Tag: Gaza
-

Trump Warns Hamas: Stop the Executions in Gaza or We Come and Kill You
US President Donald Trump, Thursday, warned Hamas that continued killings in Gaza would prompt intervention to eliminate the group.Trump dropped the warning on X, sequel to reports that at least eight public executions of alleged collaborators and rivals in Gaza City.The threat comes days after a U.S.-brokered ceasefire requiring Hamas to release hostages, disarm, and allow aid, which has been strained by internal violence. Trump specified that U.S. troops would not lead any operation, relying on regional allies, while American peacekeepers monitor the deal in Israel.
“If Hamas continue to kill people in Gaza, which is not the Deal,” Trump wrote, “we will have no choice but to go in and kill them. Thank you for your attention to this matter.” -

Joy in Gaza as Israeli Government Approves US Peace Deal
After two years of a perilous war peace that has claimed over 60000 Palestinian lives, peace has returned to Gaza.
On Friday, the Israeli government approved the 20-point proposal by US President Donald Trump, effectively signaling the ceasation of hostilities.
Officials at the prime minister’s office confirmed that Israel’s government has passed the US-brokered Gaza ceasefire and hostage release re solution. Officials said the ceasefire took immediate effect.
A senior US official said that in sync with one of the pillars of the peace deal, the United States will be sending 200 troops to the Middle East to monitor the plan’s implementation. Another official said: “No US troops are intended to go into Gaza.”
Significant components of the deal include the release of all hostages, dead or alive, held in Gaza; withdrawal of Israeli military to an agreed point and the release of some Palestinian prisoners.
However, CNN quoted a senior Hamas official as saying that a “formal declaration” ending the war in Gaza must be made before hostages are released.
-

Murder of Journalists in Gaza, Reason I Can’t Continue Wearing Reuters Press Tag-Valerie Zink
For the past eight years I have worked as a stringer for Reuters news agency. My photos covering stories in the prairie provinces have been published by the New York Times, Al Jazeera, and other media outlets across North America, Asia, Europe, and elsewhere. At this point it’s become impossible for me to maintain a relationship with Reuters given its role in justifying and enabling the systematic assassination of 245 journalists in Gaza. I owe my colleagues in Palestine at least this much, and so much more.When Israel murdered Anas Al-Sharif, together with the entire Al-Jazeera crew in Gaza City on August 10, Reuters chose to publish Israel’s entirely baseless claim that Al-Sharif was a Hamas operative – one of countless lies that media outlets like Reuters have dutifully repeated and dignified. Reuters’ willingness to perpetuate Israel’s propaganda has not spared their own reporters from Israel’s genocide. Five more journalists, including Reuters cameraman Hossam Al-Masri, were among 20 people killed this morning in another attack on Nasser hospital. It was what’s known as a “double tap” strike, in which Israel bombs a civilian target like a school or hospital; waits for medics, rescue teams, and journalists to arrive; and then strikes again.Western media is directly culpable for creating the conditions in which this can happen. As Jeremy Scahill from Drop Site News put it, “every major outlet – from the New York Times to the Washington Post, from AP to Reuters – has served as a conveyor belt for Israeli propaganda, sanitizing war crimes and dehumanizing victims, abandoning their colleagues and their alleged commitment to true and ethical reporting.”By repeating Israel’s genocidal fabrications without determining if they have any credibility – willfully abandoning the most basic responsibility of journalism – Western media outlets have made possible the killing of more journalists in two years on one tiny strip of land than in WWI, WWII, and the wars in Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Yugoslavia, and Ukraine combined, to say nothing of starving an entire population, shredding its children, and burning people alive.The fact that Anas Al-Sharif’s work won a Pulitzer Prize for Reuters did not compel them to come to his defence when Israeli occupation forces placed him on a “hit list” of journalists accused of being Hamas and Islamic Jihad militants. It did not compel them to come to his defence when he appealed to international media for protection after an Israeli military spokesperson posted a video making clear their intention to assassinate him following a report he did on the growing famine. It did not compel them to report on his death honestly when he was hunted and killed weeks later.I have valued the work that I brought to Reuters over the past eight years, but at this point I can’t conceive of wearing this press pass with anything but deep shame and grief. I don’t know what it means to begin to honour the courage and sacrifice of journalists in Gaza – the bravest and best to ever live – but going forward I will direct whatever contributions I have to offer with that front of mind.-Valerie Zink -

Gaza: Just Humanity. Nothing Religious, Nothing Ethnic, By Hassan Gimba
Victory is with patience. Success is with endurance. And war is a matter of turns. – Imam Ali, Nahj al Balagha, saying 189.
