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Hamas threatens: If Rafah is attacked, no more hostages will be released - Israel is attacking targets in Lebanon

2024-02-11T18:25:46.622Z

Highlights: Hamas threatens: If Rafah is attacked, no more hostages will be released - Israel is attacking targets in Lebanon. Large quantities of weapons and explosives have also been abandoned in the UN Palestinian Relief Agency headquarters in Gaza. In total, 28,176 Palestinians have died and 67,784 have been injured since the beginning of the war. The information processed here about the war in Israel and the fight against Hamas in the Gaza Strip comes from local and international media as well as news agencies. Much of the information cannot be independently verified.



As of: February 11, 2024, 7:11 p.m

By: Jens Kiffmeier, Felix Busjaeger, Tadhg Nagel, Felix Durach, Nail Akkoyun

Comments

Press

Split

A tunnel was found under the UNRWA headquarters.

Hamas does not want to release any more hostages if Israel attacks Rafah.

News ticker about the war in Israel.

  • UN relief agency pilloried

    : Hamas hid a tunnel under its headquarters

  • Israel

    prepares

    offensive

    on

    Rafah

    : Netanyahu calls for plan to evacuate civilians

  • Hezbollah

    attacks

    : Terrorist militia announces further attacks on Israel

  • The information processed here about the war in Israel and the fight against Hamas in the Gaza Strip

    comes from local and international media as well as news agencies.

    Much of the information cannot be independently verified.

Update from February 11th, 7:02 p.m.:

Saudi Arabia says it has made an aid payment of $250 million (around 231.8 million euros) to the internationally recognized government in Yemen.

This is reported by the AFP news agency.

The transfer to the Yemeni Central Bank was intended to support the payment of state salaries and other expenses, said the Saudi ambassador to Yemen, Mohammed al-Jaber, on Sunday in online networks.

Attack on Hezbollah in Lebanon: At least two fighters killed

Update from February 11th, 5:37 p.m.:

As the German Press Agency reports, Israeli warplanes again attacked targets of the Shiite militia Hezbollah in southern Lebanon on Sunday.

Among other things, a rocket site in Marwahin and military installations near the towns of Ramieh and Jarun were hit, the Israeli military said.

Two Hezbollah fighters are said to have been killed in the attack.

Since the beginning of the Gaza war after the Hamas massacre in Israel on October 7th, there have been repeated confrontations between Israel's army and militant groups such as Hezbollah in the Israeli-Lebanese border region.

Relations with the USA shaken because of the Israel war: Netanyahu considers comments “exaggerated”

Update from February 11th, 4:18 p.m.:

Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock will probably travel to the Middle East next week.

A spokesman for the German Foreign Ministry confirmed the trip to Israel, but did not provide any further details.

Meanwhile, relations between Israel and the US appear to be further hardening.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told

Fox News

that he has not spoken to Joe Biden since the US president made comments that Israel's war in Gaza was "exaggerated."

“As you know, I believe the response in Gaza was overblown,” Biden told reporters at the White House on Thursday.

Possible offensive in Rafah: Hamas threatens to break off hostage negotiations

Update from February 11, 12:28 p.m.:

According to Hamas, a possible Israeli ground offensive in Rafah would destroy any negotiations regarding the release of hostages who are still being held in the Gaza Strip.

Hamas broadcast this statement on the

Aksa

TV station it operates .

A high-ranking representative of the terrorist organization is quoted.

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Smoke rises after an Israeli bombardment in the southern Gaza Strip on February 11, 2024.

© Said Khatib/AFP

Update from February 11th, 12:15 p.m.:

According to Palestinian information, 112 Palestinians have been killed in the Gaza Strip in the last 24 hours.

The local health authority said 173 people were injured.

In total, 28,176 Palestinians have died and 67,784 have been injured since the beginning of the war. 

Hamas tunnel under UN headquarters: Israel calls for UNRWA chief to resign

Update from February 11, 8:05 a.m.:

There were apparently several servers in the Hamas tunnel that was found under the UNRWA headquarters in Gaza.

The Israeli military therefore assumes that Hamas' secret service operated a data center in the tunnel, the army said on Saturday.

Large quantities of weapons and explosives have also been found in the abandoned headquarters of the UN Palestinian Relief Agency in the past two weeks. 

UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini defended himself in the face of the find: the building had already been evacuated in the early stages of the war and there was no knowledge of a tunnel underneath.

Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz rejected this as “absurd” and called for the UNRWA chief to be replaced.

“His immediate resignation is essential,” Katz wrote on the platform X (formerly Twitter). 

War in Israel: Netanyahu promises civilians in Rafah “safe corridor”

Update from February 11th, 6:30 a.m.:

Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu has assured that the Israeli army will set up a safe corridor for the civilians waiting in the city of Rafah before an attack.

“We will (...) give the civilian population a safe way out of the city,” Netanyahu said in an interview broadcast on US broadcaster

ABC News

.

“We are working out a detailed plan for this.

“We are not taking this matter lightly,” Netanyahu stressed.

Areas north of Rafah have already been cleared and can be used as safe zones for the civilian population, Netanyahu said.

At the same time, he emphasized that victory was “within reach”: “We will do it.

We will take the remaining Hamas terror battalions and the last bastion of Rafah.”

An Israeli lieutenant colonel walks through a tunnel under the headquarters of the UN Palestinian relief agency UNRWA.

© Ariel Schalit/AP/dpa

Israel reports discovery of Hamas tunnel under UNRWA headquarters

Update from February 10th, 9:29 p.m.:

That's it again

UN Palestinian Relief Agency UNRWA in the pillory: The Israeli military has apparently discovered a Hamas militia tunnel that is said to run under the international organization's headquarters in the city of Gaza.

The underground passage was 700 meters long, 18 meters deep and served as an important facility for Hamas's military intelligence service, the military said on Saturday evening.

In the past two weeks, the military also claims to have found large quantities of weapons and explosives in the headquarters, which was abandoned by UNRWA in the early stages of the war.

UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini said he had no knowledge of this.

The aid organization has recently come under heavy criticism.

There have been repeated accusations from Israel that it is working with Hamas.

Specifically, some employees were accused of being involved in the terrorist acts carried out by the Islamist Hamas on October 7th in Israel.

Several Western countries temporarily suspended payments to UNRWA because of the allegations, including the two largest donors, the United States and Germany.

UN Secretary General António Guterres promised comprehensive information.

The collaboration with several employees has been terminated.

Air strikes on Rafah: Israel's military kills two Hamas officials

Update from February 10, 7:01 p.m.:

Hamas officials are believed to have been killed in the air strikes on Rafah.

As the

Tagesschau

reports, one of those killed was responsible for the security of the Hamas leaders, the other worked as a senior investigator for the militant Islamist group.

This emerges from information from the Israeli military.

A Rafah-based investigator was also killed in the attacks on the city in the Gaza Strip.

Medical sources said more than 20 people were killed in aerial attacks on two houses in Rafah on Saturday.

The mayor of the city in the south of the coastal area, Ahmed al-Sufi, also confirmed the number of victims to the German Press Agency.

In addition, Israeli soldiers are said to have bombed a Hamas vehicle.

Three people, including the head of the Islamist organization's police intelligence service and his deputy, were killed.

According to Israel, the army adheres to international law in its operations and takes precautions to minimize damage to the civilian population.

Medic found dead in Gaza Strip – offensive in Rafah is looming

Update from February 10th, 5:58 p.m.:

Two paramedics from the Palestinian Red Crescent were found dead in the city of Gaza.

Both were reported missing twelve days ago.

This is reported by

ZDF

.

It is said that the paramedics were on their way to rescue a six-year-old girl.

Update from February 10, 5:30 p.m.:

Faced with a possible offensive on Rafah in the Gaza Strip, Hamas warned on Saturday that there could be “tens of thousands” of dead and injured if Israel's military continued the attack.

In a statement, Hamas said any military action would have catastrophic consequences.

AFP said witnesses reported new attacks on Rafah early Saturday, raising fears among Palestinians of an impending ground invasion.

US attacks Houthi targets over attacks in Israel war

Update from February 10th, 4:55 p.m.:

The US military has again attacked targets of the militant Islamist Houthis in Yemen in order to prevent new attacks on ships in the Red Sea.

This is reported by the German Press Agency.

The target of Friday's attacks were two unmanned watercraft and five militia cruise missiles, the responsible US regional command Centcom announced on Saturday on the X platform, formerly Twitter.

The ships and missiles were discovered in Houthi-controlled areas in Yemen and were assessed as a direct threat to US Navy ships and merchant vessels in the region.

Since the beginning of the war in Israel and the fighting in the Gaza Strip, the Houthis have repeatedly attacked merchant ships on the Red Sea.

