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Netanyahu pushes back against new pressure over Gaza and hostages
2 September 2024, 22:54
It was his first public address since Sunday’s mass protests showed many Israelis’ furious response to the discovery of six more dead hostages.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has pushed back against a new wave of pressure to reach a ceasefire deal in Gaza after hundreds of thousands of Israelis protested and went on strike and US President Joe Biden said he needed to do more after nearly 11 months of fighting.
Mr Netanyahu said he will continue to insist on a demand that has emerged as a major sticking point in talks – continued Israeli control of the Philadelphi corridor, a narrow band along Gaza’s border with Egypt where Israel contends Hamas smuggles weapons into Gaza.
Egypt and Hamas deny it.
In his first public address since Sunday’s mass protests showed many Israelis’ furious response to the discovery of six more dead hostages, Mr Netanyahu called the corridor vital to ensuring Hamas cannot rearm via tunnels.
“This is the oxygen of Hamas,” he said.
And he added: “No-one is more committed to freeing the hostages than me… No-one will preach to me on this issue.”
Israelis had poured into the streets late on Sunday in grief and anger in what appeared to be the largest protest since the start of the war.
The families and much of the public blamed Mr Netanyahu, saying the hostages could have been returned alive in a deal with Hamas.
A rare general strike was held across the country on Monday.
Late on Monday, several thousand demonstrators gathered outside Mr Netanyahu’s private home in central Jerusalem, chanting: “Deal, Now” and carrying coffins draped in the Israeli flag.
Scuffles broke out when police snatched away the coffins, and several protesters were arrested.
Thousands more marched outside Mr Netanyahu’s Likud party in Tel Aviv, according to Israeli media.
But others support Mr Netanyahu’s drive to continue the campaign in Gaza, which was triggered by Hamas’s October 7 attack into Israel and has caused massive death and destruction in the territory.
Mr Netanyahu says the assault will force militants to give in to Israeli demands, potentially facilitate rescue operations and ultimately annihilate the group.
Key ally the United States is showing impatience.
Mr Biden spoke to reporters as he arrived at the White House for a Situation Room meeting with the US mediation team in the negotiations.
Asked if Mr Netanyahu was doing enough, Mr Biden responded: “No.”
He insisted that negotiators remain “very close” to a deal, adding: “Hope springs eternal.”
Hamas has accused Israel of dragging out months of negotiations by issuing new demands, including for lasting Israeli control over the Philadelphi corridor and a second corridor running across Gaza.
Hamas has offered to release all hostages in return for an end to the war, the complete withdrawal of Israeli forces and the release of a large number of Palestinian prisoners, including high-profile militants – broadly the terms called for under an outline for a deal put forward by Mr Biden in July.
Mr Netanyahu has pledged “total victory” over Hamas and blames it for the failure of the negotiations.
On Monday, he said he is ready to carry out the first phase of the ceasefire – a plan that would include the release of some hostages, a partial pullout of Israeli troops and the release of some prisoners held by Israel.
But he rejected Hamas’s key demand of a full withdrawal from Gaza and said he does not see any other party beside Israel capable of securing Gaza’s borders and preventing arms smuggling.
Israeli media have reported deep differences between Mr Netanyahu and top security officials, including defence minister Yoav Gallant, who say the time is ripe for a ceasefire.
An official confirmed a shouting match between Mr Gallant and Mr Netanyahu at a security cabinet meeting on Thursday, where Mr Netanyahu held a vote in favour of maintaining control over the Philadelphi corridor.
Mr Gallant cast the lone vote against the proposal, saying Mr Netanyahu was favouring border arrangements over the lives of hostages.
The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the closed-door meeting.
Mr Gallant on Sunday called on the security cabinet to overturn the decision.
Khalil al-Hayya, the Hamas official leading the negotiations, told the Qatari network Al Jazeera late on Sunday that Mr Netanyahu had deemed keeping the Philadelphi corridor “more important” than winning the hostages’ release.
