Biden says Israel making ‘mistake’ in handling of Gaza war

Biden says Israel making ‘mistake’ in handling of Gaza war
Biden reiterated that an Israeli drone attack last week that killed seven aid workers from a US-based charity in Gaza — and sparked a tense phone call with Netanyahu — was “outrageous.” (AP)
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Updated 10 April 2024
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Biden says Israel making ‘mistake’ in handling of Gaza war

Biden says Israel making ‘mistake’ in handling of Gaza war
  • Biden rebuked Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s handling of the conflict 
  • Remarks underscored dramatic shift in tone from Israel’s main ally and military backer

WASHINGTON: US President Joe Biden issued some of his sternest criticism yet of Israel’s war on Hamas, calling its approach a “mistake” as the country faces a Wednesday court deadline to prove it is not throttling aid to hunger-stricken Gaza.

With global outrage over the toll inflicted by the six-month-old war growing, Biden rebuked Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s handling of the conflict and reiterated the need for a ceasefire.

“I think what he’s doing is a mistake. I don’t agree with his approach,” Biden told Spanish-language TV network Univision in an interview that aired Tuesday night.

He urged Netanyahu “to just call for a ceasefire, allow for the next six, eight weeks, total access to all food and medicine going into the country,” in remarks that underscored the dramatic shift in tone from Israel’s main ally and military backer.

Biden’s comments come as US, Qatari and Egyptian mediators seek progress on a truce and hostage release deal that also proposes ramping up aid deliveries to address a worsening hunger crisis in the Gaza Strip.

Israel insists it is not limiting aid and has complied with US and United Nations demands to scale up the deliveries.

The government faces a Wednesday deadline from the country’s Supreme Court to demonstrate it has taken steps to increase the flow of humanitarian goods.

The case was brought by five NGOs that accuse Israel of restricting the entry of relief items and failing to provide basic necessities to Gazans.

The UN’s agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, said Tuesday that following reports of imminent famine, more than 40 percent of food delivery missions were denied in February and March. None of the UNRWA food convoys have been approved since March, it added.

Humanitarians have accused Israel of using starvation as a method of war in Gaza, where UN experts say 1.1 million people — half the population — are experiencing “catastrophic” food insecurity.

The Israeli agency that oversees supplies into the territory, COGAT, said 741 aid trucks had crossed into Gaza on Sunday and Monday, with another 468 entering on Tuesday.

Before the October 7 start of the war, about 500 trucks supplied Gaza daily.

Samantha Power, administrator of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), said recent days have seen a “sea change” in deliveries to Gaza, but added that Israel needs to do more.

“We have famine-like conditions in Gaza and supermarkets filled with food within a few kilometers away,” she told US lawmakers during a Tuesday hearing.

The White House has said Israel has taken “some steps forward” in securing a truce, while Hamas’s response has been “less than encouraging.”

Under the latest proposal, fighting would stop for six weeks, about 40 women and child hostages in Gaza would be exchanged for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel, and up to 500 aid trucks would enter Gaza per day, according to a Hamas source.

Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh has accused Israel of failing to respond to demands for an end to the war, while Netanyahu maintains Israel must achieve the twin goals of bringing home “all our hostages” and eliminating militants from the strip.

Finding himself increasingly internationally isolated over the bloodiest-ever Gaza war, Netanyahu on Tuesday told military recruits that “no force in the world” would stop Israeli troops from entering the southern Gazan city of Rafah.

“We will complete the elimination of Hamas’s battalions, including in Rafah,” he said, after earlier declaring a date for the operation had been set.

Speaking to reporters Tuesday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he had no indication of an “imminent” assault on the city, the last in Gaza to be the target of a ground invasion and where around 1.5 million Palestinians are sheltering.

Blinken added that he doubted Israel would attack Rafah before next week, when a delegation is set to visit Washington.

US officials have repeatedly aired objections to such an attack, including during Biden’s call last week with Netanyahu.

“A full-scale military invasion of Rafah would have an enormously harmful effect” on civilians trapped there and “would ultimately hurt Israel’s security,” said US State Department spokesman Matthew Miller.

Israel has invited tenders for 40,000 large tents, according to a document on the defense ministry website — part of its preparations to evacuate Rafah ahead of an offensive, a government source said on condition of anonymity.

The war broke out with Hamas’s October 7 attack against Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,170 people, mostly civilians, according to Israeli figures.

Palestinian militants also took more than 250 hostages, 129 of whom remain in Gaza, including 34 the Israeli army says are dead.

Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 33,360 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry.

The carnage wrought by the war was on full display at the destroyed Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, where relief teams and relatives have been scouring for human remains among piles of concrete and twisted rebar.

Health workers in white hazmat suits wandered between bombed-out buildings as diggers plied mounds of rubble.

