Israel Hamas War Updates – Artifex.News https://artifexnews.net Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Wed, 31 Jul 2024 07:21:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 https://artifexnews.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-Artifex-Round-32x32.png Israel Hamas War Updates – Artifex.News https://artifexnews.net 32 32 Palestinians detained by Israeli authorities faced torture, mistreatment: U.N. report https://artifexnews.net/article68467736-ece/ Wed, 31 Jul 2024 07:21:51 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/article68467736-ece/ Read More “Palestinians detained by Israeli authorities faced torture, mistreatment: U.N. report” »

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Israeli soldiers gather at the gate to the Sde Teiman military base, as people protest in support of soldiers being questioned for detainee abuse, July 29, 2024.
| Photo Credit: AP

The U.N. human rights office issued a report on July 31 saying Palestinian detainees taken by Israeli authorities since the October 7 attacks have faced waterboarding, sleep deprivation, electric shocks, the release of dogs, and other forms of torture and mistreatment.

The report on detention says Israel’s prison service held more than 9,400 “security detainees” as of the end of June, and some have been held in secret without access to lawyers or respect for their legal rights.

A summary of the report, based on interviews with former detainees and other sources, decries a “staggering” number of detainees — including men, women, children, journalists and human rights defenders — and said such practices raise concerns about arbitrary detention.

“The testimonies gathered by my office and other entities indicate a range of appalling acts, such as waterboarding and the release of dogs on detainees, amongst other acts, in flagrant violation of international human rights law and international humanitarian law,” said U.N. Human Rights Chief Volker Türk in a statement.

Findings in the report, one of the most extensive of its kind, could be used by International Criminal Court prosecutors who are looking into crimes committed in connection with the October 7 attacks and their aftermath, including Israel’s blistering military campaign that is ongoing in Gaza.

Authors of the report said its content was shared with the Israeli government.

The report says detainees were taken in Gaza, Israel and the West Bank, and says Israel has not provided information regarding the fate or whereabouts of many, adding that the International Committee of the Red Cross has been denied access to facilities where they are held.

“Detainees said they were held in cage-like facilities, stripped naked for prolonged periods, wearing only diapers. Their testimonies told of prolonged blindfolding, deprivation of food, sleep and water, and being subjected to electric shocks and being burnt with cigarettes,” a summary of the report said.

“Some detainees said dogs were released on them, and others said they were subjected to waterboarding, or that their hands were tied and they were suspended from the ceiling,” it added. “Some women and men also spoke of sexual and gender-based violence.”

The report also says the Palestinian Authority, which administers parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank, had also “continued to carry out arbitrary detention and torture or other ill-treatment in the West Bank, reportedly principally to suppress criticism and political opposition.”

Also Read:Who was Ismail Haniyeh, Hamas leader killed in Iran?

On Tuesday, an Israeli military court began an initial hearing for nine soldiers detained over what a defense lawyer said were allegations of sexual abuse of a Palestinian at Sde Teiman — a shadowy facility where Israel has held prisoners from Gaza during the war. The soldiers’ detention triggered angry protests by supporters demanding their release.

On Wednesday, the military court extended the detention of eight Israeli suspects until Sunday.

The war in Gaza erupted after Hamas’ surprise attack on southern Israel on October 7, killing some 1,200 people that day and taking 250 others hostage. Israel’s retaliatory operation has obliterated entire neighborhoods in Gaza and forced some 80% of the population to flee their homes. Gaza’s Health Ministry says over 39,000 Palestinians have been killed, without distinguishing between civilians and combatants in its count.



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Heavy fighting rocks Gaza as thousands on the move again https://artifexnews.net/article68364724-ece/ Wed, 03 Jul 2024 23:17:00 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/article68364724-ece/ Read More “Heavy fighting rocks Gaza as thousands on the move again” »

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Israeli forces bombed and battled Hamas in Gaza City on Wednesday as tens of thousands of Palestinians scrambled for a safe haven after the army issued an evacuation order for a vast swathe of the territory’s south.

Apache helicopters and Israeli quadcopter drones flew above Gaza City’s Shujaiya district as heavy gunfire echoed through the streets, AFP reporters said.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejected a US media report saying his generals were urging a Gaza truce even with Hamas undefeated, stressing on Tuesday that “this will not happen”.

Military chief Herzi Halevi meanwhile said Israel is engaged in “a long campaign” to destroy Hamas over the October 7 attack and to bring home the hostages held by Palestinian militants.

