Israel hits Gaza from land, sea and air as Hamas halts talks
Israel hits Gaza from land, sea and air as Hamas halts talks/node/2550531/middle-east
Israel hits Gaza from land, sea and air as Hamas halts talks
A Palestinian woman reacts next to a child after an Israeli air strike on a UN school sheltering displaced people in Nusairat in central Gaza Strip, on July 14, 2024. (Reuters)
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Updated 16 July 2024
AFP
Israel hits Gaza from land, sea and air as Hamas halts talks
Relentless bombardments come as prospects have dwindled for a truce and hostage release dealÂ
Israel's military offensive has killed at least 38,584 people in Gaza, according to its health ministry
Updated 16 July 2024
AFP
GAZA STRIP: Israel hammered the Gaza Strip from the air, sea, and land Monday as the war in the Palestinian territory showed no sign of abating, with Hamas saying it was pulling out of truce talks.
Shells rained down on the neighborhoods of Tal Al-Hawa, Sheikh Ajlin, and Al-Sabra in Gaza City, AFP correspondents reported, while eyewitnesses said the Israeli army had shelled the Al-Mughraqa area and the northern outskirts of the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza.
Paramedics from the Palestinian Red Crescent said they had retrieved the bodies of five people, including three children, after Israeli air strikes in the Al-Maghazi camp, also in the central Gaza Strip.
Meanwhile, eyewitnesses reported Israeli gunship fire east of Khan Yunis, in southern Gaza, and shelling and Apache helicopter attacks in western areas of the southernmost city of Rafah.
The Israeli military said in a statement that it was continuing its activity throughout the coastal territory, and said it had conducted raids in Rafah and central Gaza that killed âa number ofâ militants, as well as air strikes throughout the strip over the past day.
It also said its naval forces had been firing at targets in Gaza.
The relentless bombardments came as prospects dwindled for a truce and hostage release deal being secured any time soon.
Hamas said on Sunday it was withdrawing from ceasefire talks.
The decision followed an Israeli strike targeting the head of Hamasâs military wing, Mohammed Deif, which the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said killed 92 people.
Deifâs fate remains unknown, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu saying there was âno certaintyâ he was dead while a senior Hamas official told AFP that Deif was âwell and directly overseeingâ operations.
Speaking after the strike on Al-Mawasi, a second senior official from the militant group cited Israeli âmassacresâ and its attitude to negotiations as a reason for suspending negotiations.
But according to the official, Haniyeh told international mediators Hamas was âready to resume negotiationsâ when Israelâs government âdemonstrates seriousness in reaching a ceasefire agreement and a prisoner exchange deal.â
Last week, US President Joe Biden had suggested a deal might be close, saying at a NATO summit that both sides had agreed to a framework he had set out in late May.
Hamas on Monday lashed out at the US, accusing it of supporting âgenocideâ by supplying Israel with âinternationally bannedâ weapons.
âWe condemn in the strongest terms the... American disdain for the blood of the children and women of our Palestinian people... by providing all types of prohibited weapons to the âIsraeliâ occupation,â a statement from the Hamas government media office said.
Talks between the warring parties have been mediated by Qatar and Egypt, with US support, but months of negotiations have failed to bring a breakthrough.
The war was sparked by Hamasâs surprise October 7 attack on southern Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,195 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.
The militants also seized 251 hostages, 116 of whom are still in Gaza including 42 the Israeli military says are dead.
Israel responded with a military offensive that has killed at least 38,584 people in Gaza, also mostly civilians, according to data provided by the Gaza health ministry.
The war and accompanying siege have devastated the Palestinian territory, destroying much of its infrastructure, leaving the majority of its 2.4 million residents displaced and causing a dire shortage of food, medicines and other basic goods.
Among the devastated facilities have been multiple schools. On Sunday, Israeli forces struck a UN-run school in Nuseirat camp that was being used as a shelter for displaced people but which the military said âserved as a hideoutâ for militants.
The civil defense agency in Gaza said 15 people were killed in the strike, the fifth attack in just over a week to hit a school used as shelter by displaced Palestinians.
