Israel will keep Gaza buffer zone, minister says, as ceasefire efforts stall

Israel will keep Gaza buffer zone, minister says, as ceasefire efforts stall
This handout picture released by the Israeli government press office (GPO) shows Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (C) during a visit to the northern Gaza Strip, on April 15, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 17 April 2025
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Israel will keep Gaza buffer zone, minister says, as ceasefire efforts stall

Israel will keep Gaza buffer zone, minister says, as ceasefire efforts stall
  • Since resuming their operation last month, Israeli forces have carved out a broad “security zone” extending deep into Gaza
  • Comments from Katz underscore how far away the two sides remain from any ceasefire agreement

JERUSALEM/CAIRO: Israeli troops will remain in the buffer zones they have created in Gaza even after any settlement to end the war, Defense Minister Israel Katz said on Wednesday, as efforts to revive a ceasefire agreement faltered.
Since resuming their operation last month, Israeli forces have carved out a broad “security zone” extending deep into Gaza and squeezing more than 2 million Palestinians into ever smaller areas in the south and along the coastline.
“Unlike in the past, the IDF is not evacuating areas that have been cleared and seized,” Katz said in a statement following a meeting with military commanders, adding that “tens of percent” of Gaza had been added to the zone.
“The IDF will remain in the security zones as a buffer between the enemy and the communities in any temporary or permanent situation in Gaza — as in Lebanon and Syria.”
In southern Gaza alone, Israeli forces have seized about 20 percent of the enclave’s territory, taking control of the border city of Rafah and pushing inland up to the so-called “Morag corridor” that runs from the eastern edge of Gaza to the Mediterranean Sea between Rafah and the city of Khan Younis.
It already held a wide corridor across the central Netzarim area and has extended a buffer zone all around the border hundreds of meters inland, including the Shejaia area just to the east of Gaza City in the north.
Israel says its forces have killed hundreds of Hamas fighters, including many senior commanders of the Palestinian militant group, but the operation has alarmed the United Nations and European countries.
More than 400,000 Palestinians have been displaced since hostilities resumed on March 18 after two months of relative calm, according to the UN humanitarian agency OCHA and Israeli air strikes and bombardments have killed at least 1,630 people.
Medical charity MSF said Gaza had become a “mass grave” with humanitarian groups struggling to provide aid. “We are witnessing in real time the destruction and forced displacement of the entire population in Gaza,” Amande Bazerolle, MSF’s emergency coordinator in Gaza said in a statement.
Katz said Israel, which has blocked the delivery of aid supplies into the territory, was creating infrastructure to allow distribution through civilian companies at a later date. But he said the blockade on aid would remain in place.
He said Israel would push forward with a plan to allow Gazans who wished to leave the enclave to do so, although it remains unclear which countries would be willing to accept large numbers of Palestinians.

Red lines
The comments from Katz, repeating Israel’s demand on Hamas to disarm, underscore how far away the two sides remain from any ceasefire agreement, despite efforts by Egyptian mediators to revive efforts to reach a deal.
Hamas has repeatedly described calls to disarm as a red line it will not cross and has said Israeli troops must withdraw from Gaza under any permanent ceasefire.
“Any truce lacking real guarantees for halting the war, achieving full withdrawal, lifting the blockade, and beginning reconstruction will be a political trap,” Hamas said in a statement on Wednesday.
Two Israeli officials said this week that there had been no progress in the talks despite media reports of a possible truce to allow the exchange of some of the 59 hostages still held in Gaza for Palestinian prisoners.
Israeli officials have said the increased military pressure will force Hamas to release the hostages but the government has faced large demonstrations by Israeli protesters demanding a deal to stop the fighting and get them back.
Israel launched its campaign in Gaza in response to the October 2023 attack by Hamas on southern Israel that killed 1,200 people and saw 251 taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies.
The offensive has killed at least 51,000 Palestinians, according to local health authorities, and devastated the coastal enclave, forcing most of the population to move multiple times and reducing broad areas to rubble.
On Wednesday, Palestinian medical authorities said an airstrike killed 10 people, including Fatema Hassouna, a well-known writer and photographer who had documented the war. A strike on another house further north killed three, they said.
The Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza said Israel’s suspension of the entry of fuel, medical, and food supplies since early March had begun to obstruct the work of the few remaining working hospitals, with medical supplies drying up.
“Hundreds of patients and wounded individuals are deprived of essential medications, and their suffering is worsening due to the closure of border crossings,” the ministry said.

