[🇧🇩] Israel and Hamas war in Gaza-----Can Bangladesh be a peace broker?

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[🇧🇩] Israel and Hamas war in Gaza-----Can Bangladesh be a peace broker?
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Palestinians to decide Gaza future: Qatar
Agence France-Presse . Doha 18 February, 2025, 23:11

Qatar, a key mediator in the Gaza conflict, said on Tuesday that Palestinians — not outsiders — must decide the territory’s future after the Israel-Hamas war.

Foreign ministry spokesman Majed al-Ansari told a Doha news conference that the issue was ‘a Palestinian question’, after Israel insisted on removing Hamas and the United States proposed taking over the territory.

‘From our perspective, this is a Palestinian question on what happens post this conflict,’ said Ansari when asked about Israel’s stated objective to eliminate Hamas.

‘It is a Palestinian question on who represents the Palestinians in an official capacity and also the political groups and parties in the political sphere,’ he said.

Israeli foreign minister Gideon Saar said earlier Tuesday that negotiations for the next phase of the Gaza ceasefire, which Qatar helped broker, would begin this week.

The second phase of the truce is meant to facilitate the release of all remaining hostages seized during Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack that sparked the war, and lead to a permanent end to the fighting.

Saar said Israel demanded the ‘complete demilitarisation of Gaza’ and would ‘not accept the continued presence of Hamas or any other terrorist groups’ in the territory, ruled by Hamas since 2007.

US president Donald Trump has proposed a takeover of the Gaza Strip, under which its 2.4 million inhabitants would be moved to Egypt or Jordan.

The plan has drawn widespread condemnation, with Arab states preparing a response.

Trump’s proposal has added strains to the fragile Gaza ceasefire, which has largely halted the violence since it took effect on January 19, after more than 15 months of war.

The on-going first phase of the truce, which is set to expire on March 1, has so far seen the release of 19 Israeli hostages in exchange for more than 1,100 Palestinians in Israeli custody.

More hostage-prisoner exchanges are expected before the end of the first phase, which has also allowed humanitarian aid into besieged Gaza.

Hamas however has accused Israel of blocking the entry of prefabricated structures and heavy machinery to clear rubble.

Ansari, the Qatari spokesman, said that ‘the aid the enters the Gaza Strip today is insufficient’.

‘Using humanitarian aid as a bargaining chip in negotiations is a crime in and of itself.’

Efforts were underway to secure the release this week of all remaining living hostages eligible to be freed from Gaza under the first phase of the Israel-Hamas ceasefire deal, an Israeli official source said Tuesday.

Of the 33 hostages set to be freed under phase one of the deal, 19 have already been released and Israel says eight are dead. That leaves just six living hostages slated for release in the current stage.

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu is making tremendous efforts to release all six remaining living hostages’ this week, and to secure the bodies of four others, the Israeli official source said.

A Palestinian source close to the negotiations said that ‘a proposal was presented by the mediators in recent days’ for Gaza militants ‘to deliver the bodies of several Israeli prisoners before Friday, and to increase the number’ of living captives to be released during the seventh hostage-prisoner swap on Saturday.​
 

GAZA TRUCE PHASE TWO: Hamas says ready to free all hostages at once
Agence France-Presse . Gaza City 20 February, 2025, 00:19

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An Israeli bulldozer tears up a street during an on-going raid in the Tulkarem camp for Palestinian refugees in the occupied West Bank on Wednesday. Since January 21, the Israeli military has been conducting a major operation in the ‘triangle’ of Jenin, Tubas and Tulkarem, where half a million Palestinians live. | AFP photo

Hamas signalled on Wednesday that it was willing to free all remaining hostages held in Gaza in a single swap during the next phase of the on-going ceasefire agreement.

Israel and Hamas are currently in the process of implementing phase one of the fragile Gaza truce, which has held since taking effect on January 19 despite accusations of violations on both sides.

Israel’s foreign minister said on Tuesday that talks would begin ‘this week’ on the second phase, which is expected to lay out a more permanent end to the war.

‘We have informed the mediators that Hamas is ready to release all hostages in one batch during the second phase of the agreement, rather than in stages, as in the current first phase,’ senior Hamas official Taher al-Nunu said.

He did not clarify how many hostages were currently being held by Hamas or other militant groups.

Nunu said this step was meant ‘to confirm our seriousness and complete readiness to move forward in resolving this issue, as well as to continue steps towards cementing the ceasefire and achieving a sustainable truce’.

