Prospects dim for truce as Israel rejects calls to spare Rafah
Palestinian Territories – AFP
Prospects for a cease-fire dimmed Sunday after the United States signalled it would veto the latest push for a UN Security Council resolution and mediator Qatar acknowledged that separate truce talks have hit an impasse.
Efforts to pause the over four-month-old war languish as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to reject international appeals to spare Gaza’s southernmost city of Rafah, where around 1.4 million people have sought refuge.
Israel’s relentless campaign in Gaza has edged closer to the city, with attacks killing at least 10 people there and in central Gaza’s Deir al-Balah overnight to Sunday, according to official Palestinian news agency Wafa.
At the morgue of a Rafah hospital, mourners bent down to give a final kiss to a loved one wrapped in a white body bag.
“That’s my cousin — he was martyred in al-Mawasi, in the ‘safe area’,” said Ahmad Muhammad Aburizq. “And my mother was martyred the day before.
“There’s no safe place. Even the hospital is not safe.”
A total of 127 people died over the previous 24 hours, the health ministry in Gaza said on Sunday.
Israel has killed at least 28,985 people, mostly women and children, in Gaza since early October, according to the health ministry.
Egypt, which controls the Rafah border crossing from Gaza, has repeatedly warned against any “forced displacement” of Palestinians into the Sinai desert.
President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi on Saturday reiterated his opposition. In a phone call with French President Emmanuel Macron, both leaders agreed instead on the “necessity of the swift advancement of a cease-fire”.
– ‘Moment of truth’ –
Even if a temporary truce deal is struck, Netanyahu said the ground invasion of Rafah will go ahead.
Countries urging Israel otherwise are effectively saying “lose the war”, argued the prime minister, whose coalition includes religious and ultra-nationalist parties.
Netanyahu spoke as thousands protested in Tel Aviv, the latest public call for an immediate election.
Next week’s possible United Nations Security Council vote appears unlikely to advance the cease-fire effort, with Washington already voicing opposition.
“The United States does not support action on this draft resolution,” said US Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield. “Should it come up for a vote as drafted, it will not be adopted.”
Algeria’s draft resolution seeks an immediate humanitarian cease-fire, but Thomas-Greenfield said the United States instead supports a truce-for-hostages deal that would pause fighting for six weeks.
US President Joe Biden had “multiple calls” with Netanyahu as well as Egyptian and Qatari leaders this week “to push this deal forward”, she said.
Speaking at the Munich Security Conference, Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani called those talks “not very promising”.
He said the efforts had been complicated by the insistence of “a lot of countries” that any new truce involve further releases of Israelis.
– Key hospital ‘not functional’ –
His assessment came as Hamas threatened to suspend its involvement in the talks unless relief supplies reach Gaza’s north, where aid agencies have warned of looming famine.
“Negotiations cannot be held while hunger is ravaging the Palestinian people,” a senior source in the Palestinian group told AFP, asking not to be identified because he is not authorised to speak on the issue.
Earlier, Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh reiterated the group’s demands, which Netanyahu called “ludicrous”.
They include a complete pause in fighting, the release of Hamas prisoners and the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza.
Israel’s military on Sunday said troops in the southern city of Khan Younis are still operating “in the Nasser Hospital” and adjacent to it where they “located additional weapons.”
The ongoing raid followed a week-long siege which has left the hospital “not functional anymore” even though 200 patients remain there, World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus wrote on social media platform X.
He called for access to the facility after a WHO team “was not permitted to enter” for an assessment.
The hospital was one of Gaza’s last functioning medical facilities.
The head of the UN humanitarian agency OCHA in the Palestinian territories, Andrea De Domenico, said he had “no idea” how an estimated 300,000 people still in Gaza’s north had survived.
The United Nations has cited “significant restrictions” on aid delivery to north Gaza while in Rafah there had been “reports of people stopping aid trucks to take food”.