[🇧🇩] 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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Hamas says it is investigating possible error over hostage body
REUTERS
Published :
Feb 21, 2025 20:50
Updated :
Feb 21, 2025 20:50

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Israelis sit together as they light candles and hold posters with the images Oded Lifschitz, Shiri Bibas and her two children, Kfir and Ariel Bibas, seized during the deadly October 7, 2023 attack by Hamas, on the day the bodies of deceased hostages, identified at the time by Palestinian militant groups as Lifschitz, Shiri Bibas and her two children, were handed over under the terms of a ceasefire between Hamas and Israel, in Tel Aviv, Israel February 20. Photo : REUTERS/Itay Cohen

Hamas said on Friday it was investigating a possible error in identifying human remains handed to Israel under a ceasefire deal as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threatened retaliation for failing to release the body of hostage Shiri Bibas.

Hamas was due to hand over the bodies of Shiri Bibas and her two sons Kfir and Ariel on Thursday, along with the remains of a fourth hostage under the ceasefire deal that has halted fighting in Gaza since last month.

Four bodies were delivered and the identities of the Bibas boys and the fourth hostage, Oded Lifshitz, were confirmed.

But Israeli specialists said the fourth body was that of an unidentified woman and not Bibas, who was kidnapped along with her sons and her husband, Yarden, during the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.

Basem Naim, a member of the Hamas political bureau, said “unfortunate mistakes” could occur, especially as Israeli bombing had mingled the bodies of Israeli hostages and Palestinians, thousands of whom were still buried in the rubble.

“We confirm that it is not in our values or our interest to keep any bodies or not to abide by the covenants and agreements that we sign,” he said in a statement.

Hamsas said separately that it would investigate the Israeli assertions and announce the results.

The failure to hand over the body and the staged public handover of the four coffins on Thursday, caused outrage in Israel and drew a threat of retaliation from Netanyahu.

“We will act with determination to bring Shiri home along with all our hostages - both living and dead - and ensure Hamas pays the full price for this cruel and evil violation of the agreement,” he said in a video statement, accusing Hamas of acting “in an unspeakably cynical manner” by placing the body of a Gaza woman in the coffin instead of Bibas.

Hamas said in November 2023 that the children and their mother had been killed in an Israeli air strike and Thawabta said Netanyahu “bears full responsibility for killing her and her children.”

But the Israeli military said intelligence assessments and forensic analysis of the bodies of the Bibas children indicated that they were deliberately killed by their captors.

Netanyahu gave no details on a possible Israeli response, but the incident underscored the fragility of the ceasefire agreement reached with US backing and with the help of Qatari and Egyptian mediators last month.

Six living hostages are due for release on Saturday in exchange for 602 Palestinian prisoners and detainees, according to Hamas, and the start of negotiations for a second phase of the ceasefire is expected in the coming days.

“Hamas must return the hostages as agreed in the ceasefire- the living and the deceased,” Israeli military spokesperson Nadav Shoshani said in a statement on social media platform X. “They have to bring Shiri back, and they have to release the 6 living hostages expected tomorrow,”

As the tension over the Gaza ceasefire rose, Netanyahu ordered the Israeli military to intensify operations in another Palestinian territory, the occupied West Bank, after a number of explosions blew up buses standing empty in their depots near Tel Aviv.

No casualties were reported but the explosions were a reminder of the campaign of suicide attacks on public transport that killed hundreds of Israeli civilians during the Second Intifada in the early 2000s.

“THEY MAKE A JOKE OF US”

Both sides have repeatedly accused the other of ceasefire violations, with Hamas threatening to delay the release of hostages over what it said was Israel’s refusal to allow housing materials and other aid into Gaza, a charge Israel denied.

“It’s like they make a joke of us,” said 75-year-old Ilana Caspi. “We are so in grief and this is even more, it’s like you make a punch again, another one and another one, it’s really terrible.”

The Red Cross told Reuters it was “concerned and unsatisfied” by the fact that the handover of the bodies had not been conducted privately and in a dignified manner.

One of the main groups representing hostage families said they were “horrified and devastated” by the news that Shiri Bibas’ body had not been returned, but called for the ceasefire to continue to bring back all the 70 hostages still in Gaza.

“Save them from this nightmare,” the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said in a statement.

Despite the outrage over Shiri Bibas, there was no indication that Israel would not take part in talks over a second phase of the ceasefire deal.

