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Gaza-Israel conflict matter of time: Experts

The Israeli newspaper Haaretz said in an opinion article that the regional situation has not changed much a year after the war, as increasing anxiety is felt in the public against the background of the wave of attacks in recent months…. Reports Sanaa Kamal

 Despite the relative calm that has prevailed in the region for a year, another round of conflict between the military factions based in the Gaza Strip and Israel is “only a matter of time” given the current Palestinian-Israeli high tensions, Palestinian political experts said.

One year after the bruising 11-day war between Israel and Hamas, the ruling faction of Gaza, which killed more than 260 Palestinians and 14 Israelis, the besieged Palestinian enclave is still working hard on its economic recovery even as Israel has partially reopened the crossings to allow thousands of Palestinians to work inside it and the construction materials into Gaza for its rebuilding in the aftermath of the war.

In fact, the armed Palestinian factions and Israel have never reached any final political and economic solutions to real peace in the region, the experts told Xinhua in separate remarks.

“The factors that caused the last wave of conflict are still going on, whether in Gaza or in East Jerusalem and the West Bank,” said Mukhaimer Abu Saada, a Gaza-based political expert.

“The Israelis continue to storm Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, prevent worshippers from performing their religious rituals. Meanwhile, they launch raids and arrest Palestinians in the West Bank, and keep their siege on the Gaza Strip,” he explained.

Recently, some Israeli officials have openly threatened to assassinate Yahya Sinwar, Hamas’ leader in Gaza who, in a recent speech, called on young Palestinians inside Israel to continue their individual operations in retaliation for Israel’s practices at Al-Aqsa Mosque compound.

If Sinwar is “assassinated,” Hamas, which has understated the threat, will wage “a fierce war” against Israel, which may extend to other areas outside the Gaza Strip, Abu Saada warned.

Hussam al-Dajani, another Gaza-based political expert, agreed that “things may take a turn for the worst” if Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett “succumbs to the pressure of the extreme right-wing parties.”

Still, al-Dajani has reservations about a steep military escalation in the region despite the murky prospect of a final political solution between Palestinians and Israelis.

“There must be a strong determinant that imposes that approach, such as the assassination of one of Hamas’ leaders. However, Israel will think a lot before doing that,” he said, adding both Hamas and Israel “are not interested in a new war.”

The Israeli newspaper Haaretz said in an opinion article that the regional situation has not changed much a year after the war, as increasing anxiety is felt in the public against the background of the wave of attacks in recent months.

However, the Israeli coalition led by Bennett is now in its worst condition as the coalition is barely surviving, the opinion article read, noting a government “in a state of multiple crises will have difficulty managing a fight over a period of time.”

Hazem Qassem, a spokesman of Hamas, told Xinhua that Hamas and Israel have suspended all their talks, directly and indirectly, since they reached a cease-fire last year for the May conflict.

“We do not want another war, but if Israel forces us to do so, we will certainly be ready to defend our people and our land at all costs,” Qassem said, suggesting Arab and international mediators’ efforts might not bear any fruit.

Meanwhile, the Israeli Security Agency said it has arrested members of a Hamas group in East Jerusalem over terrorist schemes, including attempts to murder Israeli politicians in early April.

“The suspects planned, among other things, to shoot at Israeli targets and public figures, including lawmaker Itamar Ben-Gvir, manufacture IEDs (improvised explosive devices) and abduct soldiers,” the agency, or Shin Bet, said in a statement.

ALSO READ: Israel to reopen main crossing point with Gaza

The suspects were also accused of acquiring a drone in order to install explosives on it and use it to attack the Jerusalem light rail, according to the agency.

The Israeli State Attorney accused Rashid Rashak, a Hamas militant in East Jerusalem’s Old City, and Mansur Tzafadi, a Hamas militant from the neighborhood of Abu Tor, of leading the cell.

Shin Bet said Israeli security forces “will continue to take determined action in order to deal with those involved in terrorism, especially in Jerusalem, to the fullest extent of the law.”

Israel captured East Jerusalem and the rest of the West Bank in the 1967 Middle East war and annexed it shortly later, in a move not recognized by most of the international community. The Palestinians wish to build the capital of their state in East Jerusalem.

