Page 11234..1020..»

Hamas says it’s preparing to respond to Israel’s latest Gaza cease-fire proposal – NPR

Posted By on April 29, 2024

People inspect damage and remove items from their homes following Israeli airstrikes on April 7, in Khan Yunis, Gaza. Ahmad Hasaballah/Getty Images hide caption

People inspect damage and remove items from their homes following Israeli airstrikes on April 7, in Khan Yunis, Gaza.

Hamas says it's examining the latest Israeli suggestions for a cease-fire in Gaza, seven months into the conflict that has claimed tens of thousands of lives and that Israeli leaders have said could soon intensify further if a deal between the two sides is not reached.

International efforts are continuing to try to firm up areas of agreement, with mediators led by Egypt at the heart of efforts to encourage both sides to end the violence.

A senior Hamas official told NPR that the militant group would respond to Israel's latest proposed conditions once it had examined them in full, but was "still studying" them and there was "no scheduled timing" for their response.

He did not offer specifics about Israel's proposals, but said it followed conditions Hamas had laid down earlier this month, which focused on an exchange involving Israeli captives held in Gaza for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners in Israel, as well as a six-week cessation of hostilities.

An Egyptian delegation left Israel on Friday, an official told AP, after holding discussions over the possibility of a multi-phase and lengthy Gaza cease-fire. The plan would allow civilians currently in the south of the territory to return to their homes further north, and might eventually lead to a more permanent agreement that ends the fighting altogether.

A major U.S. concern shared by its international partners is that the Israeli military will launch a full-scale assault on Gaza's southernmost city, Rafah, where more than a million Palestinians have sought shelter after fleeing the widespread fighting elsewhere in the Gaza Strip.

Israel has argued that further ground-based military action in Rafah is necessary for it to destroy remaining groups of Hamas fighters. But several countries including neighboring Egypt have said that any such offensive by the Israelis would have even more severe consequences for civilians, and could further destabilize the broader region.

Nonetheless Israeli forces have massed around the city, where airstrikes continue to take place daily. On Saturday one airstrike in the city killed four children, according to local health officials. Hamas has repeatedly said it will not enter into a new agreement unless it contains a provision for a permanent truce.

Meanwhile, the U.S. military has begun construction of an offshore loading platform to help deliver more aid to Gaza, with plans for trucks to be ferried from that platform to a temporary pier on the Gaza coastline as part of a large-scale operation that could begin within weeks.

An official from the World Economic Forum said senior leaders, including Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, will meet in the Saudi Arabian capital of Riyadh next week. The prime minister of Qatar, another nation at the center of Gaza cease-fire negotiations will attend, alongside the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia and Egypt, as well as U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken. He will travel there after an expected Tuesday visit to Israel as the State Department is reviewing whether to suspend aid for an Israel military unit that it found had committed serious human rights violations against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank.

Meanwhile China will also host senior leaders from Abbas' Fatah party and Hamas next week for further talks, designed to help heal a long-running political dispute between the two factions that had until Oct. 7 ruled respectively over Gaza and the West Bank. The U.S. government does not publicly support any such reconciliation, given that it considers Hamas a terrorist group but recognizes the legitimacy of Fatah and its leadership of the Palestinian Authority that exercises limited self-rule in the occupied West Bank.

Read more from the original source:

Hamas says it's preparing to respond to Israel's latest Gaza cease-fire proposal - NPR

How police agencies are responding to campus Israel-Gaza war protests – The Washington Post

Posted By on April 29, 2024

At least 900 protesters have been arrested at pro-Palestinian demonstrations on college campuses in the last 10 days, according to a Washington Post tally, the largest police response to campus activism in years and one that experts say poses myriad potential challenges for law enforcement agencies.

Mass demonstrations on campuses ranged from peaceful sit-ins on sun-soaked grassy malls to vitriolic confrontations with counterprotesters. To remove protesters calling for a cease-fire in the Israel-Gaza war and universities to divest from Israeli financial interests, some administrators turned to police, pointing to numerous reports of hate, antisemitic speech and violence that marred some demonstrations.

On some campuses, law enforcement offered repeated warnings and conducted cordial, orderly arrests. On others, police and demonstrators engaged in physical confrontations, with officers employing some of the same tools and tactics used to quell riots and demonstrations four years ago, when thousands marched through the streets of U.S. cities after a Minneapolis police officer killed George Floyd.