The Israel Hayom newspaper reported that Israeli negotiators were considering seeking an extension of the 42-day ceasefire, instead of moving to a second phase, which would involve talks over hard-to-resolve issues including an end to the war and the future of Hamas in Gaza.​
 

Arab leaders meet in KSA over Gaza plan
Agence France-Presse . Riyadh, Saudi Arabia 22 February, 2025, 22:32

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Arab leaders met in Riyadh on Friday to craft a plan for Gaza’s post-war reconstruction to counter Donald Trump’s proposal for the United States to take over the territory without its Palestinian residents.

Trump’s plan has united Arab states in opposition to it, but disagreements remain over who should govern Gaza and how its reconstruction can be funded.

A photo from the meeting showed the kingdom’s de facto leader Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman with the leaders of other Gulf Arab states, as well as Egypt and Jordan.

A source close to the Saudi government confirmed the meeting had finished. He said he did not expect a final statement to be issued as the ‘discussion was confidential’.

The official Saudi Press Agency said the ‘fraternal consultative’ meeting saw an ‘exchange of views on various regional and international issues, especially joint efforts in support of the Palestinian cause, and developments in the situation in the Gaza Strip’.

Egyptian president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s office said he had left the Saudi capital after the sit-down with the leaders of Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Trump triggered global outrage when he proposed the United States ‘take over’ the Gaza Strip and relocate its more than two million residents to Egypt and Jordan.

‘We’re at a very important historic juncture in the Arab-Israeli or Israeli-Palestinian conflict... where potentially the United States under Trump could create new facts on the ground that are irreversible,’ Andreas Krieg of King’s College London said ahead of the meeting.

The Saudi source had told AFP that the summit participants would discuss ‘a reconstruction plan to counter Trump’s plan for Gaza’.

The Gaza Strip is largely in ruins after more than 15 months of war between Israel and Hamas, with the United Nations recently estimating that reconstruction will cost more than $53 billion.

During a meeting with Trump in Washington on February 11, Jordan’s King Abdullah II said Egypt would present a plan for a way forward.

The Saudi source had said ahead of the talks that the delegates would discuss ‘a version of the Egyptian plan’.

The Saudi Press Agency said the decisions taken at the ‘unofficial’ meeting would be put on the agenda of an emergency Arab League summit to be held in Egypt on March 4.

Arab leaders see an alternative plan for Gaza’s reconstruction as essential after Trump pointed to the scale of the task as a justification for relocating its Palestinian residents.

Cairo has yet to release the details of its proposal, but former Egyptian diplomat Mohamed Hegazy outlined a plan ‘in three technical phases over a period of three to five years’.

The first phase, lasting six months, would focus on ‘early recovery’ and the removal of debris, he said.

The second would require an international conference to set out detailed plans for reconstruction and restoring infrastructure.

The final phase would see the provision of housing and services and the establishment of a ‘political track to implement the two-state solution’, an independent Palestine alongside Israel.

An Arab diplomat familiar with Gulf affairs said: ‘The biggest challenge facing the Egyptian plan is how to finance it.’

‘It would be inconceivable for Arab leaders to meet without reaching a common vision, but the main thing lies in the content of this vision and the ability to implement it.’

Krieg said it was a ‘unique opportunity’ for the ‘Saudis to rally all the other GCC countries, plus Egypt and Jordan, around on this matter, to find a common position to answer what is a kind of very coercive statement that Trump has been making’.​
 

Trump's plan for ethnic cleansing of Gaza
Muhammad Mahmood
Published :
Feb 22, 2025 21:37
Updated :
Feb 22, 2025 21:37

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US President Donald Trump and US Vice President JD Vance meeting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House in Washington on last February 4 –Reuters file photo

Early this month US President Donald Trump announced that the US would take over the Gaza Strip and develop the land as "the Riviera of the Middle East" and send 2.3 million Palestinians elsewhere but not to the US as he offered the Afrikaners (white South Africans) to move to the US from South Africa. He also clearly indicated that the Palestinians would have no right to return to Gaza but people from all over the world would be able to move to Gaza.

He declined to rule out sending US troops to make it happen. Trump further clarified his position and said that the US would seize Gaza as its own territory. According to the Wahington Post (February 5) for Trump, Gaza becomes the latest target of US manifest destiny. Trump's plan reminds us of the dark days of colonial conquest.