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The real story is not Abu Akleh’s murder

In a few weeks the uproar over Abu Akleh’s killing will die down. But the reality for the Palestinians will not change. Hundreds of Abu Aklehs will be killed and injured as has been the case for decades. And again the West will look the other way. Israel knows this and the sad fact of life is that Israel is right in believing so …. Writes Osama Al Sharif

Two weeks after the cold-blooded murder of veteran Palestinian journalist Shireen Abu Akleh in Jenin in the occupied West Bank her killers remain at large. Since her killing, which was caught on camera for the whole world to see, at least two Palestinian youths have been murdered by the Israeli occupation forces. In fact, in Jenin only 20 Palestinians have been killed by Israel since the beginning of 2022; 42 in the last two years.

 So far Israel has refused to launch an inquiry into Abu Akleh’s death, which the Palestinians and many eyewitnesses blame Israel for. The UN, the EU, the US and many international organizations like Human Rights Watch and Reporters without Borders have all called for an independent probe into the killing of the 51-year-old American citizen. Israel is coming under pressure to investigate the death and allow others to look into her murder. But the right-wing Israeli Prime Minister, Naftali Bennett, is unrelenting even as his shaky coalition is about to be voted out of power.

Tension between Israel and Palestine flare up

But despite the tragic death of Abu Akleh and the unprecedented global backlash, one cannot but underline the fact that, once more, the West is applying double standards when dealing with anything that has to do with Israel and its decades-long brutal occupation of Palestine.

Immediately following the gunning down of Abu Akleh, many mainstream western media obfuscated the facts by choosing neutral words when reporting the crime. The New York Times shamefully wrote: Abu Akleh “dies at the age of 51” while others ignored the fact that the only armed force in the area were Israeli soldiers. During her funeral, heavily armed Israeli police stormed the hospital where her coffin was about to be moved to the cemetery and attacked the pallbearers and mourners on live TV. The hesitant western media talked about “violence” and “clashes” erupting at the funeral. Again there was no pointing the finger at Israel and her brutal treatment of Palestinians under occupation.

But even then, and as politicians and international organisations condemned the killing and the attack on the mourners, few dared to speak about the larger picture; that in effect it is not the killing of Abu Akleh that was the issue but the vile Israeli occupation.

 Abu Akleh was not the first journalist to have been killed by Israeli occupation forces in the last two decades. According to independent figures more than 50 journalists, the majority Palestinians, have been gunned down by Israeli soldiers since 2000. And like Abu Akleh’s documented murder, there is plenty of evidence implicating Israel in almost all of these deliberate killings. In a handful of cases, Israel promised to carry out an investigation and in almost all, there was no culpability.

Abu Akleh was a high profile journalist; a household name for millions and an American citizen. Her murder had shocked the world and elicited an unexpected backlash. But the stark irony is that Abu Akleh had covered the occupied territories for almost 25 years and in the process reported on tens of extrajudicial killings by Israel of Palestinians; the majority of whom were unarmed civilians. Not once had the West moved to push for independent probes or to hold Israel responsible. The fact that the entire occupation of the West Bank is illegal under international law is notwithstanding.

Palestine urges UN to contain Israeli actions in East Jerusalem

Less than two weeks after Abu Akleh was killed, Israeli forces stormed the Jenin refugee camp for the umpteenth time. On 21 May and in a morning raid they killed 17-year-old Amajd Al-Fayyed, who was reportedly shot 12 times. No one in the West is going to condemn his murder or call for a probe. His wanton death was not going to be reported by the western mainstream media as well. He is just a statistic in a never ending register of Palestinian casualties who succumbed in “clashes”. No one in the western media is going to do a human interest story about who Amjad was, what he dreamt of, or how his bereaved mother and siblings feel. No one is going to ask why he was killed and if his killers are ever going to face justice.

The killing of Abu Akleh has embarrassed Israel, if only for a fleeting moment. If worse comes to worse and if the US puts pressure on Israel an internal probe may be conducted and the final reports will come up with flimsy excuses for her death. That will be that.

But the real story is not about Abu Akleh. She never thought that she would be the news. Her life was dedicated to covering the plight of her people. That remains the story—the only unfolding story.