Israelâs Netanyahu aide faces indictment over Gaza leak
Netanyahuâs close adviser, Jonatan Urich, has denied any wrongdoing in the case which legal authorities began investigating in late 2024
The prime minister has described probes against Urich and other aides as a witch-hunt.
Updated 9 sec ago
Reuters
JERUSALEM: An aide to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faces indictment on security charges pending a hearing, Israelâs attorney general said on Sunday, for allegedly leaking top secret military information during Israelâs war in Gaza. Netanyahuâs close adviser, Jonatan Urich, has denied any wrongdoing in the case which legal authorities began investigating in late 2024. The prime minister has described probes against Urich and other aides as a witch-hunt.
Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara said in a statement that Urich and another aide had extracted secret information from the Israeli military and leaked it to German newspaper Bild. Their intent, she said, was to shape public opinion of Netanyahu and influence the discourse about the slaying of six Israeli hostages by their Palestinian captors in Gaza in late August 2024. The hostagesâ deaths had sparked mass protests in Israel and outraged hostage families, who accused Netanyahu of torpedoing ceasefire talks that had faltered in the preceding weeks for political reasons.
Netanyahu vehemently denies this. He has repeatedly said that Hamas was to blame for the talks collapsing, while the militant group has said it was Israelâs fault no deal had been reached. Four of the six slain hostages had been on the list of more than 30 captives that Hamas was set to free were a ceasefire to be reached, according to a defense official at the time. The Bild article in question was published days after the hostages were found executed in a Hamas tunnel in southern Gaza.
It outlined Hamasâ negotiation strategy in the indirect ceasefire talks and largely corresponded with Netanyahuâs allegations against the militant group over the deadlock.
Bild said after the investigation was announced that it does not comment on its sources and that its article relied on authentic documents.
A two-month ceasefire was reached in January this year and included the release of 38 hostages before Israel resumed attacks in Gaza. The sides are presently engaged in indirect negotiations in Doha, aimed at reaching another truce.
How unequal shelter access puts Israelâs Arab and Bedouin communities at greater risk
Decades of infrastructure neglect have left Arab and Bedouin areas without basic protections enjoyed by Jewish communities
Residents are calling for equal emergency planning, arguing that safety during conflict should be a right, not a privilege
Updated 9 min 44 sec ago
ANAN TELLO
LONDON: As Iranian rockets shook East Jerusalem in mid-June, Rawan Shalaldeh sat in the dark while her seven-year-old son slept. She had put him to bed early and hid her phone to prevent the constant alerts from waking him, hoping sleep would shield her child from the terror above.
âThe bombing was very intense; the house would shake,â Shalaldeh, an architect and urban planner with the Israeli human rights and planning organization Bimkom, told Arab News.
While residents in nearby Jewish districts rushed into reinforced shelters, Shalaldeh and her family in the Palestinian neighborhood of Jabal Al-Zaytoun had nowhere to go.
Israelis gather in a underground shelter in Tel Aviv on June 24, 2025, after sirens sounded in several areas across the country after missiles were fired from Iran. (AFP/File)
âEast Jerusalem has only about 60 shelters, most of them inside schools,â she said. âTheyâre designed for students, not for neighborhood residents. Theyâre not available in every area, and theyâre not enough for the population.â
Her home is a 15-minute walk from the nearest shelter. âBy the time weâd get there, the bombing would already be over,â she said.
Instead, her family stayed inside, bracing for the next strike. âWe could hear the sound but couldnât tell if it was from the bombs or the interception systems,â she recalled. âWe couldnât sleep. It was terrifying. I fear it will happen again.â
That fear is compounded by infrastructure gaps that make East Jerusalemâs residents more vulnerable. âOld homes in East Jerusalem donât have shelters at all,â she said. âNew homes with shelters are rare because itâs extremely hard to get a building permit here.â
Arab and Bedouin communities were left without basic protections enjoyed bytheir Jewish neighbors. (AFP)
Israeli law requires new apartments to be built with protected rooms. However, homes built without permits are unlikely to follow the guidelines, leaving most without safe space.
The contrast with West Jerusalem is stark. âThereâs a big difference between East and West Jerusalem,â Shalaldeh said. âIn the west, there are many shelters, and things are much easier for them.â
Indeed, a June 17 report by Bimkom underscored these disparities. While West Jerusalem, home to a mostly Jewish population, has about 200 public shelters, East Jerusalem, which is home to nearly 400,000 Palestinians, has just one.
