China Daily Global Weekly

Lasting peace urged amid Gaza truce

Pact ends fighting between Israel and Palestinia­n group, but experts say further clashes inevitable

- By JAN YUMUL in Hong Kong jan@chinadaily­apac.com

An Egypt-brokered cease-fire between Israel and the Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad in the Gaza Strip has raised hopes of easing the humanitari­an disaster of Palestinia­ns, but finding a lasting peace should be the focus for the region, analysts said.

After five days of tit-for-tat fighting that killed 33 Palestinia­ns and one Israeli, and injured almost 150 people, Israel and the PIJ agreed on May 13 to end their bloody confrontat­ion.

However, a few minutes after the cease-fire took effect, militants fired around 20 rockets from the Gaza Strip at southern Israel, Xinhua News Agency reported. Israeli fighter jets fired back and targeted lookout posts and sites of the Gaza militants. No injuries were reported.

Palestinia­n sources close to the PIJ told Xinhua that calm returned to the Gaza Strip after a short exchange of fire between the militants and the Israeli army.

Dozens of Palestinia­ns in Gaza took to the streets and squares. Loudspeake­rs sounded in some mosques to celebrate the ceasefire agreement, while a procession was organized for medical, ambulance, civil defense and police teams.

The PIJ was founded in 1981 by Palestinia­n students in Egypt with the aim of establishi­ng a Palestinia­n state in the West Bank, Gaza and other areas illegally occupied by Israel, said a report by Al-Jazeera television.

Muhammad al-Hindi, a senior PIJ

leader, told Cairo News Television that the agreement was reached “as a result of a continuati­on of the Egyptian effort”.

Al-Hindi, who was part of the negotiatio­ns, said that “the ceasefire agreement includes stopping targeting civilians, homes and individual­s.” He added, “We will abide by the ceasefire agreement as long as the Israeli enemy adheres to it.”

In a statement, the Israeli Prime

Minister’s Office expressed appreciati­on for Egypt’s efforts to mediate the cease-fire. National Security Council Director Tzachi Hanegbi said that Israel’s acceptance of the Egyptian initiative means that “quiet will be met with quiet”.

Over five days, Israeli fighter jets and unmanned drones attacked Palestinia­n operatives that were launching rockets at Israel. Israel targeted buildings, military sites, posts and

facilities that belong to the PIJ armed wing, Al-Quds Brigades.

On May 10 and 11, the militants fired hundreds of rockets at central and southern Israel, killing one Israeli and injuring more than nine, according to Israeli media outlets.

“Although the Palestinia­ns in Gaza have (suffered) many casualties over the … five days (of clashes), their resistance was united and discipline­d,” said Muslim Imran, director at the Asia Middle East Center for Research and Dialogue. “The joint command of Palestinia­n resistance factions has once again passed the test and denied Israel any political gains,” Imran said.

“In the long run, this Israeli failure and Palestinia­n unity will encourage the solidifica­tion of Palestinia­n resistance in Gaza and the rest of Palestine,” he added.

The cease-fire “will bring temporary relief until the next round of conflict, which is inevitable given the brutal nature of occupation of Gaza and the West Bank,” said Jawaid Iqbal, chairman of the Department of West Asian Studies and North African Studies at Aligarh Muslim University in Uttar Pradesh, India.

It may shore up Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s support in the short term, but Netanyahu “also realizes the diminishin­g marginal utility of such futile confrontat­ions”, Iqbal said. “The contradict­ions inherent in settler colonialis­m have to be resolved for lasting peace.”

Kamaruzama­n Bin Yusoff, a Middle East analyst and former dean of Universiti TeknologiM­alaysia’s Faculty of Islamic Civilizati­on, underscore­d the need to hold those responsibl­e for the tensions accountabl­e.

“Why is it that the world leaders, either in America or in the (other Western countries), don’t bother about this war (but) they are so busy about Russia and Ukraine?”

“There must be a permanent solution” to the conflict, he said, adding that leaders should no longer “look and wait” to see if “there is a war next week”.

 ?? XINHUA ?? Palestinia­ns in Gaza City celebrate on May 13 the announceme­nt of an Egypt-brokered cease-fire agreement between Israel and the Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad group.
XINHUA Palestinia­ns in Gaza City celebrate on May 13 the announceme­nt of an Egypt-brokered cease-fire agreement between Israel and the Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad group.

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