Jordanian king, Egyptian president discuss Gaza humanitarian truce

Jordanian king, Egyptian president discuss Gaza humanitarian truce
Jordan’s King Abdullah and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi in Cairo. (Petra)
Short Url
Updated 22 November 2023
Follow

Jordanian king, Egyptian president discuss Gaza humanitarian truce

Jordanian king, Egyptian president discuss Gaza humanitarian truce
  • Leaders expressed their firm rejection of Israel’s collective punishment against the Palestinian people

LONDON: Jordan’s King Abdullah and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi have jointly welcomed the announcement of a temporary humanitarian truce in Gaza, Jordan News Agency reported.

During a meeting in Cairo, the leaders emphasized the urgent need for a permanent cease-fire and the continuous delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza.

They expressed their firm rejection of the policies of starvation and collective punishment imposed on the Palestinian people. They also opposed any attempts to internally or externally displace Palestinians from Gaza.

Both leaders reiterated their countries’ unwavering support for the Palestinian cause. They urged the international community to take advantage of the current truce to provide relief to those suffering in Gaza and to help alleviate the humanitarian crisis.

Discussions also focused on efforts aimed at regional stability that must begin with a political process working toward securing Palestinians’ legitimate rights and establishing an independent Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital.

King Abdullah highlighted the crucial role of the humanitarian truce in preventing the conflict in Gaza from escalating and in supporting efforts to end the war. He praised Egypt and Qatar for their roles in achieving the truce.

The king also lauded Egypt’s efforts in increasing aid to Gaza, treating injured Palestinians, and evacuating foreign nationals. Meanwhile, he expressed concern over the potential catastrophic consequences if Israel’s ground operations in Gaza continue or expand.
 


Destruction of Gaza water wells deepens Palestinian misery

Destruction of Gaza water wells deepens Palestinian misery
Updated 25 sec ago
Follow

Destruction of Gaza water wells deepens Palestinian misery

Destruction of Gaza water wells deepens Palestinian misery
  • Israel has killed more than 39,000 people and bombed much of Gaza, where functioning hospitals are scarce, into rubble, Gaza health authorities say

GAZA: Israel’s military blew up more than 30 water wells in Gaza this month, a municipality official and residents said, adding to the trauma of airstrikes that have turned much of the Palestinian enclave into a wasteland ravaged by a humanitarian crisis.
Salama Shourab, head of the water networks at Khan Younis municipality, said the wells were destroyed by Israeli forces between July 18-27 in the southern towns of Rafah and Khan Younis.
The Israeli military did not respond to the allegations that its soldiers destroyed the wells.
It is not only ever-present danger from Israeli bombardment or ground fighting that makes life a trial for Gaza’s Palestinian civilians. It is also the daily slog to find bare necessities such as water, to drink or cook or wash with.
People have dug wells in bleak areas near the sea where the bombing has pushed them, or rely on salty tap water from Gaza’s only aquifer, now contaminated with seawater and sewage.
Children walk long distances to line up at makeshift water collection points. Often not strong enough to carry the filled containers, they drag them home on wooden boards.
Gaza City has lost nearly all its water production capacity, with 88 percent of its water wells and 100 percent of its desalination plants damaged or destroyed, Oxfam said in a recent report.
Palestinians were already facing a severe water crisis as well as shortages of food, fuel and medicine before the destruction of the wells, which has deepened the anguish brought on by the Gaza war, now in its 10th month.