The United Nations warned that the almost nine-month-old war had “unleashed a maelstrom of human misery” and that the latest evacuation order had plunged yet more Palestinians into “an abyss of suffering”.

Ten days after Netanyahu said the war’s “intense phase” was winding down, the Israeli military again rained down air strikes and artillery fire on militants in the Shujaiya district.

The air force struck “over 50 terror infrastructure sites” across Gaza in 24 hours while ground troops “eliminated terrorists”, located tunnels and found weapons including AK-47 assault rifles, the military said.

Thousands have fled the fighting in Shujaiya, among them Umm Bashar al-Jamal, 42, who was now sheltering in Gaza City’s Yarmouk sports stadium.

“We were displaced five days ago,” she said. “We fled from Shujaiya. We woke up to the sound of tanks. The houses were bulldozed. All our homes!”

The Israeli army — which issued an evacuation order for Shujaiya a week ago — on Monday did the same for a larger area near Khan Yunis and Rafah in the south, raising fears of renewed heavy battles there.

Tens of thousands of Palestinians have again taken to the road, many bundling their scant belongings on top of cars or donkey carts as they sought safety elsewhere in the bombed-out wasteland.

– ‘Lives upended’ –

The UN agency supporting Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, said 250,000 people had been affected by the latest evacuation order that covers southern areas bordering Israel and Egypt.

Almost all patients in the European Gaza Hospital and the Red Cross field hospital decided to flee following the evacuation order, the World Health Organization said.

Though the European Gaza Hospital itself is not under evacuation instructions, the order has impacted operations.

“Now only three patients remain at the European Gaza Hospital and three at the ICRC field hospital,” the WHO said, citing figures from Tuesday.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’s spokesman Stephane Dujarric said the southern evacuation order covers 117 square kilometres (45 square miles), “making it the largest such order since October”.

The UN humanitarian coordinator for Gaza, Sigrid Kaag, told the UN Security Council on Tuesday that the war had now displaced 80 percent of Gaza’s population.

She also said not enough aid was reaching the besieged territory and that crossings must be reopened, particularly to southern Gaza, to avert a humanitarian disaster.

“Palestinian civilians in Gaza have been plunged into an abyss of suffering, their home lives shattered, their lives upended,” she said. “The war has not merely created the most profound of humanitarian crises. It has unleashed a maelstrom of human misery.”

Amid the war, siege and mass displacement, more than 150,000 people have contracted skin diseases in the squalid conditions, the World Health Organization said.

Wafaa Elwan, a Palestinian mother of seven who now lives in a tent city, said: “We sleep on the ground, on sand where worms come out underneath us.”

She said her five-year-old son, much of whose body was covered in rashes and welts, “can’t sleep through the night because he can’t stop scratching his body”.

– ‘Winds of defeatism’ –

The bloodiest ever Gaza war broke out after Hamas’s October 7 attack on southern Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,195 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.

The militants also seized 251 hostages, 116 of whom remain in Gaza including 42 the army says are dead.

Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 37,953 people, also mostly civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry.

The Israeli military said Wednesday that “operational activities continue throughout the Gaza Strip”.

The Gaza civil defence agency said seven people were killed when a strike hit a family house north of Gaza City.

Another strike killed three people in a car at Al-Maghazi refugee camp in the central Deir al-Balah area, an AFP reporter said.

The New York Times has quoted Israeli security officials as saying top generals see a truce as the best way to secure the release of the remaining hostages, even if that meant not achieving all of the war goals.

Netanyahu strongly rejected this and vowed Israel would not give in to the “winds of defeatism”.

“The war will end once Israel achieves all of its objectives, including the destruction of Hamas and the release of all of our hostages,” he said.



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Israel Expands Ground Operations, Pounds Gaza’s North https://artifexnews.net/israel-hamas-war-gaza-palestine-live-breaking-news-updates-israel-expands-ground-operations-pounds-gazas-north-4526445/ Mon, 30 Oct 2023 01:54:38 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/israel-hamas-war-gaza-palestine-live-breaking-news-updates-israel-expands-ground-operations-pounds-gazas-north-4526445/ Read More “Israel Expands Ground Operations, Pounds Gaza’s North” »

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Over 8,000 people have been killed in Gaza in Israeli strikes

Israel-Hamas war live updates:

Israel today continued to bombard Gaza as its troops pressed into the enclave with a ground assault. Israel has been pounding Gaza after Hamas attacked Israeli towns on October 7 and killed about 1,400 people. The Hamas operatives also took at least 239 hostages.