At Emory University last week, Atlanta police said officers used chemical irritants to clear an encampment, and a Georgia State Patrol officer was captured on video using a stun gun to subdue a man on the ground. The agency said the man was resisting arrest. In Boston, the Northeastern University police cleared an encampment Saturday after a shout of Kill the Jews was heard. A witness posted on social media that the shout came from a pro-Israel counterprotester. School officials said the demonstration had been infiltrated by professional organizers with no affiliation to Northeastern.

The national wave of campus arrests kicked off on April 18, when Columbia University President Minouche Shafik wrote a letter to New York police requesting help to clear the student demonstrators.

The decision led to the arrests of more than 100 people on the Manhattan campus and inspired fresh waves of protests across the country.

Phillip Atiba Solomon, a Yale professor of psychology and African American studies, and co-founder of the Center for Policing Equity, attributed the swift interdiction on several campuses in part to the mounting political pressure on university presidents to avoid appearing as if they are appeasing anti-Israel demonstrators.

Those presidents watched the careers of former Harvard president Claudine Gay and former University of Pennsylvania president Liz Magill unravel late last year after both were accused of antisemitism for their comments on how to deal with protesters, Solomon said, and want to avoid a similar fate. Shafik was questioned about antisemitism on campus by lawmakers on Capitol Hill the day before she called in police.

Presidents are trying to figure out how to deal with what seems like a fracturing on the political left, tons of pressure on the political right, some reasonable arguments students say they dont feel safe, Solomon said. And commencement is coming up. So they call the police.

He cautioned that such action sends chills to the academic environment and alienates students, and could reignite tensions between police and protesters that escalated during the racial justice demonstrations.

Any university who is calling law enforcement this weekend and beyond is asking for a tragedy, Solomon said.

The equation is complicated by the shifting nature of youth-driven protests, which have become more difficult for law enforcement to manage in the age of social media, experts said.

Policing guidelines for managing civil disobedience that were taught for decades have been rendered moot. Fractured and leaderless protest movements make negotiations useless in many scenarios; the ability to spontaneously and anonymously organize protest action online hampers law enforcements ability to prepare; and an influx of bad actors often masked seeking to escalate conflicts with police can turn scenes violent in an instant.

These are more dynamic events than any time in history, said Eugene ODonnell, a criminal justice professor at John Jay College in New York. Every day that goes by, there is more sophistication that makes them problematic. It is more their playing field than ever before.

Four days after the Columbia arrests, city police were called onto the campus of New York University, also at the request of university leaders. Dozens of students occupied a plaza at the university, and several hundred demonstrators and onlookers formed a ring around the encampment to protect them.

When police moved to clear the area on April 22, intense clashes broke out. Several objects, including water bottles, were thrown at the police. Police reported 120 arrests.

University of Southern California administrators canceled next months main commencement ceremony after police arrested dozens of people late Wednesday. At Emerson College in Boston, police said they arrested 108 people during a confrontation in which four officers were injured in the early hours of Thursday.

Many law enforcement agencies feel their hands are tied when universities declare that students and others breaking rules on campus are trespassing, experts said. When university presidents call, the police typically answer without regard for optics.

But that did not happen at one university in the nations capital.

At George Washington University, university leadership asked D.C. police to arrest protesters for trespassing and were denied, The Post reported late Friday.

Two officials familiar with the talks, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss them, said police officials concluded that taking enforcement action against a small number of peaceful protesters did not align with the departments interests.

In many locales, todays law enforcement leaders are far less willing to take action against protesters since the racial justice unrest of 2020, ODonnell said.

Policing is a political institution now, and there is no worse time to be an officer in uniform than at a protest right now, ODonnell said. The people who have failed to lead on campuses now are dumping this in the laps of the police.

At least one university scrambled to construct the legal grounds to remove protesters before calling police.

Indiana University administrators changed course on a 55-year-old campus policy that allowed temporary structures like tents and signs without a permit in Dunn Meadow, a sprawling 20-acre park on the universitys main campus, except during overnight hours. A university spokesperson said the policy includes a provision that allows changes in the rule as needed and officials did so to balance free speech and safety.

On Thursday, campus police arrested 34 people, with charges ranging from trespassing and resisting law enforcement to battery on a public safety official, said Indiana University police spokeswoman Hannah Skibba.