According to its own statements, the militia acts in solidarity with the Islamist Hamas.

It directs its attacks off the Yemeni coast on freighters with alleged ties to Israel.  

Iran comments on the war in Israel: “We have never tried to expand it”

Update from February 10, 4:45 p.m.:

Iran's foreign minister said, according to the

Guardian,

that neither Iran nor Lebanon sought to expand hostilities in the region following Hamas' attack on Israel.

“Iran and Lebanon believe that war is not the solution and that we have absolutely never tried to expand it,” Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said at a news conference alongside his Lebanese counterpart in Beirut.

AI in the Israel War: Military should use new technology in the Gaza Strip

Update from February 10, 3:30 p.m.:

As AFP reports, Israel's army has used military technology with artificial intelligence in the fight against Hamas in the Gaza Strip for the first time.

According to the British Guardian, this is fueling fears about the use of autonomous weapons in modern warfare.

In detail, the Israeli army's technology will be used to locate enemy drones.

In addition, Hamas' tunnel network in Gaza is to be mapped.

After several weeks, the conflict in the Middle East has intensified further.

Israel's army has attacked targets in the city of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip despite international warnings, according to eyewitnesses.

Medical sources said more than 20 people were killed in aerial attacks on two houses on Saturday. 

Criticism of the offensive in Rafah: Israel is expanding fighting in the Gaza Strip

Update from February 10th, 2 p.m.:

International criticism of the Israeli offensive in the south of the Gaza Strip continues.

Saudi Arabia has also now expressed criticism about the attacks on the city of Rafah.

The kingdom noted the serious consequences of military action in Rafah and stressed its categorical rejection of the forced relocation of hundreds of thousands of civilians, according to a Foreign Ministry statement on Saturday.

Riyadh called for an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council to “prevent Israel from causing an impending humanitarian catastrophe.”

Israel launches attacks on Rafah – Baerbock warns of “humanitarian catastrophe with announcement”

Update from February 10th, 12:55 p.m.:

Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock has warned Israel's government against a military offensive in the south of the Gaza Strip.

“An offensive by the Israeli army on Rafah would be a humanitarian catastrophe,” the Green politician wrote on X (formerly Twitter) on Saturday.

“The people in Gaza cannot disappear into thin air.” Baerbock pointed out that the need in Rafah was already unbelievable and that 1.3 million people there were seeking protection from the fighting in the Gaza Strip in a very small space. 

Baerbock emphasized on X that Israel must defend itself against Hamas terror, but alleviate the suffering of the civilian population as much as possible.

That's why another ceasefire is needed so that more hostages can be released.

“I will discuss how to get there again next week in Israel,” she announced.

War against Hamas: Israel launches attacks on Rafah

Update from February 10th, 12:14 p.m.:

Despite concerns and warnings expressed internationally, the Israeli military has launched attacks on the city of Rafah.

Medical sources said more than 20 people were killed in aerial attacks on two houses on Saturday.

The mayor of the city in the south of the coastal area, Mohammed al-Sufi, also confirmed the number of victims to the dpa.

Israeli soldiers also bombed a Hamas vehicle, killing three people, including the Islamist organization's head of police intelligence and his deputy, according to police sources and eyewitnesses on Saturday.

None of the information could initially be independently verified.

Israel's military initially did not comment when asked.

There are currently no Israeli ground troops deployed in the city.

Rafah's mayor Al-Sufi warned of an army advance into the town.

“Any military action in the city, home to more than 1.4 million Palestinians, will result in a massacre and a bloodbath.”

Israel war: IDF reports fighting against Hamas fighters in Khan Younis

Update from February 10, 10:14 a.m.:

The Israeli military leadership reports intense fighting between the Israeli army and Hamas fighters in the region around the city of Khan Younis.

The army's goals are “eliminating terrorists, detecting weapons and attacking terrorist infrastructure,” the military leadership said in a post on X.

Meanwhile, the Hamas-controlled Ministry of Health in the Gaza Strip reported on Saturday morning that 110 people were killed by Israeli airstrikes overnight.

The air strikes were primarily aimed at the southern city of Rafah.

The information cannot be independently verified.

Violent explosions near Damascus – Israel is probably carrying out drone attacks in Syria

Update from February 10, 8:16 a.m.:

According to media reports, the Israeli armed forces have attacked targets near the Syrian capital Damascus.

The Israeli military fired on the Damascus area from the Golan Heights, the Syrian state news agency (Sana) reported on Saturday, citing a military source.