ISRAEL SAYS WORKING ON REPAIRS
COGAT, the branch of the Israeli military that manages humanitarian activities, told Reuters it has coordinated water line repairs with international organizations and “dozens” were done in the last month including one to the northern Gaza Strip.
Other work including power repairs at a desalination plant and construction of additional lines was under way.
Hamas and other militants “have been known to attack civilian infrastructures and humanitarian aid routes, adding to the complexity and danger of delivering much-needed humanitarian aid to the region,” COGAT said.
All Gazans can do is wait in long lines to collect water since US, Qatari and Egyptian mediators have failed to secure a ceasefire from Israel and its arch-foe Hamas. Not only is there a shortage of water, much of it is also contaminated.
“We stand in the sun, my eye hurts because of the sun, because we stand for long (hours) to (secure) water,” said Youssef El-Shenawy, a Gaza resident.
“This is our struggle with non-potable water, and then there is our struggle with drinking water, which we take another queue for, that’s if it is available.”
The war started on Oct. 7 when Hamas, the Palestinian militant group ruling Gaza, killed 1,200 people in Israel, according to Israeli tallies, and took another 250 or so to hold as hostages in Gaza, one of the most crowded places on earth.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed more than 39,000 people and bombed much of Gaza, where functioning hospitals are scarce, into rubble, Gaza health authorities say.
Fayez Abu Toh observed fellow Gazans standing in line in the heat eager to get their hands on water. Like many Palestinians he wonders why Israel strikes targets that pose no threat to its military.
“Whoever has a bit of a sense of humanity has to look at these people, care for them and try to (impose) a ceasefire and end this war. We are fed up; we are all dead and tired. The people have nothing left,” he said.
“Does this well affect the strength of the (Israeli) Defense Force? This is a destruction of the infrastructure of the Palestinian people to further worsen the situation, and to pressure these people that have no one, but God.”  

 


Blasts at Iraq PMF security agency base south of Baghdad kill 4 members, sources say

Blasts at Iraq PMF security agency base south of Baghdad kill 4 members, sources say
Updated 54 min 53 sec ago
Follow

Blasts at Iraq PMF security agency base south of Baghdad kill 4 members, sources say

Blasts at Iraq PMF security agency base south of Baghdad kill 4 members, sources say
  • An Iraqi military official said the cause of the blast remained unclear and authorities will start investigating the incident

BAGHDAD: Blasts on Tuesday inside a base south of Baghdad used by Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) killed four members of the official state security agency containing several Iran-aligned armed groups, and wounded four others, police and medical sources told Reuters.
The initial death toll was one, but two others who were critically injured in the blasts later died and another body was retrieved from the location of the blasts, hospital sources and a local government official said.
The blasts came after multiple rockets were launched at Iraq’s Ain Al-Asad air base housing US-led forces late on Thursday, US and Iraqi sources said, with no damage or casualties reported.
In a statement issued following the blasts, PMF made no accusation, saying it was unidentified explosion.
Another PMF statement issued later said rockets fired by drones targeted two patrols for the PMF forces in town of Jurf Al-Sakhar just south of Baghdad.
An Iraqi military official said the cause of the blast remained unclear and authorities will start investigating the incident.
Two Iraqi PMF local commanders accused the US of carrying out airstrikes that targeted the PMF base. There was no immediate response from the US military.
Ambulances rushed to the area where the camp is located, 50 km (30 miles) south of Baghdad, said witnesses.
Iraq, a rare ally of both Tehran and Washington which hosts 2,500 US troops and has Iran-backed militias linked to its security forces, has witnessed escalating tit-for-tat attacks since the Israel-Hamas war erupted in October.

 


France shifts Western Sahara stance, seeking closer ties with Morocco

France shifts Western Sahara stance, seeking closer ties with Morocco
Updated 47 min 46 sec ago
Follow

France shifts Western Sahara stance, seeking closer ties with Morocco

France shifts Western Sahara stance, seeking closer ties with Morocco
  • France, as the former colonial power in the region, has walked a diplomatic tightrope between Rabat and Algiers on the issue

