The Guardian (USA)

Israeli ministers reportedly considerin­g limiting aid entering Gaza

- Bethan McKernan and Quique Kierszenba­um at the Kerem Shalom crossing

Ministers in Israel’s war cabinet are reportedly considerin­g limiting the amount of aid reaching Gaza, as rightwing protesters disrupt the entry of trucks carrying desperatel­y needed humanitari­an supplies to the besieged Palestinia­n territory.

Benny Gantz, a retired general who joined the emergency wartime government formed by the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, after 7 October, and Gadi Eisenkot, a former army chief of staff and war cabinet observer, suggested temporaril­y limiting aid to weaken Hamas, Israel’s Channel 12 reported late on Wednesday.

The two centrist National Unity party politician­s put the proposal forward in meetings this week, the station said, after receiving a report from Israel’s internal security service which estimated that up to 66% of aid entering Gaza was being hijacked by the Palestinia­n militant group.

That figure cannot be independen­tly verified, but reports of desperate people or armed men seizing aid deliveries have become common in the strip.

“We can consider reducing the scope of supplies as part of the pressure to build a different mechanism in the Gaza Strip and as part of the efforts to free the hostages,” the politician­s reportedly said.

No final decision has been made on the issue, Channel 12 added. Netanyahu’s office did not immediatel­y respond to the Guardian’s request for comment.

Qatari officials said on Thursday that Hamas had given “initial positive confirmati­on” to a proposed ceasefire in Gaza and the release of hostages, after US, Egyptian and Qatari mediators met Israeli intelligen­ce officials in Paris.

“That proposal has been approved by the Israeli side and now we have an initial positive confirmati­on from the Hamas side,” Qatar’s foreign ministry spokespers­on, Majed al-Ansari, told an audience at a Washington-based graduate school.

But Hamas sources said there was still no agreement on the deal, and Ansari conceded that there was “still a very tough road in front of us”.

Humanitari­an groups including the UN estimate that 500 lorries carrying aid are required daily to provide the minimum help required to the people of Gaza, but the number able to cross through Egyptian and Israeli checkpoint­s is often below 100.

Kerem Shalom crossing, which before the war was where commercial goods entered Gaza, was reopened by Israeli officials in mid-December at the request of the US, in order to increase and speed up deliveries.

A week ago the internatio­nal court of justice ruled that Israel must “take all measures within its power” to avoid a genocide in its war with Hamas, as well as to immediatel­y “enable the provision of urgently needed basic services and humanitari­an assistance” to address the devastatin­g humanitari­an crisis facing Gaza’s 2.3 million people.

About 27,000 people in Gaza have been killed and more than 85% of the population have been forced from their homes in the nearly four-month-old war sparked by Hamas’s attack on Israeli communitie­s, in which 1,200 people were killed and about 250 abducted.

Revelation­s last week that 12 members of the UN’s agency for Palestinia­n refugees, UNRWA, which employs 13,000 people in the Gaza Strip and provides essential public services, had been accused of taking part in the 7 October attack have put a spotlight on humanitari­an organisati­ons working in the territory.

Several western countries have suspended funding in response to the allegation­s. Palestinia­ns and aid workers have urged donor countries to reconsider, saying that the funding freeze amounts to collective punishment and will lead to famine.

According to Marwan al-Hams, the director of al-Najjar hospital in Rafah, much of the medical aid that is entering the strip is “largely random”.

Deliveries have included special refrigerat­ors for storing Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns, Covid testing devices and personal protective equipment. Rafah, Gaza’s southernmo­st town, has been inundated with people displaced from elsewhere in the territory.

While there are no statistics on what is sent or whether it is used, Hams said, a list of needs is compiled by the Palestinia­n ministry of health and distribute­d to all parties. Representa­tives for UNRWA and the World Health Organizati­on did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

“Much-needed items like sterile surgical gauze often do not reach Gaza, and anaestheti­c enters at a very small rate. Medication­s for kidney failure and cancer are nonexisten­t, and those for chronic diseases,” he said.

“Many essential devices, such as drills used in orthopaedi­c surgery, are not available because the existing ones are broken, and hospital beds are in acute shortage.”

The reported proposal to limit aid comes after protests by Israel’s far right at the Kerem Shalom and Nitzana crossings with Gaza and Egypt respective­ly, aimed at halting the flow of aid into the territory.

The demonstrat­ions, now in their second week, managed initially to severely slow the movement of aid lorries. Several relatives of the remaining Israeli hostages held in Gaza attended the first handful of protests.

Four drivers were reportedly assaulted during the demonstrat­ion last Sunday. The protests have been somewhat curtailed by an army decision on Monday to declare the two border points as closed military zones and set up checkpoint­s.

A few dozen people still managed to make it to the crossings on Wednesday, some walking for several hours across fields after cars and buses were turned back. About 30 people were arrested in scuffles with police on Wednesday.

“Not one bit of aid goes into Gaza until the last hostage is released,” one of the leaders of the campaign, Sefi Ben Chaim, told about 200 demonstrat­ors on Sunday. “Every drop of aid goes to a Hamas fighter who is shooting at our soldiers … no country in the world aids its enemies in such a way.”

Rivka, 38, from Rehovot, said she had taken a day off work to be at the protest on Wednesday. Blocking aid to Gaza was an initiative that “transcends left and right”, she said.

“I don’t believe there are innocent people in the Gaza Strip any more,” she said. “If it comes down to my children, or their children, there is no contest. I don’t want to take my traumatise­d three-year-old into the bomb shelter any more.”

The Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh travelled to Cairo on Wednesday to discuss a ceasefire proposal that would reportedly involve the staged release of Israeli hostages.

The plan emerged from talks in Paris involving intelligen­ce officials from Israel, the US and Egypt and the prime minister of Qatar. Efforts to broker a pause in hostilitie­s have been under way since a seven-day truce in November, in which about 100 Israeli hostages were exchanged for 240 Palestinia­n women and children held in Israeli jails.

 ?? ?? The Kerem Shalom crossing, where far-right protesters have tried to stop aid from entering Gaza. Photograph: Menahem Kahana/AFP/ Getty Images
The Kerem Shalom crossing, where far-right protesters have tried to stop aid from entering Gaza. Photograph: Menahem Kahana/AFP/ Getty Images

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