Under the ceasefire’s first phase, 19 Israeli hostages have been released by militants so far in exchange for more than 1,100 Palestinian prisoners freed from Israeli jails in a series of Red Cross-mediated swaps.

Wednesday’s offer came after Israel and Hamas announced a deal for the return of all six remaining living hostages eligible for release under phase one in a single swap this weekend.

After the completion of the first phase, 58 hostages will remain in Gaza.

Hamas also agreed on Tuesday to return the bodies of eight dead hostages in two groups this week and next, including the remains of Shiri Bibas and her two young sons, Kfir and Ariel, who have become national symbols in Israel of the hostages’ ordeal.

The boys’ father Yarden Bibas was taken hostage separately on October 7, 2023, and was released alive during an earlier hostage-prisoner swap.

While Hamas said Shiri Bibas and her boys were killed in an Israeli air strike early in the war, Israel has never confirmed this, and many supporters remain unconvinced of their deaths, including members of the Bibas family.

‘I ask that no one eulogise my family just yet. We have held onto hope for 16 months, and we are not giving up now,’ the boys’ aunt, Ofri Bibas, wrote on Facebook on Tuesday night following Hamas’s announcement.

Israeli authorities have confirmed that the remains of four hostages are due to be returned on Thursday, although they have not officially named them.

The national forensic institute in Tel Aviv has mobilised 10 doctors to expedite the identification process, public broadcaster Kan reported on Wednesday.

Hamas and its allies took 251 people hostage during the October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, of whom 70 remain in Gaza, including 34 the Israeli military says are dead.

The October attack resulted in the deaths of 1,211 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures.

Israel’s retaliatory campaign has killed at least 48,297 people in Gaza, the majority of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory that the United Nations considers reliable.​
 

Hamas, Israel agree return of six hostages, bodies held in Gaza
AFP
Jerusalem
Published: 19 Feb 2025, 08: 40

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Palestinians walk past tents lining the streets amid the rubble of destroyed buildings in Jabalia, in the northern Gaza Strip on 18 February 2025, as people return to northern parts of Gaza during a current ceasefire deal in the war between Israel and Hamas. AFP

Hamas and Israel announced a deal Tuesday for the release of six living hostages from Gaza and the return of four captives' bodies -- including, the militants said, the remains of two young boys seen as national symbols back home.

The family of hostages Shiri Bibas and her sons Ariel and Kfir, the last remaining Israeli children held in Gaza, said they were "in turmoil" at the news, noting they had still received no "official confirmation" of their loved ones' deaths.

Thirty-three Israeli hostages were due for release under the first phase of the fragile Gaza truce that took effect last month, with 19 freed so far in exchange for more than 1,100 Palestinian prisoners. Of the remaining 14, Israel says eight are dead.

Hamas "decided to release on Saturday, February 22, the remaining living (Israeli) prisoners whose release was agreed in the first phase, numbering six", the group's top negotiator Khalil al-Hayya said in a televised address.

The group also "decided to hand over four bodies on Thursday, among them (those of) the Bibas family", Hayya added.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office subsequently confirmed that during indirect negotiations in Cairo, "agreements were reached" for the six living hostages to be handed over on Saturday, in addition to four bodies on Thursday and four more next week.

A Bibas family statement said it had been "in turmoil following (the) Hamas spokesperson's announcement about the planned return of our Shiri, Ariel, and Kfir this Thursday".

The trio were abducted during Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack on Israel that sparked the Gaza war, with Ariel and Kfir coming to symbolise the hostages' plight for many Israelis. Their father Yarden Bibas was also taken hostage separately, and was released alive during a previous hostage-prisoner exchange.

Hamas has previously said that Shiri Bibas and the children were killed in an Israeli air strike in November 2023, but Israel has not confirmed their deaths.

"Until we receive definitive confirmation, our journey is not over," the family statement said.

'Reluctantly hopeful'

The bodies due to be handed over on Thursday are the first to be returned to Israel by Hamas since the war began.

Israel's military issued a statement on Tuesday urging the public not to take notice of what it called "unverified rumours" about the hostages, without elaborating.

Israeli campaign group the Hostages and Missing Families Forum published the names of the six living hostages due for release on Saturday, saying it "welcomes with profound joy the return of Eliya Cohen, Tal Shoham, Omer Shem Tov, Omer Wenkert, Hisham Al-Sayed and Avera Mengistu".

