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Israeli military to call up 50,000 reservists as it plans new phase of Gaza war

Israeli military to call up 50,000 reservists as it plans new phase of Gaza war

BreakingNews.ie12 hours ago
An Israeli military official said that the country's top generals had approved plans to begin a new phase of operations in some of Gaza's most densely populated areas.
Speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak publicly, the official said that the military will be operating in parts of Gaza City where the Israeli military has not yet operated and where Hamas is still active.
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The official said after receiving approval from military leaders, the plan would now progress toward the final approval stage.
It remains unclear when the operation will begin.
The official said 50,000 reservists will be called up in the coming month, nearly doubling the number of active reservists to 120,000.
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Gaza scholarship students to be evacuated to Britain
Gaza scholarship students to be evacuated to Britain

Times

time41 minutes ago

  • Times

Gaza scholarship students to be evacuated to Britain

Nine students in Gaza with offers from British universities have been told that the UK will attempt to bring them out so they can start their studies. The students, who have offers at leading institutions and scholarships funded by the government, were told on Tuesday that they would be helped by the Home Office and Foreign Office to come to the UK in the coming weeks. However, dozens more with university offers have been left in limbo, prompting criticism from vice-chancellors and politicians. • Living in Gaza, accepted to Cambridge — blocked by the Home Office A cross-party campaign of more than 100 MPs, several universities and other organisations has lobbied for help for more than 80 students with offers, including 40 who have full scholarships. Some have start dates of September 1 but their visas have been held up by problems, including a lack of biometric data. The UK's biometrics centre in Gaza closed after the Hamas attacks on Israel in October 2023 and there are no other suitable places to register their data in the territory. The Home Office had been insisting that students with places at UK universities provide fingerprints and photographs to apply for a visa. Jordan and Egypt have offices but the students would need British government intervention to enable them to leave Gaza. Italy circumvented this by taking data once students had crossed the border while Ireland waived the requirement and took 16 students in May. France and Belgium have also evacuated students. The nine who were contacted have Chevening Scholarships, which are fully funded by the government for outstanding applicants from around the world to take a one-year master's degree at any British university. They have offers from LSE, University College London, King's College London, Queen Mary University and the universities of Greenwich, Portsmouth, Warwick and Glasgow. Mohamed, 25, who is due to study in Glasgow, said: 'Receiving the letter from the Foreign Office today gave me a sense of hope after so many months of uncertainty. It is a reminder that our situation is being heard and that there is a possibility of finally being able to pursue the opportunities we've worked so hard for. 'While challenges remain, this step means a lot for me personally and for all of us still waiting for a chance to move forward. At the same time, many of my peers who are bright students and dedicated professionals with so much to contribute to the world have not yet received any communication. They remain trapped, their futures on hold, despite the dedication and potential they carry. I hope that this step is only the beginning, and that no one is left behind.' Dr Nora Parr, a researcher at the University of Birmingham who has been co-ordinating efforts to assist the more than 80 students in Gaza, said: 'We are immensely relieved that the government has reached out to students, and to know that there are protocols being put in place for their safe passage to campus for the autumn. However, this limited communication leaves the majority of students totally in the dark. These are students who have put everything into achieving their university and scholarship places, and now they are worried they are going to be left behind.' • Hamas survivors join protest to end war in Gaza She said that many lived in 'dire precarity' with some having been displaced 18 times and that time was running out for them to start their courses. Professor Bhaskar Vira, senior pro-vice-chancellor for education at Cambridge, which is hoping to welcome scholarship students from Gaza in the autumn, said: 'We welcome the news that the government has contacted the Chevening scholars to facilitate safe passage out of Gaza. However, many more talented students who have earned highly competitive scholarships at UK universities, including at Cambridge, remain stuck in Gaza and unable to take up their offers.' Professor Emma McCoy, vice-president at LSE, said: 'We are extremely concerned about offer-holders who are currently stuck in Gaza and urge the UK government to do everything it can to help these talented students to take up their places next month.' Professor Brad MacKay, deputy principal at St Andrews, said: 'It is deeply concerning that many more students with fully funded offers from UK universities, including St Andrews, still face uncertainty. 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We've all worked hard, and we all deserve the same level of transparency and support.' A government spokesman said: 'We are working urgently to support Chevening scholars in Gaza who have offers from British universities to leave and take up their places in the UK. We are doing everything we can to support their safe exit and onward travel to the UK, but the situation on the ground in Gaza makes this extremely challenging. 'The government recognises the scholars' potential as future leaders and believes the programme fosters global development. It is considering requests for support from other students in Gaza with offers from UK universities.'