Violent explosions were heard west of the Syrian capital.

The Syrian air defense shot down some of the rockets.

Sana further reported that there was only material damage.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said a residential building west of the Syrian capital was hit.

Three people were killed.

On Friday evening, the Shiite Hezbollah militia claimed responsibility for a rocket attack on an Israeli barracks in the Golan Heights. 

“Catastrophic consequences” threaten – Israel targets Rafah

Update from February 10, 7:00 a.m.:

The Israeli army continued to bomb targets in the region of the city in the south of the Gaza Strip following Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's order to develop a plan to evacuate the civilian population from Rafah.

Eyewitnesses reported attacks on Saturday morning in the area around the city, which is now home to around 1.3 million Palestinians.

More than a million Palestinian internally displaced people have sought refuge from the fighting in the city on the border with Egypt since the start of the war.

The human rights organization Human Rights Watch (HRW) sharply criticized Netanyahu's announcement.

“Forcing the more than one million Palestinian refugees in Rafah to undergo a new evacuation without there being a safe place for them to go would be illegal and would have catastrophic consequences,” said HRW representative Nadia Hardman on the night Saturday.

There are no safe places left in the Gaza Strip.

“The international community should act to prevent further atrocities,” Hardman said.

War crimes in the West Bank?

UN allegations against Israel

Update from February 9, 7:57 p.m.:

The killing of three Palestinian men in a West Bank hospital in January by Israeli commandos disguised as medical staff and Muslim women could constitute war crimes, a group of UN experts said on Friday.

The three militants were killed in a joint covert operation by the army, Shin Bet security service and border police at Ibn Sina Hospital in Jenin on January 29, the Israeli military said.

“Under international humanitarian law, the killing of a defenseless, injured patient being treated in a hospital constitutes a war crime,” the U.N. experts said in a statement, referring to Basel Al-Ghazzawi, who was being treated for injuries alleged to have been caused by an Israeli airstrike.

Soldiers “disguised as seemingly harmless, protected medical personnel and civilians.”

“By masquerading as seemingly harmless, protected medical personnel and civilians, the Israel Defense Forces also prima facie committed the war crime of perfidy, which is prohibited under all circumstances,” they added, calling on Israel to investigate.

According to the Israeli military, one of the men killed in the hospital was a member of the Palestinian militant group Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip, while the others worked for the Jenin Brigade and the armed wing of Islamic Jihad.

 The Ibn Sina Hospital in the West Bank.

© IMAGO/Nasser Ishtayeh

Update from February 9th, 7:55 p.m.:

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has strongly condemned Israel's plans for a military offensive in the city of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip.

Abbas said on Friday evening at his official residence in Ramallah in the West Bank that these would represent a "dangerous prelude" to a policy of displacement that Palestinians fear.

Abbas accused Israel and its ally USA of “destructive policies”.

He called on the UN Security Council to take action.

“These steps [considered by Israel] endanger security and peace in the region, they cross all red lines,” he added.

Israel prepares offensive on Rafah

Update from February 9th, 7 p.m.:

 Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has ordered the country's army to prepare an offensive on the southern city of Rafah in the Gaza Strip.

"It is impossible to achieve the war goal of eliminating Hamas if four Hamas battalions remain in Rafah," he said through the prime minister's office on Friday.

The plans that the military leadership should present to the government must also include the evacuation of civilians in Rafah, the statement said. 

A military offensive in Rafah, which lies in the very south of the Gaza Strip and borders Egypt, is considered highly problematic.

The town, which had around 300,000 inhabitants before the war, is now said to be home to 1.3 million people.

Most of them fled there from other parts of the Gaza Strip before the war, partly on orders from the Israeli military. 

“Combined Plan” for Evacuation and Destruction - Warnings of Humanitarian Disaster

“It is clear that intense (military) activity in Rafah requires civilians to clear the combat zone,” Netanyahu said on Friday.

He therefore instructed the military leadership to present the government with a “combined plan” for the evacuation of the population and the destruction of the Hamas battalions. 

UN Secretary-General António Guterres had previously warned of a humanitarian catastrophe and consequences for the entire region.

Half of the Gaza Strip's population is crammed into Rafah and has nowhere else to go, he wrote on the news platform X, formerly Twitter.

The US government and German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock have also spoken out clearly against military action in Rafah in recent days. 

A camp of refugee Palestinians in Rafah.