In Israel itself voices were raised that the Jewish state had lost the battle for public opinion. Israel was being lambasted not in the mainstream media but on social media platforms. Millions, from all over the world, told the story as it really is; about a brutal occupation that has dehumanized the Palestinians in every way, both Muslims and Christians. The story was about Israel that is above the law, unaccountable for its breaches of international laws and conventions and one that continues to carry out its crimes with impunity.

In a few weeks the uproar over Abu Akleh’s killing will die down. But the reality for the Palestinians will not change. Hundreds of Abu Aklehs will be killed and injured as has been the case for decades. And again the West will look the other way. Israel knows this and the sad fact of life is that Israel is right in believing so.

(Osama Al Sharif is a journalist and political commentator based in Amman)   

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Arab News

Israel to reopen main crossing point with Gaza

Israel on Tuesday decided to reopen the Erez crossing point on the northern tip of the Gaza Strip after economic losses in the impoverished coastal enclave had piled up…reports Asian Lite News

“After an assessment of the security situation, it was decided to resume the entry of workers and merchants from Gaza into Israel through the Erez crossing as of Tuesday,” Major General Ghassan Alyan, coordinator of Government Activities in the Palestinian territories, said in a statement.

“The opening of the crossing to the movement of merchants and workers, and other civilian steps from the Gaza Strip into Israel is conditional on maintaining security and stability in the region.”

Israel closed the crossing point on Sunday after unknown militants fired several rockets from the Gaza Strip at southern Israel, reports Xinhua news agency.

The incident took place against the backdrop of growing tension in East Jerusalem and the Israeli arrest campaigns in the West Bank during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

ALSO READ:Israel warns possible cyberattacks in run-up to Quds Day

Gaza economists said that keeping the crossing open would have constituted a qualitative leap in breaking the current state of economic deterioration and stagnation that has continued for more than 15 years due to Israeli blockade.

They said that some 12,000 Palestinian workers and merchants cross from the Gaza Strip to Israel every day, bringing financial liquidity of 5 million Israeli Shekels ($1.52 million) to the coastal enclave.

These revenues, which were supposed to enter Gaza through the workers, would greatly alleviate the economic, social, and living crisis suffered by the enclave’s residents.

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Arab News World World News

Third rocket fired from Gaza to Israel in 24 hours

In a span of 24 hours, a third rocket from the Gaza Strip was fired into Israel on Saturday, following two from the Hamas-ruled enclave the previous night…reports Asian Lite News

The rocket landed in open territory, with no damage or injuries reported, according to the Israel Defense Forces.

In response to several rockets fired into Israel from Gaza in the past week after several months of calm, Israel announced the temporary closure of the sole pedestrian crossing from the enclave to the Jewish state, reports Xinhua news agency.

Thousands of Gazans cross into Israel on a daily basis to make a living.

ALSO READ: Israeli fighter jets bombarded military facility in Gaza

“The decision to reopen the crossing to workers and merchants will be studied in accordance with the evaluation of the situation,” Israel’s Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories said in a statement.

Israel has been imposing a strict blockade on the Gaza Strip since Hamas seized control of the territory in 2007.

The militant organisation, which does not recognise the state of Israel, has since launched thousands of rockets toward Israel to break the siege.

Tensions have run high between Israelis and Palestinians in recent weeks amid their repeated clashes in Jerusalem.

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Arab News World

Israeli fighter jets bombarded military facility in Gaza

Israeli fighter jets bombarded a military facility belonging to the Hamas in Gaza in response to a rocket from the besieged coatsal encalve into the Jewish state…reports Asian Lite News

Hamas security officials told Xinhua news agency on Thursday that the facility was severely damaged, but no injuries were reported.

It was the second Israeli airstrike on Hamas military facilities in Gaza in less than two days due to rocket attacks on Israel.

Witnesses said that several explosions were heard in central Gaza Strip after the military facility was attacked and that militants fired back at the attacking Israeli fighter jets.

An Israeli army spokesman said in a statement that the airstrike came in response to a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip into southern Israel.

ALSO READ:Rocket fired from Gaza at southern Israel: Israeli army

No one claimed responsibility for firing the rocket.

Since April 15, there have been violent clashes between Palestinian worshipers and Israeli police forces at Al-Aqsa Mosque compound.

Dozens of Israeli settlers entered the mosque’s compound to perform prayers on the Jewish Passover holiday.

