The Guardian (USA)

Israel under pressure to let more aid into Gaza as hostage talks continue

- Jason Burke in Jerusalem and Julian Borger in Washington

Israel’s leaders were under renewed pressure to allow more aid into Gaza on Wednesday after the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, told Benjamin Netanyahu to “accelerate and sustain improvemen­ts” seen during recent days in the amount of humanitari­an assistance reaching the territory.

Humanitari­an agencies say that though the number of lorries entering Gaza after being vetted by Israel has increased significan­tly, these still deliver only a fraction of what is needed.

Blinken met Netanyahu for two hours in Jerusalem, discussing the need to sustain humanitari­an deliveries to Gaza; hostage and ceasefire negotiatio­ns; and efforts to “ensure a lasting, sustainabl­e peace in the region”, a reference to broader talks the US has been holding with Saudi Arabia about a possible normalisat­ion of relations with Israel, as well as the prospects for establishi­ng a Palestinia­n state, which the Israeli prime minister adamantly opposes. Blinken also restated Washington’s determined opposition to Israel’s planned offensive on the southern Gaza city of Rafah.

Blinken later travelled to the port of Ashdod to highlight some of the improvemen­ts in aid delivery in recent days. He said the port had been open since February to US flour in transit to Gaza and was now open to other kinds of humanitari­an aid: “We’re now seeing a real flow of assistance that is going to the people in Gaza.”

He also said that a convoy of aid trucks from Jordan had passed through the Erez crossing for the first time on Wednesday. “That’s very important because that’s direct access to the north of Gaza,” he added.

Blinken also said that a sea corridor, involving a US-made floating dock and pier to deliver ship-borne humanitari­an aid, was “probably a week away from being operationa­l”. “So the progress is real, but given the need, given the immense need in Gaza, it needs to be accelerate­d, it needs to be sustained,” he said.

Earlier this week, the UN secretary-general, António Guterres, said there had been incrementa­l progress toward averting “an entirely preventabl­e, human-made famine” in the northern Gaza Strip, but called on Israel to do more. Humanitari­an agencies say they still face bureaucrat­ic obstacles as well as grave logistical difficulti­es inside Gaza. Some aid officials have disputed Israeli methods of counting trucks and their loads entering the territory.

Jordan’s foreign ministry on Wednesday said Israeli settlers attacked two of its humanitari­an aid convoys as they made their way towards Gaza through the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

The lorries, carrying food, flour and other aid, managed to continue on their journey and reach their destinatio­n, the ministry added in a statement. Honenu, an Israeli legal aid agency, said four men who had “blocked aid trucks going to Gaza” near the West Bank settlement of Ma’ale Adumim were arrested by Israeli police.

Col Moshe Tetro, head of Israel’s Coordinati­on and Liaison Administra­tion for Gaza, said he hoped the Erez crossing would be open every day, and help reach a target of 500 aid trucks entering Gaza daily. That would be in line with prewar supplies entering the territory and far more than it has received over the last seven months.

There is growing speculatio­n that Israel will soon launch a long-threatened assault into the southern Gaza city of Rafah, where more than 1 million Palestinia­ns displaced from their homes farther north are sheltering. The plan has drawn intense opposition from Israel’s allies, including the US, which says the overcrowde­d conditions could lead to thousands of civilian casualties as well as further disrupting aid deliveries entering via Egypt.

The secretary of state said on Wednesday that the US could not support a Rafah operation without a humanitari­an plan, and it had not seen one.

Israel is the final stop on Blinken’s Middle East tour, his seventh visit to the region since war broke out last October.

According to a UN update published on Wednesday, Israeli bombardmen­t from the air, land and sea continues across much of Gaza, resulting in further civilian casualties, displaceme­nt and destructio­n of houses and other civilian infrastruc­ture.

Attention in Israel has focused on the prospect of the release of surviving hostages held in Gaza if a ceasefire deal is reached with Hamas.

In a ceasefire at the end of November, 100 of about 240 hostages were freed in exchange for about 240 Palestinia­n women and children held in Israeli jails, but negotiatio­ns for further exchanges collapsed after a week. Israel estimates that 129 hostages remain unreturned, of whom 34 are believed to be dead.

Talks this week in Cairo are widely viewed as the last opportunit­y to salvage a diplomatic solution to free the Israeli hostages and a pause or end to the war after multiple rounds of talks over the past five months. A Hamas delegation left the Egyptian capital on Monday, saying they would return again with a written response to Israel’s latest ceasefire proposal.

Blinken has repeatedly urged Hamas to accept an “extraordin­arily generous” truce deal that would see 33 hostages released in exchange for a larger number of Palestinia­n prisoners, discussion­s on allowing displaced Palestinia­ns to return to north Gaza and a second phase of a truce that would involve a “period of sustained calm”.

A senior official for Hamas said the group was still studying the proposed deal but accused Blinken of failing to respect both sides and described Israel as the real obstacle. “Blinken’s comments contradict reality,” Sami Abu Zuhri told Reuters.

Blinken, who also privately met the families of hostages, told them that freeing them was “at the heart of everything we’re trying to do”.

“There is a very strong proposal on the table right now. Hamas needs to say yes, and needs to get this done,” Blinken told protesters calling for the hostages’ release after he met the families.

Israel’s opposition leader, Yair Lapid, who also met Blinken during his visit, said Netanyahu “doesn’t have any political excuse not to move to a deal for the release of the hostages”. “He has a majority in the nation, he has a majority in the Knesset, and if needed, I’ll make sure he has a majority in the government,” he said on X.

Various members of Netanyahu’s cabinet, mainly from the religious nationalis­t partners he depends on for the survival of his coalition government, have criticised the negotiatio­ns.

Orit Strook, a member of the Religious Zionist party and a minister, described the emerging hostage deal as “awful” in an interview with Israel’s Army Radio. “Soldiers who left everything behind and went out to fight for the objectives that the government set – and we’re throwing that into the trash in order to now save 22 people or 33 people or I don’t know how many? A government of that kind has no right to exist,” Strook said.

The son of one hostage told the same network that “extremists” in Israel were preventing a deal. “Forces that are so extreme and so deranged that have emerged in this country – it’s simply a nightmare,” Matti Danzig said. “We’re their hostages and my father is Hamas’s hostage.”

 ?? May. Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters ?? The Israeli defence minister, Yoav Gallant, US secretary of state, Antony Blinken and the UN senior humanitari­an coordinato­r for Gaza, Sigrid Kaag, at the Kerem Shalom crossing on 1
May. Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters The Israeli defence minister, Yoav Gallant, US secretary of state, Antony Blinken and the UN senior humanitari­an coordinato­r for Gaza, Sigrid Kaag, at the Kerem Shalom crossing on 1
 ?? May. Photograph: Ronen Zvulun/Reuters ?? A worker unloads humanitari­an aid near the Erez crossing in northern Gaza on 1
May. Photograph: Ronen Zvulun/Reuters A worker unloads humanitari­an aid near the Erez crossing in northern Gaza on 1

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