The Jerusalem Post

Knesset winter session opens in moment of silence

Legislatio­n to postpone municipal elections by three months passes first reading

- • By ARIELLA MARSDEN

the Knesset winter session opened on monday with a long moment of silence for the more than 1,300 Israelis murdered in hamas’s attack on Israel last week.

after opening statements by Knesset speaker amir ohana, president Isaac herzog, prime minister benjamin netanyahu, and opposition leader yair Lapid, the proceeding­s were disrupted twice by sirens.

the session, which was set to be another dramatic few months of legislatio­n, will be muted until the end of the war only with legislatio­n of laws related to the war.

herzog dedicated his speech to all the victims who were murdered, kidnapped, or missing, the soldiers, the emergency services, the citizens, and the diaspora.

“we are mourning, but we are also proud,” he said. “everyone has been fighting to their last bullet and their last breath, and we are still fighting.”

herzog stressed the importance of unity.

“even now, at the height of fighting, when we haven’t finished burying our dead, I’m hearing dangerous voices getting stronger, who are taking the entire nation backward and are sowing the seeds of separation and hatred,” he said. “this cannot happen. It just cannot. our enemies are eager for any ounce of polarizati­on between us. therefore, this house has to reflect the sense of unity among the people at this time and the understand­ing that there are bigger things right now than our disagreeme­nts.”

netanyahu spoke next, reiteratin­g that Israel’s goal is victory against hamas.

“there are many questions about this catastroph­e that happened 10 days ago,” he said. “we will investigat­e to the end, and we have already begun to utilize our lessons. but for now, we are focused on one goal – uniting the forces and storming on to victory.”

netanyahu echoed us president joe biden’s warning to those who would take advantage of the war and attack Israel.

“I have a message also for Iran and hezbollah,” he said. “don’t repeat the mistake you made before, because today, the price you pay will be much heavier.”

otzma yehudit announced shortly after the moment of silence that mK Limor son har-melech would initiate a

second front with Hezbollah, following Iran’s warning that it was prepared to intervene.

US President Joe Biden has also warned Iran against such a step. The newest US aircraft carrier, which is the world’s largest, was already in the Eastern Mediterran­ean and is due to be joined by a second US aircraft carrier in the coming days.

Some 2,000 US troops could be preemptive­ly sent to the region due to the escalating war, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday.

Asked by reporters about a possible visit by Biden, which Israeli media have reported could happen this week, IDF Spokesman R.-Adm. Daniel Hagari said a “visit by the president of the United States has strategic importance.”

“Its strategic importance is for the entire Middle East and the impact in which the highest level figure in the United States comes to Israel in time of war,” he said.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Nasser Kanaani said Washington must be held to account for “the crimes of the Zionist regime... Iran considers that the United States is already militarily involved in the conflict between Israel and Palestinia­ns.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke with Netanyahu and said Russia was ready to help end the Gaza conflict, the Kremlin said.

“Vladimir Putin informed [Netanyahu] about the steps Russia is taking to help normalize the situation, prevent further escalation of violence and prevent a humanitari­an catastroph­e in the Gaza Strip,” it said.

Earlier on Monday, Putin discussed the crisis with the leaders of Iran, Egypt, Syria, and the Palestinia­n Authority and said any form of violence against civilians was unacceptab­le, the Kremlin said.

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi said supporting the Palestinia­ns was Tehran’s foreign policy priority, but the “resistance” groups make their own independen­t decisions, Iranian state media reported.

Raisi was quoted as telling Putin: “There is a possibilit­y of the conflict between Israel and [the] Palestinia­ns expanding to other fronts.”

In a push to calm the situation, Egypt, which often plays a mediator role between Hamas and Israel, called for a summit with regional countries on the crisis, which Egyptian media outlet Al Qahera News said was expected to be held on Saturday in Sharm el-Sheikh.

Diplomats continued to push on Monday to secure the release of the hostages. Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan spoke by phone with Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh on Monday, a Turkish Foreign Ministry source said.

They discussed the latest developmen­ts in the war and the release of civilian hostages held by Hamas, the source said. In addition, Blinken spoke with Fidan by phone about the hostage situation.

Blinken met with Netanyahu, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, and President Isaac Herzog. His meeting with Netanyahu was interrupte­d by a warning siren that forced them to go into a bomb shelter.

Blinken “underlined his firm support for Israel’s right to defend itself from Hamas’s terrorism and reaffirmed US determinat­ion to provide the Israeli government with what it needs to protect its citizens,” the US State Department said.

He discussed with Netanyahu “the US’s close coordinati­on with the UN and regional partners to facilitate the provision of humanitari­an aid to civilians, [and] also discussed our commitment to the safe and speedy release of those held hostage by Hamas,” it said.

Diplomatic concerns continued to grow on Monday for the fate of the one million Gazans displaced by IAF airstrikes and suffering from Israel’s decision to halt electricit­y, fuel, and food shipments to Gaza.

European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell called for the hostages to be released and for humanitari­an aid to be restored to Gaza.

“Human suffering can be no bargaining chip,” he said.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres issued the same call and said the Middle East was on the “verge of the abyss.”

Authoritie­s from the Hamas-run Gaza Strip said more than 2,800 Palestinia­ns had been killed since the war began, with about a quarter of them being children, and more than 10,000 were wounded and in hospitals desperatel­y short of supplies.

According to the United Nations, power is out, sanitary water is scarce, and the last fuel for hospital emergency generators could be used up within a day.

Gaza residents on Monday said overnight airstrikes were the heaviest yet, and the bombing carried on through the day.

Cairo said the Rafah crossing was not officially closed but was inoperable due to Israeli airstrikes on the Gaza side.

“We are waiting for the green light for the aid to enter, and dozens of volunteers are ready at any time,” a Red Crescent official in the northern Sinai said.

Early on Monday, two Egyptian security sources told Reuters a ceasefire for several hours in southern Gaza had been agreed upon for aid and evacuation­s at Rafah. Egyptian state TV later quoted an unnamed, high-level source as saying no such truce had been agreed to, and Israel and Hamas also denied it.

“There is an urgent need to alleviate the suffering of Palestinia­n civilians in Gaza,” Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry told reporters, adding that talks with Israel on opening the Rafah crossing for aid had so far been fruitless.

UN humanitari­an aid chief Martin Griffiths was expected to travel to Cairo on Tuesday to try to get supplies through.

“It is critical that life-saving assistance is allowed to move through the Rafah crossing without delay,” his office said.

Washington has been focusing on getting the crossing briefly opened to allow some of the few hundred Gazans with US passports to leave. Shoukry said Egypt could allow medical evacuation­s and let some Gazans cross with permission to travel.

But there has been no public talk of Egypt accepting a mass influx of refugees, meaning the vast majority of Gazans are unlikely to be offered a route out. Egypt and other Arab states say a mass exodus would be unacceptab­le, amounting to the expulsion of Palestinia­ns

 ?? (Noam Revkin Fenton/Flash90) ?? MKs STAND for a minute of silence yesterday in the Knesset in memory of the Israelis murdered in Hamas’s massacre and those who have died since the war began.
(Noam Revkin Fenton/Flash90) MKs STAND for a minute of silence yesterday in the Knesset in memory of the Israelis murdered in Hamas’s massacre and those who have died since the war began.

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