During the clashes, more than 200 Palestinians were injured, and 300 were arrested, most of whom were later released.

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Arab News World

Rocket fired from Gaza at southern Israel: Israeli army

One rocket was fired from the Gaza Strip into Israeli territory on Wednesday night, a second time in one week, the Israeli army said in a statement…reports Asian Lite News

The rocket triggered sirens in the areas near the besieged Palestinian enclave, Xinhua news agency reported, citing the statement.

The rocket landed in the southern Israeli town of Sderot and was not intercepted by Israel’s aerial defense system, according to another statement from the Israeli police.

Local media said a house was damaged by the shrapnel of the rocket.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

ALSO READ: UAE summons Israeli, Swedish ambassadors

It was the second time a rocket was fired from Gaza into Israeli territory this week. A rocket was launched from the Gaza Strip into Israel on Monday night, which was the first time in the last four months. As a response, Israeli fighter jets bombarded military facilities in the southern Gaza Strip early Tuesday.

The rocket launch came amid clashes that broke out in Jerusalem between Arabs and Jews just hours after police stopped a flag march organized by Ultra-nationalist Israelis from reaching the Damascus Gate of Jerusalem’s Old City.

The tension between Israel and the Palestinians has flared up in the West Bank and East Jerusalem over the past three weeks as the Jewish festival of Passover overlap with the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

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Arab News World

Israel threatens to halt humanitarian aid to Gaza if rocket attacks continue

Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz threatened on Tuesday to halt the humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip if rocket attacks from the Palestinian enclave continue…reports Asian Lite News

He made the remarks after meeting a special Israeli commando unit in the occupied West Bank, a day after militants from Gaza fired a rocket towards southern Israel, Xinhua news agency reported.

“If Hamas leaders decide to undermine stability, the moves we have made to develop Gaza’s economy will be rolled back. We will not allow terrorists and provocateurs to harm the holy places,” Gantz said in a statement.

ALSO READ: Israel army intercepts rocket from Gaza amid tensions

The rocket fired on Monday night was intercepted by Israel’s anti-rocket Iron Dome system. Israel’s air force later launched airstrikes targeting a weapons manufacturing site belonging to Hamas, short for the Islamic Resistance Movement controlling the enclave.

The attack came amid recent tensions between Israel and the Palestinians in East Jerusalem, mainly around the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, where some 200 Palestinians have been injured in clashes with Israeli police since Friday.

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Arab News News

Israel army intercepts rocket from Gaza amid tensions

Israel’s aerial defense system intercepted a rocket launched from the Gaza Strip on Monday, amid simmering tensions between the Israelis and Palestinians, an Israeli military spokesperson said in a statement…reports Asian Lite News

“One rocket was fired from the Gaza Strip into Israeli territory, and it was intercepted by the Iron Dome Air Defense System,” the military spokesperson said.

The rocket triggered sirens in Israeli communities near the Gaza Strip. It was the first time a rocket was fired from Gaza in the last seven months, Xinhua news agency reported.

ALSO READ: Al Aqsa raid puts Israel in trouble

The rocket launch came amid the latest wave of violence over the past month that saw Israeli police raiding the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in East Jerusalem during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. At least 200 Palestinians were injured during Israelis’ raids.

Meanwhile, more than 10 Israelis were killed in a string of shooting, stabbing, and car-ramming attacks in the last few weeks, some of which were carried out by Arab citizens of Israel.

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Arab News News

Designs Bloom at Gaza

Fashion house helps unemployed Gazans to start their own businesses … reports Sanaa Kamal, Xinhua

Hussam Abu Kashif, a 20-year-old refugee from Jabalia Camp, is among dozens of unemployed Gazans who anticipated jump-starting their own careers in the fashion industry through a comprehensive training program.

“After weeks of intensive and continuous training, today I am able to design both menswear and women’s clothes … I find myself talented in drawing and fashion design,” Abu Kashif told Xinhua while sewing a jacket.

Five months ago, upon hearing that the Gaza-based “Aya and Khalil Fashion House” was opening the courses, he quickly enrolled.

“I have joined this course in order to find a job, especially since I was not able to get a job related to my university major,” said the novice designer, who was aspiring to open his business and support his family with an adequate income.

