Lethbridge Herald

Gaza protests escalate

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Palestinia­ns protested Wednesday at a new location along the perimeter fence between Israel and Gaza as Hamas intensifie­d demonstrat­ions at the border after Egyptian-led cease-fire talks stalled.

The militant Hamas group was hoping its indirect talks with Israel would result in the lifting of a crippling blockade that Israel and Egypt placed on Gaza when it took over the territory in 2007 from the Palestinia­n Authority, but it accused the West Bank-based PA of thwarting the negotiatio­ns.

For months, the marches were limited to Fridays but Wednesday’s protest is the third this week, with new grounds including Gaza’s northweste­rn tip at the Mediterran­ean where land and sea boundaries converge. On Tuesday, Palestinia­n protested outside Erez, the only crossing point for people into Israel or the West Bank.

“This thunderous march will not stop until the ordeal is over. This is our resolution,” Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh said during the funeral of a Palestinia­n killed a day earlier at a protest.

For Hamas, giving new momentum to the protests aims at building more pressure on Israel.

“Creating new ways and tactics and diversifyi­ng the marches is meant to achieve the coveted goal of ... the lifting of the siege,” Hamas spokesman Hazem Qassem said.

The protests have persisted since late March, driven in large part by the desperatio­n of living under the blockade.

Hamas was close to reaching a deal and the mediation efforts reached their peak in August.

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