Ƶ

Israel sends tanks into West Bank for first time in decades, says fleeing Palestinians can’t return

Palestinian children and journalists disperse as Israeli tanks enter the Jenin camp for Palestinian refugees in the occupied West Bank, on February 23, 2025. (AFP)
Palestinian children and journalists disperse as Israeli tanks enter the Jenin camp for Palestinian refugees in the occupied West Bank, on February 23, 2025. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 25 February 2025

Israel sends tanks into West Bank for first time in decades, says fleeing Palestinians can’t return

Israel sends tanks into West Bank for first time in decades, says fleeing Palestinians can’t return
  • The Palestinian foreign ministry called the Israeli moves “a dangerous escalation of the situation in the West Bank,” and urged the international community to intervene in what it termed Israel's illegal “aggression”
  • Israel regularly sends troops into Palestinian zones but typically withdraws them after missions

JENIN, West Bank: Israeli tanks moved into the occupied West Bank on Sunday for the first time in decades in what Palestinian authorities called a “dangerous escalation,” after the defense minister said troops will remain in parts of the territory for a year and tens of thousands of Palestinians who have fled cannot return.
Associated Press journalists saw several tanks move along unpaved tracks into Jenin, long a bastion of armed struggle against Israel.
Israel is deepening its crackdown on the Palestinian territory and has said it is determined to stamp out militancy amid a rise in attacks. It launched the offensive in the northern West Bank on Jan. 21 — two days after the current ceasefire in Gaza took hold — and expanded it to nearby areas.
Palestinians view the deadly raids as part of an effort to cement Israeli control over the territory, where 3 million Palestinians live under military rule.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said he and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered the military to “increase the intensity of the activity to thwart terrorism" in all refugee camps in the West Bank.
“We will not allow the return of residents, and we will not allow terrorism to return and grow,” he said.
Earlier, Katz said he had instructed the military to prepare for “an extended stay” in some of the West Bank's urban refugee camps from which about 40,000 Palestinians have fled, leaving them “emptied of residents.”

The camps are home to descendants of Palestinians who fled during wars with Israel decades ago. It was not clear how long Palestinians would be prevented from returning. Katz said Israeli troops would stay “for the coming year.” Netanyahu said they would stay “as long as needed."
Tanks were last deployed in the West Bank in 2002, when Israel fought a deadly Palestinian uprising.
The Palestinian foreign ministry called the Israeli moves “a dangerous escalation of the situation in the West Bank,” and urged the international community to intervene in what it termed Israel's illegal “aggression.”
“Even if they stay, we will return to the camp at the end,” said Mohamed al-Sadi, one of those displaced from Jenin. “This camp is ours. We have no other place to go.”
Netanyahu under pressure to crack down
With fighting in Gaza and Lebanon on hold, Netanyahu has been under pressure from far-right governing partners to crack down on militancy in the West Bank. The U.N. says the current Israeli military operation is the longest since the Palestinian uprising of the early 2000s.
Under interim peace agreements from the early 1990s, Israel maintains control over large parts of the West Bank, while the Palestinian Authority administers other areas. Israel regularly sends troops into Palestinian zones but typically withdraws them after missions.
More than 800 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank since the war in Gaza erupted on Oct. 7, 2023, with a Hamas attack on southern Israel. Israel says most were militants, but stone-throwing youths protesting Israeli raids as well as bystanders have also been killed. In the most recent operation, a pregnant Palestinian woman was killed.
Jewish settlers also have carried out rampages in Palestinian areas in the territory. And there has been a spike in Palestinian attacks emanating from the West Bank. On Thursday, blasts rocked three empty buses in Israel in what police view as a suspected militant attack.
Israel captured the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem in the 1967 Mideast war. Palestinians want all three territories for their future independent state.
US envoy to pursue extended ceasefire
The truce between Israel and Hamas in Gaza remains tenuous.
A week is left in the ceasefire’s first phase, and no negotiations have been reported on the second phase. The truce’s collapse could lead to renewed fighting in Gaza, where Netanyahu says 63 hostages remain, about half of them believed dead, including a soldier captured in 2014.
“We are ready to return to intense fighting at any moment," Netanyahu said Sunday. The military increased its “operational readiness” around Gaza.
The US special envoy for the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, told CNN he expects the second phase to go forward, adding: “We have to get an extension of phase one and so I’ll be going into the region this week, probably Wednesday, to negotiate that.” He told CBS he will visit Qatar, Egypt, Israel, the United Arab Emirates and Ƶ.
But a senior Hamas leader, Mahmoud Mardawi, said Sunday the group will not engage in further discussions with Israel through mediators until Israel releases the 620 Palestinian prisoners meant to be freed on Saturday.
Israel said early Sunday it was delaying the release until it gets assurances that Hamas stops what Israel calls “humiliating” handovers of hostages in staged ceremonies criticized by the U.S. and Red Cross as cruel.
Egypt and Qatar were pressing Israel to release the prisoners, and Egypt refused to discuss any Israeli demands before then, said an Egyptian official involved in the talks who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to talk to the media.
Palestinian family members were distraught. “What have the prisoners done? We don’t know what happened. They killed our joy,” said one mother, Najah Zaqqot.
The White House is supporting Israel’s decision to delay releasing the Palestinians prisoners, calling it “appropriate.”
National Security Council spokesman Brian Hughes said Sunday that, “given Hamas’ barbaric treatment of the hostages, including the hideous parade of the Bibas children’s coffins through the streets of Gaza, Israel’s decision to delay the release of prisoners is an appropriate response.”
“The President is prepared to support Israel in whatever course of action it chooses regarding Hamas,” Hughes said in a statement.
Meanwhile, Netanyahu faced new criticism over the war while speaking at a military graduation. As he held up a picture of Shiri Bibas and her young boys, Ariel and Kfir, whose remains were returned from Gaza last week, to demonstrate “what we are fighting against,” audience members called out “Shame!” and “Why didn’t you save them?” The prime minister didn’t react.


