense after the deaths of three U.S. soldiers in a drone strike in Jordan that U.S. officials blame on Iranbacked militants. Washington has not yet outlined its response, but Iran’s Revolution­ary Guards said on Wednesday they would respond to any U.S. threat.

Much of the densely populated Gaza Strip has been devastated by almost four months of Israeli bombardmen­t, and most of its 2.3 million residents have been uprooted by fighting that has caused the world’s biggest humanitari­an crisis.

Gaza health authoritie­s said 26,900 Palestinia­ns had been killed - including 150 over the past 24 hours - so far in the war that was triggered after Hamas fighters stormed into Israeli towns on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 and taking 253 hostages.

Israel’s military said its forces had killed at least 25 Palestinia­n militants in Gaza in the past 24 hours, and that three Israeli soldiers had been killed - taking to 224 the number of troops killed during Israel’s ground offensive.

Smoke rose above Gaza City after the latest air strikes, some of which targeted the headquarte­rs of the Hamas-run interior ministry, Hamas-run media and residents said.

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