Gaza. A four-letter word sounding like the tasty gizzard. But Gaza is nowhere as palatable as the gizzard. Gaza is now the symbol of all that is bad with apartheid and racism. It brings to the world the sights, sounds and fury of the Holocaust. Gaza is not a place that can be tasty at all. Well, except for hunger. Diseases. Deprivation. And death.
Gaza City, a hot semi-arid climate with Mediterranean characteristics, was the most populous city in Palestine until the Gaza War displaced most of the population. Inhabited since 15 BC, it has been dominated by different peoples and empires throughout its history. The Philistines conquered it after the ancient Egyptians had ruled it for 350 years, followed by the Roman Empire, under which it experienced relative peace. Later, it developed into a centre of Islamic law when Haruna Rashid conquered it.
For want of space, one would jump to contemporary times when Gaza City fell to British forces during World War I, becoming a part of Mandatory Palestine. Due to the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, Egypt administered the newly formed Gaza Strip territory. The city was occupied by Israel in the Six-Day War in 1967. However, Gaza has been largely destroyed by Israeli airstrikes since the start of the Gaza War in October 2023, including a large amount of significant cultural heritage in the Old City of Gaza.
Residents of Gaza were more like prisoners in an open prison. They were only allowed to travel to the West Bank in exceptional humanitarian cases, particularly for urgent medical reasons, but not for marriage. It is possible to travel from the West Bank to Gaza only if the person pledges to relocate to Gaza permanently. Socioeconomic conditions in the camps are generally poor, characterised by high population density, cramped living conditions, and inadequate basic infrastructure, including roads and sewers. Overcrowded camps, inadequate sanitary facilities, poor hygiene conditions and insufficient access to clean drinking water increase the risk of disease outbreaks, including diarrheal diseases and skin or viral infections. In addition to the physical consequences, the mental health of displaced people is at risk.
The above scenario has been the lot of the Gazans, a people who have lost their lands and are confined to an open-air prison.
Some people in Nigeria are so sentimental about the issues in the Middle East that their reasoning has been beclouded by religion and ethnicity. So they side with the untruth and injustice of man on man.
Not long ago in Nigeria, some communities rose in arms when they wrongly thought the government of the day wanted to seize their lands and give them to another tribe in the name of “ruga”, yet these same people do not sympathise with those whose lands were taken away from them elsewhere. In contrast, they should be the first to feel their pain. Communities here still fight over land, and border disputes are rampant, yet they fail to see the pain of the Gazans.
Many who, under normal circumstances, would not subscribe to their lands being taken ought to sympathise with the Gazans. However, many do not out of hypocrisy or misplaced sentiments. But even among the Israelites, the occupying nation, many of its citizens believe what is happening in Gaza is wrong.
Professor Meir Baruchain, who opined, “I think that we are in the lowest moral point of Jewish history. That’s what I think. In the lowest moral point of Jewish history,” said that the treatment of Palestinians—including the killing of children, the destruction of olive trees, and other forms of violence—has been widely accepted by much of the Israeli public, and is seen as part of a policy sustained across generations.
Professor Baruchain, 62, is an Israeli history and civics teacher who was held in solitary confinement for four days after posts he made on Facebook denouncing the war in Gaza and his opposition to the killing of innocent Palestinian civilians. Police seized his phone and two laptops before interrogating him on suspicion of committing an act of treason and intending to disrupt public order. After being in jail for four days, Baruchin was freed but lost his job as a teacher and is still facing charges.
“These days, Israeli citizens who are showing the slightest sentiment for the people of Gaza, opposing the killing of innocent civilians, are being politically persecuted, they go through public shaming, they lose their jobs, they are being put in jail,” he said.