Trump also indicated where he wanted the Palestinians to move "I think I could make a deal with Jordan. I could make a deal with Egypt". Possibly Trump in his mind had some Arab leaders collaboration with the British enabling the British and the French to colonise the Levant on the basis of the secret Sykes-Picot agreement of 1916. In particular, the colonisation of Palestine by the British facilitated to give shape to the Balfour Declaration of 1917 in creating the racist apartheid colonial settler state called Israel in Palestine by displacing Palestinians in 1948.

Trump's hostility toward Palestine and Palestinians is also nothing new. During his first term, he closed the PLO's office in Washington, D.C. and stopped funding for UNRWA, the agency that supports Palestinian refugees. Trump moved the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

In fact, Israel was forged out of the forced expulsion of Palestinians from their land which resulted in more than 700,000 Palestinians forced out of their homes by Israeli forces. Israel passed laws it still uses to confiscate their property. On last Monday (February 17), Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz ordered the creation of a directorate in the Defence Ministry tasked with overseeing the implementation of the plan announced by US President to ethnically cleanse Gaza.

More importantly, Jordanian King Abdulla II throughout the US backed Israeli genocide kept the Israeli supply line in full operation through Jordan when Israel faced supply disruptions from other Arab countries like Yemen. He also joined Israel to shoot down Iranian missiles fired at Israel in retaliation for Israel's assassinations of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran and Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah. King Abdullah II and his betrayal of the Palestinians is apparent to all. Both Egypt and Jordan maintained Israel's blockade of Gaza and worked strenuously to demobilise the widespread opposition within their own countries.

Also, in occupied West Bank, the Israeli armed forces have instituted widespread closures, bombed Jenin refugee camp and destroyed residential buildings and public infrastructure. The Israeli defence minister said "Jenin is only the beginning" and there will be "more operations in other parts of the West Bank".

President Trump hosted Jordan's King Abdullah II at the White House on February 11 and renewed his suggestions that Gaza could be emptied of residents, controlled by the U.S. and redeveloped as a tourist area, an idea originally floated by Jared Kushner. Jordan along with other Arab states including Egypt, however, has rejected Trump's plan to relocate civilians from Gaza fearing that would destabilise Egypt and Jordan.

Trump announced his plan alongside his ally, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who praised Trump's proposal as "revolutionary and creative". He also praised Trump as "the greatest friend Israel has ever had in the White House" and then said "it is worth paying attention to this" idea, adding further that it was "something that could change history".

In fact, this has always been an Israeli aim to depopulate Gaza of Palestinians. Many Israeli officials have called for the same plan, in exactly the same language for over a year. Trump, in effect, was merely stating openly the actual policy of the Israeli government. This is just the latest iteration of efforts aimed at ethnically cleansing Palestinians from their homeland. Trump's remarks suggest his foreign policy on Palestine will remain largely unchanged from his predecessor's.

On February 16 the Israeli finance minister raised the possibility of the imminent implementation of Trump's plan for Gaza. Last week US Secretary of State Marco Rubio met Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem and both men pledged to work together to implement Trump's plan for the ethnic cleansing of Gaza. Also, from the Israeli perspective displacing Palestinians from Gaza would put an end to Palestinian statehood.

Many leaders across the world have also warned that displacing Palestinians from Gaza would destabilise the entire Middle East. Trump's comments could derail the attempts to bring about an end to fighting in Gaza.

Meanwhile, the UN has warned that any forced displacement of civilians from occupied territory is strictly prohibited under international law and "tantamount to ethnic cleansing". UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres also said, "any forced displacement of people is tantamount to ethnic cleansing". Germany's chancellor Olaf Scholz also strongly criticised Trump's plan calling it "absurd".

Responding to Trump's plan, Human Rights Watch stated that it "would move the US from being complicit in war crimes to direct perpetration of atrocities". The executive director of Amnesty International USA added that "removing all Palestinians from Gaza is tantamount to destroying them as a people. Gaza is their home. Gaza's death and destruction is a result of the government of Israel killing civilians by the thousands, often with US bombs".

Hamas also declared that Trump's remarks were "absurd' and reflected "deep ignorance of Palestine and the region". Hamas also made it clear that Gaza is an integral part of occupied Palestinian land. Hamas fighters remain in operational position even after 16 months of fighting and still overseeing the civilian administration in Gaza.