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50 years on, Lebanon remains hostage to sectarian rivalries

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Israel expands military campaign in Gaza ahead of Netanyahu’s US visit

Israel expands military campaign in Gaza ahead of Netanyahu’s US visit
Updated 01 July 2025
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Israel expands military campaign in Gaza ahead of Netanyahu’s US visit

Israel expands military campaign in Gaza ahead of Netanyahu’s US visit
  • The intensified Israeli military operations came after days of mounting calls for a ceasefire
  • Gaza’s civil defense agency reported that Israeli forces killed at least 20 people on Tuesday

GAZA CITY: Israel’s military said Tuesday that it had expanded its operations in Gaza, where residents reported fierce gunfire and shelling days before a planned trip to Washington by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The intensified operations came after days of mounting calls for a ceasefire, with US President Donald Trump — whom Netanyahu is scheduled to meet next week — among those urging Israel to strike a new deal to halt the war and bring home the hostages still held in Gaza.
Gaza’s civil defense agency reported that Israeli forces killed at least 20 people on Tuesday. In response to reports of deadly strikes in the north and south of the territory, the Israeli army told AFP it was “operating to dismantle Hamas military capabilities.”

I believe that every time negotiations or a potential ceasefire are mentioned, the (Israeli) army escalates crimes and massacres on the ground

Raafat Halles, 39, Shujaiya district

Separately, it said Tuesday morning that in recent days it had “expanded its operations to additional areas within the Gaza Strip, eliminating dozens of terrorists and dismantling hundreds of terror infrastructure sites both above and below ground.”
Raafat Halles, 39, from the Shujaiya district of Gaza City, said “air strikes and shelling have intensified over the past week,” and tanks have been advancing.
“I believe that every time negotiations or a potential ceasefire are mentioned, the army escalates crimes and massacres on the ground,” he said. “I don’t know why.”
Amer Daloul, a 44-year-old resident of Gaza City, also reported fiercer clashes between Israeli forces and militants in recent days, telling AFP that he and his family were forced to flee the tent they were living in at dawn on Tuesday “due to heavy and random gunfire and shelling.”
AFP photographers saw Israeli tanks deploying at the Gaza border in southern Israel and children picking through the rubble of a destroyed home in Gaza City.
Others photographed Palestinians mourning over the bodies of relatives in the city’s Al-Shifa hospital and the Al-Aqsa hospital in Deir el-Balah, central Gaza.
Netanyahu announced he would visit Trump and senior US security officials next week, amid mounting pressure to end more than 20 months of devastating fighting in Gaza.
Trump vowed Tuesday to be “very firm” in his stance on ending the war when he meets the Israeli premier on July 7.
“But he (Netanyahu) wants it too.... He wants to end it too,” the US president added.
Hamas official Taher Al-Nunu told AFP the group is “ready to agree to any proposal if it will lead to an end to the war and a permanent ceasefire and a complete withdrawal of occupation forces.”
“So far, there has been no breakthrough.”


Syrian authorities capture high-ranking official who helped run notorious Saydnaya prison

Syrian authorities capture high-ranking official who helped run notorious Saydnaya prison
Updated 01 July 2025
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Syrian authorities capture high-ranking official who helped run notorious Saydnaya prison

Syrian authorities capture high-ranking official who helped run notorious Saydnaya prison
  • Thaer Hussein, a colonel said to be an assistant to the prison director, had been on the run since the collapse of President Bashar Assad’s regime in December
  • Rights groups described it as a “human slaughterhouse” after former inmates told of the torture and extrajudicial killings that took place within its walls

LONDON: Syrian authorities on Tuesday arrested a former high-ranking official who helped run the notorious Saydnaya Prison.

Thaer Hussein, described as an assistant to the director of the prison, had been on the run since the collapse of President Bashar Assad’s regime in December.

Syria’s Internal Security Command in Tartus said Hussein, who held the rank of colonel within the former regime, was captured while hiding in a remote part of the coastal town. He has been referred to judicial authorities, the Syrian Arab News Agency reported.

Several officials who held senior positions at Saydnaya have been arrested since December. The military prison, located north of Damascus, was operated by the Ministry of Defense. After the fall of the Assad regime, rebel forces and local residents freed at least 2,000 prisoners held there.