According to him, if he had been Palestinian, he would have faced more violence. Below is his interview:
“Here in Israel, for generations, we kill the Palestinians. We injure the Palestinians. We have more than 1,500 Palestinians in administrative detention. We demolish their houses here in Jerusalem. We cut down their olive trees. We confiscate their property, their waters. And most Israelis expect them to accept it. And when they don’t take it, they react violently. They (Israel) blame them, the Palestinians.
“For most Israelis, I mean, we hold millions of Palestinians under occupation for generations. They are deprived of their fundamental rights. And for most Israelis, it can go on forever. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not justifying the violence. But this is, I think, the realistic conclusion. How can we expect the Palestinians to live under occupation forever?
“Every Israeli citizen knows clearly that if you dare to show the slightest sentiment towards the people of Gaza, if you criticise the killing of innocent civilians, including women and children, in Gaza, you will be politically persecuted. You will go through public shaming. You will lose your job, and in my case, you may even be put in jail.
“I wanted as many Israelis to know what is done on their behalf. Most Israelis don’t know because the mainstream media doesn’t show what goes on in Gaza, what we are doing in Gaza. They wished me to die. They wanted my children to die. They threatened to rape my daughter. That was the kind of reaction that we are against.
“As human beings, we must develop a sense of justice and empathy. We must always endeavour to side with the oppressed because a man oppressed anywhere in the world is humanity oppressed everywhere in the world.”
Gaza and their sufferings have nothing to do with religion or race. Among them are Muslims and Christians, and the Muslims are almost all Sunni.
This is why you find Europeans and Christians at the vanguard of the calls for a better living condition for Gazans, currently under Israeli blockade, where food and medical supplies are not allowed to reach them. How does a person with blood flowing in their veins rationalise the dropping of bombs on starving masses who had assembled to receive food aid at a designated spot?
You find the young Swedish climate and political activist Greta Thunberg leading a march through the streets to break the blockade. Former Galatasaray, Italy and Manchester City manager, Roberto Mancini, also spoke out on social media in support of Gaza, urging the international community to act to protect innocent lives and calling for urgent humanitarian aid to the battered enclave.
“We cannot keep striking civilians, families, and children,” he said.
The last Pope and the current one both spoke against the suffering of the Palestinians. Pep Guardiola also said, “War in Gaza hurts my whole body”.
Piers Morgan, a British TV commentator and a rabid supporter of Benjamin Netanyahu, recently agreed with Mehdi Hassan, Zeteo’s editor-in-chief: “Listen, you and I have talked about this war in Gaza ever since it started, this phase of the 75-year conflict,” Piers says to Mehdi. “I have resisted going as far as you have done in your criticism of the Israeli government. I resist no more.”
Gaza is not about Islam or Arabs. Gaza is about humanity.
Hassan Gimba, anipr, is the CEO/Publisher of Neptune Prime.
-

As Rainstorm and Trump Blow Through Gaza, Residents Say They Will Never Leave
By Nidal Al-Mughrabi and Hussam Al-Masri
After Trump came the flood.
Heavy wind and rainfall howled across the Gaza Strip in the early hours of Thursday, as winter storm flooded tents housing displaced families, ripping off the plastic sheeting that sealed homes.
Yet residents said U.S. President Donald Trump’s announcement of plans to seize the enclave and expel them had only made them more determined to stay.
“Despite the tragedy we are living, despite the rain and the very bad weather, people are staying under no roof,” said Qassem Abu Hassoun, standing in the rain surrounded by wrecked homes and broken roads in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip.
His family had returned here to their destroyed home as soon as a ceasefire was declared on January 19 after having spent months sheltering further north. They have no plans to leave ever again.
“People are hanging on to their country, their land. People are hanging on to even one grain of sand of their country,” he told Reuters.
The night after most Gazans learned of Trump’s shock announcement, the storm whipped families out of their sleep and shredded makeshift tents made from plastic and cloth sheeting. Residents bailed water out in small plastic pots.
In the morning, Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz ordered the army to prepare a plan to allow the “voluntary departure” of residents from Gaza.