Al-Hayya also said Hamas had offered “great flexibility”, including reducing its demand for 500 Palestinian prisoners to be released in exchange for each captive Israeli soldier to 50, and from 250 Palestinian prisoners for each Israeli civilian hostage to 30.
He accused Israel of introducing new conditions, including increasing the number of prisoners who would be deported upon release and banning the release of elderly or ill prisoners serving life sentences.
Israel said the six hostages found dead in Gaza were killed by Hamas shortly before Israeli forces arrived in the tunnel where they were held.
Hamas’s armed wing, the al-Qassam Brigades, appeared to say in a statement on Monday that it now had a policy of killing any hostages that Israel tries to rescue.
It said that after Israeli troops rescued four hostages in a deadly raid in June, it issued new orders to its fighters guarding hostages on how to deal with them if Israeli troops approach.
It said that Mr Netanyahu’s insistence on using military pressure instead of reaching a deal “will mean they (hostages) will return to their families in coffins”.
Three of the killed hostages were reportedly among those who would have been released in the first phase of the ceasefire proposal outlined by Mr Biden in July.
Thousands attended the funeral on Monday for one of the six, Israeli-American Hersh Goldberg-Polin.
He was one of the best-known hostages, with his parents leading a high-profile campaign for the captives’ release, meeting with Mr Biden and Pope Francis and addressing the Democratic National Convention last month.
The general strike, called by Israel’s largest trade union, the Histadrut, ended early after a labour court accepted a petition from the government calling it politically motivated.
It was the first such strike since the start of the war, aiming to shut down or disrupt major sectors of the economy, including banking and healthcare.
Some flights at Israel’s main international airport, Ben-Gurion, either departed early or were slightly delayed.
“There’s no need to punish the whole state of Israel because of what is happening, overall, it is a victory for Hamas,” said one passenger, Amrani Yigal.
But in Jerusalem, resident Avi Lavi said that “I think this is fair, the time has come to stand and to wake up, to do everything for the hostages to come back alive”.
Municipalities in Israel’s populated central area, including Tel Aviv, participated.
Others, including Jerusalem, did not.
Some 250 hostages were taken on October 7.
More than 100 were freed during a ceasefire in November in exchange for the release of Palestinians imprisoned by Israel.
Eight have been rescued by Israeli forces.
Israeli troops mistakenly killed three Israelis who escaped captivity in December.
Roughly 100 hostages remain in Gaza, a third of whom are believed to be dead.
Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, when they stormed into southern Israel on October 7.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive in Gaza has killed more than 40,000 Palestinians, according to local health officials, who do not say how many were militants.
The war has displaced the vast majority of Gaza’s 2.3 million people, often multiple times, and plunged the besieged territory into a humanitarian catastrophe, including new fears of a polio outbreak.
Meanwhile, Israel continued its six-day raid on the Jenin refugee camp in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
Associated Press reporters saw bulldozers tearing up roads.
The Palestinian Red Crescent, whose paramedics are operating in Jenin, said Israeli forces were blocking their ambulances from reaching the wounded.
Palestinians in a town outside Jenin held a funeral for a 58-year-old man, Ayman Abed, who was arrested the day before and died in Israeli custody.
The Israeli military said he died from a “cardiac event”, but did not provide details.
Human rights groups have reported abuses of Palestinians detained by Israel, and the military has confirmed the deaths of at least 36 Palestinians in its detention centres since October.
Israel says it has killed 14 militants in Jenin, arrested 25 militants and dismantled explosives buried under roads.
Palestinian health officials say at least 29 people have been killed, including five children.
Mohannad Hajj Hussein, a Jenin resident, said electricity and water were cut off.
“We are ready to live by candlelight and we will feed our children from our bodies and teach them resistance and steadfastness in this land,” he said.
“We will rebuild what the occupation destroyed and we will not kneel.”