Rights groups described it as a “human slaughterhouse” after former inmates told of the torture and extrajudicial killings that took place within its walls.


Lebanon drafts reply to US demand for Hezbollah to disarm, sources say

Lebanon drafts reply to US demand for Hezbollah to disarm, sources say
Updated 01 July 2025
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Lebanon drafts reply to US demand for Hezbollah to disarm, sources say

Lebanon drafts reply to US demand for Hezbollah to disarm, sources say
  • Barrack said full disarmament should be completed by November or by the end of the year at the latest
  • The proposal also refers to establishing a mechanism overseen by the United Nations to secure the release of Hezbollah-linked prisoners by Israel

BEIRUT: Lebanese officials were drafting a response on Tuesday to US demands for armed group Hezbollah to relinquish its weapons across the country by November in exchange for a halt to Israeli military operations, two sources briefed on the matter said.

The deadline has turned up the heat on Iran-backed Hezbollah, which was struck hard by Israel during last year’s war, is suffering a financial crunch and faces pressure in Lebanon to disarm.

Washington’s demands were conveyed by Thomas Barrack, US special envoy to Syria and ambassador to Turkiye, during a trip to Beirut on June 19.

The sources, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter, told Reuters Barrack had shared a written roadmap with Lebanese officials and told them he expected to hear back by July 1 on any proposed amendments.

The six-page document centers on the disarmament of Hezbollah and other militant groups, and urges Lebanon to improve ties with neighboring Syria and implement financial reforms, they said.

It proposes a phased approach to disarmament, in which Hezbollah would hand in its arms throughout Lebanon in exchange for the withdrawal of Israeli troops occupying areas in south Lebanon, the sources said.

Barrack said full disarmament should be completed by November or by the end of the year at the latest, they said.

Disarmament would end Israeli strikes targeting Hezbollah members and unlock funds to rebuild parts of Lebanon destroyed by Israeli forces last year, they said.

The US has said Washington will not support reconstruction in Lebanon without Hezbollah laying down arms.

The proposal also refers to establishing a mechanism overseen by the United Nations to secure the release of Hezbollah-linked prisoners by Israel, the sources said.

They said Barrack had urged Lebanese officials to seize the opportunity laid out in the roadmap as it “may not come up again.” He is set to return to Lebanon next week.

Barrack had not yet gotten Israeli approval for the roadmap, the sources said. There was no immediate response from the US state department, Israel’s prime minister’s office or Israel’s foreign ministry to Reuters requests for comment.

’THE RIGHT TO SAY NO’
Lebanon has appointed a committee to formulate a preliminary response, comprised of delegates from the offices of Prime Minister Nawaf Salam, President Joseph Aoun and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, a Hezbollah ally, the sources said.

It was not clear whether the initial reply would be ready by Tuesday. The US proposal includes a condition that the final deal be sealed with a unanimous decision by Lebanon’s government, the sources said.

The second source, and a third source briefed on the matter, said Berri was in close communication with Hezbollah to secure the group’s input.

“Hezbollah has not refused to cooperate with the committee and in fact began sending signals of cooperation — but has not committed to disarming,” the third source said.

The prospect of securing Hezbollah’s disarmament — unimaginable two years ago — underlines the big shifts in the Middle East power balance to the detriment of Iran’s allies across the region since the start of the war between Israel and Hezbollah ally Hamas in October 2023.

Some of Hezbollah’s arsenal was destroyed by Israeli airstrikes, and other depots in southern Lebanon were handed over to Lebanon’s army in accordance with the US-brokered ceasefire that ended that round of conflict.

That deal called for the disarmament of armed groups across Lebanon. Hezbollah has said it applies only to the group in Lebanon’s southernmost districts.

Hezbollah has not commented publicly on Barrack’s proposal. But in a televised address on Monday, its secretary general, Naim Qassem, reiterated Hezbollah’s resistance to US and Israeli pressure and urged other Lebanese to do the same.

“We have the right to say ‘no’ to them, ‘no’ to America, ‘no’ to Israel,” Qassem said. “We call on you in Lebanon: do not help Israel and America with their plans.”

Qassem said the US and Israel “want to exploit the moment to turn the equation in the entire region in their image.”