Mahmoud Abbas, Head of Palestinian Authority in the West Bank also strongly rejected any plans to displace Palestinians from Gaza, saying, "We will not allow any infringement of the rights of our people, which we have struggled for decades and made great sacrifices to achieve." The US President's plan to take over Gaza and displace its Palestinian residents has been opposed by Arab states as well.

Trump's call for depopulating Gaza of Palestinians and to relocate them elsewhere permanently aims at paving the way to fulfil the Israeli dream to create Eretz Yisrael (the greater Israel) which involves annexing all the Palestinian territories and expand borders into Lebanon, Jordan and Syria.

Trump's Gaza Plan violates numerous principles of international law. Already the International Criminal Court (ICC) has issued an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity. This is the first time that Netanyahu has been indicted by an international court for the ongoing war on Gaza.

Many already are branding Trump's Gaza plan a second Balfour Declaration. Trump's Gaza plan will also set a very dangerous precedent and would encourage authoritarian leaders around the world to do similarly and contribute to a global breakdown of peace and security.

According to many experts in international law his plan to permanently move millions of Palestinians out of Gaza constitute ethnic cleansing which could amount to a war crime or crime against humanity. In fact, international law is very clear on the forced deportation or transfer of a civilian population. It is a violation of international humanitarian law, a war crime, and a crime against humanity. The mass deportation of civilians from occupied territory was recognised as a war crime under the Geneva Convention of 1949.

It is the responsibility of all governments around the world to condemn this dangerous plan, and do everything possible to halt it. Palestinians should be allowed to return home in Gaza, receive help in rebuilding Gaza, and live in peace. Meanwhile, Arab and international solidarity with the Palestinian people is getting stronger by the days which will help further strengthen Palestinian resistance against Israeli aggression and occupation.​
 

Bangladesh also walks out during Israeli speech: MoFA
BSS
Published :
Feb 22, 2025 21:26
Updated :
Feb 22, 2025 21:26

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The foreign ministry has said some quarters have been misinterpreting an instant walkout by some delegates from the speech of the Israeli delegate at the 4th Global Ministerial Conference on Road Safety on February 18, in Marrakesh, Morocco.

“This is to inform you that the Bangladesh delegation was also among the countries that walked out,” said the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) in a statement on Friday.

Bangladesh's position on the Palestinian cause and Israeli genocide and other repressions of the Palestinians is well known, said the foreign ministry in its statement.

The ministry requested all concerned to refrain from spreading misinformation about this particular situation.​
 

Gaza ceasefire gravely endangered
Says Hamas after Israel delays release of over 600 Palestinian prisoners

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  • Israel deploying tank division in a West Bank city​
  • 40,000 Palestinians displaced from Jenin, other refugee camps​

Hamas yesterday said Israel has gravely endangered a five-week-old Gaza truce by delaying the release of Palestinian prisoners under the deal because of the manner it has freed Israeli hostages.

The first phase of the truce ends early in March and details of a planned subsequent phase have not been agreed.

With tensions again hanging over the deal -- which halted more than 15 months of offensive -- Israel yesterday announced an expansion of military operations in the occupied West Bank.

The military said a tank division will be sent in to the West Bank city of Jenin, the first such deployment to the territory in 20 years.

Since the Gaza ceasefire's first phase began on January 19, Hamas has released 25 living Israeli hostages in ceremonies before crowds at various locations in Gaza.

Armed masked fighters escort the captives onto stages adorned with slogans. The hostages have spoken and waved in what Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called "humiliating ceremonies".

The Red Cross has previously appealed to "all parties" for the swaps to be carried out in a "dignified and private" manner.

In the seventh such transfer, Hamas released six Israeli captives on Saturday but Israel put off the planned release of more than 600 Palestinian prisoners in exchange.

Senior Hamas official Bassem Naim said postponing the release exposes "the entire agreement to grave danger".

Naim said the mediators, "especially the Americans", must pressure Israel's government "to implement the agreement as it is and immediately release our prisoners."

Alongside the Gaza offensive -- which displaced almost the entire population of 2.4 million -- violence has also soared in the West Bank.

Yesterday, Israel's military said "a tank division will operate in Jenin" as part of "expanding" operations in the area, where the military began a major raid against Palestinian militants just after the Gaza truce began.

The United Nations has said the military activities have led to "forced displacement" of 40,000 Palestinians from Jenin and other refugee camps.

Defence Minister Israel Katz said he has told troops "to prepare for a prolonged presence in the cleared camps for the coming year.​
 

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