“The stench of death is everywhere,” said Motasem Salah, director of the Gaza Emergency Operations Center.

The World Health Organization said Israel’s two-week raid had transformed Gaza’s largest medical complex into a ruin.

“When the dead are buried properly, they can be identified later with forensic examinations, giving loved ones some consolation,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus posted on social media on Tuesday. “This war is a moral failure of humanity.”

 


Jewish population in West Bank keeps rising. Settlers hope Trump will accelerate growth

Israeli army vehicles drive during a military raid in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, on February 4, 2025. (AFP)
Israeli army vehicles drive during a military raid in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, on February 4, 2025. (AFP)
Updated 32 sec ago
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Jewish population in West Bank keeps rising. Settlers hope Trump will accelerate growth

Israeli army vehicles drive during a military raid in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, on February 4, 2025. (AFP)
  • Gordon’s group projects the Jewish population in the West Bank will surpass 600,000 by 2030. There are roughly 3 million Palestinians living in the West Bank

BEIT EL, West Bank: The Jewish population in the West Bank grew at twice the rate of the general Israeli population last year, according to an advocacy group that hopes the Trump administration will support policies that help accelerate the growth of settlements in the occupied territory.
The West Bank’s Jewish-settler population rose by roughly 2.3 percent — over 12,000 people — last year, reaching 529,450, according to a report by West Bank Jewish Population Stats.
That was a slight dip from the 2.9 percent growth rate in 2023, but roughly double the 1.1 percent population growth rate inside Israel proper.
The number of Jewish settlers in the West Bank could grow “much higher” under the administration of US President Donald Trump, Baruch Gordon, the director of the group that publishes the data, said Tuesday.
Israel captured the West Bank in the 1967 Mideast war and has built about 130 settlements and dozens of settlement outposts in a bid to cement its control over the territory. The Palestinians seek the area as the heartland of a future state and say the presence of settlements makes independence impossible.
Nearly all of the international community, including the former Biden administration, opposes the settlements as obstacles to peace.
The International Court of Justice ruled in July that the occupation of the West Bank was illegal and said that it violated Palestinians’ right to self-determination. It said Israeli policy in the territories constituted “systemic discrimination” based on religion, race or ethnic origin, and that Israel had already effectively annexed large parts of the territory.
During his first term, Trump broke with the international community and years of American policy. He developed close ties with settler leaders and presented a peace plan that would allow Israel to annex large parts of the West Bank and keep all of its settlements.
That track record has raised hopes among Israel’s settlers that they could be entering a new period of rapid growth. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition is dominated by settler supporters and he has placed a prominent settler leader, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, in charge of settlement planning.
“I think you’re going to see an explosion of the construction here,” Gordon said.
Gordon’s group projects the Jewish population in the West Bank will surpass 600,000 by 2030. There are roughly 3 million Palestinians living in the West Bank.
The report does not include east Jerusalem, where it estimates 340,000 Jewish settlers live. Israel says these settlers are residents of neighborhoods of its capital, while the international community considers these areas to be settlements.
Inside the gated settlement of Beit El, on a hilltop abutting several Palestinian villages in the central West Bank, construction is continuing apace. It’s a rapidly developing community, where high-rise luxury condominiums finished last year can now house 300 families and construction workers are working on a new dormitory for a Jewish seminary.
Settlers like Gordon say Israel must keep the territory for security and spiritual reasons. “This is our biblical heartland,” he says.
But critics say the settlement expansion is a recipe for continued conflict. The military last month launched a large-scale operation in the northern West Bank last month, in part as a response to militant attacks on settlements.
The United Nations says over 800 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire since Hamas’ attack on Oct. 7, 2023, triggered Israel’s war in Gaza. It also has reported a jump in settler attacks on Palestinians.
Israel says its military offensives are aimed at militants, but stone throwers and uninvolved civilians have also been killed in the crackdown.

 


Libya’s UN Mission forms panel to propose ways to solve election impasse

Libya’s UN Mission forms panel to propose ways to solve election impasse
Updated 29 min 14 sec ago
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Libya’s UN Mission forms panel to propose ways to solve election impasse

Libya’s UN Mission forms panel to propose ways to solve election impasse
  • An UNSMIL statement named the advisory committee’s 13 men and seven women members and said they would meet for the first time next week in Tripoli
  • The committee’s proposals would be submitted to the Mission “for consideration for the subsequent phase of the political process“

