Business Day

Blinken urges Israel to keep Palestinia­n state hopes alive

• US secretary of state, on his fourth visit to the region in a bid to end Israel-Gaza war, has met Arab leaders

- Arafat Barbakh, Simon Lewis and Nidal Al-Mughrabi Gaza/Tel Aviv/Cairo

US secretary of state Antony Blinken told Israeli leaders on his latest mission on Tuesday to rein in the Gaza war as there is still a chance of gaining acceptance from their Arab neighbours if they create a path to a viable Palestinia­n state.

On his fourth trip to the region since October in a largely fruitless quest to tamp down the violence, Blinken said he will share what he had heard in two days of talks with Jordan, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.

His talks will include a meeting with the Israeli war cabinet formed in the wake of the October 7 attacks by Palestinia­n militants from Hamas, which rules Gaza, that Israel says killed 1,200 people.

The Israeli offensive has killed more than 23,000 Palestinia­ns, destroyed much of Gaza and displaced most of the population of 2.3-million at least once, creating a worsening humanitari­an crisis.

Blinken has already said he will press Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government on the “absolute imperative” to do more to protect Gaza’s civilians and allow humanitari­an aid to reach them. US President Joe Biden said overnight that Washington is quietly pushing Israel to begin withdrawin­g some of its forces.

Blinken’s meetings around the region have focused on trying to chart a longer-term approach to the decades-old Israel-Palestinia­n conflict, as part of a path towards ending the Gaza war. After his meetings with Arab allies, he said they want integratio­n with Israel — a long-term Israeli aim — but only if that includes a “practical pathway” to a Palestinia­n state.

“I know of your own efforts, over many years, to build much greater connectivi­ty and integratio­n in the Middle East, and I think there are actually real opportunit­ies there,” he told his Israeli counterpar­t, Israel Katz, on Tuesday.

“But we have to get through this very challengin­g moment and ensure that October 7 can never happen again and work to build a much different and much better future.”

HEAVY FIGHTING

After weeks of US pressure to ease its assault, Israel says that its forces are moving from full-blown warfare to a more targeted campaign in the northern half of Gaza, while still maintainin­g intensive combat in southern areas.

It said troops had killed about 40 Palestinia­n fighters and raided a militant compound and tunnel shafts since Monday during expanded operations in Khan Younis in the south.

The Palestinia­n health ministry in Gaza said 57 Palestinia­ns killed by Israeli air strikes and 65 wounded had arrived in the past 24 hours at the already cramped al-Aqsa hospital in the centre of the 45km-long Gaza Strip.

The vast humanitari­an crisis has put pressure in particular on the US, Israel’s closest ally, to press for the assault on Gaza to be scaled back.

The UN humanitari­an office OCHA said that “as casualties rise, the ability to treat them continues to be in jeopardy”.

It said three hospitals in central Gaza and Khan Younis, including al-Aqsa, were “at risk of closure due to the issuance of evacuation orders in nearby areas and the ongoing conduct of hostilitie­s nearby”.

‘CEASEFIRE NOW’

Late on Monday, the medical charity MSF said a shell had broken through the wall of one of its shelters in Khan Younis, which houses more than 100 staff and their families, critically wounding the five-year-old daughter of an MSF staffer.

Biden, who was confronted on Monday by protesters shouting “Ceasefire now!” while visiting a church in South Carolina, said he had been “quietly” working to encourage Israel to ease its attacks and “significan­tly get out of Gaza”.

Israel’s relentless bombardmen­t and its restrictio­ns on humanitari­an access to Gaza have prompted SA to file a lawsuit in the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, accusing Israel of genocidal actions against Palestinia­ns. Hearings are due to begin on Thursday.

Israeli President Isaac Herzog told Blinken there is “nothing more atrocious and prepostero­us” than the court case, noting that Israel’s Hamas enemies are sworn to its destructio­n.

WE HAVE TO GET THROUGH THIS VERY CHALLENGIN­G MOMENT AND … WORK TO BUILD A MUCH DIFFERENT AND MUCH BETTER FUTURE

Antony Blinken US secretary of state

The conflict has spread to Lebanon, where Hezbollah has been firing rockets across the Israeli border in support of Hamas. Both groups are supported by Iran.

Three members of Hezbollah were killed on Tuesday in a strike on their vehicle in south of Lebanon, according to two sources familiar with the group’s operations. A top Hezbollah commander was also killed in the area on Monday.

Hezbollah said it had launched a drone attack against Israeli command headquarte­rs in response to the killings of senior Hezbollah figure Wissam Tawil and of deputy Hamas leader Saleh al-Arouri in Beirut last week. Israel has neither confirmed nor denied responsibi­lity for the attacks.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Integratio­n in the Middle East: US secretary of state Antony Blinken, right, and Israeli minister Benny Gantz. Blinken’s meetings around the region have focused on trying to chart a longer-term approach to the decades-old Israel-Palestinia­n conflict.
/Reuters Integratio­n in the Middle East: US secretary of state Antony Blinken, right, and Israeli minister Benny Gantz. Blinken’s meetings around the region have focused on trying to chart a longer-term approach to the decades-old Israel-Palestinia­n conflict.

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