To combat strategic disadvantages inherent to modern protests, some law enforcement agencies have responded in recent years with an overwhelming show of force, according to policing experts, who see the tactic as an effort to cow protesters with large numbers of personnel and fearsome armor.

At the University of Texas at Austin, state troopers in riot gear helped detain 57 protesters who were arrested by campus police on Wednesday, drawing praise from Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R).

But local prosecutors dropped the charges due to deficiencies in the charging documents, a Travis County Attorney spokesperson said.

George Lobb, who volunteered with 15 other lawyers to represent protesters through the Austin Lawyers Guild, said there was no violence at the protest until the state police showed up. He also noted that state universities in Arlington and San Antonio had protests the same day but no police crackdowns or arrests.

He faulted the university president for poor leadership and not realizing when you call in the Pretorian guard, goon squad, youre going to get goon squad behavior.

Ammer Qaddumi, 21, of Houston, a junior economics and government major who is Palestinian American, was among those taken into custody by police.

The arrests themselves were unlawful, Qaddumi said while participating in a protest on the campus mall Friday afternoon, the same spot where he had been detained days before. About a dozen campus police officers looked on from a distance.

The fact that UTs default response was police force instead of trying to understand student grievances, that is the most egregious thing, he said. Its a blatant violation of our right to protest and free speech.

The rest is here:

How police agencies are responding to campus Israel-Gaza war protests - The Washington Post

In Northern Israel, Clashes With Hezbollah Drive a Hospital Underground – The New York Times

Posted By on April 29, 2024

The entrance hall to the Galilee Medical Center in northern Israel is mostly empty and quiet. Roaring warplanes and the intermittent thunder of artillery have replaced the sounds of doctors, orderlies and patients at this major hospital closest to the border with Lebanon.

Nearly all of the hospitals staff members and patients have gone underground.

Getting to the hospitals nerve center these days involves navigating past 15-foot concrete barricades and multiple blast doors, then descending several floors into a labyrinthine subterranean complex.

That is where thousands of patients and hospital workers have been for the past six months as strikes have intensified between Israeli forces and Hezbollah, the powerful Iranian-backed militia in Lebanon, just six miles to the north.

The underground operation at Galilee Medical Center in Nahariya is one of the most striking examples of how life in northern Israel has been upended since Hezbollah began launching near-daily attacks against the Israeli military in October in solidarity with Hamas, the Iranian-backed group that led the attack on southern Israel that month.

The cross-border fire has prompted tens of thousands of Israelis to evacuate towns, villages and schools and forced factories and businesses to close. On the Lebanon side of the border, tens of thousands more have fled their homes.

We are having trouble retrieving the article content.

Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit andlog intoyour Times account, orsubscribefor all of The Times.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber?Log in.

Want all of The Times?Subscribe.

Follow this link:

In Northern Israel, Clashes With Hezbollah Drive a Hospital Underground - The New York Times

Biden Confers With Netanyahu on a Possible Cease-Fire and Hostage Deal – The New York Times

Posted By on April 29, 2024

President Biden spoke with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel on Sunday to discuss the prospects of a possible cease-fire deal to secure the release of hostages held by Hamas, while repeating his warnings about a new Israeli assault on the city of Rafah in southern Gaza, officials said.

The call was meant to pave the way for Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken, who left Washington just a few hours earlier on Sunday for his latest trip to the Middle East aimed at scaling back the war in Gaza. Mr. Blinken headed to Saudi Arabia, where he will see Egyptian and Qatari officials who have served as intermediaries with Hamas in the cease-fire and hostage talks, which remain in a stalemate.

The State Department announced while Mr. Blinken was in flight on Sunday that after attending a meeting of the World Economic Forum in Riyadh, he would also stop in Jordan and Israel. The secretary has been a critical player in the Biden administrations efforts to broker a cessation to the war, increase humanitarian aid and win the release of more than 100 hostages believed to still be in Gaza since the Oct. 7 Hamas-led terrorist attack.

Thats going to be right at the top of the list for Secretary Blinken, to keep pushing for this temporary cease-fire, John F. Kirby, a national security spokesman for the White House, said on This Week on ABC. We want it to last for about six weeks. It will allow for all those hostages to get out and, of course, to allow for easier aid access to places in Gaza, particularly up in the north.