Israel prepares for Gaza City offensive as 60,000 reservists called up
Israel prepares for Gaza City offensive as 60,000 reservists called up

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

Israel prepares for Gaza City offensive as 60,000 reservists called up

Thousands of Palestinians were told to leave their homes near Gaza City on Wednesday as Israel called up 60,000 reservists for a new ground offensive. The first evacuation orders in nearly two months were issued for Jabaliya, a densely packed refugee camp in northern Gaza, as Israeli jets dropped leaflets advising residents to move south. 'To mitigate the risk of harm to civilians — the civilian population currently located in the active combat zone has been warned and allowed to move south for their safety,' the Israel Defence Forces said after officials announced a 'new phase of combat' in the Strip. Gaza's civil defence agency said Israeli airstrikes and gunfire killed at least 25 people across the territory on Wednesday, with the army already operating in the Jabaliya and Zeitoun suburbs of Gaza City. Israel Katz, the Israeli defence minister, approved a plan by the IDF to capture Gaza City, home to nearly half of the Strip's 2.3 million residents, which will entail the mobilisation of more than 100,000 troops, including reservists, over the next month. 'Once the operation is completed, Gaza will change its face and will no longer look as it did in the past,' Katz said. The plan, to be submitted for final approval by the security cabinet on Thursday, will put the majority of Gaza under Israeli military occupation indefinitely, even as Egypt and Qatar have been trying to broker a ceasefire in the war with Hamas. 'This is a new phase of combat,' an IDF official said. 'We are going into Hamas's main military and governing stronghold, into new areas where Hamas holds military capabilities, as we've seen in recent days, in order to bring the hostages home and defeat Hamas.' This week the militant group, which started the war with its attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, agreed to a proposed 60-day truce in exchange for releasing about half the Israeli hostages it still holds, the freeing of some Palestinian prisoners by Israel, and facilitating more aid into Gaza. Late on Wednesday, Netanyahu's office issued a statement on the operation before its security cabinet approval, saying the prime minister had 'shortened' the timetables to seize control of Gaza City. '[Binyamin] Netanyahu has directed that the timetables — for seizing control of the last terrorist strongholds and the defeat of Hamas — be shortened' — in an apparent shun to Hamas's acceptance of the ceasefire proposal last month, adding that Netanyahu greatly appreciated the fighters who have been mobilised. Mediators in Cairo and Doha are waiting for Israel's formal response but Binyamin Netanyahu, the country's prime minister, signalled that he is only interested in a deal that releases all the hostages. Mustafa Qazzaat, head of the emergency committee in the Gaza municipality, described the situation on the ground as 'catastrophic'. He said that 'large numbers' of people were fleeing their neighbourhoods, with the majority of those displaced 'on the roads and streets without shelter'. Israeli soldiers in Khan Yunis, southern Gaza, fought off an attack on Wednesday by Hamas fighters who emerged from tunnels and opened fire with machineguns and rocket-propelled grenades. The IDF returned fire and ordered a drone strike on the group of at least 18 gunmen, killing ten, the military said. The IDF's new operation proposes an encirclement of Gaza City and predicts close-quarters fighting with two brigades of Hamas militants thought to be inside the city and the heavily built-up central refugee camps. Palestinians flee after attacks on the Zeitoun area AHMED JIHAD IBRAHIM AL-ARINI/GETTY IMAGES The military plans to evacuate up to one million civilians via so-called 'safe routes' from Gaza City towards al-Mawasi in Rafah, although many Palestinians insist they will not leave. Israel has also allowed tents into southern Gaza for the first time in the war and plans to construct two additional field hospitals and four extra aid distribution centres to cope with refugees. Plans for the new offensive have been condemned by critics of Israel's military campaign at home and abroad. President Macron, who has vowed to recognise a Palestinian state at next month's UN general assembly, said that the new offensive 'can only lead to a complete disaster for both peoples'. Israel 'will drag the region into a permanent war', the French president posted on social media, reiterating his call for an 'international stabilisation mission' to keep the peace in Gaza. Macron also promised to host, with Saudi Arabia, a summit in New York next month to revive discussions around the two-state solution, which has been rejected by Netanyahu. Binyamin Netanyahu ABIR SULTAN/EPA The hostage families forum, a campaign group for relatives of those held captive since the October 7 attacks, also called for an emergency meeting with Katz after he approved the operation, codenamed Gideon's Chariots 2. 'Approving plans to occupy Gaza, while there is a deal on the table for Netanyahu's approval, is … a stab to the heart of the families,' the group said, adding that 'the plan that should have been approved last night is the plan to return every last hostage'. Some reservists have also shown signs of dissent and fatigue towards an expansion of the war. A large section of society, the Ultra-Orthodox, has also failed to enlist, putting a strain on reservists amid a shortage of soldiers. 'Sending troops to die for a political fantasy that even the military leadership doesn't believe in is a betrayal of the public and of the soldiers who have sacrificed so much,' said Yotam Vilk, a reservist who opposes the operation, referring to the IDF chief of staff's previously reported objections to the plan. 'What happens after Gaza City is captured? Will we impose indefinite military rule? Build mass detention camps in violation of Israel's obligations under the genocide convention? Without a political vision, without readiness to make a deal — what future is left for Israel? For the hostages still trapped underground? For the countless Palestinians who will continue to suffer and die? 'Every soldier who loves this country must understand: it's time to stop enabling this. The war must end, the hostages must come home, and only a full agreement will get us there.' Israel's cabinet has not convened a security meeting to discuss the latest ceasefire proposal. Instead, hardline elements of the government are moving forward with plans to expand settlement building in the West Bank that would divide land identified as key to a future Palestinian state, cutting it off from East Jerusalem and separating the north and the southern West Bank. On Wednesday, Israel approved the construction plan for the so-called E1 area, which had been delayed for decades in the face of international objections. David Lammy, the British foreign secretary, said that if the settlement plan was implemented it would constitute a 'flagrant breach of international law and critically undermine the two-state solution'. Bezalel Smotrich, Israel's far-right finance minister, said: 'The Palestinian state is being erased — not with slogans, but with actions.' He has promised to end the prospect of a two-state solution. Itamar Ben-Gvir, the security minister, visited Palestinian prisoners in an Israeli prison to show them a large black-and-white poster of Gaza in ruins due to Israeli bombing. Itamar Ben-Gvir with the poster of Gaza in ruins 'This is how it's supposed to look,' Ben Gvir, who runs Israel's prisons and police, said of the devastation in a video posted to his Telegram account. One Palestinian inmate recognised his destroyed home in the photo, he added. 'This is what they see every morning when they go out to the courtyard,' Ben-Gvir said. Both Smotrich, of the Religious Zionism party, and Ben-Gvir, of the Jewish Power party, have threatened to bring down Netanyahu's coalition government if he agrees to a ceasefire deal, although parliament is on a summer break. Both ministers were sanctioned by Britain in June over their incitement to violence against Palestinians.