TRIPOLI: The UN Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) announced on Tuesday it had formed a committee to propose ways to resolve contentious issues hindering the holding of long-awaited national elections.
A political process to resolve more than a decade of conflict in Libya has been stalled since an election scheduled for December 2021 collapsed amid disputes over the eligibility of the main candidates.
Libya has had little peace since a 2011 NATO-backed uprising, and it split in 2014 between eastern and western factions, with rival administrations governing in each area.
An UNSMIL statement named the advisory committee’s 13 men and seven women members and said they would meet for the first time next week in Tripoli.
“The role of the Advisory Committee will be developing technically sound and politically viable proposals for resolving outstanding contentious issues to enable the holding of elections,” said UNSMIL.
UNSMIL said that the committee’s proposals would be submitted to the Mission “for consideration for the subsequent phase of the political process.”
“The Advisory Committee is not a decision-making body or a dialogue forum. It is time-bound and is expected to conclude its work in a short time frame,” the Mission explained.
UNSMIL said members were chosen for professionalism, expertise in legal, constitutional and/or electoral issues; an ability to build compromise and an understanding of Libya’s political challenges.


A Tripoli-based Government of National Unity (GNU) under Prime Minister Abdulhamid Al-Dbeibah was installed through a UN-backed process in 2021 but the Benghazi-based House of Representatives (HoR) no longer recognizes its legitimacy.
Dbeibah has vowed not to cede power to a new government without national elections.
Many Libyans have voiced skepticism that their political leaders are negotiating in good faith, believing them to be unwilling to bring forward elections that might remove them from their positions of power.
“Libyans are aware of the damaging effects that the current political divisions are having on their country, its unity, sovereignty and stability,” the Mission added.
The HoR was elected in 2014, while in Tripoli there is a High State Council that was formed as part of a 2015 political agreement and drawn from a parliament elected in 2012.
Last month UN Secretary-General António Guterres appointed Hanna Serwaa Tetteh of Ghana as special representative for Libya and head of UNSMIL, succeeding Abdoulaye Bathily of Senegal.


Israeli West Bank offensives displace thousands: officials

Israeli West Bank offensives displace thousands: officials
Updated 53 min 41 sec ago
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Israeli West Bank offensives displace thousands: officials

Israeli West Bank offensives displace thousands: officials
  • Jonathan Fowler, UNRWA spokesman, said an estimated 2,450 to 3,000 families have been displaced from the Tulkarem refugee camp
  • Faisal Salama, head of the camp’s popular committee, estimated that 80 percent of the camp’s 15,000 residents have been displaced

RAMALLAH: Israeli military offensives in two West Bank refugee camps have displaced nearly 5,500 Palestinian families since December, local and UN officials said Tuesday, amid escalating violence in the occupied territory.
The Israeli military describes its ongoing operations as “counterterrorism” efforts aimed at rooting out Palestinian militancy.
Jonathan Fowler, spokesman for the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA), said an estimated 2,450 to 3,000 families have been displaced from the Tulkarem refugee camp.
Faisal Salama, head of the camp’s popular committee, estimated that 80 percent of the camp’s 15,000 residents have been displaced.
Both Salama and Fowler said that obtaining precise figures is challenging because of the security situation within the camp and its fluctuating population.
“The displaced people from the camp are scattered in the suburbs and in the city of Tulkarem itself,” Salama told AFP.
He said that six people had been killed and dozens wounded since the offensive began on January 25.
“The bombing of residential homes in the camp continues, along with destruction and bulldozing of everything.”
Salama also reported that the violence has severely restricted the movement of goods into the camp.
“There is a shortage of water, no electricity, no communication and a lack of essential supplies such as milk for children, diapers, and medicine,” he added.
Displacement has also been severe in Jenin, also in the northern West Bank, where the military launched an intensive assault it dubbed “Iron Wall” on January 21.
Fowler reported that 3,000 families — around 15,000 people — have fled Jenin refugee camp since December, initially when Palestinian security forces staged their own operation against militants and then later because of the Israeli offensive.
Displacement has surged in recent days after the military assault inflicted further destruction on the camp.
On Sunday, Israeli media and the Palestinian news agency Wafa reported that Israeli forces had demolished 20 buildings in a single coordinated detonation in the camp.
Both the Tulkarem and Jenin refugee camps are known strongholds of Palestinian militancy.
A gunman attacked an Israeli military checkpoint in the northern West Bank at Tayasir on Tuesday, fatally wounding two soldiers before troops shot him dead, the military said.
The Palestinian health ministry reported on Tuesday that 70 people had been killed by Israeli forces in the West Bank this year, 38 of them in Jenin.
Israel’s military says its forces had killed “approximately 55 terrorists” across the West Bank in January, without specifying the locations.
Its West Bank operations intensified following a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip on January 19.
The Palestinian health ministry says Israeli troops and settlers have killed at least 884 Palestinians, including many militants, in the West Bank since the Gaza war began on October 7, 2023.
Over the same period, at least 32 Israelis have been killed in Palestinian attacks or during Israeli military raids in the territory, official Israeli figures show.