© IMAGO/Bashar Taleb\apaimages

Israeli soldiers storm hospital in Khan Yunis

Update from February 9th, 5:45 p.m.:

According to the Palestinian Red Crescent, Israeli soldiers stormed a hospital in the city of Khan Yunis in the south of the Gaza Strip.

This is reported by the

AFP news agency.

The Israeli armed forces stormed the Al-Amal hospital and began a search, the organization said on Friday.

The Israeli military did not initially respond to a request from the news agency.

At the beginning of the week, the Red Crescent announced that around 8,000 people who had sought protection in the hospital had been evacuated.

Around 40 displaced people, 80 patients and 100 employees remained in the hospital after the evacuation.

Israel has recently focused its military action on Khan Yunis in the south of the Gaza Strip.

The army suspects that high-ranking officials of the Islamist Palestinian organization Hamas are hiding in the city, as well as hostages kidnapped by them.

Netanyahu has Rafah evacuated

Update from February 9th, 4:32 p.m.:

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has ordered his armed forces to draw up plans for the evacuation of the civilian population in the city of Rafah.

The military should present the government with a “combined plan to evacuate the population and destroy the battalions” of the radical Islamic group Hamas in Rafah, the prime minister's office said on Friday.

Rafah is located in the south of the Gaza Strip near the border with Egypt.

Since the war between Israel and Hamas began, more than a million Palestinian internally displaced people have sought refuge in the city.

Smoke rises over the town of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip.

© Ismael Mohamad/imago-images

Update from February 9th, 3:40 p.m.:

The Syrian state news agency SANA has reported the shooting down of two Israeli drones near the capital Damascus.

The drones entered Syrian airspace from the Golan Heights.

The report cannot currently be independently verified.

Israel's armed forces have not yet commented on the allegations.

War in Israel: Humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip – one in ten children is malnourished

Update vom 9. Februar, 15.22 Uhr: Die humanitäre Lage im Gazastreifen ist weiterhin katastrophal. Angaben der Vereinten Nationen zufolge ist fast jedes zehnte Kind unter fünf Jahren im Gazastreifen unterernährt. Dies hätten Messungen des Armumfangs von Tausenden von Kleinkindern und Säuglingen ergeben, wie es in einer am Freitag verbreiteten Mitteilung des Büros der Vereinten Nationen für die Koordinierung humanitärer Angelegenheiten (OCHA) hieß. Insgesamt seien 9,6 Prozent unterernährt, im nördlichen Gazastreifen allein sogar 16,2 Prozent.

Der Wohltätigkeitsorganisation ActionAid zufolge würden einige Bewohner des Gazastreifens Gras essen. „Jeder Einzelne in Gaza ist jetzt hungrig“, hieß es. Auch die Versorgung mit sauberem Trinkwasser sei ein Problem. Die Hilfsorganisation Islamic Relief zitierte einen ihrer Mitarbeiter in Gaza mit den Worten: „Meine Kinder und ich haben seit Monaten kein Obst oder Gemüse mehr gegessen. Menschen werden getötet, wenn sie versuchen, zu den Wagen der Vereinten Nationen mit Hilfslieferungen zu gelangen.“

Hamas fordert 1000 Lastwagen humanitäre Hilfe pro Tag für den Gazastreifen

Update vom 9. Februar, 13.23 Uhr: Die Hamas fordert offenbar, dass täglich 1000 Lastwagen mit humanitärer Hilfe in den nördlichen Gazastreifen gefahren werden, um die Auswirkungen des Kriegs zu mildern. Das berichtet mehrere arabische Medien. Auch die Times of Israel berichtet unter Berufung auf das von der Hamas geleitete Medienbüro in Gaza von der Forderung.

Die Hungersnot im Gazastreifen habe sich „infolge der amerikanischen und israelischen Aktionen verschlimmert“, wird ein Hamas-Sprecher zitiert. „Wir fordern die sofortige Einfahrt von 1000 Lastwagen täglich in den nördlichen Gazastreifen, bis er sich von der Hungersnot und ihren Auswirkungen erholt hat“, hieß es weiter. Schätzungsweise leben aktuell noch 300.000 bis 400.000 palästinensische Menschen im nördlichen Gazastreifen, den Israels Armee zu Beginn des Krieges evakuieren ließ.

Sorge in Israel: Erkennen die USA schon bald einen palästinensischen Staat an?