According to the Israeli government, more than half the hostages held by Hamas have foreign passports from 25 countries, including 54 Thai nationals.

Medical authorities in the Gaza Strip on Sunday said that 8,005 people – including 3,324 minors – had been killed.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to “crush” Hamas operatives, who have an extensive tunnel network in and around Gaza City.

Here are the live updates on the Israel-Hamas war:

Get NDTV UpdatesTurn on notifications to receive alerts as this story develops.

Biden, Egypt President Discuss Humanitarian Aid To War-Torn Gaza

US President Joe Biden on Sunday spoke with Egypt President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi and expressed his appreciation for Egypt’s role in efforts to facilitate the delivery of humanitarian assistance to war-torn Gaza.

According to White House, the two leaders committed to the significant acceleration and increase of assistance flowing into Gaza beginning Sunday and then continuously. 

“They also discussed the importance of protecting civilian lives, respect for international humanitarian law, and ensuring that Palestinians in Gaza are not displaced to Egypt or any other nation,” the White House said in a statement. 

Mr Biden also briefed President Sisi on US efforts to ensure that “regional actors not expand” the conflict in Gaza and also on continuing efforts to secure the release of hostages. 

Mr Biden and Mr Sisi affirmed their commitment to work together to set the conditions for a durable and sustainable peace in the Middle East to include the establishment of a Palestinian state.

Israel-Hamas War: Phone, Internet Cuts In Gaza Hampers Rescue Operations

The phone and internet cuts in Gaza have hampered rescue operations. The cuts appeared to ease on Sunday, but telecoms provider Paltel said that Israeli air strikes again had knocked out internet and phone service in parts of the enclave’s northern sections, where the Hamas group has command centres.

Video: Israeli Battle Tanks Strike Hamas In Northern Gaza

Two days after the Israeli government ordered expanded ground incursions, Israel on Sunday released a video showing its battle tanks in northern Gaza. According to Israel Defense Forces (IDF), IAF aircraft, guided by IDF troops, struck Hamas structures and killed “multiple terrorists”.

“Anti-tank missile launch posts and observation posts were struck,” the IDF said.

Some pictures posted on social media platforms also showed Israeli troops waving an Israeli flag deep inside Gaza. NDTV could not verify the images.

Israel-Hamas War Live News Updates: Israel Expands Ground Operations, Pounds Gaza’s North

With a motive to “crush” Hamas operatives for their October 7 attack on Israeli towns, Israel today pounded northern Gaza as its troops — backed by tanks — pressed into the enclave with a ground assault. 

Israeli air strikes reportedly hit areas near Gaza City’s Shifa and Al-Quds hospitals.

Clashes between Hamas operatives and Israeli forces were also reported in a border area east of the city of Khan Younis in Gaza’s south.

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Hamas Frees Two Israeli Women, US Cautions On Gaza Invasion https://artifexnews.net/israel-hamas-war-live-updates-hamas-frees-two-israeli-women-us-cautions-on-gaza-invasion-4508606/ Tue, 24 Oct 2023 01:23:01 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/israel-hamas-war-live-updates-hamas-frees-two-israeli-women-us-cautions-on-gaza-invasion-4508606/ Read More “Hamas Frees Two Israeli Women, US Cautions On Gaza Invasion” »

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Israel-Hamas War Live Updates: Hamas freed two more women hostages abducted to the Gaza Strip

New Delhi:

Hamas freed two Israeli women who were among the more than 200 hostages taken during its October 7 rampage in southern Israel while according to some reports the US had advised Israel to hold off on a ground assault in the Gaza Strip.

“We decided to release them for humanitarian and poor health grounds,” Abu Ubaida, spokesman for the armed wing of the Palestinian Hamas militant group, said on Telegram.

The Israeli prime minister’s office issued a statement confirming that the women, whom it named as Nurit Cooper, 79, and Yocheved Lifshitz, 85, were handed over to the Israeli military and would be taken to a medical facility.

Israel launched an immediate war on Hamas and more than 5,000 people have since been killed in its air attacks on Gaza, according to the Gaza health ministry.

Here are the live updates on the Israel-Hamas war:

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Can “Talk” About Israel-Hamas Ceasefire Only After Hostages Freed: Biden

US President Joe Biden said on Monday that any discussions about a Gaza ceasefire could only take place if Hamas frees all hostages seized from Israel in its October 7 attack.