Apart from preparing some 70 attendees to compete with Arab and international designers, the courses were also set to promote locally produced collections instead of imports.

Designs Bloom at Gaza

Tahani al-Hour, another trainee from Khan Yunis city who has experience in clothing production, said she was happy with the chance to learn new skills.

“I learned here how to supervise the production, especially as I am exporting them to the Palestinian communities abroad,” the 40-year-old mother of six told Xinhua.

For many years before the imposition of the Israeli blockade on Gaza in 2007, thousands of highly skilled Gazans worked in the field of sewing for Israeli fashion companies with an end market in Europe.

But nowadays, local markets are crowded with imported clothes which are exorbitantly priced, whereas Gaza-produced items can rival at a more competitive price, said Khalil Khudair, the co-founder of the fashion house.

“Tailors usually rely on ready-made designs that they get whether from the Internet or Israeli companies. We lack professional and talented designers who are able to compete with,” Khudair said.

ALSO READ: Gaza Airport Turns Gallery

Khudair said the courses, which would take at least three months and a half to finish, “teach local people … from drawing models for dresses or formal outfits to sewing and final production of clothes to be ready for sale and use.”

Considering many of the applicators are financially strapped, the courses offer large discounts on tuition fees, so the students could be better positioned to launch their own business, according to the organizers.

A report issued by the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights in February found that 1.5 million Gazans live in poverty due to the Israeli blockade, with an over 50-percent unemployment rate by the end of 2021.

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Arab News News

Gaza Airport Turns Gallery

Palestinian artists express nostalgia about Gaza airport through art works  …. Writes Sanaa Kamal, Xinhua

Mohammed Qureiqa, a Gaza-based artist stood in front of the remains of the destroyed Gaza International Airport terminal in the southern Gaza Strip, overwhelmed with feelings of sadness and astonishment over the fate of this “dream place” for Gazans.

“I have heard a lot about the airport in Gaza, but I have not been here before,” the 23-year-old artist told Xinhua.

“I had imagined what would this place look like and in my imagination, there was an elderly woman waiting for her turn to board the plane.”

So far, the Gaza airport remains dysfunctional and it makes the young man outraged.

“It is not fair that Gazans are deprived of their legitimate right to have their own airport, which gives them freedom of travel,” he said.

Qureiqa translated his feelings towards the “destroyed airport” into paintings that describe the situation of the besieged Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

In one of his works, He painted three stacked suitcases surrounded by large slabs with thorns.

The construction of Gaza International Airport began at the end of January 1996 when the late President Yasser Arafat decided to lay the foundation stone for this national edifice, and it was opened in 1998.

The airport, sitting on an area of 2,350 dunums (235 hectares), is located in the Rafah Governorate in the southern Gaza Strip.

It was designed to receive large Boeing 747 aircraft, and includes a terminal with an area of four thousand square meters, accommodating more than 750,000 passengers per year with the possibility of expansion.

However, it stopped operating in 2001, after the Israeli army damaged it as a result of military tensions with the Palestinian factions. It was completely destroyed in 2006, following the capture of the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in 2005.

Qureiqa is not the only artist who expresses nostalgia about Gaza airport through paintings. Jihad Jarbou, also embodied her feelings by creating an iron sculpture of a tightly closed travel bag.

“For many years, when someone planned to travel, I heard my relatives saying that take me with you in the bag, to express the difficulty of traveling from Gaza,” Jarbou, 22, told Xinhua.

“I used to travel a lot, and when I landed at the airports in other countries, I was heartbroken because we were deprived of being in our own airport,” Jerboa added.

ALSO READ: Art in real-time and real space

“We (Gazans) suffer a lot in our trips, as we take many hours before we reach Egypt, which is our gateway to the outside world,” she said, expressing her hope that the Gaza airport will be built again in the near future.

Both Qureiqa and Jerboa were among the artists who participated in the exhibition “Gaza International Airport” organized by the Tamer Foundation for Community Education, which aims to document “the Gaza artists’ vision of the destroyed Gaza airport and their wishes to re-establish it,” said Bissan Nadim, the project coordinator at the foundation.

“It is very difficult to paint the airport by pure imagination, where is just rubble and columns. The airport is a civilian entity before it is political or military, as it gives us freedom of movement, which is included in all international laws,” she told Xinhua.