
Israel opposition, hostages' kin call for end to Gaza war
Israel's opposition leader and the families of Israeli hostages held in Gaza called on Tuesday for an end to the war in the Palestinian territory after a ceasefire was announced with Iran.
US President Donald Trump said a truce was in effect between Israel and Iran after 12 days of war that saw Israel and the United States pummel the Islamic republic's nuclear facilities.
'And now Gaza. It's time to finish it there too. Bring back the hostages, end the war,' opposition leader Yair Lapid of the centre-right Yesh Atid party wrote on X.
The Hostages and Missing Families Forum, the main group representing the families of those abducted during Hamas's October 2023 attack on Israel, also called on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to seek a Gaza ceasefire.
'We call on the government to engage in urgent negotiations that will bring home all the hostages and end the war. Those who can achieve a ceasefire with Iran can also end the war in Gaza,' it said in a statement.
Of the 251 hostages seized by Palestinian militants in October 2023, 49 are still held in Gaza, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead.
The prime minister of Qatar, a key mediator between Israel and Hamas, said the Gulf country was working on resuming talks for a ceasefire.
'We are still continuing our efforts, and God willing, we will try to look for an opportunity during the next two days for having indirect negotiations between the two parties,' Sheikh Mohammed Bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani said.
Israeli President Isaac Herzog suggested the truce with Iran was 'a great opportunity' to foster national unity after the highly divisive Gaza war, although he did not call for an end to the fighting in the territory.
'I believe this can be a moment of goodwill and national agreement on many painful issues,' Herzog told reporters at the site of an Iranian missile strike in southern Israel.
Foreign leaders too expressed hope that the fragile ceasefire between Israel and Iran would lead to a truce in Gaza which Israeli troops invaded more than 20 months ago.
'Today... the moment has come to conclude a ceasefire for Gaza,' Chancellor Friedrich Merz told the German parliament. The Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority demanded that the ceasefire with Iran be widened to include Gaza, which is suffering from famine-like conditions and near-daily deadly shootings near aid centres, according to UN agencies.
'The Palestinian presidency welcomed US President Donald Trump's announcement of a ceasefire agreement,' president Mahmud Abbas's office said in a statement, adding: 'We demand the completion of this step by achieving a ceasefire that includes the Gaza Strip.'
The October 2023 attack that sparked the Gaza war resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
Israel's retaliatory military campaign has killed at least 56,077 people, also mostly civilians, according to figures from the Gaza health ministry which the United Nations considers reliable.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Tuesday said that 'the moment has come' for a ceasefire in Gaza between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas.
Speaking to parliament, Merz reiterated Germany's support for Israel, which he said 'has a right to defend its existence and the safety of its citizens'. But he added that Germany reserves the right to 'critically question what Israel wants to achieve in the Gaza Strip'.
He also said that Germany 'will not consider suspending or terminating' the EU-Israel Association Agreement, which has been under review by the EU as it looks to pressure Israel into allowing more aid into Gaza.
However, Merz also called on Israel to ensure 'humane treatment of the people in the Gaza Strip, especially women, children and the elderly'.
Merz made the comments amid hopes for a ceasefire between Israel and Iran announced by US President Donald Trump, even as the two sides accused each other of continuing hostilities and the US president voiced frustration with both.
Israel launched strikes against Iran on June 13, hitting nuclear and military sites as well as residential areas, and prompting waves of retaliatory Iranian missile attacks.
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Middle East Eye
39 minutes ago
- Middle East Eye
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In the 1980s Israel even formulated a plan to bomb Pakistan's nuclear site with Indian assistance - a scheme that the Indian government eventually backed out of. AQ Khan, as he is commonly remembered by Pakistanis, believed that by building a nuclear bomb he had saved his country from foreign threats, especially its nuclear-armed neighbour India. Today many of his fellow citizens agree. 'Why not an Islamic bomb?' Pakistan first decided to build a bomb after its larger neighbour had done so. On 18 May 1974 India tested its first nuclear weapon, which it codenamed Smiling Buddha. Pakistani Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto immediately vowed to develop nuclear weapons for his own country. "We will eat grass or leaves, even go hungry, but we will get one of our own," he said. There was, he declared, 'a Christian bomb, a Jewish bomb and now a Hindu bomb. 'Why not an Islamic bomb?' 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But work on the nuclear programme continued. By 1986, Khan was confident Pakistan had the capability to produce nuclear weapons. 'Imperial whore': Top Pakistani official goes after son of overthrown shah of Iran Read More » His motivation was in large part ideological: 'I want to question the holier-than-thou attitude of the Americans and British,' he said. 'Are these bastards God-appointed guardians of the world?' There were serious efforts to sabotage the programme, including a series of assassination attempts widely understood to have been the work of Israel's intelligence agency, Mossad. Executives at European companies doing business with Khan found themselves targeted. A letter bomb was sent to one in West Germany - he escaped but his dog was killed. Another bombing targeted a senior executive of Swiss company Cora Engineering, which worked on Pakistan's nuclear programme. Historians, including Adrian Levy, Catherine Scott-Clark and Adrian Hanni, have argued that the Mossad used threats and assassination attempts in a failed campaign to prevent Pakistan from building the bomb. Siegfried Schertler, the owner of one company, told Swiss Federal Police that Mossad agents phoned him and his salesmen repeatedly. He said he was approached by an employee of the Israeli embassy in Germany, a man named David, who told him to stop 'these businesses' regarding nuclear weapons. The Israelis 'didn't want a Muslim country to have the bomb', according to Feroz Khan, a former official in Pakistan's nuclear weapons programme. 'Are these bastards God-appointed guardians of the world?' - AQ Khan, Pakistani nuclear scientist In the early 1980s Israel proposed to India that the two collaborate to bomb and destroy Pakistan's nuclear facility at Kahuta in Pakistan's Rawalpindi district. Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi approved the strike. 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Pakistan then successfully tested its own in the Balochistan desert later that month. The US responded by sanctioning both India and Pakistan. Pakistan had become the world's seventh nuclear power. And Khan was a national hero. He was driven around in motorcades as large as the prime minister's and was guarded by army commandos. What the Israel-Iran-US conflict taught Pakistan Read More » Streets, schools and multiple cricket teams were named after him. He wasn't known for playing down his achievements. 'Who made the atom bomb? I made it,' Khan declared on national television. 'Who made the missiles? I made them for you.' But Khan had also organised another, particularly daring, operation. From the mid-1980s onwards, he ran an international nuclear network which sent technology and designs to Iran, North Korea and Libya. He would order double the number of parts the Pakistani nuclear programme required and then secretly sell the excess on. 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Middle East Eye
39 minutes ago
- Middle East Eye
Largest British Jewish body suspends members for criticising Israel
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The National
an hour ago
- The National
Israel's Leviathan gasfield to resume production after shutdown during Iran conflict
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