“We should have those hostages released and then we can talk,” Biden said at a White House event when asked if he would support a “hostages-for-ceasefire” deal.

Biden then apologized for having to leave the event to promote his economic program ahead of next year’s election, saying he had to go to the White House Situation Room for “another issue I have to deal with.”

Can 'Talk' About Israel-Hamas Ceasefire Only After Hostages Freed: Biden
Some Of Israel’s Actions In Gaza May Backfire, Warns Barack Obama

Some of Israel’s actions in its war against Hamas, like cutting off food and water for Gaza, could “harden Palestinian attitudes for generations” and weaken international support for Israel, former U.S. President Barack Obama said on Monday.

In rare comments on an active foreign policy crisis, Obama said any Israeli military strategy that ignores the human costs of the war “could ultimately backfire.”

“The Israeli government’s decision to cut off food, water and electricity to a captive civilian population (in Gaza) threatens not only to worsen a growing humanitarian crisis; it could further harden Palestinian attitudes for generations, erode global support for Israel, play into the hands of Israel’s enemies, and undermine long-term efforts to achieve peace and stability in the region,” Obama said.

Some Of Israel's Actions In Gaza May Backfire, Warns Barack Obama
Hamas Says It Freed 2 More Hostages, Days After It Released 2 Americans

  • Palestinian militant group Hamas said on Monday it had freed two more women hostages abducted to the Gaza Strip from Israel during the October 7 attacks.
  • The Islamist group’s military wing said in a statement the two had been freed for “compelling humanitarian” reasons following mediation by Qatar and Egypt.
  • There was no immediate confirmation by Israeli authorities but Israeli media reported that the women had been taken to the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt.
  • Two American women, a mother and daughter, were freed on Friday.
  • Israel on Monday increased the number of hostages it has confirmed to 222 people seized when Hamas gunmen crossed the border and attacked kibbutz communities, towns and military bases in southern Israel.
Hamas Says It Freed 2 More Hostages, Days After It Released 2 Americans

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Israel-Hamas war: The significance of Rafah border and why its reopening matters to Egypt | Explained https://artifexnews.net/article67437358-ece/ Sat, 21 Oct 2023 12:21:50 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/article67437358-ece/ Read More “Israel-Hamas war: The significance of Rafah border and why its reopening matters to Egypt | Explained” »

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The story so far: Over the past few days, thousands have fled south of the Gaza Strip after Israel ordered the evacuation of over one million civilians in the north — nearly half of the total population of the Palestinian enclave — ahead of an anticipated ground invasion by the Israeli military. The planned invasion was in response to the multi-front attack by Hamas on October 7 that killed more than 1,000 Israelis. 

Even as civilians queue up at the border with hopes of escaping the conflict zone, the status of the sole remaining exit out of Gaza and the gateway for crucial supplies that the besieged area desperately needs — the Rafah crossing on the Egyptian border — remains unclear. With food, water, electricity, fuel and other critical supplies running dangerously low, uncertainty now looms large over the fate of displaced Palestinians and trapped foreign nationals.

The U.S. on October 18, without giving a timeline, claimed that Egypt has agreed to reopen the crossing after Cairo said that the arterial crossing was not sealed but rendered inoperable by continuous airstrikes by the Israeli military.

Check out furthercoverage by The Hindu on the Israel-Palestine conflict here.

Where is the Rafah crossing and who controls it?

The Gaza Strip is a narrow 41-km designated Palestinian territory along the eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea, bound to the north and east by Israel, and to the south by Egypt. Israel controls Gaza’s airspace and territorial waters, which makes it extremely hard for Palestinians to pass through.

Source: United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), 2018

The enclave, home to more than two million people, currently has three functional entry and exit points — the Erez or the Beit Hanoun crossing in the north, and the Karem Abu Salem and Rafah crossings in the south. The Erez crossing, managed by Israel in the north, controls the movement of people between Gaza and the West Bank via Israel. The checkpoint is limited to “exceptional humanitarian cases” and prominent traders. Only a few individuals can exit Gaza because the mandatory Israeli-issued exit permit is not easy to obtain. The Israeli authorities allowed 58,606 exits from Gaza in August this year, according to the United Nations. The Karem Abu Salem point is also under Israel’s control but is exclusively for the movement of commercial goods. Both are presently shut.