He has also been leading discussions about what comes after the war is over. During his stop in Saudi Arabia, according to a State Department official who spoke on the condition of anonymity, Mr. Blinken expects to meet with Arab and European officials in a group to talk about plans for rebuilding Gaza, even though Israel is still carrying out its war there and has not achieved its elusive and perhaps impossible goal of fully eradicating Hamas.

An administration official said that about three-quarters of Mr. Bidens nearly hourlong call to Mr. Netanyahu focused on the possible cease-fire and hostages deal. American officials have said that Israel has accepted the U.S.-drafted plan, and they have placed blame for the failure to reach an agreement squarely on Hamas, which in their description has not been constructive. During the call, the president agreed that the onus remained on Hamas to accept the latest proposal, the official said.

We are having trouble retrieving the article content.

Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit andlog intoyour Times account, orsubscribefor all of The Times.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber?Log in.

Want all of The Times?Subscribe.

The rest is here:

Biden Confers With Netanyahu on a Possible Cease-Fire and Hostage Deal - The New York Times

World Central Kitchen says it will resume operations in Gaza – NPR

Posted By on April 29, 2024

People stand next to a vehicle in Deir Al-Balah, in the central Gaza Strip, on April 2, where workers from the World Central Kitchen (WCK), were killed in Israeli airstrikes, according to the NGO. Yasser Qudihe/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty hide caption

People stand next to a vehicle in Deir Al-Balah, in the central Gaza Strip, on April 2, where workers from the World Central Kitchen (WCK), were killed in Israeli airstrikes, according to the NGO.

The aid group World Central Kitchen said it was resuming operations in Gaza, less than a month after seven of its staff were killed in Israeli airstrikes.

"The humanitarian situation in Gaza remains dire. We are restarting our operation with the same energy, dignity, and focus on feeding as many people as possible," CEO Erin Gore said on Sunday.

Gaza residents are experiencing catastrophic levels of hunger and a U.S. official said earlier this month that parts of Gaza are already experiencing famine.

The April 1 strikes in Gaza triggered international criticism of Israel's military, which later admitted it was in "serious violation" of military operating procedures. World Central Kitchen, which distributes meals in disaster zones, had paused its operations there as a result.

"To date we have distributed more than 43 million meals and we are eager to deliver millions more. Food is a universal right and our work in Gaza has been the most life-saving mission in our 14-year organizational history," Gore said in a statement.

Israel cut off food, fuel and medicine to Gaza early in the war. Under international pressure, it has since allowed some aid in, but aid groups say it's far from what's needed. Israel says it is not limiting aid.

Gore said World Central Kitchen has 276 trucks with the equivalent of nearly 8 million meals ready to enter through the Rafah crossing with Egypt. The group also has trucks planned to come from Jordan and is looking to bring food via the sea through Israel's Ashdod Port.

Gore said the group is finalizing construction on a third major kitchen in the Mawasi neighborhood of southern Gaza a facility they'll call Damian's Kitchen in honor of one of the staff members killed in the strikes.

Those killed in the strikes were Palestinian Saifeddin "Safi" Issam Ayad Abutaha; John Chapman of Britain; Jacob Flickinger of the U.S. and Canada; Lalzawmi "Zomi" Frankcom of Australia; Britons James Henderson and James Kirby; and Damian Sobol of Poland.

The group was founded in 2010 by chef Jos Andrs, who spoke at a memorial for the seven workers at Washington's National Cathedral on Thursday. "They risked everything to feed people they did not know and would never meet," he said.

At least 224 humanitarian workers have been killed in the Israel-Hamas war since it began in October, according to the United Nations Security Council, which says the number is more than three times higher than ever recorded in a single conflict in a single year.

Israel apologized for the airstrikes and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his country "deeply regrets the tragic incident." The Israeli military said the strikes violated military operating procedures and that senior military officers would be dismissed and reprimanded.

Gore said of the Israeli military: "While we have no concrete assurances, we continue to seek answers and advocate for change with the goal of better protecting WCK and all NGO workers serving selflessly in the worst humanitarian conditions. Our demand for an impartial and international investigation remains."

President Biden spoke with Netanyahu on Sunday. The White House said they discussed "increases in the delivery of humanitarian assistance into Gaza including through preparations to open new northern crossings starting this week. The President stressed the need for this progress to be sustained and enhanced in full coordination with humanitarian organizations."