“It seems even the weather is against us, but neither the weather, nor Trump nor Israel will eject us from our land,” said Abdel Ghani, a father of four living with his family in the ruins of their Gaza City home destroyed by Israel.
The winds blew away the plastic sheets they had used to cover the shattered windows and holes in the walls. Rainwater had poured inside. Still, they were going nowhere, he told Reuters in a text message.
“Is he nuts?” he said of Trump. “We will not sell our land for you, real estate developer. We are hungry, homeless, and desperate but we are not collaborators. If he wants to help, let him come and rebuild for us here.”
In Israel, Channel 12 reported that Katz’s plan would include exit options via land crossings, as well as special arrangements for departure by sea and air.
Displacement of Palestinians is one of the most sensitive issues in the Middle East. Forced or coerced displacement of a population under military occupation is a war crime, banned under the 1949 Geneva Conventions.
Hamas official Basem Naim told Reuters Katz’s statement was not surprising and meant to cover up for Israel’s failure to achieve any of its objectives in the war on Gaza.
Israel has said it aimed to eradicate Hamas, the militant group which triggered the war with a deadly attack on October 7, 2023. But since the ceasefire began three weeks ago, Hamas fighters have restored their control of the enclave.
Meanwhile, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians displaced within Gaza have returned to homes, particularly in the northern part of the territory which lies in almost total ruins. Naim said this was evidence of Palestinians’ deep attachment to the land.
“If they are sincere in their claims, they should lift the suffocating blockade on Gaza, open the crossings, and they will be shocked to find that the number of those returning to Gaza will exceed the number of those leaving, despite the massive destruction,” Naim said.
The war in Gaza was triggered by the Hamas attack, when fighters killed 1,200 people and abducted more than 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.
Since then, Israel’s military assault on Gaza has killed more than 47,000 Palestinians in the last 16 months, according to the Gaza health ministry, and provoked accusations of genocide and war crimes that Israel denies.
An initial six-week ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, agreed with Egyptian and Qatari mediators and backed by the U.S., has so far largely held, but prospects for a durable settlement beyond that first phase are unclear.
-

A Nation at War: Five Days in Israel, By Azu Ishiekwene
Perhaps three will be the lucky number. After at least two previous failed attempts, a peace deal between Israel and Hamas might be reached by January 20 or in the early days of Donald Trump’s second term. Or…
It’s a matter of perhaps, with a big P. Optimism is a rare commodity in a region with the longest-running conflict and the largest river of bad blood. Yet, after over 450 days of war with its predations, traumas and devastations, a bit of optimism is not a bad thing.
In that spirit, I accepted the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs invitation for a five-day official visit between December 15 and 19.
To visit or not?
One week before my trip, Bashar al-Assad fell and fled to Russia. The inheritor of a legacy of hostility toward Israel, his father, Hafez, once demanded the cession of the Golan Heights as a precondition for peace between Israel and Syria. Bashar’s fall ended over 50 years of the Assad dynasty, leaving in its place an uncertain and dangerous void.
With a ceasefire holding by a thread, this was an inauspicious time to visit anywhere in the area, let alone the country at the heart of the renewed conflict.
Yet, after passing up the invitation in January 2023, I decided to go on my first trip to Israel. As our plane, Flight ET 404, descended from Addis Ababa, flying low over the Mediterranean, which bounds Ben Gurion Airport, Tel Aviv, at past seven in the morning, I couldn’t help imagining the worst.
With Hamas launching over 19,000 rockets – mainly unguarded missiles – against Israel since October 7, not a few of them targeting Tel Aviv, Israeli airspace has become something of an aviator’s nightmare. As Flight ET 404, carrying seven African journalists from Nigeria, Rwanda, Ethiopia, Zambia, Kenya, South Africa, and Ghana, among other passengers, approached Ben Gurion one hour behind schedule, I thought, what if a stray rocket hit us?
Never say never
It may sound like the product of an overwrought mind contaminated by familiarity with bad news. But after Hamas killed more than 1,139 people, including women and children, on October 7 and took 364 hostages, many of the victims at a peace party in Nova, southern Israel, overthinking the worst appears to be the standard way of life.