(Source:OCHA)

(Source:OCHA)

Opposite the Erez crossing in the north is the Rafah point on the border with the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt — a vast, volatile Egyptian territory of mountains and desert which has been a centre of conflict for decades, starting with the first Arab-Israeli war in 1948.

This crossing is the primary exit point from Gaza due to longstanding restrictions associated with the blockade at the Erez crossing. Since it serves as a vital link between the ‘world’s biggest open-air prison’ and the outside world, the Rafah crossing is widely referred to as the lifeline of the Gaza Strip. It is under the management of Egypt as per a 2007 agreement with Israel. It is the only border not directly controlled by Israel, but the approval of Israeli authorities is still required for supplies to enter Gaza from Egypt. Egyptian authorities allowed 19,608 exits of people from Gaza in August, which was also the highest number of exits recorded since July 2012.

(Source:OCHA)

(Source:OCHA)

How did Rafah emerge as the lifeline of Gaza? 

The present Egyptian-Israeli border is a reflection of multiple wars fought between Israel and Egypt, and others involving the colonial powers which formerly ruled Egypt and historical Palestine. 

The first form of the present boundary emerged around the beginning of the 20th century, following an agreement between the Turkish authorities and the British Empire regarding an “administrative separating line” from Rafah to Taba on the Gulf of Aqaba. The Rafah-Aqaba line became a boundary between the two territories administered by Britain after the First World War, as per a historical account of the evolution of Egyptian-Israeli boundaries. The line to Taba remained a border until the establishment of Israel in 1948. 

The first Arab-Israeli war that followed resulted in Egypt taking control over the Gaza Strip, which meant that the Israel-Egypt border no longer existed. In 1956, Israel, France and Britain invaded the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt and occupied Gaza after Egyptians announced the nationalisation of the Suez Canal Company. The Israeli forces eventually withdrew from the Gaza Strip after the intervention of the United Nations. A U.N. Emergency Force was dispatched to the troubled area for a peacekeeping operation.

 Israeli-Egyptian Boundaries

Israeli-Egyptian Boundaries

The third Arab-Israeli War, also called the Six-Day War, broke out in 1967 following heightened tensions in the region after Egypt re-militarised the Sinai peninsula, expelled the U.N. forces from Sinai and the West Bank, and closed the Straits of Tiran. Israel secured a decisive victory against Arab forces and captured the Sinai peninsula, the West Bank, the Gaza Strip, East Jerusalem and the Syrian territory of Golan Heights by the end of the war. The West Bank and the Gaza Strip were declared “closed military areas”, which meant restrictions on the movement of Palestinians.

The Israel-Egypt peace process took place between 1973 and 1982 after the Yom Kippur War, also called the Fourth Arab-Israeli War, ended in a stalemate. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat made history when he embarked on an official visit to Jerusalem in November 1977 to advance the peace process, and went on to address the Knesset (Parliament of Israel). Sadat’s visit was viewed as a breakthrough. The Camp David Accords signed in 1978 set the framework for peace. The Peace Treaty between Israel and Egypt in 1979 eventually led to the restoration of the border, with Israel withdrawing from the Sinai Peninsula by 1982. 

As the two countries began to demarcate their boundary, Rafah was converted into a partitioned town at the gates of the Sanai Peninsula. A report ‘The Divided People of Rafah’ published in the Middle East International in 1988 reads, “In 1982, the new barbed-wire fence divided the city and its population into two. Families were separated, property was divided and many houses and orchards were cut across and destroyed by the new boundary, bulldozed, for security reasons, to form a belt on both sides of the border.”

After the first Palestinian uprising or the First Intifada, Israel gave partial responsibility for administering the Gaza Strip and the Jericho area to a Palestinian authority that was an outcome of the Oslo Accords. 

The 1994 Gaza-Jericho Agreement between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) established a shared management and control system of the Allenby Bridge from the West Bank into Jordan and the Rafah crossing from Gaza to Egypt. In a 2005 report, the Al Mezan Center for Human Rights says the pact gave Israel and the Palestinians shared control of the crossing in theory, but Israel retained primary control. “Israel had the lion’s share of control at the terminal, and thus over the freedom of movement of Gaza’s some 1.4 million residents,” it adds. 

When the Second Intifada broke out in 2000, triggered by Ariel Sharon’s infamous visit to Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem, Israel fully took over control of the crossing and banned Palestinian staff from working in the terminal. 