Israel's military campaign in Gaza has killed more than 34,000 Palestinians, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health. Some 1,200 people were killed in the Hamas-led attack in Israel on Oct. 7 and 133 hostages remain in Gaza, some of whom are thought to be dead, Israeli officials say.

Becky Sullivan contributed reporting.

Read more:

World Central Kitchen says it will resume operations in Gaza - NPR

Opinion | Israel Has a Choice to Make: Rafah or Riyadh – The New York Times

Posted By on April 29, 2024

U.S. diplomacy to end the Gaza war and forge a new relationship with Saudi Arabia has been converging in recent weeks into a single giant choice for Israel and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: What do you want more Rafah or Riyadh?

Do you want to mount a full-scale invasion of Rafah to try to finish off Hamas if that is even possible without offering any Israeli exit strategy from Gaza or any political horizon for a two-state solution with non-Hamas-led Palestinians? If you go this route, it will only compound Israels global isolation and force a real breach with the Biden administration.

Or do you want normalization with Saudi Arabia, an Arab peacekeeping force for Gaza and a U.S.-led security alliance against Iran? This would come with a different price: a commitment from your government to work toward a Palestinian state with a reformed Palestinian Authority but with the benefit of embedding Israel in the widest U.S.-Arab-Israeli defense coalition the Jewish state has ever enjoyed and the biggest bridge to the rest of the Muslim world Israel has ever been offered while creating at least some hope that the conflict with the Palestinians will not be a forever war.

This is one of the most fateful choices Israel has ever had to make. And what I find both disturbing and depressing is that there is no major Israeli leader today in the ruling coalition, the opposition or the military who is consistently helping Israelis understand that choice a global pariah or a Middle East partner or explaining why it should choose the second.

I appreciate how traumatized Israelis are by the vicious Hamas murders, rapes and kidnappings of Oct. 7. It is not surprising to me that many people there just want revenge, and their hearts have hardened to a degree that they cant see or care about all of the civilians, including thousands of children, who have been killed in Gaza as Israel has plowed through to try to eliminate Hamas. All of this has been further hardened by Hamass refusal so far to release the remaining hostages.

But revenge is not a strategy. It is pure insanity that Israel is now more than six months into this war and the Israeli military leadership and virtually the entire political class has allowed Netanyahu to continue to pursue a total victory there, including probably soon plunging deep into Rafah, without any exit plan or Arab partner lined up to step in once the war ends. If Israel ends up with an indefinite occupation of both Gaza and the West Bank, it would be a toxic military, economic and moral overstretch that would delight Israels most dangerous foe, Iran, and repel all its allies in the West and the Arab world.

We are having trouble retrieving the article content.

Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit andlog intoyour Times account, orsubscribefor all of The Times.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber?Log in.

Want all of The Times?Subscribe.

Excerpt from:

Opinion | Israel Has a Choice to Make: Rafah or Riyadh - The New York Times

Israel-Hamas War Day 206: What’s going on in Gaza, Lebanon? – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on April 29, 2024

Anti-Israel protesters praised the October 7 Massacre and several terrorist organizations at a Vancouver rally on Friday according to a video published by Free Palestine Tri-cities British Columbia, demanding that the groups be removed from Canada's list of terrorist entities.

Charlotte Kates, the international coordinator for the allegedly Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-affiliated (PFLP) Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, led demonstrators in a chant proclaiming "Long live October 7."

Go here to read the rest:

Israel-Hamas War Day 206: What's going on in Gaza, Lebanon? - The Jerusalem Post

Israel agrees not to invade Rafah until consulting with US, Biden admin official says – USA TODAY

Posted By on April 29, 2024

usatoday.com wants to ensure the best experience for all of our readers, so we built our site to take advantage of the latest technology, making it faster and easier to use.

Unfortunately, your browser is not supported. Please download one of these browsers for the best experience on usatoday.com

Original post:

Israel agrees not to invade Rafah until consulting with US, Biden admin official says - USA TODAY

Israel Delivers More Aid to Gaza, but Threat of Famine Persists, U.N. Says – The New York Times

Posted By on April 29, 2024

Under intense international scrutiny, Israel has expedited the flow of aid into Gaza this month, but humanitarian groups say that more is needed as severe hunger grips the enclave, particularly in the devastated north.