The pictures of the victims at the Nova party with their stories written on small boards and hoisted on wooden poles above beds of candles and flowers at the memorial site are also engraved in the hearts of families up and down the country, still struggling to come to terms with what happened on that day.
At the Bring Them Back Home Now office, an NGO in Tel Aviv, 82-year-old Itzik Horn, a survivor of two terrorist attacks in his original home in Argentina, shared the story of how his two sons, Yair, 46 and Eitan, 38, were kidnapped from the Nir Oz Kibbutz not far from Nova, the epicentre of Hamas crime scene on October 7. Eitan had gone to visit his brother Yair for the weekend when Hamas struck.
A father can’t forget
After the attack, Horn did not hear from his children again for weeks until a Hamas video surfaced showing they had been taken hostage.
“I’ve not heard any news about them again since November (2023),” Horn said, hunched over a chair on the verge of a forlorn hope from retelling this story a million times. “A father can’t just forget his children or give up on them, can he? I want to know what is happening to them. Are they gagged, dead or alive? I want to know. I want them back home, now.”
I still have, as a keepsake, the felt pen of one of Ela Ben-Zvi’s three children, scattered among the shards of glass and other household items, strewn on the floor of her vandalised, bullet-ridden home in Kibbutz Be’eri, one of the oldest kibbutz in Israel impacted by the attack.
Seven hours in the bunker
Ela, her husband, Eyal, three children, and a dog had lived in Be’eri, separated by a wire mesh, only five kilometres from Gaza. On the morning of October 7, when the bomb alarm went off at 6:20 a.m., she had nine seconds to get to the shelter with her children, aged 8, 5, and 3, and her dog. It was not an unfamiliar drill.
Except this one was longer and more harrowing for the retired soldier and her husband, let alone for the children and the dog, who were consigned for seven hours to a relentless siege in a bunker hardly suitable for more than two.
The IDF later rescued Ela and her family, but her dog died afterwards. Her neighbour, a 78-year-old woman living alone, was not so lucky. The Hamas attackers murdered her in her bed, one of the reported 102 people killed in Be’eri on that day.
Some sheikhs were here
Upcountry, in the Ramim Ridge of the Naftali Mountains in Upper Galilee, the story of Orna Weinberg from four generations in the Manara Kibbutz, a community described as Israel’s northern shield, exemplified the paradox of the strife between Israel and Lebanon, its northern neighbour.
“When this Kibbutz was founded 81 years ago (before the State of Israel), we didn’t have water,” Weinberg said as we stood overlooking a UN truck on the other side of the border. “We used to fetch water from Lebanon, bringing them up here on mules and barrows. When the first water pipes were installed, the sheikhs of these Lebanese villages came to celebrate with us!”
As we inspected the ruins from the multiple rocket and mortar attacks launched by Hezbollah, the silence only broken by Weinberg’s narration and the sounds of our shoes crunching the remnant of mangled metals, twisted glasses, and other household utensils littering the floor inside one of the bombed buildings in Kibbutz Manara, Weinberg’s story sounded like a tale from another world.
“Nowhere to go!”
What is left today of that once thriving community of 260 people where Rachel Rabin Yaakov, sister of former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, also lived, is a shadow of itself. With at least five older adults dead after the forced evacuations that followed the Hezbollah attacks that affected 70 percent of the community, Manara is a ghost town sustained by the stubborn spirit of a few like Weinberg, who have stayed back to rebuild.
“We have nowhere to go. I have nowhere to go,” Weinberg said. “This is the only place I know. It’s the shield of the North, without which Israel will not exist. If Hezbollah prevails, if Iran prevails, not only Israel, but the whole world is in trouble!”
About land?
While pro-Palestinian sentiments frame the question as essentially one of decades of oppression and injustice arising from a land grab, several Israeli officials I met on this trip dismissed such sentiments, citing two instances. One, in 1979, Israel ceded the Sinai Peninsula, twice the size of Israel, to Egypt as a peace offering.
Two, in 1993, even after Yitzhak Rabin signed the Oslo Accords with Arafat under a deal supervised by US President Bill Clinton to prevent the creation of new settlements and pave the way for a two-state solution, top PLO officials, including Arafat, later described the Accord as a strategic manoeuvre before “the great Jihad.”
