Live Middle East: Israeli police kill Turkish man who stabbed officer

Live Middle East: Israeli police kill Turkish man who stabbed officer
Live Middle East: Israeli police kill Turkish man who stabbed officer
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13:43

Israeli police kill Turkish man who stabbed officer

Israeli police shot dead a man in Jerusalem who stabbed a police officer with a knife. It concerns a 34-year-old man with Turkish nationality. The officer was injured but his injuries are not life-threatening. A source at the Israeli police told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz that the Turkish man had only been in Israel for a few days, probably as a tourist.

The incident took place near one of the entrance gates to Jerusalem’s Old City, which has been heavily guarded since the Hamas attack on October 7. The Old City is home to important religious sites for Muslims, Jews and Christians.

Daan de Vries

13:13

Israel will also invade Rafah if a ceasefire agreement is reached, Netanyahu says

Israel will also invade Rafah if Hamas and Israel agree to a ceasefire. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said this during a meeting with families of Israeli hostages. “There is no way we will end the war before we achieve all the goals,” Netanyahu said.

An agreement between Israel and Hamas appears to have come closer in recent days. There is a new Israeli proposal on the table, which calls for a 40-day ceasefire and the release of hundreds or possibly thousands of Palestinian prisoners in exchange for the release of 33 Israeli hostages. Egypt, which is mediating the negotiations, says it has “good hope” that both sides will agree to this proposal.

Israel previously appeared to make the continuation of the ground attack on Rafah dependent on an agreement with Hamas. Netanyahu is under intense domestic pressure to free Israeli hostages through a deal, while far-right hardliners in his government are demanding a raid on Rafah. The international community has called on Israel to refrain from doing so. There are fears that an Israeli attack will lead to a humanitarian disaster in the city, where more than a million Palestinians have gathered in the past six months.

Daan de Vries

11:16

Hamas and Fatah are holding ‘in-depth and frank’ talks on reconciliation in China

The Palestinian movements Fatah and Hamas have held talks in the Chinese capital Beijing about the beginning of reconciliation. According to a spokesperson for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, representatives conducted an “in-depth and frank dialogue.” The aim of the talks is to investigate whether Fatah and Hamas can form a joint government in the future.

In 2006, after the only elections ever held in the Palestinian territories, Fatah and Hamas briefly formed a coalition. However, the coalition soon fell apart and a bloody civil war began, after which Fatah was expelled from the Gaza Strip. Since then, Hamas has been in power in Gaza, while Fatah forms the internationally recognized Palestinian Authority and controls part of the occupied West Bank.

At the end of February, Fatah and Hamas also held talks in Moscow. For both China and Russia, facilitating the negotiations offers the opportunity to present themselves as peacemakers. The United States wants the Fatah-led Palestinian Authority to take power in the Gaza Strip after the war, without a role for Hamas. However, the Palestinian Authority is very unpopular among Palestinians due to corruption problems. Furthermore, Israel has repeatedly stated that it will never accept such a government.

Daan de Vries

08:41

American politicians extremely critical of possible International Criminal Court arrest warrant against Netanyahu

Members of the US Congress have spoken out strongly about reports that the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague plans to issue arrest warrants for high-ranking Israelis. The White House also says it ‘does not support’ the ICC investigation. Mike Johnson, the Republican leader of the House of Representatives, has called on President Biden to “immediately and unequivocally” call for an end to the investigation. Johnson fears that the arrest warrants will set a precedent that will also lead to American politicians being summoned.

The International Criminal Court would, among other things, prepare arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant. Israeli media and members of the Israeli government reported this yesterday. The arrest warrants are said to be related to the Israeli warfare in the Gaza Strip and the Israeli government’s refusal to allow sufficient food shipments to the area.

Both Israel and the US have not ratified the Rome Statute, the founding treaty of the International Criminal Court, and can therefore ignore the arrest warrants. American politicians have already drawn up legislation in response to possible arrest warrants, reports the American news site Axios. Some Republican members of Congress are speculating about imposing sanctions against ICC officials involved in the investigation. A Democratic congressman wants the US to approach other countries to ask them to reconsider their support for the ICC.