Israels efforts which include opening new aid routes have been acknowledged in the last week by the Biden administration and international aid officials. More aid trucks appear to be reaching Gaza, especially the north, where experts have warned for weeks that famine is imminent.

The increased levels of aid are a good sign, but it is too early to say that looming famine is no longer a risk, said Arif Husain, the chief economist at the United Nations World Food Program.

This cannot just happen for a day or a week it has to happen every single day for the foreseeable future, Mr. Husain said, adding that the main need was for more food, water and medicine. If we can do this, then we can ease the pain, we can avert famine.

The aid groups have long complained that only a trickle of aid is entering the enclave, blaming harsh war conditions, strict inspections and limits on the number of crossing points. Israel has maintained that the restrictions are necessary to ensure that neither weapons nor supplies fall into the hands of Hamas.

Original post:

Israel Delivers More Aid to Gaza, but Threat of Famine Persists, U.N. Says - The New York Times

Palestinians in Gaza grow angry with Hamas as war with Israel drags on – The Washington Post – The Washington Post

Posted By on April 29, 2024

JERUSALEM More than six months into the war in Gaza and with dimming hopes for a cease-fire deal, Palestinians there are growing more critical of Hamas, which some of them blame for the months-long conflict that has destroyed the territory and their lives.

The war has displaced most of the Gaza Strips population, killed tens of thousands of people and pushed the enclave toward famine, its infrastructure in ruins. The Israeli military waged a punishing campaign to eliminate Hamas after the group, which has ruled Gaza for 17 years, attacked Israel on Oct. 7, killing an estimated 1,200 people and abducting more than 250.

But while the majority of Palestinians in Gaza blame Israel for their suffering, according to polling conducted in March, they also appear to be turning their ire toward the militants. In interviews with more than a dozen residents of Gaza, people said they resent Hamas for the attacks in Israel and war-weary and desperate to fulfill their basic needs just want to see peace as soon as possible.

If Hamas wanted to start a war, they should have secured people first secured a place of refuge for them, not thrown them into suffering that no one can bear, said Salma El-Qadomi, 33, a freelance journalist who has been displaced 11 times since the conflict started.

Palestinians want leaders who wont drag people into a war like this, she said. Almost everyone around me shares the same thoughts: We want this waterfall of blood to stop. Seventeen years of destruction and wars are enough.

Palestinians in Rafah, Gaza, marked a somber Eid al-Fitr on April 10, praying by the ruins of a mosque and visiting graves of loved ones. (Video: The Washington Post)

Hamas, an Islamist political and military movement, was founded in 1987 during the first Palestinian uprising. It staged some of the deadliest attacks on Israeli civilians and later won Palestinian legislative elections, beating out the secular Fatah party that leads the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank.

The rival parties entered into a deadly power struggle, fighting a brief but bloody battle in Gaza in 2007, when Hamas seized control. For years after that, the group fought sporadic wars with Israel, but it also presided over periods of calm.

It used the smuggling tunnels under the border with Egypt to manage the territorys besieged economy and cracked down on criminal gangs that preyed on locals. The underground passages also served as key pipelines for the groups arsenal of weapons, supplementing its homemade rockets with more sophisticated missiles, ammunition and other materiel.

More recently, however, Hamass fortunes turned. The tunnel trade had dried up after Egypt sealed off the network, and the groups isolation deepened as some Arab states began normalizing relations with Israel.

Still, many observers, including Israels leaders, were sure Hamas wanted to stay in power and had little interest in a major conflict. The attack in October took many Palestinians and much of the world by surprise.

Hamas has said it launched the assault in part to avenge what it claimed was Israels desecration of the al-Aqsa Mosque compound in Jerusalem, Islams third-holiest site and known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary. Known to Jews as the Temple Mount, it is the holiest site in Judaism.

The attack, a terrifying rampage through southern Israeli communities, initially boosted the groups support in both Gaza and the West Bank, according the Ramallah-based Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research, which carried out polling in late November and early December.

Even recently, in a poll conducted over five days in March, a majority of respondents in both places say Hamass decision to carry out the attack was correct.

But, the centers researchers said, It is clear from the findings that support for the offensive does not mean support for Hamas. Instead, the results show three-quarters of Palestinians believe the attack refocused global attention on the conflict after years of neglect.