Against the backdrop of intense violence and Hamas’ resistance, Israel announced a unilateral withdrawal from the Gaza Strip in 2005 to revitalise the peace process. The subsequent Agreement on Movement and Access (AMA) brought the Rafah crossing back under Palestinian control on paper. Israel evacuated its troops and settlers by August 2005 and left Gaza. Notably, the Rafah crossing was one of the main points of difference between the Palestinian National Authority and Israel over the course of arranging for Israel’s withdrawal and transfer of land and crossings in the Gaza Strip. Israel demanded that its ability to be present in the crossing be ensured, without jeopardising its claim of full withdrawal from Gaza, the Al Mezan report notes.

Peace, however, continued to elude Palestine as Hamas seized control of the military and political establishment in Gaza after a landslide victory in the 2006 election amid Israel’s continuing occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem. The Hamas win led to a split in the Palestinian governance and bloody clashes. Attacks in Israel, and airstrikes in Gaza, coupled with tighter restrictions by Israel and Egypt on the movement through the Rafah crossing for security reasons, exacerbated the conflict. In 2007, Israel imposed a complete blockade, cut electricity and fuel supplies to Gaza and sealed the border.  

Poverty, hunger and unemployment engulfed the enclave. Following a few failed attempts to force open the Rafah border, a series of blasts along the crossing in January 2008 destroyed part of the wall, allowing thousands of Palestinians to cross into Egypt in search of food and supplies. In response, Egypt built a cement wall and sealed its barrier with barbed wire and metal barricades.

Egypt’s balancing act on Israel and Palestine

Egypt walks a tightrope in its dealings with its neighbours Israel and Palestine. While Egypt has a peace treaty with Israel and has strengthened economic ties and security cooperation with the country, it also recognises the importance of the Palestinian cause.

However, Egypt has assisted Israel for years in enforcing a blockade in the Gaza Strip and controlling the movement of people and goods.

In 2007, the Egyptian government under President Hosni Mubarak assisted Israel in enforcing the blockade in Gaza owing to its opposition to Hamas. The interim regime of the Muslim Brotherhood, which took over for around a year after Mubarak stepped down in the aftermath of the Egyptian uprising, announced the permanent re-opening of the Rafah crossing. The Brotherhood is an Islamic organisation formed in 1928 to promote social and political change in Muslim-majority countries. Hamas is an outgrowth of the Muslim Brotherhood’s Palestinian branch.

The rise of the current regime under the leadership of Marshal Abdel Fattah al-Sisi following a coup in 2013 dealt a blow to ties. Political uncertainty and military operations in northern Sinai led Egypt to impose severe restrictions on the crossing from 2014 to 2018. Egypt was strongly opposed to the deployment of Hamas personnel at the border crossing. The administration’s condition to reopen the border was the full authority of the Palestinian Authority staff at the checkpoint on the Palestinian side.

The crossing was reopened in May 2018 for Ramzan to ‘ease burdens’ during the Muslim holy month. It remained open for a long while before Hamas sealed the border in 2020 amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The Rafah crossing was intermittently opened for short periods, but Egypt “indefinitely” opened the border in February 2021 after bilateral talks between the Palestinian and Egyptian leadership to facilitate Palestinian passage to and from the Gaza Strip. At the time, Cairo was hosting talks between Hamas and Fatah, which runs the Palestinian Authority in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, regarding the possibility of holding parliamentary and presidential votes. As per reports, the move aimed at creating a better atmosphere and encouraging negotiations between the Palestinian factions.

Wounded Palestinians at the Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, central Gaza Strip, after arriving from al-Ahli hospital following an explosion there, on Tuesday, October 17, 2023.

Wounded Palestinians at the Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, central Gaza Strip, after arriving from al-Ahli hospital following an explosion there, on Tuesday, October 17, 2023.

The Rafah border remained open during the Israel-Hamas conflict in May to allow the movement of aid to the Gaza Strip. Egypt brokered a ceasefire that ended 11 days of conflict. In August that year, Egypt shut the border again following an escalation between Israel and Hamas, partially reopening it after a few days.

The crossing largely remained open since 2021 except for holidays, but was made “inoperable” earlier this month after war broke out in the region following a surprise attack by Hamas. 

What are Egypt’s concerns?

Caught in the crossfire, people in Gaza face a worsening humanitarian crisis, with Israel cutting off the entry of food, water and electricity supplies, even as truckloads of supplies pile up at the closed Rafah border. Egypt, which manages the Rafah border, has been seeking to establish a corridor for humanitarian relief but has been unable to do so far. It says the crossing has been rendered inoperable due to Israeli bombings. 

