Israel-Hamas: dozens dead in Israeli raids in Gaza, Israeli cabinet meeting

Negotiations for a possible truce between Israel and Hamas continue, while new strikes on the Gaza Strip have left more than 60 dead. The human toll continues to rise in Gaza, where more than 31,553 Palestinians have died since the start of the Israeli response. For his part, Benjamin Netanyahu is determined to continue the war.

More than 60 Palestinians, including twelve from the same family, died in Israeli night strikes on the Gaza Strip according to Hamas, a few hours before a meeting on Sunday of Benjamin Netanyahu’s security cabinet focused on negotiations for a possible truce. More than five months after the start of the war between Israel and Hamas triggered by a bloody attack by the Palestinian terrorist movement, the human toll continues to rise in Gaza with 31,553 dead since October 7 according to Hamas and the threat of widespread famine according to the UN.

And despite international pressure for a ceasefire, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has vowed to destroy Hamas, is determined to continue the war and his army continues to bombard the cramped Palestinian territory it is besieging.

On Sunday, the Hamas Ministry of Health reported at least 61 deaths, including women and children, in dozens of nighttime strikes by the Israeli army against the Gaza Strip. Among them, 12 members of the Thabet family whose home was hit at dawn by bombs in the Bichara district of Deir al-Balah (center). The raids were intense in Deir al-Balah, Gaza City in the north and the towns of Khan Younes and Rafah in the south, according to witnesses. Fierce fighting pitted Israeli soldiers and Palestinian fighters in Khan Younes and Gaza City.

“In the name of humanity”

Faced with the devastating war, international mediators – the United States, Qatar, Egypt – are trying to secure a new humanitarian truce agreement, after that at the end of November. In vain so far. The Israeli security cabinet is due to meet at the end of the day to determine the “mandate” of the delegation which must go to Doha for further discussions.

But Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, a leader of the far right, is opposed to sending this delegation. “Netanyahu must order … the army to immediately enter Rafah and intensify military pressure until Hamas is destroyed.” In this city stuck on the closed border of Egypt and bombarded daily by the Israeli air force, there are more than 1.5 million Palestinians, most of the displaced people living in very harsh conditions.

Benjamin Netanyahu approved “action plans” for a ground offensive in Rafah, involving an “evacuation of the population”, his office said without further details. “In the name of humanity, we call on Israel not to move forward” in its operation against Rafah, said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the head of the World Health Organization.

The war was sparked by an unprecedented attack on October 7 by Hamas terrorists infiltrating from Palestinian territory in southern Israel, which resulted in the deaths of at least 1,160 people, most of them civilians, according to a AFP count from official sources. According to Israel, around 250 people have been kidnapped and 130 of them are still hostages in Gaza, 32 of whom are believed to have died.

In retaliation, Israel launched a massive bombing campaign against Gaza, where Hamas took power in 2007, followed 20 days later by a ground offensive that allowed its soldiers to advance from the north to the south of the strip. of land approximately 40 km long and 10 km wide.

Insufficient aid

Considered a terrorist organization by the United States and the European Union, Hamas said it was ready, in a new proposal, for a six-week truce, during which 42 hostages – women, children, elderly and sick people – could be released in exchange for 20 to 50 Palestinian prisoners for each hostage released. The movement also calls for the “withdrawal of the army from all towns and populated areas”, the “return of the displaced” and the entry of at least 500 aid trucks per day into Gaza, said one of its officials. . Israel controls the entry of land aid into the Gaza Strip, which remains very insufficient given the needs of the 2.4 million inhabitants, the vast majority of whom are threatened with famine according to the UN.

Departing from Cyprus, a boat from the Spanish NGO Open Arms carrying 200 tonnes of food from the organization World Kitchen Central unloaded its cargo in Gaza. Aid must be delivered to the north of the Palestinian territory, where the humanitarian situation is particularly catastrophic. A second aid boat is ready to leave, according to Cyprus. In addition, several Arab and Western countries continued to airdrop food into Gaza. But for the UN, aid by land is vital.

Source: Europe1

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