Detained Gaza aid boat activists launch hunger strike: NGO

Detained Gaza aid boat activists launch hunger strike: NGO
Updated 19 sec ago

Detained Gaza aid boat activists launch hunger strike: NGO

Detained Gaza aid boat activists launch hunger strike: NGO
  • One US activist reported “severe physical violence by Israeli forces,” while others described being held in poor conditions, Adalah said

JERUSALEM: More than a dozen activists being held by Israel after their aid boat was intercepted en route to Gaza launched a hunger strike on Monday to protest their detention, according to a local NGO assisting them.
At least five of the 21 passengers of the Freedom Flotilla vessel Handala have agreed to be summarily deported after the boat was stopped and boarded by the Israeli navy while attempting to break a military blockade of the war-ravaged Palestinian territory.
The legal aid group Adalah said that on Monday afternoon, “hearings concluded at Givon Prison, concerning the continued detention of the 14 volunteers who... refused to consent to an expedited deportation process.”
“During the hearings, the volunteers stressed that their mission was humanitarian — motivated by the need to act against Israel’s illegal siege and the genocide against Palestinians in Gaza,” the group said in a statement.
One US activist reported “severe physical violence by Israeli forces,” while others described being held in poor conditions, Adalah said.
“The activists told the tribunal that they remain on an open hunger strike in protest of their unlawful detention,” it added.
It later said the tribunal had “upheld the continued detention of the 14 volunteers.”
Israel has been treating their cases as immigration violations, which Adalah maintains is illegal, saying they were brought into the country against their will from international waters.
The Handala’s 21 passengers hailed from 10 countries, and included two French lawmakers and a pair of Al Jazeera journalists.
Adalah said at least one of the lawmakers, the two journalists and two other passengers were already on their way out of the country.
Two passengers who were Israeli-American dual nationals were released after being interrogated, according to the organization.
A previous boat sent by Freedom Flotilla, the Madleen, was also intercepted by the Israeli military in international waters on June 9.
It carried 12 campaigners, including prominent Swedish activist Greta Thunberg. The activists were eventually expelled by Israel.