Trucks carrying humanitarian aid for Palestinians wait for the re-opening of the Rafah border crossing to enter Gazas, in the city of Al-Arish, Sinai peninsula, Egypt, October 16, 2023.

Trucks carrying humanitarian aid for Palestinians wait for the re-opening of the Rafah border crossing to enter Gazas, in the city of Al-Arish, Sinai peninsula, Egypt, October 16, 2023.
| Photo Credit:
Reuters

Egypt, however, has maintained that it won’t allow any forced displacement of Palestinians from the Gaza Strip into the Sinai Peninsula through Rafah. Struggling with a significant migrant population, the nation is reluctant to let in hundreds of thousands of Palestinian refugees fleeing the conflict, concerned about heightened risks to its national security and economy. There is the additional threat of refugees affiliated to Hamas adding to instability in the Sinai Peninsula.

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has said the forced displacement of Palestinians to Sinai would turn the peninsula into a base for attacks against Israel. “What is happening now in Gaza is an attempt to force civilian residents to take refugees and migrate to Egypt, which should not be accepted… Egypt rejects any attempt to resolve the Palestinian issue by military means or through forced displacement of Palestinians from their land, which would come at the expense of the countries of the region,” he said, adding that Egyptians would “protest in their millions” against any displacement to Sinai.



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Israel Orders A Million Gazans To Flee, Where Will They Go? https://artifexnews.net/israel-hamas-war-gaza-strip-1-1-million-ndtv-explains-israel-orders-a-million-gazans-to-flee-where-will-they-go-4477772rand29/ Fri, 13 Oct 2023 09:37:51 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/israel-hamas-war-gaza-strip-1-1-million-ndtv-explains-israel-orders-a-million-gazans-to-flee-where-will-they-go-4477772rand29/ Read More “Israel Orders A Million Gazans To Flee, Where Will They Go?” »

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Gaza has been under a debilitating Israeli blockade for over 15 years.

Hamas on Friday rejected an Israeli order to evacuate 1.1 million civilians south from northern Gaza within 24 hours, ahead of an expected ground incursion that will likely turn the overcrowded Palestinian territory into one of the world’s bloodiest war zones.

“Our people reject the threat of the occupation (by Israeli) leaders and (the) call to flee to the south or Egypt,” the group said. “We are steadfast on our land and in our homes and our cities. There will be no displacement.”

However, the demand to move over a million people at short notice, during a war, has been criticised by the United Nations, which warned Israel of “devastating consequences”. “… impossible for such a movement to take place without devastating humanitarian consequences,” the UN said.

READ | Israel Asks Gaza City Civilians To Evacuate, UN Calls Order “Impossible”

The big (and very obvious) concern for aid agencies is – where? And how do you move 1.1 million men, women and children, as well as injured and infirm, while being bombarded by Israeli forces?

Israel has already indicated its willingness to inflict collateral damage, including killing civilians.

READ | “There Will Be Collateral Damage…”: Ex-Israel PM’s Warning To Hamas

The Gaza Strip

Gaza is 41 km long and between six and 12 km wide. It is divided into five areas – North Gaza, Gaza, the Middle Area, Khan Younis, and Rafah. The Strip has two land borders – Israel on its north and east, and Egypt on its south. Both are closed. To its west is the Mediterranean Sea, also closed.

Gazan airspace is controlled by Israel; their airport was destroyed by the Israelis in 2022.

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It is, therefore, completely cut off from the world; the narrow 365 sq km patch of land, which is among the most densely populated on the world, relies (almost) entirely on Israel for food, fuel, medicines, drinking water and other essentials, and, to a lesser extent, on international aid agencies.

Israel’s Demand

Israel has demanded 1.1 million Gazans move from North Gaza to southern areas, potentially a 40 km journey in 24 hours, and as far down as Rafah and the border with Egypt.

There are two main entry/exit points on Gaza’s land border through which people are allowed – the Erez Crossing in the north that is controlled by Israel, and the Rafah Crossing controlled by Egypt.

Both have been closed to Gazans looking to flee the fighting. There is a third crossing – Kerem Shalom – which is controlled by Israel also but is normally only used to move goods.

Latest and Breaking News on NDTV

The Gaza side of the Rafah Crossing was bombed even as civilians were looking to flee, raising questions over how serious Israel is about not deliberately targeting non-combatants.