Erdogan condemns blasphemous cartoon

Erdogan condemns blasphemous cartoon
Updated 01 July 2025
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Erdogan condemns blasphemous cartoon

Erdogan condemns blasphemous cartoon
  • ‘We will not allow anyone to speak against our sacred values,’ says Turkiye’s president
  • Cartoonists arrested amid angry protest, Erdogan’s condemnation

ANKARA, ISTANBUL: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday condemned as a “vile provocation” a blasphemous cartoon in a satirical magazine.

The cartoon was criticized by religious conservatives and Erdogan’s ruling party, which called it an “Islamophobic hate crime,” even as the magazine Leman apologized to readers who felt offended and said it had been misunderstood.
“We will not allow anyone to speak against our sacred values,” Erdogan said in televised remarks, adding that authorities would closely follow the legal process.
“Those who show disrespect to our Prophet and other prophets will be held accountable before the law,” he said.
Four Leman cartoonists were detained late on Monday over the drawing.

FASTFACT

The government said an inquiry was launched under a penal code article that criminalizes incitement to hatred and enmity.

Crowds rallied against Leman in central Istanbul on Tuesday, despite a ban on gatherings and a heavy police presence.
Late on Monday, Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya shared a video on X showing police officers detaining Pehlevan, the cartoonist, with his hands cuffed behind his back as he was dragged up a stairwell.
He also shared videos of three other men being removed from their homes and dragged into vans, one of them barefoot.
“The individual who drew this vile image, D.P., has been apprehended and taken into custody. These shameless people will be held accountable before the law,” Yerlikaya wrote.
The government said an inquiry was launched under a penal code article that criminalizes incitement to hatred and enmity.
A group called Islamic Solidarity Platform called a protest on Tuesday, prompting police to shut Taksim Square and Istiklal, the city’s busy shopping thoroughfare.
The group of around 300 protesters shouted slogans at the magazine. According to a correspondent, the protesters were far less aggressive than those who rallied on Monday night, when around 400 people tried to storm a bar frequented by the
magazine staff.

 


Red Cross ‘deeply alarmed’ by intensifying hostilities in Gaza

Red Cross ‘deeply alarmed’ by intensifying hostilities in Gaza
Updated 01 July 2025
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Red Cross ‘deeply alarmed’ by intensifying hostilities in Gaza

Red Cross ‘deeply alarmed’ by intensifying hostilities in Gaza
  • ICRC: ‘The intensification of hostilities comes as Gaza’s already-decimated health care system struggles to absorb a relentless surge in critical cases’
  • ICRC: ‘Nearly all public hospitals in Gaza are shut down or gutted by months of hostilities and restrictions on the entry of critical medicine’

GENEVA: The Red Cross said it was deeply worried Tuesday as Israel’s military expanded its operations in Gaza, warning that the Palestinian territory’s few remaining functional medical facilities were already overwhelmed.

“The International Committee of the Red Cross is deeply alarmed by the intensifying hostilities in Gaza City and Jabaliya, which have reportedly caused dozens of deaths and injuries among civilians over the past 36 hours,” the ICRC said in a statement.

The increased operations came after days of mounting calls for a ceasefire, with US President Donald Trump among those urging Israel to strike a new deal to halt the war and bring home the hostages still held in Gaza.

Israel’s campaign to destroy the Palestinian militant group Hamas has raged on unabated, however, with Gaza’s civil defense agency reporting Israeli forces killed at least 20 people on Tuesday.

“The intensification of hostilities comes as Gaza’s already-decimated health care system struggles to absorb a relentless surge in critical cases,” the ICRC said.

“Nearly all public hospitals in Gaza are shut down or gutted by months of hostilities and restrictions on the entry of critical medicine, supplies and equipment.”

It said the medical facilities that continue to function — including the Red Cross Field Hospital — were overwhelmed and running “dangerously low” on essential supplies, including fuel, and even body bags.

“This severely compromises their ability to treat the wounded or ensure dignified management of the dead,” the Geneva-based ICRC said.
Furthermore, it said widespread evacuation orders were pushing Gazans into an ever-shrinking space and create panic among civilians, and hamper the ability of first responders to reach those in need.

“The ICRC urgently reiterates its call for the protection of medical personnel and medical facilities in Gaza,” the organization said, adding that they should not be deprived of resources.

And it insisted that evacuated civilians should have satisfactory conditions of shelter, hygiene, health, safety and food.

“Many people in Gaza right now are injured, sick, or have disabilities. They are often unable to comply with evacuation orders. Constant care must be taken to spare them,” the ICRC said.