Israel, they insist, is a victim of duplicitous diplomacy, mainly by Arab countries, that condemn its acts of self-defence in the daytime and, at night, urge it not to spare Shiite extremism, promoted by Iran, the most significant source of regional instability.
Against the odds
It’s a measure of Israel’s resilience that, despite the war and disagreements even within Israel about how best to handle the war and the return of the remaining 100 hostages, despite a Hamas information machinery that brooks neither dissent nor filters, Israel is still standing.
Yet, its long-term security is intrinsically linked to its neighbours, with whom they have been joined by history and geography and must find and negotiate a common ground, one that might reenact Weinberg’s legend of the sheikhs from Lebanon.
- Ishiekwene is the Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP and author of the book Writing for Media and Monetising It.
-

Tinubu, at Saudi Summit, tells Israel: End This Aggression Against Gaza Now

Leaders at the Saudi summit on Gaza President Bola Tinubu, on Monday, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, made a strident call for an immediate end to the Israeli aggression in Gaza, warning that “the conflict in Palestine has persisted for far too long, inflicting immeasurable suffering.”
The President made the declaration while speaking at the extraordinary Arab-Islamic Summit, convened to address the catastrophic situation in the Middle East, expressing deep concern on the humanitarian tragedy in Gaza.
The one-day summit was a follow-up to the Riyadh summit last year, and was attended by Heads of State and Government of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) and the League of Arab States.
Reiterating Nigeria’s call for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, President Tinubu affirmed the country’s support for a two-state solution, where both Israeli and Palestinians can co-exist in security and dignity.
He noted that this solution remained a viable part to lasting peace in the region.
”The conflict in Palestine has persisted for far too long, inflicting immeasurable suffering on countless lives.
”As representatives of nations that value justice, dignity, and the sanctity of human life, we have a moral obligation to collectively bring about an immediate end to this conflict.
”It is not enough to issue empty condemnations. The world must work towards an end to Israeli aggression in Gaza, which has persisted for far too long.
“No political aim, no military strategy, and no security concern should come at the expense of so many innocent lives,” Tinubu declared.
The Nigerian leader called on parties in the conflict in the Middle East to respect the principles of proportionality and the basic rights of civilians, consistent with global legal and diplomatic frameworks.
”In a rules-based international order, States have the right of self-defence. But self defence must take proportionality into account, in line with global legal, diplomatic – and moral – frameworks.
”An entire civilian population, their dreams and futures, cannot be dismissed as collateral,” he said.
Explaining Nigeria’s principled and consistent stance on the two-state solution, President Tinubu noted that it stands as a beacon of hope, representing the rights of both Israelis and Palestinians to self-determination and peace.
”It is not just a diplomatic article of faith; it is a vision grounded in the principles of equality and mutual recognition.
”Achieving this vision requires a commitment to dialogue and respect for history. We all know this conflict did not begin on October 7 in 2023. It can only be resolved through principled compromise, based on appreciation of the proper context.
”This conflict, in the cradle of history, is so visceral that the ripples of division spread far and quickly. The corrosive impact of the images of endless violence, repeated on a billion smart phones around the world is huge. We need to find new pathways to peace, without delay,” he said.
The Nigerian leader commended King Salman of Saudi Arabia and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman for convening the summit, describing it as a vital opportunity to renew diplomatic efforts and work toward a sustainable peace.
He assured that Nigeria given its own experiences would continue to support international efforts that advance peace and stability in the Middle East.
”Our own experiences, domestically and regionally, have taught us that identity politics are no substitute for respecting the nuances of diversity,” he said.
According to President Tinubu ”the path to reconciliation may be fraught with challenges, but it is through honest conversation that we can foster understanding.
”The international community has the opportunity to bring to bear new thinking on this most relentless challenge.
”It is our duty to engage in this dialogue with sincerity and resolve, recognising the complexities that each side faces.”
President Tinubu called for the establishment of a secretariat to implement the resolutions of the Summit.