Even where shelters do exist they are often inaccessible. The municipalityâs website fails to clearly mark their locations, and many residents are unaware they exist. Some shelters even remain locked during emergencies â especially at night.
The report concluded that the current infrastructure is grossly inadequate, leaving most East Jerusalem residents without access to basic protection during attacks.
Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem hold temporary residency IDs that lack any listed nationality and must be renewed every five years. Unlike Arab citizens of Israel â often referred to as â48 Arabsâ â or residents of southern Israel, they do not have Israeli citizenship.
For many Palestinian and Arab citizens of Israel, the 12-day Israel-Iran war in June laid bare a deeper inequity â one that extends beyond conflict and into the fabric of everyday life.
âI havenât spoken with any of my friends in the north yet, but I saw videos on Instagram,â Shalaldeh said. âArab families tried to enter shelters and were prevented â because theyâre Arab.â
The war, she said, exposed an uncomfortable truth for many Arab citizens of Israel. âAfter the war, many realized theyâre not treated like Israelis â even though they have citizenship, work in Israel and speak Hebrew.â
âThereâs an Israeli policy that tries to blur their identity. But the war opened a lot of peopleâs eyes. It became clear theyâre not equal, and the issue of shelters was shocking for many.â
One town where this inequity became alarmingly visible was Tira, a predominantly Arab community in central Israel with roughly 27,000 residents. Though well within the range of missile attacks, Tira lacks adequate public shelters.
âMost of the few shelters that exist are outdated, insufficient, or located far from residential areas,â Fakhri Masri, a political and social activist from Tira, told Arab News. âIn emergencies, schools are often opened as temporary shelters, but they only serve nearby neighborhoods and canât accommodate everyone.
âMany homes do not have protected rooms, and this leaves families, especially those with children or elderly members, extremely vulnerable.â
When sirens sounded during the attacks, panic set in. âIt was the middle of the night,â Masri said. âMany of us had to wake our children, some still half asleep, and scramble for any kind of cover.â
With official shelters scarce, families resorted to improvised solutions. âPeople ran into stairwells, lay on the ground away from windows, or tried to reach school shelters â if they were even open or nearby,â he said.
Others simply fled to their cars or huddled outdoors, hoping distance from buildings would offer some safety.
âIt was chaotic, frightening, and it felt like we were left completely on our own,â Masri said. âThe fear wasnât just of rockets â it was also the fear of having no place to run to.â
Underlying this crisis, he argued, is a deeper pattern of state neglect. âArab towns like Tira were never provided with proper infrastructure or emergency planning like Jewish towns often are,â he said. âThat in itself feels like a form of discrimination.
âIt makes you feel invisible â like our safety doesnât matter. Itâs a constant reminder that weâre not being protected equally under the same state policies.
âWe are not asking for anything more than what every citizen deserves â equal rights, equal protection, and the right to live in safety and dignity. It is a basic human right to feel secure at our own home, to know that our children have somewhere safe to go during an emergency.â
Masri, who has long campaigned for equal emergency protections, called on the Israeli government to end discrimination in shelter planning.
âTreat Arab towns with the same seriousness and care as any other town,â he said. âWe are people who want to live in peace. We want our children to grow up in a country where safety is not a privilege but a right â for everyone, Jewish and Arab alike.
âUntil that happens, we will keep raising our voices and demanding fairness, because no one should be left behind.â
The picture is similar for the roughly 100,000 Bedouin who live across 35 unrecognized villages in the Negev and Galilee regions, often in makeshift homes that provide little protection. Many of these villages are near sensitive sites targeted by Iran.
One such village is Wadi Al-Naâam, the largest unrecognized village in Israel, home to about 15,000 Bedouin residents in the southern Negev desert.
âWhen we say unrecognized, it means we have nothing,â said Najib Abu Bnaeh, head of the villageâs emergency team and a member of its local council. âNo roads, no electricity, no running water â and certainly no shelters.
âDuring wars, people flee the villages. They hide in caves, under bridges â any place they can find.â
IN NUMBERS
âą 250 Shelters built across Negev since Oct. 7, 2023 â half of them by the state.
âą 60 School-based shelters in East Jerusalem, concentrated in select locations.
âą 1 Public shelter in East Jerusalem.
âą 200 Public shelters in West Jerusalem.
(Source: Bimkom)
After the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on southern Israel, the army began installing a small number of shelters in unrecognized villages. But Abu Bnaeh said that these efforts have fallen short.
âIn our village, they built two structures,â he said. âBut they have no ceilings, so they donât protect from anything.â
He estimates that more than 45,000 protective buildings are needed across all unrecognized villages.
As the head of Wadi Al-Naâamâs emergency response team, Abu Bnaeh leads a group of 20 volunteers. Together, they assist residents during missile alerts, evacuating families to shelters in nearby townships such as Segev Shalom and Rahat, and delivering food and medicine.
âWe train people how to take cover and survive,â he said. âWe also help train teams in other villages how to respond to injuries, missiles and emergencies.
âThe best way to protect people is simple. Recognize the villages. Allow us to build shelters.â
Even recognized villages face issues. In Um Bateen, officially recognized in 2004, basic infrastructure is still missing.
âAlthough our village is recognized, we still donât have electricity,â Samera Abo Kaf, a resident of the 8,000-strong community, told Arab News.
âThere are 48 Bedouin villages in northern Israel. And even those recognized look nothing like Jewish towns nearby.â
Building legally is nearly impossible. âThe state refuses to recognize the land weâve lived on for generations,â she said. âSo, we build anyway â out of necessity. But that means living in fear; of winter collapsing our roofs, or bulldozers tearing our homes down.â
Abo Kaf said that the contrast is obvious during her commute. âI pass Beer Sheva and Omer â trees, paved roads, tall buildings. Itâs painful. Just 15 minutes away, life is so different.
âAnd I come from a village that is, in many ways, better off than others,â she added.
With each new conflict, the fear returns. âIsrael is a country with many enemies â itâs no secret,â Abo Kaf said. âEvery few years, we go through another war. And we Bedouins have no shelters. None.
âSo not only are our homes at risk of demolition, but we also live with the threat of rockets. Itâs absurd. Itâs infuriating. If something doesnât change, thereâs no future.â
Michal Braier, Bimkomâs head of research, said that no government body had responded to its report, though many civil society organizations have supported its findings based on specific cases.
âThere are stark protection gaps between high- and low-income communities,â she told Arab News. âAnd most Arab and Palestinian communities rank low on socio-economic indicators.
âThis is a very neo-liberal planning and development policy that, by definition, leaves the weak behind.â
Turkiyeâs Kurdish region finds it difficult to accept peace is at hand
Conflict has caused 50,000 deaths among civilians and 2,000 among soldiers
Updated 56 min 30 sec ago
AFP AP
HAKKARI, Turkiye: Southeast Turkiye, where the army has battled Kurdish militants for decades, is not yet convinced that lasting peace is at hand.
In a slickly managed ceremony recently held across the border in Iraq, members of the Kurdish rebel group PKK destroyed their weapons as part of a peace process underway with the Turkish state.
But on the streets and in the tea houses of Hakkari, a Kurdish-majority town some 50 kilometers from the Iraqi border, few people express much hope that the deadly conflict is over.
One tea drinker who was willing to speak asked not to be filmed. âWe donât talk about it,â he said.
The conflict has caused 50,000 deaths among civilians and 2,000 among soldiers, according to Turkiyeâs President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Mehmet Duman, a local, said: âThe state must take a stepâ to match the symbolic operation to destroy PKK weapons in Iraq.
âTurkiye has won,â Erdogan said Saturday, a day after the PKKâs symbolic destruction of weapons signaling the start of the disarmament process. âEighty-six million citizens have won,â he added.
While he has opened a peace process with the PKK, or Kurdistan Workersâ Party, he has also continued his crackdown on opposition parties.
The government has arrested hundreds of members of the CHP, a social-democratic, secular party. The main opposition force to Erdogan, it is rising in the polls.
