Berlin evacuates 19 Germans plus relatives from Gaza

Germany said Wednesday that 19 of its citizens and 14 of their relatives had been evacuated from Gaza as Israel presses its offensive against Hamas in the war-ravaged Palestinian territory. (AFP/File)
Germany said Wednesday that 19 of its citizens and 14 of their relatives had been evacuated from Gaza as Israel presses its offensive against Hamas in the war-ravaged Palestinian territory. (AFP/File)
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Updated 02 April 2025

Berlin evacuates 19 Germans plus relatives from Gaza

Berlin evacuates 19 Germans plus relatives from Gaza
  • Foreign ministry spokeswoman Kathrin Deschauer said the evacuation on Tuesday “took considerable time” but Berlin was “very relieved
  • She welcomed reports of talks, facilitated by regional actors, toward a new Gaza truce

BERLIN: Germany said on Wednesday that 19 of its citizens and 14 of their relatives had been evacuated from Gaza as Israel presses its offensive against Hamas in the Palestinian territory.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Kathrin Deschauer said the evacuation on Tuesday “took considerable time” but Berlin was “very relieved that this succeeded through close cooperation” with Israeli officials.
Deschauer added that she welcomed reports of talks, facilitated by regional actors, toward a new Gaza truce.
“That’s important, good and somewhat encouraging, but the current situation is dramatic, and it’s important that all parties return to the negotiating table to achieve a ceasefire,” she said at a regular news briefing.
The war was sparked by the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel.
Israel resumed major airstrikes on Gaza on March 18 after talks on next steps in a six-week truce broke down.
The Health Ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said Tuesday that the overall toll since the war began had reached at least 50,399 people, most of them civilians.
Jordan’s King Abdullah II, speaking during a Berlin visit, deplored the dire humanitarian situation and the war’s impact on children.
“Today, Gaza has the highest number of child amputees per capita in the world, along with massive numbers of injured adults,” he told the Global Disability Summit.
He said a Jordanian aid project with mobile clinics had helped more than 400 amputees in Gaza, including children.
The UN Human Rights Council has condemned Israel’s renewed offensive in Gaza and demanded the country uphold its responsibility to “prevent genocide” in the Palestinian territory.
The UN’s top rights body overwhelmingly adopted a resolution putting forth a list of demands to Israel, including calling on it to “lift its illegal blockade” on Gaza.
The text, adopted with 27 of the council’s 47 members voting in favor, four against and 16 abstaining, deplored “the violation by Israel of the ceasefire agreement.”
The resolution, put forward by most members of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, demanded “unimpeded humanitarian assistance and the urgent restoration of basic necessities” to Gaza.
It slammed “the use of starvation of civilians as a method of warfare,” and called on all countries “to take immediate action to prevent the continued forcible transfer of Palestinians within or from the Gaza Strip.”
The text also voiced “grave concern at statements by Israeli officials amounting to incitement to genocide” and demanded that Israel “uphold its legal responsibility to prevent genocide.”
Wednesday’s resolution called on countries to stop supplying military equipment to Israel.
It also ordered the Commission of Inquiry — a high-level team probing abuses in the conflict — to broaden its investigation to look at “the direct and the indirect transfer or sale of arms, munitions, parts, components and dual-use items to Israel.”
The text called on the UN General Assembly to consider setting up a new investigative team to prepare prosecutions for major international crimes in the conflict.
Several countries took the floor to lament a lack of “balance” in the text.
They included the Czech Republic, which voted against the resolution along with Germany, Ethiopia, and North Macedonia.


Netherlands looks at trade ban on goods from Israeli settlements

Netherlands looks at trade ban on goods from Israeli settlements
Updated 8 sec ago

Netherlands looks at trade ban on goods from Israeli settlements

Netherlands looks at trade ban on goods from Israeli settlements
  • Foreign minister makes remarks during visit to West Bank
  • Dutch join EU members Spain, Slovenia, Ireland, Belgium in assessing sanctions on trade with settlements

LONDON: The foreign minister of the Netherlands has said his country is working to ban goods from illegal Israeli settlements in occupied Palestine. 

David van Weel made the comments during a visit to the West Bank, where he visited an area previously attacked by Israeli settlers.

The Netherlands paused efforts to enact broader sanctions against Israel following the ceasefire with Hamas last month. However, violence by settlers in the West Bank has prompted international condemnation.

“Now we deem it is not a time to increase sanctions on Israel because we want to see the peace plan implemented and we want to also encourage Israel to play a positive part in this,” van Weel told The Guardian.

“At the same time, we’re not blind to any movements on the West Bank that might move the two-state solution further (away).”

Sanctions are tough for EU members to impose individually on trade as the issue falls within the broader remit of the bloc.

“It’s not easy to make a carve-out,” van Weel said. “We cannot just stop (all imports from illegal settlements) immediately because there is currently no legal basis for that. We are trying to make new policy now, then it has to go through parliament.”

The EU is Israel’s largest trading partner, making up a third of all Israeli exports. Goods from the settlements make up a relatively small proportion of those exports. 

The Netherlands joins Spain, Slovenia, Belgium and Ireland in planning to sanction trade with Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Belgium and Spain have also cut consular services to those living in settlements.

In June, nine member states asked the EU Commission to assess cutting trade with Israeli settlements after the International Court of Justice ruling on the illegality of Israel’s occupation of Palestine. They included Finland, Luxembourg, Poland, Portugal and Sweden.

The Netherlands is historically a staunch Israeli ally, but pushed the EU in May to review the association agreement with the country, which is the foundation of tariff-free trade and other links including in finance and scientific research.

This led to calls from within the EU in September to suspend the free trade agreement with Israel after it was found to have violated numerous human rights obligations.

There were also calls to sanction two far-right Israeli ministers, Itamar Ben Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich.

Sven Kuhn von Burgsdorff, a former EU envoy to Palestine, told The Guardian: “Business as usual is over … Time for impunity is over.”

More than 200 Palestinians have been killed by settlers and the Israeli military this year in the West Bank, including 40 children.

Eight attacks occurred daily on average in October, including against people, property and livestock. It marks a high point in the past 20 years of EU records.

The attacks come amid plans by far-right Israeli politicians in parliament to effectively annex the West Bank by making it subject to Israeli law. The bill passed the preliminary reading stage in October but is opposed by the US.