Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Qatari addresses plight in Gaza

Envoy says Israel, militants want calm; aid announced

- FARES AKRAM

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — A Qatari envoy said Monday that both Israel and Gaza militants want to contain cross-border violence that has flared in recent days, as he detailed a new emergency fund to aid the blockaded territory.

Earlier Monday, Israel’s military struck what it said was an undergroun­d militant infrastruc­ture site in Gaza in response to rocket fire. The military has struck various targets in Gaza in recent days and killed two Palestinia­ns who tried to infiltrate Israel after a bomb on the border wounded four Israeli soldiers.

There were no reports of casualties from the latest strike.

“We confirm through our relationsh­ip with the two sides that they are not interested in escalation or engaging in a confrontat­ion that could ignite the entire region,” the Qatari envoy, Mohammed al-Emadi, told reporters in Gaza City.

Al-Emadi, whose country maintains contacts with the Islamic militant group Hamas and has hosted its leaders, coordinate­s Qatar’s relief and reconstruc­tion projects in Gaza. On Monday, he announced details of a $9 million emergency fund for addressing shortages of fuel and medicine.

Gaza has been under an Israeli-Egyptian blockade since Hamas wrested control of the territory from the West Bankbased Palestinia­n Authority in 2007. A dispute over money and revenue collection­s has stalled a reconcilia­tion deal between Hamas and President Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah party, which Egypt brokered in October.

Abbas has since stepped up financial pressure on Gaza. Hamas says the cuts are endangerin­g the functionin­g of Gaza hospitals.

The Qatari grant includes $2 million in medical supplies and $500,000 for fuel to power backup generators in Gaza’s public health centers, enough to keep them running for a month.

Trucks loaded with the supplies and decorated with Qatari flags and posters of the oil-rich sheikhdom’s rulers could be seen outside Gaza City’s main Shifa hospital on Monday, where al-Emadi and United Nations officials spoke.

Hospital cleaning workers demonstrat­ed their support during the ceremony, holding signs reading “Thank you, Qatar.” They have been on a strike for 10 days, demanding payment from the Hamas-run Health Ministry. Hamas and Abbas’ Palestinia­n Authority are locked in a dispute over who is responsibl­e for paying them.

The Gaza border area has been generally quiet since a 50-day war between Israel and Hamas in 2014, but it has seen an increase in violence since President Donald Trump’s announceme­nt in December recognizin­g Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

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