Cape Argus

Bombings amid truce talks

- | AFP | AFP

ISRAEL bombed targets in Gaza yesterday after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insisted the army would destroy Hamas despite the Cairo ceasefire talks continuing.

More than six months into the war, Hamas said it was “studying” a new proposal for a temporary truce, submitted during the talks with US, Qatari and Egyptian mediators.

Under the plan, fighting would stop for six weeks, 40 women and child hostages would be exchanged for hundreds of Palestinia­n prisoners, and up to 500 aid trucks would enter Gaza per day, a Hamas source said.

Hamas said it “appreciate­s” the mediators’ latest efforts but accused Israel of failing to respond to its long-standing demands, including a full withdrawal of forces from Gaza.

Netanyahu stressed – despite growing pressure from top ally the US – that Israel would pursue the twin goals of bringing home the hostages and destroying Hamas after its October 7 attack on Israel. “Today I received a detailed report on the talks in Cairo,” the premier said in a video message. “We are working all the time to achieve our goals, primarily the release of all our hostages and achieving a complete victory over Hamas.”

He said Israeli forces would storm Gaza’s far-southern city of Rafah on the Egyptian border, despite global concern for the fate of up to 1.5 million Palestinia­ns sheltering there. The Israeli premier said: “This victory requires entry into Rafah and the eliminatio­n of the terrorist battalions there. “It will happen – there is a date,” he vowed without saying when he plans to send troops into the last city in Gaza so far spared a ground invasion.

US officials renewed their objections to a Rafah operation, following a phone call last week between President Joe Biden and Netanyahu.

“We have made clear to Israel that we think a full-scale military invasion of Rafah would have an enormously harmful effect on those civilians and that it would ultimately hurt Israel’s security,” said State Department spokesman Matthew Miller.

Israel has invited tenders for 40 000 large tents, according to a document on the defence ministry website – part of its preparatio­ns to evacuate Rafah ahead of an offensive, a government source said on condition of anonymity.

The specificat­ions are for each tent to house 12 people, or some 480000 people in total, according to the defence ministry.

The carnage left by the bloodieste­ver Gaza war was on display in the southern city of Khan Yunis, a wasteland of shattered buildings and mountains of rubble after months of heavy bombardmen­t and street fighting.

Displaced Palestinia­ns returned on foot, in cars and on donkey-drawn carts after Israeli forces pulled out on Sunday in what the army said was a tactical and temporary withdrawal.

As Palestinia­ns readied for today’s Eid-ul-Fitr holiday marking the end of the fasting month of Ramadaan, they were stunned at the apocalypti­c sight of hundreds of gutted or collapsed buildings, bomb craters and tank tracks in the sand. The war has resulted in the deaths of 1 170 people, mostly civilians, according to Israeli figures. Palestinia­n militants also took more than 250 hostages, 129 of whom remain in Gaza, including 34 the army says are dead. Israel’s retaliator­y offensive has killed at least 33 207 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry.

The army said yesterday that it had destroyed “terrorist infrastruc­ture” throughout Gaza and an “aircraft eliminated a terrorist in Khan Yunis who participat­ed in the October 7 massacre”. In the central Gaza Strip, “troops eliminated a number of terrorists in close-quarter combat,” it said. “Several additional terrorists who posed a threat to the troops were eliminated by aircraft strikes and precise sniper fire.”

A UN team this week inspected Al-Shifa hospital, Gaza’s largest, which was mostly destroyed in two weeks of fierce fighting which the army said targeted militants holed up inside.

While the war has destroyed swathes of Gaza, levelling entire city blocks, an Israeli siege has pushed many of its 2.4 million people to the brink of famine. Israel, under intense US pressure to step up aid deliveries, on Monday allowed in 419 aid trucks, a daily record since the start of the war, said the Israeli defence ministry body Cogat. Amid the war, violence has flared elsewhere in the Middle East, drawing in Iran-backed groups based in Lebanon, Iraq, Syria and Yemen.

Israel’s army said a projectile targeted its southern port city of Eilat on Monday but was intercepte­d by its naval C-Dome missile defence system without causing casualties.

Israel has faced a chorus of global calls to halt the fighting and ease the suffering, including from France, Egypt and Jordan. French Foreign Minister Stephane Sejourne, demanding that vastly more aid be allowed into Gaza, said there are multiple “levers of influence” including sanctions.

Türkiye said it would impose trade restrictio­ns on Israel, covering cement and steel constructi­on materials, sparking an Israeli vow to take retaliator­y steps.

Nicaragua has brought Israel’s ally Germany before the Internatio­nal Court of Justice to demand emergency measures to stop Berlin from sending Israel weapons and other assistance.

Lawyers for Nicaragua argued that Germany is in breach of the 1948 United Nations Genocide Convention, set up in the wake of the Holocaust.

Germany’s representa­tive has rejected the claim and told the court in The Hague yesterday that “our history is the reason why Israel’s security has been at the core of German foreign policy”.

Meanwhile, Israel was buying tents to shelter almost half a million Gazans ahead of a ground attack on what it claims is Hamas’s last bastion in Rafah, a government source said yesterday.

The Israeli army estimates that Hamas has four battalions of fighters in Rafah.

 ?? ?? PEOPLE bury the body of displaced Christian Palestinia­n at a Muslim graveyard, as his family was not able to bury him at the Christian cemetery in Gaza City due to Israeli measures that ban movement from the south of the Gaza Strip to its north, yesterday.
PEOPLE bury the body of displaced Christian Palestinia­n at a Muslim graveyard, as his family was not able to bury him at the Christian cemetery in Gaza City due to Israeli measures that ban movement from the south of the Gaza Strip to its north, yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa