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After 15 months of war, Hamas still rules over what remains of Gaza

Fighters from the Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas, control the crowd as Red Cross vehicles manoeuvre to collect Israeli hostages to be released under a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas, in Gaza City, Sunday, Jan. 19, 2025. (AP)
Fighters from the Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas, control the crowd as Red Cross vehicles manoeuvre to collect Israeli hostages to be released under a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas, in Gaza City, Sunday, Jan. 19, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 20 January 2025

After 15 months of war, Hamas still rules over what remains of Gaza

After 15 months of war, Hamas still rules over what remains of Gaza
  • Avi Issacharoff: “Hamas is going to remain in power and will continue to build more tunnels and recruit more men, without the emergence of any local alternative”
  • Israel has killed over 47,000 Palestinians, according to local health officials, and has reduced entire neighborhoods to fields of rubble

GAZA CITY: As a ceasefire brought calm to Gaza’s ruined cities, Hamas was quick to emerge from hiding.
The militant group has not only survived 15 months of war with Israel — among the deadliest and most destructive in recent memory — but it remains firmly in control of the coastal territory that now resembles an apocalyptic wasteland. With a surge of humanitarian aid promised as part of the ceasefire deal, the Hamas-run government said Monday that it will coordinate distribution to the desperate people of Gaza.
For all the military might Israel deployed in Gaza, it failed to remove Hamas from power, one of its central war aims. That could make a return to fighting more likely, but the results might be the same.
There was an element of theater in Sunday’s handover of three Israeli hostages to the Red Cross, when dozens of masked Hamas fighters wearing green headbands and military fatigues paraded in front of cameras and held back a crowd of hundreds who surrounded the vehicles.
The scenes elsewhere in Gaza were even more remarkable: Thousands of Hamas-run police in uniform re-emerged, making their presence known even in the most heavily destroyed areas.
“The police have been here the whole time, but they were not wearing their uniforms” to avoid being targeted by Israel, said Mohammed Abed, a father of three who returned to his home in Gaza City more than seven months after fleeing the area.
“They were among the displaced people in the tents. That’s why there were no thefts,” he said.
Other residents said the police had maintained offices in hospitals and other locations throughout the war, where people could report crimes.
Israel has repeatedly blamed Hamas for the heavy civilian death toll and damage to infrastructure because the group’s fighters and security forces embed themselves in residential neighborhoods, schools and hospitals.
A deeply rooted movement
Opinion polls consistently show that only a minority of Palestinians support Hamas. But the Islamic militant group — which does not accept Israel’s existence — is deeply rooted in Palestinian society, with an armed wing, a political party, media and charities that date back to its founding in the late 1980s.
For decades, Hamas functioned as a well-organized insurgency, able to launch hit-and-run attacks on Israeli forces and suicide bombings in Israel itself. Many of its top leaders have been killed — and quickly replaced. It won a landslide victory in 2006 parliamentary elections, and the following year it seized Gaza from the Western-backed Palestinian Authority in a week of street battles.
Hamas then established a fully-fledged government, with ministries, police and a civilian bureaucracy. Its security forces quickly brought Gaza’s powerful families into line and crushed rival armed groups. They also silenced dissent and violently dispersed occasional protests.
Hamas remained in power through four previous wars with Israel. With help from Iran it steadily enhanced its capabilities, extended the range of its rockets and built deeper and longer tunnels to hide from Israeli airstrikes. By Oct. 7, 2023, it had an army of tens of thousands in organized battalions.
In the surprise incursion that triggered the war, its fighters attacked southern Israel by air, land and sea, killing around 1,200 people, mostly civilians. Hamas-led militants abducted 250 others.
A war like no other
In response, Israel launched an air and ground war that has killed over 47,000 Palestinians, according to local health officials, and has reduced entire neighborhoods to fields of rubble. Some 90 percent of Gaza’s population has been displaced, often multiple times.
Nearly every day of the war, the Israeli military announced that it had killed dozens of fighters, or taken out a midlevel commander, or dismantled a tunnel complex or obliterated a weapons factory. Israeli forces killed Hamas’ top leader, Yahya Sinwar, and most of his lieutenants. But the exiled leadership is mostly intact and Mohammed Sinwar, his brother, has reportedly assumed a bigger role in Gaza.
The military says it has killed over 17,000 fighters — roughly half of Hamas’ estimated prewar ranks — though it has not provided evidence.
What Israel said were carefully targeted strikes frequently killed women and children and in some cases wiped out entire extended families.
The military blamed civilian casualties on Hamas. But survivors of the bombardment, crammed into tents after their homes were flattened, were a pool of potential recruits.
Earlier this month, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a prepared speech that Hamas had recruited nearly as many fighters as it lost during the war.
Michael Milshtein, an Israeli expert on Palestinian affairs and former military intelligence officer, said Hamas no longer has the ability to launch an Oct. 7-style attack but has returned to its insurgent roots, using creative tactics like harvesting unexploded Israeli ordnance for homemade bombs.
“Hamas is a chameleon. It changed its colors according to the circumstances,” he said.
“The war is ending with a strong perception of success for Hamas,” he added. “The enlistment capabilities will be crazy. They won’t be able to handle it.”
Israel ensures there is no alternative
Palestinian critics of Hamas have long said there is no military solution to the Mideast conflict, which predates the birth of the militant group by several decades.
They argue that Palestinians would be more likely to break with Hamas if they had an alternative path to ending Israel’s decades-long occupation, which has further entrenched itself during the war.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose government is opposed to Palestinian statehood, has ensured they do not.
He has rebuffed proposals from the United States and friendly Arab countries for a reformed Palestinian Authority to govern both Gaza and parts of the occupied West Bank ahead of eventual statehood. Instead, he has vowed to maintain open-ended security control over both territories.
Avi Issacharoff, a veteran Israeli journalist — and co-creator of the Netflix hit “Fauda” — said Netanyahu’s refusal to plan for the day after was the “biggest debacle of this war.”
“Israel is waking up from a nightmare into the very same nightmare,” he wrote in Israel’s Yediot Ahronot newspaper. “Hamas is going to remain in power and will continue to build more tunnels and recruit more men, without the emergence of any local alternative.”
Netanyahu has threatened to resume the war after the first six-week phase of the ceasefire if Israel’s goals are not met, while Hamas has said it will not release dozens of remaining captives without a lasting truce and an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.
There’s no reason to think another military campaign would bring about a different result.
In early October, Israeli forces sealed off the northern towns of Beit Lahiya, Beit Hanoun and Jabaliya, barring nearly all humanitarian aid, forcing thousands to flee and destroying nearly every structure in their path, including schools and shelters, according to witnesses who fled.
The army had carried out major operations in all three places previously, only to see militants regroup. At least 15 Israeli soldiers have died in northern Gaza this month alone.
When residents returned to Jabaliya on Sunday, they found a sprawling scene of devastation with only a few tilted shells of buildings in a sea of gray rubble.
Dozens of Hamas police kept watch over their return.