The anger mounting now in the enclave appears centered on stalled cease-fire talks, with Hamas insisting on a permanent truce and Israels full withdrawal from Gaza before it hands over any hostages.

We cant live like this anymore, said a 29-year-old displaced lawyer and mother of three, who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation. Hours before the interview, she said, Israeli drones fired at her and her children on the street in central Gaza.

We need to be able to mourn what has happened to us, to bury those who were killed and look for those lost, she said. By any means, we want the war to stop, whatever it takes.

Fedaa Zayed, a 35-year-old writer from northern Gaza, said she thinks Hamas is avoiding a cease-fire agreement because it doesnt want to admit defeat. She fled her Gaza City apartment on the second day of the war and is now staying in Rafah on the border with Egypt.

In reality, we are in full retreat, the domestic front is destroyed, Zayed said. We, as a people, want a cease-fire, the withdrawal of the Israeli army. We want to return to our homes even if they are in rubble.

Hamas says it understands the frustrations of those who are suffering in Gaza. But these complaints do not reflect the political situation, said Basem Naim, a senior Hamas official.

Instead, he said, we are listening to thousands of voices that are emphasizing that despite the sacrifice, they refuse to let go of the big goals that involve ending the occupation, freeing Jerusalem and setting up a Palestinian state.

Naim and other senior political leaders, including Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh, are based outside Gaza. Inside the enclave, Hamas leader Yehiya Sinwar, the apparent mastermind of Oct. 7, is believed to be hunkered down in a tunnel to escape the Israeli strikes.

Hamas, however, has never really tolerated dissent, and it arrested, jailed and beat activists who spoke out against its rule.

The groups administration in Gaza was full of corruption, nepotism, and bias in favor of the movement, said Mohamed, 35, a graphic designer from Rafah. He spoke on the condition that only his first name be used out of fear of reprisal by the groups fighters.

Also in Rafah, Ayman, 46, said he voted for Hamas in 2006 because he thought the Palestinian Authority was corrupt. But what came next, he said, also speaking on the condition that only his first name be used, was a number of wars, the destruction of homes, the martyrdom of thousands, difficulty in life, and the siege.

Earlier this year, demonstrations calling for a cease-fire broke out in at least two cities in Gaza. In a video of a protest in January, a crowd of mostly men and boys marches down a street in the city of Khan Younis, holding antiwar signs and chanting: The people want an end to the war!

Analysts say they have also seen an uptick in social media posts critical of Hamas.

Hamas... dont be upset with us and try to understand us correctly, Rami Haroon, a 45-year-old dentist and father of five, wrote on Facebook on April 20.

We have been suffocated by you for a long time, wrote Haroon, who said he is not affiliated with any political party. Your ship will sink and you will drown us with you.

But while resentment is brewing, many Palestinians feel its a shame to go after Hamas during this Israeli assault, said Mkhaimar Abusada, associate professor of political science at al-Azhar University in Gaza, who is now based in Cairo. They dont want to be seen as collaborators with the occupation if they protest against Hamas now.

In the March poll from the policy center, a slim majority of respondents in Gaza said they would prefer Hamas rather than the Palestinian Authority to control the Strip after the war. The other options included the United Nations, the Israeli military, or one or more Arab countries.

Given the magnitude of the suffering in the Gaza Strip, this seems to be the most counter intuitive finding of the entire poll, the researchers wrote. At the same time, the results were consistent with the increase in the percentage of Palestinians in Gaza who think Hamas will win the war and stay in power.

There are many ways to understand that, Palestinian political analyst Khalil Sayegh, who is based in Washington, said of the finding in an interview last week. One of which is that the people understood and saw that Hamas is staying, and thus theyre afraid to express their opinions.

According to Abusada, people care about Palestine and resistance and freedom and independence. But first of all, they want to live as humans, to be able to eat and sleep.

Thats why the criticism is much more vocal now and much more public now, he said. Israel really sent us to the Stone Age.

Mahfouz and Balousha reported from Cairo, and Harb from London. Sarah Dadouch in Beirut contributed to this report.

Palestinians in Rafah, Gaza, marked a somber Eid al-Fitr on April 10, praying by the ruins of a mosque and visiting graves of loved ones. (Video: The Washington Post)

Follow this link:

Palestinians in Gaza grow angry with Hamas as war with Israel drags on - The Washington Post - The Washington Post


Page 11234..1020..»

matomo tracker