He urged the leaders to mandate a select Heads of Government to canvass support globally and oversee the implementation of the Summit resolutions, providing regular reports to a joint OIC and Arab League leadership until permanent peace is achieved in the Middle East.
In his opening remarks, Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman condemned Israeli actions in Gaza and Lebanon, including the targeting of civilians and the continued violation of the Al-Aqsa mosque.
He also condemned Israeli ban on the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) from delivering relief aid to Palestinians and the displacement of Lebanese people.
He emphasized the importance of preserving Lebanon’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.
The Crown Prince highlighted Saudi Arabia’s role in promoting Palestinian statehood based on the 1967 borders, mentioning international recognition and the establishment of a Global Coalition with the European Union and Norway.
He urged more states to join the Global Coalition.
PHOTO CAPTIONS
1. PRESIDENT TINUBU AT THE EXTRAORDINARY JOINT ARAB-ISLAMIC SUMMIT IN RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA, NOVEMBER 11, 2024.
2. PRESIDENT TINUBU, SAUDI ARABIA’S CROWN PRINCE MOHAMMED BIN SALMAN AND OTHER LEADERS AT EXTRAORDINARY JOINT ARAB-ISLAMIC SUMMIT IN RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA, NOVEMBER 11, 2024.
-

Israel Pounds Gaza as UN Negotiates Ceasefire Resolution
Israeli troops launched more deadly strikes in Gaza on Tuesday and raided two of the last functioning hospitals in Gaza’s north, while the U.N. Security Council is intensely negotiating a resolution to bring humanitarian aid to Gaza during some kind of a halt in the fighting.
A strike on a home in Rafah where displaced people were sheltering killed at least 27 people, including women and children, and another killed at least three people, according to Associated Press journalists who saw the bodies arrive at two local hospitals early Tuesday.
Nearly 20,000 Palestinians have been killed since Israel declared war on Hamas, according to the Health Ministry in Gaza, which does not differentiate between civilian and combatant deaths. Thousands more lie buried under the rubble of Gaza, the U.N. estimates. Israel says 127 of its soldiers have died in its ground offensive after Hamas raided southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing about 1,200 people — mostly civilians — and taking about 240 hostages.
- Associated Press
-

War in Gaza: More Horror as Israeli Strikes Kill 175 as Ceasefire ends
Israeli strikes on houses and buildings have killed at least 178 people throughout the Gaza Strip on the first hours of fighting after a weeklong truce collapsed Friday, according to the Health Ministry there. Israel said it struck more than 200 Hamas targets.
Militants in Gaza resumed firing rockets into Israel, and fighting broke out between Israel and Hezbollah militants operating along Israel’s northern border with Lebanon.
Cease-fire mediator Qatar said efforts are ongoing to renew the truce, which saw Israel pause most military activity in Gaza and release 300 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for militants freeing over 100 fighters held in Gaza.
Israel says 115 adult men, 20 women and two children are still held captive.
Weeks of Israeli bombardment and a ground campaign have left homeless more than three-quarters of Gaza’s 2.3 million residents, causing a humanitarian crisis, widespread shortages of food, water and other supplies.
Up until the truce began, more than 13,300 Palestinians have been killed — roughly two-thirds of them women and minors — according to the Health Ministry in Hamas-ruled Gaza. The toll is likely much higher. Some 1,200 Israelis were killed, mostly during Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel that triggered the war.
- AP
-

Gaza hostage release will not start before Friday, Israel says
GAZA/JERUSALEM, Nov 22 (Reuters) – The release of hostages under a temporary truce between Israel and Hamas militants will not happen before Friday, Israel’s national security adviser said on Wednesday night.
Israel and Hamas agreed early on Wednesday to a ceasefire in Gaza for at least four days, to let in aid and free at least 50 hostages held by militants in the Palestinian enclave in exchange for at least 150 Palestinians jailed in Israel.
The starting time of the truce and release of hostages captured by Hamas during its Oct. 7 attack on Israel had yet to be officially announced. An Egyptian security source said mediators sought a start time of 10 a.m. on Thursday.
Israel’s public broadcaster Kan, citing an Israeli official, reported there was a 24-hour delay in the agreement because the deal was not signed by Hamas and mediator Qatar. The official said they were optimistic the agreement will be implemented when it is signed.