Frankly Speaking: The most dangerous era for aid workers?

Frankly Speaking: The most dangerous era for aid workers?
Updated 38 min 30 sec ago

Frankly Speaking: The most dangerous era for aid workers?

Frankly Speaking: The most dangerous era for aid workers?
  • Aid chief Tom Fletcher highlights both the deadly physical risks for humanitarians, especially in Gaza, and the severe underfunding crisis
  • UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator says critics are right to call for renewal and reform

RIYADH: Tom Fletcher, the UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator, paints a stark picture of the current humanitarian landscape, warning this year may surpass the previous as the deadliest for aid workers.

Appearing on the Arab News current affairs program “Frankly Speaking,” Fletcher described the brutal conditions humanitarians face worldwide amid intensifying conflicts and crises — especially in Gaza, which has been under Israeli siege and bombardment for almost two years.

“Last year was the deadliest year to be a humanitarian worker. And of course, it’s much easier than being a civilian under the bombs in these places we work,” Fletcher told “Frankly Speaking” host Ali Itani, who was filling in for Katie Jensen.

“I fear that this may well be the most dangerous year in recorded history for aid workers.”

Appearing on the Arab News current affairs program “Frankly Speaking,” Tom Fletcher described the brutal conditions humanitarians face worldwide amid intensifying conflicts and crises — especially in Gaza. (AN Photo)

A record 383 aid workers were killed worldwide in 2024, according to UN figures released on August 19 to mark World Humanitarian Day. Nearly half of those deaths — 181 — occurred in Gaza.