 


Landmark Saudi-French peace summit signals growing international consensus for Palestinian statehood

Landmark Saudi-French peace summit signals growing international consensus for Palestinian statehood
Updated 13 min 52 sec ago

Landmark Saudi-French peace summit signals growing international consensus for Palestinian statehood

Landmark Saudi-French peace summit signals growing international consensus for Palestinian statehood
  • Global representatives are attending a conference at the UN in New York to revive hopes for a two-state solution
  • Summit delegates demanded a Gaza ceasefire, unrestricted aid delivery, and accountability for Israeli attacks

DUBAI/LONDON: The first day of the High-Level International Conference for the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine sent a unified message: the path toward Palestinian statehood is taking shape, with international actors working to chart what France’s foreign minister described as an “irreversible political path” to a two-state solution.

Co-hosted by Ƶ and France at the UN from July 28 to 30, the conference seeks to revive global momentum around Palestinian recognition — momentum that has waned amid Israel’s military campaign in Gaza triggered by the Hamas-led Oct. 7, 2023, attacks.

“This is a historic stage that reflects growing international consensus,” Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan told a near-capacity hall on Monday, adding that the gathering aims to shift the international atmosphere decisively toward a two-state solution.

Attendees stand during a moment of silence during a ministerial high level meeting during the United Nations conference on a two state solution for Israel and the Palestinians, at UN headquarters on July 28, 2025, in New York City. (AFP)

“This is not simply a political position. Rather, this is a deeply entrenched belief that an independent Palestinian state is the true keys to peace,” which he said he envisioned in the form of the Arab Peace Initiative, presented by Ƶ and adopted by the Arab League in Beirut in 2002.

The conference comes days after French President Emmanuel Macron pledged to officially recognize the State of Palestine at the UN General Assembly in September — a move that would make France the first G7 country to do so.

The US, however, declined to participate, saying in a memo that the meeting was “counterproductive to ongoing, life-saving efforts to end the war in Gaza and free hostages.”

Washington added that it opposes “any steps that would unilaterally recognize a conjectural Palestinian state,” arguing such moves introduce “significant legal and political obstacles” to resolving the conflict.

Israel, which faces mounting international pressure over the humanitarian crisis in Gaza — where the UN says starvation is taking hold — also boycotted the meeting.

Naeema, a 30-year-old Palestinian mother, sits with her malnourished 2-year-old son Yazan in their damaged home in the Al-Shati refugee camp, west of Gaza City, on July 23, 2025. (AFP)

French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said the wide attendance at the conference proved “the consensus and the mobilization of the international community around the appeal for an end to the war in Gaza.” He urged participants to view the gathering as “a turning point — a transformational juncture for implementing the two-state solution.”

“We have begun an unprecedented and unstoppable momentum for a political solution in the Middle East, which is already beginning to bear fruit,” Barrot said, citing tangible steps such as “recognition of Palestine, normalization and regional integration of Israel, reform of Palestinian governance, and the disarmament of Hamas.”

While the 1947 UN Partition Plan originally proposed separate Jewish and Arab states, Israel’s far-right government continues to reject any form of Palestinian statehood, advocating instead for the permanent annexation of land and, in some cases, the expulsion of Palestinian residents.

“This conference does not promote a solution, but rather deepens the illusion,” said Danny Danon, the Israeli ambassador to the UN, on Monday, accusing organizers of being “disconnected from reality” by prioritizing Palestinian sovereignty over the release of hostages and the dismantling of Hamas.

Palestinians inspect the site struck by an Israeli bombardment in Muwasi, Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Monday, July 28, 2025. (AP)

The future of Hamas and Israeli settler violence dominated discussions on the first day and are expected to remain a focus throughout the conference.

Juan Manuel Santos, the former Colombian president and Nobel Peace Prize laureate, told the conference that the current Israeli government is “pursuing a greater Israel through the destruction of Gaza, illegal settlement expansion and the annexation of the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.”

He called on nations to recognize the State of Palestine, saying it would send a clear message that Israel’s “expansionist agenda will never be accepted and does not serve their true interests.”

Ƶ's Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud (C) speaks during a ministerial high level meeting during the United Nations conference on a two state solution for Israel and the Palestinians, at UN headquarters on July 28, 2025, in New York City. (AFP)

Intervening on the issue, Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa described Gaza as the “latest and most brutal manifestation” of the crisis.