Shoham's family said it had been informed he was scheduled for release, adding: "While we are reluctantly hopeful, we remain cautious and pray that Tal will return safely."

Five Thais held in Gaza since the October 2023 attack have also been released outside the scope of the truce deal.

The truce has held despite both sides trading accusations of violations, and despite the strain placed on it by US President Donald Trump's widely condemned plan to take control of devastated Gaza and relocate its population.

Saudi Arabia is set to host the leaders of Egypt, Jordan, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates on Friday to present their own plan for Gaza's reconstruction while ensuring that Palestinians remain on their land.

Trump floated Egypt and Jordan as possible destinations for displaced Gazans, but both countries rejected the idea.

After the Saudi meeting, Egypt will host an extraordinary Arab League meeting on Gaza on March 4.

For Palestinians, any forced displacement evokes memories of the "Nakba", or catastrophe -- the mass exile of their ancestors during Israel's creation in 1948.

'Demilitarisation'

Israel, meanwhile, demanded on Tuesday the "complete demilitarisation of Gaza", with Foreign Minister Gideon Saar saying it would "not accept the continued presence of Hamas or any other terrorist groups" in the Palestinian territory.

Saar also said Israel would begin negotiations "this week" on the truce's second phase, which aims to lay out a more permanent end to the war. Phase one is due to expire on March 1.

Qatar, a key mediator in the Gaza conflict, said on Tuesday that Palestinians must decide the territory's future.

"It is a Palestinian question on who represents the Palestinians in an official capacity and also the political groups and parties in the political sphere," said foreign ministry spokesman Majed al-Ansari.

Hamas's 2023 attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,211 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures.

Israel's retaliatory campaign has killed at least 48,291 people in Gaza, the majority of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory that the United Nations considers reliable.

Of 251 people seized in the Hamas attack, 70 remain in Gaza, including 35 the Israeli military says are dead.

Israel's military said that in southern Gaza on Tuesday, soldiers fired on a man after he ignored warning shots. A hospital source in Khan Yunis said it had received the body of a 15-year-old.​
 

Hamas hands over bodies of youngest Gaza hostages taken from Israel
REUTERS
Published :
Feb 20, 2025 16:19
Updated :
Feb 20, 2025 16:19

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Palestinians look on during the handover by Hamas of deceased hostages Oded Lifschitz, Shiri Bibas and her two children Kfir and Ariel Bibas, seized during the deadly October 7, 2023 attack, to the Red Cross, as part of a ceasefire and hostages-prisoners swap deal between Hamas and Israel, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, February 20, 2025. Photo : REUTERS/Ramadan Abed

Hamas handed over the bodies on Thursday of Israeli infant Kfir Bibas and his four-year-old brother Ariel, the two youngest captives taken by Hamas in their October 7, 2023 attack and among the most potent symbols of the trauma inflicted that day.

Red Cross vehicles drove away from the handover site in the Gaza Strip with four black coffins that had been placed on a stage. Each of the caskets had a small picture of the hostages.

Armed Hamas militants in black and camouflage uniforms surrounded the area.

After the hostages were handed over by the Red Cross, the coffins were scanned for explosives, according to the military. The coffins of the four deceased hostages have been transported into Israel, the Israeli military said.

Hamas handed over the bodies of the two boys and their mother Shiri Bibas, along with that of a fourth hostage, Oded Lifschitz, under the Gaza ceasefire agreement reached last month with the backing of the United States and the mediation of Qatar and Egypt.

“Agony. Pain. There are no words. Our hearts — the hearts of an entire nation — lie in tatters,” said Israel’s President Isaac Herzog.

“On behalf of the State of Israel, I bow my head and ask for forgiveness. Forgiveness for not protecting you on that terrible day. Forgiveness for not bringing you home safely.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and its defence establishment have faced criticism over the major security breach on October 7, the country’s single deadliest day.

Critics argue that Netanyahu has not done enough to bring the hostages back, which he rejects.

One militant stood beside a poster of a man standing over coffins wrapped in Israeli flags. Instead of legs he had tree roots in the ground, suggesting the land belongs to Palestinians. The poster read “The Return of the War=The Return of your Prisoners in Coffins”.

On the Gaza City coastline, Palestinian fishermen gather in the hope of catching enough fish to feed their families.

