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  • AFP

    Pressure piles on Israel's Netanyahu over Gaza

    By Ronaldo SCHEMIDTOmar AL-QATTAAEyad BABARobbie Corey-Boulet and Michael BlumRONALDO SCHEMIDTSharon ARONOWICZ, Sharon ARONOWICZ, Oren ZIVOmar KAMAL, Aníbal Maíz CáceresJack GUEZ,

    2024-09-02
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3CPadr_0vHmF8mT00
    Policemen scuffle with a protester as families and supporters of Israeli hostages held in Gaza hold a rally calling for their release in Tel Aviv /AFP

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faces mounting international and domestic pressure after the killing in Gaza of six captives, with US President Joe Biden saying he is not doing enough to secure the release of hostages.

    Britain said Monday it would suspend some arms exports to Israel, citing a "clear risk" they could be used in a serious breach of international humanitarian law.

    Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said he was "deeply disheartened" by London's decision, while the premier said he sought forgiveness for failing to save the latest hostages killed.

    "Hamas will pay a very heavy price for this," he said during a televised press conference as he rejected making any "concessions" in Gaza ceasefire talks.

    Abu Obeida, spokesman for Hamas's armed wing the Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, said remaining hostages would return "inside coffins" if Israel maintains its military pressure on Gaza.

    A statement said "new instructions" had been given to militants guarding the captives on what to do if Israeli troops approached.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1A2Cfp_0vHmF8mT00
    Families and supporters of Israeli hostages have held regular rallies calling on the government to secure a truce and hostage release deal /AFP

    In Washington, Biden met US negotiators working alongside Qatar and Egypt to try to secure a truce deal that would free the remaining hostages in Gaza in return for Palestinian prisoners held in Israel.

    Asked by reporters if he thought Netanyahu was doing enough to secure a deal for the release of hostages, Biden replied: "No."

    - 'Devastation and outrage' -

    Netanyahu said Monday Israel must retain control of the key Philadelphi Corridor on the Gaza-Egypt border -- a significant sticking point in negotiations.

    "Hamas has to make the concessions," said Netanyahu, whose critics have accused him of prolonging the war to stay in power.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1QoIb4_0vHmF8mT00
    An Israeli strike on the outskirts of Gaza City hit a school sheltering war displaced /AFP

    Israelis were gripped by grief and fury after the military said Sunday the bodies of six hostages, all captured alive during Hamas's October 7 attack on southern Israel that triggered the war, were recovered from southern Gaza.

    A strike announced by the Histadrut trade union seeking a hostage deal brought parts of Israel to a standstill Monday, although some cities were largely unaffected.

    "This is our last chance! Deal now!" protesters chanted as thousands marched Monday through the streets of Tel Aviv.

    "Our hearts are burning" and "Enough with this blood government" read signs held by demonstrators as they pushed for a deal to free the remaining 97 hostages, including 33 the military says are dead.

    Outside Netanyahu's Jerusalem home, protester Karem Saar said "it's his responsibility to get his citizens out" of Gaza.

    "Hamas are the ones that pulled the trigger but the fact that they're still there is on Netanyahu," she told AFP.

    Of 251 hostages seized on October 7, just eight have been rescued alive by Israeli forces, although scores were released during a one-week truce in November -- the only one so far.

    - Gaza polio campaign -

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1IfUjT_0vHmF8mT00
    A health worker administers the Polio vaccine to a Palestinian child in the central Gaza Strip /AFP

    With Gaza lying in ruins and the majority of the 2.4 million residents forced to flee, often taking refuge in cramped and unsanitary conditions, disease has spread.

    After the first confirmed polio case in 25 years, a vaccination drive got underway Sunday with localised "humanitarian pauses" to the fighting.

    However, an AFP journalist reported troops blowing up homes in Gaza City and warplanes hitting a house to the east overnight into Tuesday.

    The territory's civil defence agency said Israel carried out a deadly strike on a tent sheltering displaced people in southern Khan Yuins, as well as bombarding central Gaza.

    Around 160,000 children received a first polio vaccine dose on Sunday and Monday in central Gaza, the territory's health ministry said.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0wqX4L_0vHmF8mT00
    Israeli military vehicles and rising plumes of smoke during an ongoing raid in the occupied West Bank's Jenin refugee camp /AFP

    Palestinian mother Basma al-Batsh told AFP on Sunday she was "very happy" the vaccination drive was happening.

    "I want to protect my children because I was afraid that they would be affected and become disabled," she said.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2pAqCq_0vHmF8mT00
    West Bank: Israel's military operation /AFP

    Israel's military campaign against Hamas has so far killed at least 40,786 people in Gaza, according to the territory's health ministry. The UN rights office says most of the dead are women and children.

    The October 7 attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,205 people, mostly civilians and including hostages killed in captivity, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures.

    - West Bank raids -

    Since the war erupted violence has surged in Israel's border area with Lebanon and in the occupied West Bank, where the Israeli military launched a large-scale offensive on Wednesday.

    Imad Naim Abu Al-Hayat, a Jenin resident, said his barbershop was destroyed by the Israeli military, which has occupied the West Bank since 1967.

    "They want to destroy the country so that people get tired of the (Palestinian) resistance, but we will not get tired of the resistance," he told AFP beside a pile of rubble.

    Further south in Tulkarem, an Israeli airstrike targeted an "armed terrorist cell" late Monday which the military said had shot at security forces.

    Separately, a medical source at Tulkarem's governmental hospital said Israeli forces killed a boy by shooting him in the head.

    The Ramallah-based Palestinian health ministry said Monday at least 26 Palestinians have been killed in the northern West Bank since Wednesday.

    Three Israeli police officers were also killed in a shooting Sunday in the southern West Bank, an area where three Palestinians have also been killed in recent days according to the territory's health ministry.

    In Lebanon, the health ministry said an Israeli strike on a vehicle in the south killed two people Monday.

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    Add a Comment
    Raymond Gatley
    09-04
    I'm not from Missoula Montana, I live in Browning Montana native American reservation see the tricks these Catholic perverts play
    Raymond Gatley
    09-04
    Yeshua and cousins don't go in, it'll be a quagmire, just like Vietnam they're dug in, just like Iraq they'll be all kinds of chemicals and biological agents. you won't figure out what it is or they won't tell you just like they did the American troops and everybody else over there who got sick they're just about all dead from the first Gulf war aren't they , netanyahu LED you into a trap Israel one big ambush you were warned
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