RABAT, Morocco: France has thrown its support behind Morocco’s autonomy plan for the disputed Western Sahara, shifting a decades-old position and adding itself to a growing list of countries to align with Morocco as a United Nations-mediated peace process remains stalled.
In a letter to King Mohammed VI, France’s President Emmanuel Macron called the plan that Morocco proposed in 2007 to offer the region limited autonomy under its sovereignty the “only basis” to solve the conflict. The shift deals a blow to the pro-independence Polisario Front, which has for decades claimed to be the legitimate representative of the indigenous Sahrawi people.
“The present and future of Western Sahara fall within the framework of Moroccan sovereignty,” Macron wrote in a letter made public on Tuesday. “France intends to act consistently with this position at both national and international level.”
Macron’s move is unlikely to change the key tenets of the territorial dispute but could deepen France ties with Morocco, which has long blamed it for drawing the colonial borders it sees as the root of the conflict. France signaled earlier this year that it was open to investing in Moroccan projects in the disputed territory.
The move could strain diplomatic relations in North Africa, further alienating both France and Morocco from Algeria, which supports the Polisario Front’s claims and allows it to operate as a self-declared government in exile from refugee camps within its borders.
It follows similar shifts from the United States, Israel, Spain and a growing list of African nations that have established consulates in the territory.
In a statement, Moroccan King Mohammed VI’s Royal Cabinet called France’s shift “a significant development.” A high-ranking Moroccan official who spoke on the condition of anonymity noted France’s role as a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council and called it “a game-changer” amid an international shift toward Morocco’s position.
The move was preemptively rebuked by both Algeria and the Polisario Front in the days leading up to the publication of letter, which Algeria said it was made aware of by France in the days prior.
The Polisario’s Mohamed Sidati accused France of acting at odds with international law and backing Moroccan expansionism as its influence wanes throughout Africa.
“Whatever hardships Morocco tries to impose on us with the support of France, the Sahrawi people will continue to stubbornly defend their rights until they obtain the definitive departure of the Moroccan aggressor from their territory and general recognition of the legitimacy of their struggle for self-determination and independence,” Sidati, the Foreign Minister of the self-declared Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, said in a statement on Monday.
Algeria called Morocco and France “colonial powers, new and old” and announced it would withdraw its ambassador from Paris.
“The French decision is clearly the result of a dubious political calculation, a morally questionable judgment and legal interpretations that are neither supported nor justified,” Algeria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement last week.
Western Sahara is roughly the size of Colorado, encompassing a stretch of desert rich in phosphates and sitting along an Atlantic coastline rich in fish. Morocco annexed the former Spanish colony in 1975, sparking a regional conflict and putting it at odds with the pro-independence Polisario Front over the region that the United Nations considers a “non-self-governing territory.”
Morocco quickly moved to occupy the majority of the land, fighting off guerilla warfare from the Polisario until the UN brokered a 1991 ceasefire and established a peacekeeping mission to monitor the truce and help prepare a referendum on the territory’s future. Disagreements over who is eligible to vote prevented the referendum from taking place.
Morocco has long sought political recognition of its claim from its other nations, while the Polisario has prioritized fighting legal battles to assert the people of the region’s right to self-determination.
Sporadic violence has ensued since the Polisario renewed armed conflict in 2020, ending a 29-year truce. Morocco has since embarked on expansive economic development efforts, constructing ports, highways and hotels.

 


Algeria to withdraw its ambassador from France, foreign ministry says

Algeria to withdraw its ambassador from France, foreign ministry says
Updated 47 min 16 sec ago
Follow

Algeria to withdraw its ambassador from France, foreign ministry says

Algeria to withdraw its ambassador from France, foreign ministry says
  • Algeria took similar measures against Madrid when Spain backed Morocco’s autonomy plan in 2022

TUNIS: Algeria has decided to withdraw its ambassador from France, the foreign ministry said on Tuesday, after France recognized a plan for autonomy for the Western Sahara region under Moroccan sovereignty as the only way of resolving a long-running dispute.
Algeria took similar measures against Madrid when Spain backed Morocco’s autonomy plan in 2022.