Kfir Bibas was nine months old when the Bibas family, including their father Yarden, was abducted at Kibbutz Nir Oz, one of a string of communities near Gaza that were overrun by Hamas-led attackers from Gaza.

Hamas said in November 2023 that the boys and their mother had been killed in an Israeli airstrike but their deaths were never confirmed by Israeli authorities and even at the last minute, some refused to accept they were dead.

“Shiri and the kids became a symbol,” said Yiftach Cohen, a resident of Nir Oz, which lost around a quarter of its inhabitants, either killed or kidnapped, during the assault. “I still hope that they will be alive.”

Yarden Bibas was returned in an earlier exchange of hostages for prisoners this month. But the family said this week their “journey is not over” until they received final confirmation of what happened to the boys and their mother.

Some of those Israelis killed on October 7 were known peace activists.

Lifshitz was 83 when he was abducted from Nir Oz, the kibbutz he helped found. His wife, Yocheved, 85 at the time, was seized with him and released two weeks later, along with another elderly woman.

He was a former journalist. In an op-ed he published in left-leaning Haaretz in January 2019, titled “Defender of Israel He Is Not”, he questioned Netanyahu’s security credentials and criticised his policies, including on Hamas and Gaza.

Among what he listed as Netanyahu’s policy failures, Lifshitz noted his rejection of the two-state solution with the Palestinians and a 2011 deal that exchanged more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners, including hardliner Yahya Sinwar who would become Hamas’ leader in Gaza and the mastermind of the October 7 attack - for one abducted Israeli soldier.

Israeli forces killed Sinwar during the Gaza war.

The handover marks the first return of dead bodies during the current agreement and Israel is not expected to confirm their identities until full DNA checks have been completed.

Netanyahu has faced criticism from his far-right coalition allies for agreeing to the deal, which some in Israel feel rewards Hamas and leaves the militant group in place in Gaza.

But successive surveys have shown broad support among the public for the ceasefire.

Israel launched its war in the Gaza Strip after the Hamas-led attack that killed some 1,200 people, according to Israeli tallies, with 251 kidnapped. The Israeli military campaign has killed some 48,000 people, Palestinian health authorities say, and left densely populated Gaza largely in ruins.

LIVING HOSTAGES

Thursday’s handover of bodies will be followed by the return of six living hostages on Saturday, in exchange for hundreds more Palestinians, expected to be women and minors detained by Israeli forces in Gaza during the war.

So far 19 Israeli hostages have been released, as well as five Thais who were returned in an unscheduled handover.

Negotiations for a second phase, expected to cover the return of around 60 remaining hostages, less than half of whom are believed to be alive, and a full withdrawal of Israeli troops from the Gaza Strip to allow an end to the war, are expected to begin in the coming days.

The issue has also been clouded by U.S. President Donald Trump’s call for Palestinians to be resettled outside Gaza, a move critics say would amount to a war crime and ethnic cleansing, and for the enclave to be developed as a waterfront property under U.S. control.​
 

Palestine: A large Victorian workhouse?

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The spectre of repeated Israeli violence in Gaza and the West Bank seems to have attained a semblance of normality in the face of world leaders’ indifference to the suffering of Palestinians. FILE PHOTO: REUTERS

Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank have been forced to live a dreadful life amid the intermittent horrors of bombings and killings. After over a year of Israeli genocide in Gaza, there is now a fragile ceasefire. However, US President Donald Trump's repeated threats of "all hell breaking loose" upon the Gazans have been looming large.

We are tired of being mentally shocked and morally bruised by the extent of the depravity of which Israel and its international backers are capable. All these have numbing effects on our moral sensibilities and do not seem to sufficiently outrage people's common sense and reason anymore.

While Gaza is currently under the media spotlight, Israeli murders and mayhem of the Palestinians who live in Jenin and other refugee camps in the West Bank have gone unabated. As devastation sites, according to Palestine's foremost political commentator Mustafa Barghouti, there is not much difference between Gaza and places in the West Bank.

Given the level of Israeli cruelty inflicted on Palestinians, we can safely say that the Zionist authorities and their Western allies are fuelled and intoxicated by bloodlust and that the IDF soldiers are unhinged psychotics. But why do they massacre Palestinians? Are they driven by sadistic tendencies alone?

There are methods behind their murderous madness. A discussion of the abuses of children and other vulnerable groups in Victorian workhouses may help understand the schemes of Israeli settler colonialism and the logic of its domination and oppressive tactics.