“The idea that peace can come through the destruction or subjugation of our people is a deadly illusion,” he said, arguing that the Palestinian people — and not Hamas — “have demonstrated an ironclad commitment to peace in the face of brutal violence.”

Israel has defended its actions as essential to national security and has signaled its intention to maintain military control over Gaza and the West Bank after the war. But on Monday, several speakers insisted that true security cannot exist without peace.

“Just as there can be no peace without security, there can be no security without peace,” said Italian representative Maria Tripodi.

Mourners pray over the body of Soad Qeshtah, who died hours after being delivered by emergency caesarean section from her mother, seven-months pregnant Soad al-Shaer, killed in an overnight Israeli airstrike on Khan Younis in the Gaza Strip, Monday, July 28, 2025. (AP)

Participants proposed building an inclusive regional security framework modeled after the OSCE or ASEAN, focused on negotiations and policy rather than military control.

Qatar’s representative emphasized that while a ceasefire and increasing the flow of humanitarian aid remain the immediate goals, lasting peace requires a two-state solution, tackling root causes, protecting independent media, and countering hate speech.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty said Cairo has “intensified efforts” to end the war, resume aid, and provide security training to forces that could help create the conditions for a viable Palestinian state.

The humanitarian crisis in Gaza loomed large over discussions. With the territory’s health and food systems in a state of collapse, the UN has warned that famine is already unfolding in parts of the enclave, where hundreds of thousands remain trapped.

An Israeli tank enters Israel from Gaza, July 28, 2025. (REUTERS)

Despite mounting international pressure, Israel has maintained tight control over land access and aid convoys, increasing the allowance of humanitarian convoys entering the enclave on Sunday — efforts that humanitarian groups say are insufficient, erratic, and dangerous.

Ahmed Aboul Gheit, secretary-general of the Arab League, warned that “a new Middle East will never emerge from the suffering of Palestinians.” Peace, he said, will not come through “starvation, deportation or total suppression,” and cannot exist while occupation and apartheid persist.

Prince Zeid Ra’ad Al-Hussein, former UN high commissioner for human rights, urged the international community to define a clear and pragmatic plan for a new and independent Palestine.

“A vision is not for today’s emotional audit,” he said, but for a new tomorrow for both Israel and Palestine. This is why, “a two-state solution would have to be practical to gain support” and “wholesale vagueness about the end game is not strategic; it is dangerous.”

A displaced Palestinian girl reacts as she receives lentil soup at a food distribution point in Gaza City in the northern Gaza Strip on July 25, 2025. (AFP)

He advocated for a “cleverly designed, regionally anchored security arrangement to prevent unilateral abrogation as a first urgent transitional step” in addition to a reconstruction and rehabilitation mission with an international mandate.

Addressing delegates, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the conflict had reached a “breaking point,” and urged a shift from rhetoric to concrete action.

Nothing justifies “the obliteration of Gaza that has unfolded before the eyes of the world,” he said, listing illegal settlement expansion, settler violence, mass displacement and the annexation drive as elements of a “systemic reality dismantling the building blocks of peace.”

The sun sets over north Gaza, July 28, 2025. (REUTERS)

He called for an immediate end to unilateral actions undermining a two-state solution, and reaffirmed the UN vision of two sovereign, democratic states living side-by-side in peace, based on pre-1967 borders and with Jerusalem as a shared capital.

“This remains the only framework rooted in international law, endorsed by this Assembly, and supported by the international community,” he said. “It is the only credible path to a just and lasting peace between Israelis and Palestinians. And it is the sine qua non for peace across the wider Middle East.”

 


Hamas must surrender Gaza control, disarm: Palestinian PM

Hamas must surrender Gaza control, disarm: Palestinian PM
Updated 28 July 2025

Hamas must surrender Gaza control, disarm: Palestinian PM

Hamas must surrender Gaza control, disarm: Palestinian PM
  • Mohammad Mustafa made the statement at UN conference on the two-state solution for Israel and the Palestinians

Palestinian prime minister Mohammad Mustafa said Monday that Hamas must disarm and give up control of Gaza to the Palestinian Authority to restore security in the war-torn territory.
“Israel must withdraw completely from the Gaza Strip and Hamas must relinquish its control over the strip and hand over its weapons to the Palestinian Authority,” Mustafa said at a conference on the two-state solution for Israel and the Palestinians at the United Nations in New York.