 


No time to seek shelter, residents in north Israel after Golan strike

No time to seek shelter, residents in north Israel after Golan strike
Updated 30 July 2024
Follow

No time to seek shelter, residents in north Israel after Golan strike

No time to seek shelter, residents in north Israel after Golan strike
  • “Before, we felt safe, we didn’t feel danger,” said Amal Al-Shaar, 46, who accompanied her 12-year-old son Adam to the Galilee Medical Center
  • “We’re the only hospital to be functional below ground or in a protected area since October 7,” said director Massad Barhum

NAHARIYA, Israel: The war with Hezbollah that residents of northern Israel feared since the start of the Gaza conflict appeared more likely after a deadly rocket strike rocked the annexed Golan Heights.
There, in the Golan Heights bordering Nahariya’s Galilee region and occupied by Israel since 1967, 12 youths were killed and dozens wounded Saturday by the rocket that hit a soccer field in the Druze Arab town of Majdal Shams.
“Before, we felt safe, we didn’t feel danger,” said Amal Al-Shaar, 46, who accompanied her 12-year-old son Adam to the Galilee Medical Center in the coastal town of Nahariya while he received treatment for his injuries from the strike.
“We paid a high price with our children’s lives, we paid with the blood of our hearts for this war,” she said.
Below the ground where Adam and Amal were and in what used to be the hospital’s underground parking lot, certain departments were relocated to protect them from future rocket attacks.
“We’re the only hospital to be functional below ground or in a protected area since October 7,” said director Massad Barhum, who made the decision for the transfer the day of Hamas’s unprecedented attack on Israel that sparked the war in Gaza.
As early as October 8, Hezbollah, a Lebanese Shiite movement supported by Iran, began to fire rockets at Israel in support of Palestinians and of its ally Hamas, which rules Gaza.
Since then, cross-border exchanges of fire between Israel’s army and the group have become almost daily, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed a “severe response” to the Majdal Shams strike blamed on Hezbollah.
Tuesday, another Israeli civilian was killed by a rocket in the area, according to the army and paramedics, leading the military to strike back inside Lebanon where it says it has been aiming at Hezbollah’s infrastructure for weeks.
Tens of thousands of Israelis who lived close to the border were evacuated shortly after the start of the war in Gaza, but in Nahariya, people remained.
This created a “new border” where Nahariya is on the frontline, said Barhum, “along this entire new border, it’s us.”
“When there is a war, it will be here. Missiles could hit here,” said the 64-year-old Arab-Israeli, adding that his hospital is “ready to hold for seven days” without any contact with the outside world.
Strings of small Israeli flags have been hanged between the various departments as a sign of support.
In the hospital’s neonatal unit, the first department to have been relocated underground, newborns are under high protection.
Down there, only the incubators’s humming break the silence, as the sound of air-raid sirens cannot travel through the ground.
“We’re safe down here, far from the world,” said Vered Fleisher-Shefer, the unit’s director, who said she refuses to “live in fear.”
Like Nahariya, the nearby town of Maalot is so close to Lebanon — about 10 kilometers (six miles) — that residents will have just a few seconds to seek shelter when sirens warn of incoming rockets.
“We’re not even inside the (bomb) shelter when we hear explosions... that’s the scary thing,” said teacher Florence Touati-Wachsstock, who move there more than a decade ago.
“That’s what happened in Majdal Shams, and they’re even closer (to Lebanon),” added the 47-year-old mother of five.
“For almost 10 months, we’ve been expecting a real war with Lebanon, even more so these past few days with the attack in Majdal Shams,” she said.
Now she is reassessing her plans for the future.
“Should we stay, should we go, when will we know that we need to go, we have no idea of what can happen this evening, or tomorrow,” she said.
On Tuesday night, Israel carried out a strike on Hezbollah’s stronghold in the suburbs south of Beirut, targeting what the army said was the commander responsible for the Majdal Shams attack.
A source close to the Iran-backed militant group said that senior commander Fuad Shukr was the target but that he “survived the Israeli strike.”