In Victorian England, workhouses were meant to keep the paupers off the streets. The inmates had to work hard without any payment and were forced to live in squalid and disease-infested conditions. Even though the poor were provided with accommodation and (inadequate) food in the workhouse, the system bore hallmarks of slavery.

Victorian writer Charles Dickens was a formidable critic of the workhouse system. In his April 1850 essay "Pet Prisoners," Dickens drew a comparison between the treatment convicted felons received at London's Pentonville Prison and the treatment the poor got at a nearby workhouse at Saint Pancras. In order to highlight points of contrast, he mentioned the amount of food provided for the prisoners of Pentonville and that for the inmates of the workhouse to show the malnutrition of the latter. Dickens concluded that the lodging of the workhouse inmate was "very inferior" to that of the prisoner.

A month later, in May 1850, Dickens wrote another essay, titled "A Walk in a Workhouse," where he discussed the pitiable condition of "fatherless," "desolate and oppressed" children in a workhouse that he visited. He characterised the workhouse as a "little world of poverty" that was "inhabited by a population of some fifteen hundred or two thousand paupers, ranging from the infant newly born or not yet come into the pauper world to the old man dying on his bed." Here again, Dickens alluded to "the Model Prison at Pentonville" and reasserted that "in respect of cleanliness, order, diet, and accommodation," the "dishonest felon is … better provided for and taken care of than the honest pauper" in the workhouse.

Dickens's novel Oliver Twist is perhaps the most vivid—though fictional—account of the abuse and cruelty against inmates in Victorian workhouses. The narrator of the story describes the state of food deprivation of the poor children in the workhouse of Mr Bumble in the following way:

"Oliver Twist and his companions suffered the tortures of slow starvation for three months: at last they got so voracious and wild with hunger that one boy, who was tall for his age … hinted darkly to his companions that unless he had another basin of gruel per diem, he was afraid he might some night happen to eat the boy who slept next to him." (Chapter 2)

Since the intention of the authorities was to deter the poor from seeking parish relief, they rendered the conditions inside the workhouse deliberately harsh and sufficiently degrading so that the poor did not wish to live there. As the narrator in Oliver Twist informs us, the workhouse authorities "established the rule that all poor people should have the alternative … of being starved by a gradual process in the house, or by a quick one out of it."

In the novel, the board of the workhouse is composed of "long-headed men" and "practical," "sound-judging," and "mighty philosophers" who make "wise and humane regulations." They had in mind that the sole intent of establishing Victorian workhouses was to curtail public spending on poverty. In order to deter people from resorting to government support, the inmates of workhouses were subjected to hard work, (semi-) starvation, and other adverse living conditions. The authorities made the conditions of the workhouses repellent so that the poor did not opt to live there.

The Zionist blueprint for Palestine resonates with the strategy of the workhouse authorities of Victorian England. Practitioners of Israeli realpolitik seem to have been following in the footsteps of the "practical philosophers" in Oliver Twist. They have taken measures to subject Palestinians to cruel treatment and excruciating hardships to expel them from their land. The Israeli authorities have been making the conditions in Palestine increasingly difficult so that the Palestinians do not want to live there and so that the former can extend their occupation and settler colonial control over the lands of the latter.

The recent declaration by President Donald Trump to forcibly transfer and resettle the population of Gaza elsewhere exposed the design of the US-Israel alliance. One justification that the US president offered is that Gaza is now "a demolition site" where no one can live. What Trump didn't say is that Gaza didn't become unliveable because of any natural disaster. The demolition man—Benjamin Netanyahu—who was next to Trump when he made the reprehensible statement is primarily responsible for what Palestine is today. Netanyahu has been rightly awarded an arrest warrant by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) for his war crimes in the region.

The spectre of repeated Israeli violence in Gaza and the West Bank seems to have attained a semblance of normality in the face of world leaders' indifference to the suffering of Palestinians. Like "the humble, half-starved" Oliver Twist in Dickens's novel, Palestinians are "despised by all, and pitied by none" of the global powers.

But the violent, broad-daylight atrocities and war crimes of Israel against Palestinians will remain a blot on the conscience of the global community. In order to understand what Palestine is, one has to visualise a Victorian workhouse that has been subjected to bombings, ethnic cleansing, genocide, and other dastardly crimes for many decades.

Dr Md Mahmudul Hasan is professor in the Department of English Language and Literature at the International Islamic University Malaysia.​
 

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