Israeli military to call up 60,000 reservists as it plans new phase of Gaza war
Israeli military to call up 60,000 reservists as it plans new phase of Gaza war

Rhyl Journal

timean hour ago

  • Rhyl Journal

Israeli military to call up 60,000 reservists as it plans new phase of Gaza war

Speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak publicly, the official said that the military will be operating in parts of Gaza City where the Israeli military has not yet operated and where Hamas is still active. Israeli troops are already operating in the Zeitoun neighbourhood of Gaza City, and the Jabaliya refugee camp in northern Gaza, in order to prepare the groundwork for the expanded operation, which is expected to receive approval from the chief of staff in the coming days. It remains unclear when the operation will begin. The official said 60,000 reservists will be called up in the coming month, nearly doubling the number of active reservists to 120,000. Prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said earlier this month that the objective was to secure the release of the remaining hostages and ensure Hamas and other militants can never again threaten Israel. Hamas-led militants started the war when they attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting 251. Most of the hostages have been released in ceasefires or other deals. Hamas says it will only free the rest in exchange for a lasting ceasefire and an Israeli withdrawal. The planned offensive into Gaza City and the central camps has heightened international condemnation of Israel and fuelled fears of another mass displacement among Palestinians. Hundreds of thousands of displaced people are sheltering in the city and its holds some of the last remnants of critical infrastructure remaining in Gaza. Mediators and Hamas say they have agreed to ceasefire terms, but Israel's response remains unclear as members of Mr Netanyahu's coalition oppose a phased deal that does not 'complete the defeat of Hamas'.

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