So far in 2025, at least 265 aid workers have been killed globally, representing a 54 percent increase compared to the same period last year. Around 65 percent of the aid workers killed in 2025 have been in Gaza.

Fletcher highlighted the relentless physical and mental toll faced by aid workers, citing ongoing attacks that have cost lives, especially in hotspots like Gaza.

“It’s brutal and there’s not enough accountability. No one is being held to account for what’s happening to us. Where are these weapons coming from which are killing our people and killing those that we serve?” he asked.

Fletcher also paid tribute to the bravery of humanitarian teams who “continue to go into danger, towards the sound of gunfire in order to save lives” everywhere from Haiti to the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Alongside these risks, Fletcher stressed that aid organizations face severe underfunding. “We are massively underfunded. The appeals right now are only 19 percent funded,” he said, exposing a vast gap between global need and available resources.

Being candid about the UN itself, Fletcher acknowledged its flaws, yet insisted it remains the best mechanism humanity has to foster global cooperation.

The UN “of course is not perfect,” Fletcher said. “I work in it. This can be even better. That’s why the Secretary-General has set out the reform program. But it’s still the best model we have for global coexistence.”

A woman receives a package of non-food items after arriving at the Dougui refugee settlement. (UNHCR)

He said that those critics who are pushing for renewal and reform are correct, describing ongoing efforts as “defining much more clearly our work around saving lives,” reducing bureaucracy, and devolving power closer to communities in need.

Addressing the humanitarian funding crisis, Fletcher painted a sobering picture. “We’re taking a battering right now,” he said. “And we will fight for the system. We won’t let this go easily. This is a hill we will die on, that we will defend at all costs.

“The appeals are only 19 percent funded. Hundreds of millions of people are not getting the life-saving support they need.”

Yet he offered a clear, precise call to global governments and citizens alike. “All we’re asking, in order to save over 100 million lives, if we got just 1 percent of what the world currently spends on arms, on defense, then we could do it,” he said.

“Somewhere along the line, the priorities are out of place. And we’ve got to get those priorities back where they should be. And we’ve got to fund this effort.”

Fletcher spoke forcefully on the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Gaza. He slammed Israel’s blockade, demanding “full, unequivocal access so that we can stop that starvation and reach all those civilians inside Gaza.”

Aid distribution in the embattled enclave is currently managed by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation — a private aid organization established in early 2025, backed by the Israeli and US governments.

Unlike the UN and traditional humanitarian agencies, which operate numerous smaller distribution points, the GHF runs a limited number of heavily secured aid hubs mostly in southern Gaza, guarded by Israeli military oversight and armed private contractors.

The GHF says it prevents aid being diverted to Hamas. Critics argue the GHF militarizes aid, breaks humanitarian principles of neutrality, independence, and impartiality, and concentrates aid delivery in restricted locations that force civilians to travel despite evacuation orders.

Its distribution sites have been associated with repeated deadly incidents and mass killings allegedly linked to Israeli military actions, raising serious safety concerns.

Asked whether UN agencies would ever consider working with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, Fletcher said his colleagues were far better placed to distribute aid.

“We’ve been clear that we won’t be working through the GHF mechanism,” he said. “We know we can do this at scale. We have the trucks. We have the convoys. We have the community networks. We have the experience.”

A Palestinian carries a bag containing aid near a Gaza Humanitarian Foundation distribution center operated by the US-backed organization, Netzarim, central Gaza Strip, in August. (AP/File Photo)

He called on Israeli authorities to “let us in, let us deliver,” underscoring the urgency of removing bureaucratic obstacles and the barriers holding aid trucks at the borders.

Returning to a broader theme, Fletcher described the UN’s plan to strengthen global cooperation. “This really is, I think, the most consequential High-Level Week for a generation,” he said, highlighting Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ bold reform agenda.

“We are reforming, we’re regrouping, particularly bringing in the voices of those who miss out, lose out in this strongman, survival-of-the-fittest world.

“But also that we’re renewing, that we’re imagining what we can be alongside defending what we do. I think this is the week that the UN and the multilateral system and global coexistence fight back.”