Damascus opera house eyes better future

Damascus opera house eyes better future
Updated 04 February 2025
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Damascus opera house eyes better future

Damascus opera house eyes better future
  • ‘We hope for more support now; under the old regime, we had no financial aid or even symbolic backing’

DAMASCUS: To applause, percussionist Bahjat Antaki took the stage with Syria’s national symphony orchestra, marking the first classical concert at the Damascus opera house since president Bashar Assad’s ouster.

The concert was a way of saying “we are here and able to produce art,” despite more than years of devastating war, Antaki said after last week’s performance, which drew an audience of hundreds.

“We will continue, and we will be stronger and more beautiful,” the 24-year-old said.

After opposition fighters ousted Assad on Dec. 8, the orchestra’s rehearsals and concerts were halted as Syria embarked on a delicate transition away from decades of one-family rule enforced by a repressive security apparatus.

While the country has breathed a sigh of relief, many in the capital — known for being more liberal than other parts of the country — have expressed apprehension about the direction the new leaders may take on personal freedoms and potentially the arts.

The new authorities have said repeatedly they will protect Syria’s religious and ethnic minorities, and that the country’s transition will be inclusive.

“There aren’t fears, but worries,” said violinist Rama Al-Barsha before going onstage.

“We hope for more support — under the old regime, we had no financial aid or even symbolic support,” the 33-year-old said.

The concert was conducted by Missak Baghboudarian, a member of Syria’s Armenian minority, and included works by Beethoven and Tchaikovsky but also by Syrian composers.

In the audience were European and Gulf Arab diplomats as well as new Health Minister Maher Al-Sharaa and his family.

Sharaa is the brother of interim President Ahmad Al-Sharaa, who until recently led the Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham group that spearheaded the offensive against Assad.

Last month, the opera house also hosted its first concert by well-known Islamic music singer known as Abu Ratib, who returned after decades in exile for his political views and whose recordings until recently were sold in secret.

The orchestral performance paid homage “to the martyrs and the glory of Syria.”

A minute’s silence was held for the more than 500,000 people killed during the civil war which erupted after Assad brutally repressed anti-government protests in 2011.

Images of the destruction wreaked by more than 13 years of fighting were projected on the back wall of the stage, along with pictures of mass demonstrations.

Also shown were photographs of Alan Kurdi, the toddler who became a tragic symbol of the Syrian refugee crisis when his tiny body was washed up on a Turkish beach in 2015 after his family’s failed attempt to reach EU member Greece by small boat.

In a reminder of the heavy economic cost of the war, the venue was unheated for the concert despite the winter cold.

Organizers said they could not afford the fuel, and both musicians and technical staff performed for free.

Audience member Omar Harb, 26, acknowledged concerns about the future of the arts in Syria’s political transition but said after the performance that “it seems that nothing will change.”

“We hope that these events will continue — I want to come back again,” said the young doctor, after watching his first concert at the opera house.

Yamama Al-Haw, 42, said the venue was “a very dear place.”

“What we see here today is the Syria that I love ... the music, the people who have come to listen — that’s the best image of Damascus,” she said, beaming, and wearing a white hijab.

She expressed optimism that the country was headed toward “better days.”

“Everything suggests that what will come will be better for the people ... we will have the Syria we want.”


Gaza sick, wounded could get medical care in Japan

Gaza sick, wounded could get medical care in Japan
Updated 04 February 2025
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Gaza sick, wounded could get medical care in Japan

Gaza sick, wounded could get medical care in Japan
  • “We are thinking about launching a similar program for Gaza, and the government will make efforts toward the realization of this plan,” Ishiba said

TOKYO: The Japanese government is considering offering medical care in the world’s fourth-largest economy for sick and wounded residents of Gaza, Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said.
Ishiba told a parliament session on Monday that his administration is working on a policy to provide support in Japan for “those who are ill or injured in Gaza.”
He said that educational opportunities could also be offered to people from Gaza, which is under a fragile ceasefire with Israel.
Ishiba was responding to a lawmaker who had asked whether a 2017 scheme to accept Syrian refugees as students could be used as a reference point to help Gaza residents.

BACKGROUND

In 2023, Japan accepted 1,310 people seeking asylum — less than 10 percent of the 13,823 applicants.

“We are thinking about launching a similar program for Gaza, and the government will make efforts toward the realization of this plan,” Ishiba said.
The measures discussed in parliament are different to Japan’s main asylum policy, which has long been criticized for the low number of claims granted by the nation.
In 2023, Japan accepted 1,310 people seeking asylum — less than 10 percent of the 13,823 applicants.
Under a different framework, as of the end of last year, Japan had accepted a total of 82 people as students from Syria who were recognized as refugees by the UN refugee agency, a foreign ministry official in charge of aid programs said.