Evacuation Options

There are none, for now.

Israel has already ruled out opening Gazan airspace or allowing aid agencies access via land or sea routes, and with the border crossings controlled by Israeli military, the Gazans are penned in.

READ | Israel Asks Gaza Residents To Flee War Against Hamas, Where’s The Exit?

One (perhaps the only) option are humanitarian corridors to allow civilians an escape route.

Israel has shown no indication it will permit this on its side, which leaves only Egypt. Cairo has so far rejected any move to set up such corridors, security sources in that country said Wednesday.

One of the sources, who asked not to be identified, said this was to “protect the right of Palestinians to hold on to their cause and their land”. Egypt has long restricted Gazans access to its territory.

The Israel – Hamas War

Israel’s expected ground attacks will follow a week of relentless aerial strikes, which have killed over 1,500 people so far, as Tel Aviv extracts revenge for Hamas killing more than 1,200 on October 7.

That those ground attacks are moving closer was reinforced this afternoon after an NDTV exclusive ground report showed tanks and armoured vehicles massing at the Gaza border.

READ | Ground Report: Israeli Tanks Roll Up To Border As Gazans Asked To Move South

These include Namer Infantry Fighting Vehicles, the most heavily armoured in the world, and Merkava IV tanks that have defence systems that can destroy incoming anti-tank missiles.



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Israel Ex Envoy To NDTV https://artifexnews.net/hamas-uses-palestinians-as-human-shields-israel-ex-envoy-to-ndtv-4473842rand29/ Thu, 12 Oct 2023 07:38:50 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/hamas-uses-palestinians-as-human-shields-israel-ex-envoy-to-ndtv-4473842rand29/ Read More “Israel Ex Envoy To NDTV” »

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New Delhi:

The Hamas is a “brain-washed fundamentalist group that has taken Palestinians living in Gaza as hostage and is using them as human shields”, Ron Malka, the ex-Israel envoy to India, told NDTV.

He also said the goal of Israel’s response to Hamas’ attacks – 1,500 gunmen stormed the border and slaughtered over a thousand people – is the “total elimination of military capabilities of Hamas…”

“Don’t make a mistake…”, the Israeli diplomat said, “Hamas is not Palestinian… it is not Islam. They are brain-washed people… only brain-washed people can do these types of things to children, infants” and underlined the Israel government’s intention to “wipe Hamas off the face of the Earth”.

“We will do whatever it takes… they should be eliminated. They should not be part of humanity.”

READ | Signs Israel Planning “Something Big”, Weighing Gaza Ground Assault

“They are a fundamental organisation… a terror organisation. This is a war between the free world and fundamentalists… the free world is fighting for its principle and values,” Mr Malka declared.

The fighting words come as the Gaza Strip – a 365 square km patch of land home to over 2.3 million people – teeters on the edge of a humanitarian catastrophe.

Israel’s “complete siege” means the Palestinian territory has run out of fuel, food and drinking water.

READ |Food Shortage, Blackouts Paralyse Gaza As Israel Targets Hamas

Gaza also mains power late last night, triggering a medical disaster as hospitals treating tens of thousands – those injured and suffering from diseases – without power.

READ | Electricity In Gaza Goes Out After Sole Power Station Stops Working

Earlier Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu likened Hamas to the Islamic State, and said, “Every Hamas member is dead man… we will crush and destroy them as Daesh was destroyed.”

Over 4,000 people have died on both sides since attacks began – with a deadly barrage of rockets that overwhelmed Israel’s famed Iron Dome aerial defence system and killed hundreds in hours.

The dead include civilians – men, women and children – on both sides, and that figure will certainly increase dramatically before the dust settles, particularly since Tel Aviv is prepping for a ground invasion of Gaza and may open a second front after rocket attacks from Lebanon-based Hezbollah.

READ | “No Wreaths Left”: Death Count Spirals As Israel Vows To Crush Hamas

Hamas’ attacks were followed by questions over the failure of Iron Dome and Israeli intelligence networks – seen by many as one of the world’s best – to predict and/or prevent the rocket fusillade.

READ | Explained: How Mossad Functions And Why It Failed To Stop Hamas Attack

On that topic Mr Malka told NDTV, “We will investigate it later. We were caught by surprise… but we are not surprised anymore. We are prepared now. Spirit and unity of Israeli people is remarkable.”

NDTV is now available on WhatsApp channels. Click on the link to get all the latest updates from NDTV on your chat.



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