“Negotiations for the release of our captives are progressing and continue all the time,” Israeli National Security Adviser Tzachi Hanegbi said in a statement released by the prime minister’s office.
“The start of the release will proceed according to the original agreement between the parties, and not before Friday,” Hanegbi said.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made no mention of a potential delay in implementation of the agreement during a press conference late on Wednesday. Hanegbi’s statement was released about an hour after the press conference.
The first truce in a near seven-week-old war, reached after mediation by Qatar, was hailed around the world as a sign of progress that could ease the suffering of civilians in Israel-besieged Gaza and bring more Israeli captives home. Arab ministers praised the agreement but said it should become a first step toward a full ceasefire.
Israel said the ceasefire could be extended further if more hostages were freed, and a Palestinian source said as many as 100 hostages in total could be released by the end of the month.
Hamas and allied groups captured around 240 hostages when Islamist gunmen rampaged through southern Israeli towns on Oct. 7. Previously, Hamas had released just four.
Israel has subjected Hamas-ruled Gaza to a siege and relentless bombardment since the Oct. 7 attack, which killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, according to Israeli tallies. Since then, over 14,000 Gazans have been killed, around 40% of them children, according to medical officials in the territory.
“It’s not going to get all the hostages out, but it does get these first 50 or so, all women and children… We’ll start to see them come start to get released over the next 24 hours or so,” White House national security spokesperson John Kirby said.
The United States also hoped that hundreds of humanitarian aid trucks would reach Gaza in the next few days, Kirby said.
“Now, it’s important that all aspects are fully implemented,” U.S. President Joe Biden said in a comment on the deal on X.
The Red Cross will be able to visit any remaining hostages in Gaza, Netanyahu said at Wednesday night’s press conference.
STAGGERED RELEASE OF HOSTAGES
The 50 hostages would be released over four days at a rate of at least 10 daily, Netanyahu’s office said in a statement on Tuesday night. The truce could be extended day by day as long as an additional 10 hostages were freed per day, it said.
Israel’s justice ministry published a list of 300 names of Palestinian prisoners who could be freed.
Hamas said the initial 50 hostages would be released in exchange for 150 Palestinian women and children imprisoned in Israel. Hundreds of trucks of humanitarian, medical and fuel supplies would enter Gaza, while Israel would halt all air sorties over southern Gaza and maintain a daily six-hour daytime no-fly window in the north, the enclave’s ruling Islamists said.
Qatar’s chief negotiator in ceasefire talks, Minister of State at the Foreign Ministry Mohammed Al-Khulaifi, told Reuters the truce meant there would be “no attack whatsoever. No military movements, no expansion, nothing”.
Arab foreign ministers, visiting Britain and France for talks on Wednesday, said the agreement should be extended.
“Whatever humanitarian access now increases as a result of this hostage deal must remain in place and must be built upon,” Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud said in London alongside his Jordanian and Egyptian counterparts.
They are leading a so-called contact group of mostly Muslim countries that are lobbying Israel’s major allies and the U.N. Security Council to bring about an end to the Gaza war and move towards a permanent solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict.
“That has to be a plan with an endgame, with timelines, with a mechanism for implementation, with guarantees, and the whole world has to be behind it and the U.S. will have to play a leading role,” Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi said.
Both Israel and Hamas said the pause in hostilities would not halt their broader missions.
“We are winning, and we will continue to fight until a complete victory,” Netanyahu said at Wednesday night’s press conference.
Hamas said in its statement: “As we announce the striking of a truce agreement, we affirm that our fingers remain on the trigger, and our victorious fighters will remain on the look-out to defend our people and defeat the occupation.”
- Reporting by Reuters journalists in Gaza, James Mackenzie, Dan Williams, Emily Rose and Henriette Chacar in Jerusalem, Andrew Mills in Doha, Steve Holland and Jonathan Landay in Washington, Ahmed Mohamed Hassan in Cairo and Reuters bureaux; Writing by Peter Graff, Mark Heinrich and Grant McCool Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore, Nick Macfie and Cynthia Osterman
- Reuters