Update vom 9. Februar, 10.30 Uhr: Israel hat laut einem Zeitungsbericht die Sorge, die USA könnten im Rahmen der Bemühungen um eine Zweistaatenlösung einen palästinensischen Staat auch ohne Zustimmung Israels anerkennen. Die israelische Zeitung Maariv schrieb am Freitag, Israel sehe „intensive Aktivitäten“ der US-Regierung mit dem Ziel einer Einigung des Westjordanlands und des Gazastreifens unter einer palästinensischen Regierung. 

Der israelische Ministerpräsident Benjamin Netanjahu lehnt eine Zweistaatenlösung ab. Damit ist ein unabhängiger palästinensischer Staat gemeint, der friedlich Seite an Seite mit Israel existiert. Bemühungen darum kamen zuletzt aber jahrelang nicht mehr voran. Auch die islamistische Palästinenserorganisation Hamas, die 2007 ein Jahr nach ihrem Wahlsieg gewaltsam die alleinige Macht im Gazastreifen an sich gerissen hatte, lehnt dies ab. 

Krieg in Israel: Hisbollah kündigt Angriffe an – „Sirenen werden ertönen“

Update vom 9. Februar, 7.48 Uhr: Als Reaktion auf einen israelischen Drohnenangriff auf das Fahrzeug eines hochrangigen Hisbollah-Mitglieds, hat die libanesische Terror-Miliz eine neue Angriffsserie gegen den Norden Israels gestartet. Die israelische Armee hatte sich zuvor nicht zu dem Angriff in der südlibanesischen Stadt Nabatäa bekannt. Sowohl arabische als auch israelische Medien berichteten jedoch von dem Vorfall und identifizierten das Hisbollah-Mitglied als Abbas al-Debs.

Ein Hisbollah-Sprecher wollte die Identität der Zielperson weder bestätigen noch dementieren und erklärte gegenüber Newsweek, „Debs‘ Name sei von Israel genannt worden, nicht von uns“. Weiter behauptete er, dass niemand getötet wurde, und es „nur Verletzte“ gebe. Anschließend drohte er, dass in „in einer Reihe von Siedlungen“ in Israel Sirenen ertönen werden.

Biden kritisiert Israel: „Vorgehen im Gazastreifen ist überzogen“

Erstmeldung: Tel Aviv/Gaza – Während es in Israel und im Gazastreifen in der Nacht zum Freitag (9. Februar) verhältnismäßig ruhig blieb, hat US-Präsident Joe Biden seine Tonart gegenüber Premierminister Benjamin Netanjahu verschärft und das Vorgehen gegen die Terror-Miliz Hamas als unverhältnismäßig bezeichnet. „Ich bin der Ansicht, dass das Vorgehen bei der Reaktion im Gazastreifen überzogen ist“, sagte Biden. Es gebe viele unschuldige Menschen, die hungerten, in Not seien oder gar ums Leben kämen. „Das muss aufhören.“ Der Demokrat hatte sich bei seinem Auftritt vor der Presse eigentlich zu einem innenpolitischen Thema geäußert, beantwortete zum Schluss aber eine Frage zur Krise im Nahen Osten. 

Die USA drängen Israel schon länger dazu, den Schutz der Zivilbevölkerung zu verstärken und mehr Hilfe für die Bevölkerung in Gaza zu ermöglichen. Die jüngsten Äußerungen der US-Regierung lassen jedoch zunehmenden Unmut erkennen, was den Widerhall ihrer Appelle bei der israelischen Führung angeht.

Luftangriffe auf Rafah: Offenbar mehrere Menschen getötet

In der Nacht kam es Medienberichten zufolge zu israelischen Luftangriffen auf Rafah, der südlichsten Stadt des Gazastreifens. Laut dem von Katar betriebenen Sender Al Jazeera fielen dem Angriff auf Wohngebiete mehrere Menschen zum Opfer.

Israel has stepped up airstrikes on Rafah in recent days after Prime Minister Netanyahu vowed to expand the military offensive on the city to advance the war against Hamas.

In this case, too, the United States warned urgently of catastrophic consequences for the civilian population if the operation were extended to the city.

It was only on Wednesday (February 7th) that US Secretary of State Antony Blinken struck a strikingly clear note during a visit to Israel and warned the military leadership to do more to protect civilians in the Gaza war.

The dehumanization that Israel experienced in the Hamas massacre in October “cannot be a license” to dehumanize others, Blinken said in Tel Aviv.

(talk to agencies)

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2024-02-11

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