Syria’s new leadership is attending the UN General Assembly for the first time since the fall of the Assad regime in December last year. Fletcher said there is a collective responsibility to engage with and support the country’s development.

“It is on all of us now to demonstrate a sustained, patient, ambitious commitment to Syria’s development, long-term development, that we get behind the Syrian leadership,” he said.

Fletcher recalled an earlier visit after President Ahmad Al-Sharaa took power when Syrians expressed a desire to transition “from a position where it still needs humanitarian support to one where it is really leading its own recovery with that international backing” — a goal rooted in Syrian aspirations to regain dignity and normalcy.

Fletcher also identified Sudan as a key humanitarian concern for this year’s High-Level Week, stressing the need for increased aid access and urgent support.

“We have to keep hammering away for access to all of Sudan. We’ve got to get properly into Darfur... I’m very worried at the moment about El-Fasher, so we’ve got to get the convoys of aid moving at scale.”

During his appearance on Frankly Speaking, Fletcher also paid tribute to the bravery of humanitarian teams who “continue to go into danger, towards the sound of gunfire in order to save lives.” (AN Photo)

On September 12, Ƶ, the US, Egypt, and the UAE announced a joint roadmap aiming to bring peace to Sudan, which has endured conflict since April 2023.

Their plan called for a three-month humanitarian ceasefire, followed by an immediate permanent ceasefire, and then a nine-month political transition process to establish a civilian-led government.

Fletcher praised the opening created by the quad. “We’ve got to push through that opening and make sure we’re really surging humanitarian support, because Sudan is the big one — 30 million people need our help right now.”

As High-Level Week gets underway, Fletcher underscored the challenges facing the UN system amid rising global polarization and power struggles.

“There’s a danger that as we move further from the middle of the 20th century... people forget why these institutions were created,” he said.

“They forget the horror that you get if you leave polarization, extremism, radicalism, nationalism just to take root and to spread.”

He stressed the necessity of recommitting to the values that underpin the UN and acknowledged the calls for reform as both justified and vital.

“That’s why the secretary-general has set out the reform program. But it’s still the best model we have for global coexistence.” Fletcher urged member states and the global community to rally in defense of these institutions and ideals.

His message to world leaders was both urgent and hopeful.

“We need member states, everyone coming to New York right now, to show where they stand and to stand for coexistence, to stand for those without a voice, and to get to work, to roll up their sleeves, to stop conflicts and save lives.”


Israeli police officers detain former Arab member of Knesset Haneen Zoabi

Israeli police officers detain former Arab member of Knesset Haneen Zoabi
Updated 21 September 2025

Israeli police officers detain former Arab member of Knesset Haneen Zoabi

Israeli police officers detain former Arab member of Knesset Haneen Zoabi
  • She was arrested at her home in Nazareth, taken to Tiberias
  • Zoabi being detained on suspicion of incitement to terrorism, support for proscribed organizations

LONDON: Israeli police officers have detained former Knesset member Haneen Zoabi after arresting her at her home in Nazareth, in the north of Israel, on suspicion of “incitement to terrorism.”

She was taken to Tiberias for questioning, according to Hassan Jabareen, director of the Haifa-based Adalah Legal Center. He said that she was being investigated on suspicion of incitement to terrorism and support for organizations designated as terrorists by the Israeli authorities.

“It is clear to me that this detention is unlawful,” Jabareen added, according to the Palestinian News and Information Agency. “She could have been summoned in a regular and proper way, with a scheduled time and place for questioning, instead of being detained at her family home in the early morning, accompanied by six police officers, over such allegations.”

He noted that the legality of the detention would be central to proceedings if the authorities sought to extend it, WAFA added.

Zoabi is a prominent Palestinian political figure, known for her strong criticism of Israeli policies and her advocacy for the 1.6 million Palestinian citizens of Israel, who make up 20 percent of the population.

She served as a member of the Knesset for the Palestinian nationalist Balad Party from 2009 to 2019.