Those arrested include the mayor of Istanbul, Ekrem Imamoglu, the partyâs likely candidate in the next presidential elections, and the mayors of other major cities who took power when CHP made major gains in March 2024 local elections.
Accused of âcorruption,â they deny the charges against them. The crackdown has also hit opposition media outlets, such as the Sozcu channel.
On Saturday morning, before the plenary session of his AKP party, Erdogan sought to be reassuring.
âWe know what we are doing. No one should worry, be afraid, or question anything. Everything we are doing is for Turkiye, for our future and our independence,â he insisted.
The PKK announced in May that it would disband and renounce armed conflict. The move came after PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan, who has been imprisoned on an island near Istanbul since 1999, urged his group in February to convene a congress, and formally disband and disarm.
Ocalan renewed his call in a video message broadcast on Wednesday, saying, âI believe in the power of politics and social peace, not weapons.â
The PKK issued a statement from the fighters who were laying down their weapons, saying that they had disarmed âas a gesture of goodwill and a commitment to the practical successâ of the peace process.
âWe will henceforth continue our struggle for freedom, democracy, and socialism through democratic politics and legal means,â the statement said.
Turkish parliamentary Speaker Numan Kurtulmus said that the initial disarmament step had proceeded âas planned,â but cautioned that the process was far from complete.
âThereâs still a long way to go in collecting many more weapons,â Kurtulmus said. âWhat matters is ending the armed era in a way that ensures weapons are never taken up again.â
The official noted that the Turkish parliament was close to setting up a commission to oversee the peace process.
Devlet Bahceli, Erdoganâs nationalist ally who initiated the peace process, welcomed the ceremony, saying it marks âhistoric developments that signal the end of a dark era.â
UAE, Turkish presidents reaffirm support for regional stability
Al-Nahyan, Erdogan discuss regional, international issues in phone call
Talks reflect strong ties between Ankara, Abu Dhabi
Updated 13 July 2025
Arab News
LONDON: UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan discussed recent developments in the Middle East with his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, on Sunday.
During a telephone call the leaders emphasized their countriesâ commitment to supporting all efforts that promote peace and stability in the region, the Emirates News Agency reported.
They emphasized the need for improved coordination to tackle regional crises through dialogue and diplomacy, which they said was essential for achieving lasting peace and stability.
The call reflects the close ties and economic partnership between Ankara and Abu Dhabi and strong cooperation in various sectors.
Syrian Kurdish authorities reiterate call for autonomy after Damascus meeting
The Kurdish administration said Syrians âhave suffered for decades from a centralizedâ regime and called for a decentralized and democratic system
The Kurds control vast swathes of territory in Syriaâs north, including oil and gas fields
Updated 13 July 2025
AFP
DAMASCUS: Syriaâs Kurdish authorities called again on Sunday for a system of government that preserves a measure of their de facto autonomy, days after Damascus rejected âany formâ of decentralization.
Mazloum Abdi of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) â the Kurdish administrationâs de facto army â and interim President Ahmed Al-Sharaa first struck an accord in March to integrate Kurdish institutions into the state, but its implementation has been held up by differences between the two parties.
The pair met again on Wednesday in the presence of a US envoy to discuss the stalled efforts, but Damascus afterwards reiterated its opposition to âany form of division or federalization,â and called for SDF fighters to be absorbed into the army.
In a statement Sunday, the Kurdish administration called âfor a pluralistic democratic system, social justice, gender equality, and a constitution that guarantees the rights of all componentsâ of society.
âSyrians have suffered for decades from a centralized system that monopolized power and wealth, suppressed local will, and dragged the country into successive crises,â it said.
âToday, we aspire to be effective partners in building a new Syria, a decentralized Syria that embraces all its people and guarantees their rights equally.â
The Kurds control vast swathes of territory in Syriaâs north, including oil and gas fields.
Kurdish forces, with the support of a Washington-led coalition, played a vital role in the fight against the Daesh group in Syria, which ultimately led to the jihadist groupâs territorial defeat.
In an interview with the channel Kurdistan 24 on Wednesday, US ambassador to Turkiye and special envoy to Syria Tom Barrack said that while he recognized the SDFâs role in the fight against the IS group, it had to accept the ârealityâ that âthe only future path for them is Damascus.â