Daan de Vries

Also read: Israel nervous about reports that International Criminal Court is preparing an arrest warrant for Netanyahu

06:12

US university suspends students for pro-Palestinian protest

Columbia University in New York on Monday began suspending students who refuse to take down their tents on campus. Students had set up the tent camp in protest against Israel’s attacks in the Gaza Strip.

Rector Nemat Minouche Shafik said in a statement that negotiations took place between student organizations and the university board for days, but that these ultimately did not lead to a solution.

The university had warned students on Monday morning that they had to leave the protest camp by 2 p.m. and sign a form in which they agreed to abide by the rules or face suspension.

The first major American student protests around Gaza took place earlier this month at Columbia, one of the prestigious Ivy League universities in the US. These have since spread to educational institutions across the country. About 350 demonstrators were arrested this weekend.

On Monday, there was a clash in Austin, Texas, between protesting students and police, who deployed pepper spray and made dozens of arrests. (AP)

The tent camp at Columbia University in New York.Image Getty Images via AFP

02:43

Egypt calls Gaza ceasefire talks hopeful

Egypt has high hopes for the proposal for a ceasefire in Gaza that Hamas representatives brought from Cairo, Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry said late on Monday evening. Egyptian intelligence sources tell news agency Reuters know to expect a response from the Palestinian organization within two days.

A senior Hamas official already reported to the news agency on Sunday AFP that the movement has ‘no major problems’ with Israel’s latest proposal for a ceasefire in Gaza. This involves a plan for a 40-day ceasefire and the release of potentially thousands of Palestinian prisoners in exchange for the release of Israeli hostages, British Foreign Secretary David Cameron confirmed on Monday.

“We are hopeful that the proposal will take into account the position of both sides and move both sides to moderation,” Shoukry said. “There are factors on both sides that will have consequences. But I hope everyone seizes this moment to recognize that we cannot continue with this situation that continues to cost lives.”

Egypt, Qatar and the United States have been acting as mediators for a truce between Israel and Hamas for months. So far, a deal has only been completed once. A week-long truce was in effect in November. That week, more than a hundred hostages were released in exchange for three times as many Palestinian prisoners. (AP)

11:39 PM, Yesterday

US found misconduct in five units of Israeli forces

The United States has determined that five units of the Israeli army are responsible for gross violations of the human rights of Palestinians. This concerns abuses in the occupied West Bank before the war between Israel and Hamas broke out in the Gaza Strip in October.

‘Effective’ intervention and ‘corrective’ measures have been taken in four units. The possibility of American sanctions has therefore been removed, according to the Foreign Ministry in Washington. Discussions continue between the Israeli and US governments regarding the fifth army unit, about which Israel provided additional information.

A ministry spokesperson declined to provide details about the violations committed by the units and what measures were taken. It has also not been revealed which units are involved, but it is believed that the fifth army unit is the Netzah Yehuda battalion. That battalion was founded in 1999 for ultra-Orthodox soldiers. (AP)

Read more here about the infamous Netzah Yehuda Battalion that follows its own rules with impunity.

11:38 PM, Yesterday

Welcome to the live blog of Tuesday April 30

This was the most important news of Monday April 29:

Israel is willing to agree to a 40-day ceasefire in exchange for the release of 33 Israeli civilians held hostage by Hamas. That demand is lower than the original demand, which involved forty hostages. The number has been adjusted downwards because a number of the hostages died in captivity.

At least 27 people have been killed and dozens injured in Israeli airstrikes on three houses in the city of Rafah, in southern Gaza. Doctors in the area informed the Reuters news agency on Monday. More than a million Palestinians have fled to Rafah in the past six months, because the city had been declared safe by Israel.

Food aid organization World Central Kitchen (WCK) resumes its work in Gaza. At the beginning of this month, WCK suspended work in Gaza after seven employees were killed in an Israeli drone attack on an organization’s convoy.

Read Monday’s full live blog here.

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