Syria to select new parliament on October 5

A large Syrian flag flutters above Tishreen Park in Damascus on June 4, 2025. (AFP)
A large Syrian flag flutters above Tishreen Park in Damascus on June 4, 2025. (AFP)
Updated 21 September 2025

Syria to select new parliament on October 5

A large Syrian flag flutters above Tishreen Park in Damascus on June 4, 2025. (AFP)
  • Upcoming legislature will comprise 210 lawmakers — 140 designated by local committees supervised by electoral commission and 70 nominated by Al-Sharaa

DAMASCUS: Syria is set to hold the selection process for a transitional parliament on October 5, in accordance with a constitutional declaration announced earlier this year, the electoral commission said Sunday.
The People’s Assembly of Syria was dissolved by the country’s new authorities who seized power after ousting longtime ruler Bashar Assad in a lightning offensive last December.
The upcoming legislature, which will serve for a five-year transitional period, will comprise 210 lawmakers — 140 designated by local committees supervised by the electoral commission and 70 directly nominated by interim President Ahmed Al-Sharaa.
The process will be held on October 5 “in the electoral districts of Syria’s provinces,” the commission wrote on its Telegram channel.
It did not specify if all provinces would take part.
In late August, the government announced that the selection would be delayed in the Druze-majority province of Sweida — the site of deadly clashes in July — and in the Kurdish-held regions of Raqqa and Hasakah, due to the security and political situation.
The system for appointing the interim parliament has been a target of major criticism by the opposition and civil society groups, which have denounced the concentration of powers in the president’s hands and insufficient representation of the country’s ethnic and religious minorities.
According to the constitutional declaration adopted in March, the transitional parliament will have a renewable mandate of 30 months.
It will excercize its role until a permanent constitution is adopted and new elections are held.


Two Israeli far-right ministers urge West Bank annexation as Western countries recognize Palestinian state

Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich (R-L). (File/AFP)
Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich (R-L). (File/AFP)
Updated 21 September 2025

Two Israeli far-right ministers urge West Bank annexation as Western countries recognize Palestinian state

Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich (R-L). (File/AFP)
  • Recognition by UK, Canada, and Australia of a Palestinian state requires “countermeasures: the swift application of sovereignty in Judea and Samaria” Ben Gvir said

JERUSALEM: Two Israeli far-right ministers on Sunday called for the annexation of the Israeli-occupied West Bank following Britain, Canada and Australia’s recognition of a Palestinian state.
“The recognition by Britain, Canada, and Australia of a Palestinian state... requires immediate countermeasures: the swift application of sovereignty in Judea and Samaria and the complete dismantling of the Palestinian Authority,” National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir said in a statement, using the Israeli name for the Palestinian territory.
“I intend to submit a proposal for applying sovereignty at the upcoming cabinet meeting.”
Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who has also repeatedly called for the annexation of the West Bank, made a similar statement.
“The days when Britain and other countries would determine our future are over. The mandate is over, and the only response to this anti-Israeli move is sovereignty over the historic homeland of the Jewish people in Judea and Samaria, and permanently removing the folly of a Palestinian state from the agenda,” Smotrich said on X.
“Mr prime minister, the time is now and it is in your hands,” he wrote.


Israel making progress on Syria pact but deal still far off: Netanyahu

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. (File/Reuters)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. (File/Reuters)
Updated 21 September 2025

Israel making progress on Syria pact but deal still far off: Netanyahu

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. (File/Reuters)
  • “We are holding talks with the Syrians, there is some progress, but there was still a ways to go,” Netanyahu said
  • Syrian president said Wednesday that a security pact was a “necessity” and that it would need to respect Syria’s airspace and territorial unity

JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday there has been progress on a security deal with Syria but an agreement was not imminent.

Speaking at the outset of a cabinet meeting, Netanyahu said victory against Hezbollah in Lebanon had opened up the possibility of peace with Israel’s northern neighbors.

“We are holding talks with the Syrians, there is some progress, but there was still a ways to go,” he said. “In any case these discussions, as well as the contacts with Lebanon, would not have been possible without our decisive victories on the northern front and others.”

Syria’s President Ahmed Al-Sharaa said on Wednesday that ongoing negotiations with Israel to reach a security pact could lead to results “in the coming days.”

He said a security pact was a “necessity” and that it would need to respect Syria’s airspace and territorial unity and be monitored by the United Nations.

Syria and Israel are in talks to reach an agreement that Damascus hopes will secure a halt to Israeli airstrikes and the withdrawal of Israeli troops who have pushed into southern Syria.