International summit on 2-state solution ‘deepens the illusion’ of peace, says Israeli envoy to UN

International summit on 2-state solution ‘deepens the illusion’ of peace, says Israeli envoy to UN
Updated 28 July 2025

International summit on 2-state solution ‘deepens the illusion’ of peace, says Israeli envoy to UN

International summit on 2-state solution ‘deepens the illusion’ of peace, says Israeli envoy to UN
  • Participants are engaging in discussions ‘disconnected from reality’ instead of ‘demanding the release of the hostages and working to dismantle Hamas’ reign of terror,’ he says
  • Israel and the US boycott the 2-day conference, co-chaired by Ƶ and France, which began on Monday at the UN’s HQ in New York

NEW YORK/LONDON: Ahead of an international conference on a two-state solution to the conflict between Israel and Palestine, Israel’s ambassador to the UN, Danny Danon, told reporters on Monday that the summit “does not promote a solution, but rather deepens the illusion.”

Formally titled the High-Level International Conference for the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine and the Implementation of the Two-State Solution, the two-day event began on Monday at the UN headquarters in New York, co-chaired by Ƶ and France. With humanitarian experts warning that Gaza is on the brink of famine, the summit has been described as urgent and long overdue.

But Danon said: “Instead of demanding the release of the hostages and working to dismantle Hamas’ reign of terror, the conference organizers are engaging in discussions and plenaries that are disconnected from reality.”

Jonathan Harounoff, the international spokesperson for Israel’s mission at the UN, confirmed that his country would not participate in any conference that “doesn’t first urgently address the issue of condemning Hamas and returning all of the remaining hostages.” The US also boycotted the event.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, for whom the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant in November in connection with its investigation into war crimes during Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza, said the international conference “rewards terrorism” and accused France of helping to legitimize what could become “an Iranian proxy state.”

The UN’s humanitarian chief, Tom Fletcher, on Sunday warned that the situation in Gaza was dire, with widespread hunger, children wasting away and people risking their lives in their attempts simply to obtain food.

While recent moves by Israeli authorities to ease restrictions and allow more aid into the territory represented a step forward, he said, it was not enough. Vast quantities of aid, safe access routes, consistent supplies of fuel, efforts to protect civilians, and an immediate ceasefire are urgently needed to prevent further catastrophe, he added.


US dismisses UN Israel-Palestinian conference as ‘publicity stunt’

US dismisses UN Israel-Palestinian conference as ‘publicity stunt’
Updated 28 July 2025

US dismisses UN Israel-Palestinian conference as ‘publicity stunt’

US dismisses UN Israel-Palestinian conference as ‘publicity stunt’
  • US State Department labeled three-day event “unproductive and ill-timed”

NEW YORK: The US on Monday dismissed a French-Saudi-sponsored conference at the United Nations on promoting a two-state solution to the conflict between Palestinians and Israelis as a “stunt.”

The US State Department labeled the three-day event “unproductive and ill-timed,” as well as a “publicity stunt” that would make finding peace harder.

The diplomatic push is a “reward for terrorism,” the statement said, also calling the promise to recognize a Palestinian state by French President Emmanuel Macron “counterproductive.”

In the statement from spokesperson Tammy Bruce, the State Department added that the conference “far from promoting peace,” would “prolong the war, embolden Hamas, and reward its obstruction and undermine real-world efforts to achieve peace.”

Bruce continued: “As Secretary Rubio has made clear, this effort is a slap in the face to the victims of October 7th and a reward for terrorism. It keeps hostages trapped in tunnels.  

“The United States will not participate in this insult but will continue to lead real-world efforts to end the fighting and deliver a permanent peace. Our focus remains on serious diplomacy, not stage-managed conferences designed to manufacture the appearance of relevance.”

The statement said President Macron’s announcement about recognizing a Palestinian state was “welcomed by Hamas,” while encouraging its “obstruction of a ceasefire,” and greatly undercut US diplomatic efforts to “end the suffering in Gaza, free the hostages, and move the whole Middle East towards a brighter and more prosperous future.”

* With AFP