
‘All of Gaza will be Jewish'
The far-right Otzma Yehudit politician dismissed renewed UN warnings of man-made famine in the enclave, stating that the Israeli government is 'racing toward erasing Gaza.'
'Thank God we are erasing this evil. All of Gaza will be Jewish,' Eliyahu told Radio Kol Barama on Thursday, according to Ynet.
'We shouldn't be dealing with hunger in Gaza –let the world take care of them. No nation feeds its enemies. Have we completely lost our minds? Should we care about their evening meal?' he added.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu distanced himself from the comments, noting that Eliyahu is not a member of the Security Cabinet, which determines the conduct of the war.
'This government's policy is clear and united. His statements do not represent it,' Netanyahu said.
Israeli Ambassador to the US Yechiel Leiter also condemned Eliyahu's remarks, calling them 'wrong, foolish, and totally unrepresentative of the government and people of Israel.' Posting on X, he insisted that Israel is committed to creating a mechanism to deliver humanitarian aid to Gazan civilians 'BUT NOT THROUGH HAMAS.'
According to local health authorities, more than 59,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since October 2023, including at least 113 who died from hunger. World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Wednesday that Israel's 'blockade' has pushed Gaza to the brink of 'mass starvation.'
Philippe Lazzarini, head of the UN's Palestinian refugee agency (UNRWA), has called on Israel to allow access for 6,000 aid trucks currently stalled in Egypt and Jordan. Israeli officials, meanwhile, have accused Hamas and other armed groups of hoarding supplies and attacking civilians at distribution points.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Russia Today
4 days ago
- Russia Today
South Africa comments on Palestinian statehood
South African Foreign Minister Ronald Lamola has called for a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestine conflict in an address at a high-level UN conference aimed at advancing concrete steps toward peace. Lamola said South Africa continues to condemn the horrific events of October 7, where innocent Israeli citizens were killed. In a reaffirmation of its anti-war stance, South Africa outlined key principles necessary to restore the credibility of the two-state solution. 'Firstly, all states must urgently recognise Palestinian statehood, and the territorial integrity and contiguity of Palestine should be established and respected. In this regard, South Africa welcomes the intentions of recognition of the state of Palestine by France as an important step towards achieving a two-State solution,' Lamola said. 'Secondly, there cannot be peace while the very existence of the Palestinian people is being threatened by Israel's continued genocidal actions in Gaza and the forced displacement of Palestinians in the West Bank. This is part of a systematic pattern of injustices and oppression of Palestinians since the adoption of Resolution 181 and the subsequent Nakba in 1948. These actions must be condemned, and the UN Security Council must act to protect the Palestinian people in whole and in part. 'Thirdly, preserving the viability of the two-state solution must include promoting safeguards such as the full respect for international law, including international humanitarian law, and human rights law. It is necessary for the immediate and full implementation of resolutions of the United Nations and the provisional measures, as well as Advisory Opinions of the International Court of Justice,' Lamola continued. The minister said all states, not just Israel, must follow their collective obligations under international law. They all must preserve the sanctity of international law and ensure accountability. Against this backdrop, the Hague Group was established, and the Madrid Group recently convened. Both initiatives aim to elevate the primacy of international law, promote accountability, and ensure a just peace. Lamola said all obstacles to a two-state solution must be removed. This includes an immediate ceasefire and a commitment to a peace process; the release of hostages by Hamas and political prisoners by the state of Israel; the halting of illegal Israeli settlement expansion; the removal of the illegal separation wall cutting across the occupied Palestinian Territory; and the resumption of all internationally reputable humanitarian relief efforts and the reconstruction of Gaza, which of course can only take place once there is peace. 'Global attention is on this conference. There is an expectation that we will deliver an effective response to the destruction of an entire population and a peaceful path for preserving the prospect of a viable Palestinian State existing side by side with the State of Israel in peace and security. This expectation is not misplaced, and it could not be higher,' he said. 'Eighty years since the founding of the United Nations, this is a matter that has plagued our collective conscience. The solution lies with a tangible re-commitment from all of us to the values that bind us.' UN Secretary-General António Guterres said statehood for the Palestinians is a right, not a reward. Denying statehood would be a gift to extremists everywhere. 'The only realistic, just, and sustainable solution is two States – Israel and Palestine – living side-by-side in peace and security, within secure and recognised borders, on the basis of the pre-1967 lines, with Jerusalem as the capital of both – in line with international law, UN resolutions and other relevant agreements,' Guterres said. He implored the international community not only to keep the two-state solution alive, but to take the urgent, concrete, irreversible steps necessary to make it published by IOL


Russia Today
5 days ago
- Russia Today
US congresswoman labels Gaza ‘a genocide'
Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene has declared that the situation in Gaza amounts to a 'genocide,' blasting the worsening humanitarian crisis and starvation in the enclave. She also called on Hamas to release the remaining hostages captured during the Islamist group's October 7 assault on Israel, which left around 1,200 people dead. 'It's the most truthful and easiest thing to say that Oct 7th in Israel was horrific and all hostages must be returned, but so is the genocide, humanitarian crisis, and starvation happening in Gaza,' Greene wrote on X on Tuesday. She was replying to a controversial tweet by Congressman Randy Fine. 'Release the hostages. Until then, starve away,' he wrote last week, suggesting that the discourse around starvation in Gaza was 'Muslim terror propaganda.' Greene criticized the post, stressing that the lawmaker's 'awful statement will actually cause more antisemitism.' Fine was reportedly dropped from a list of candidates endorsed by the pro-Israel US lobby organization AIPAC days after the post. The UN warned on Tuesday that the situation in Gaza is one step away from being classified as a famine. There is mounting evidence that 'widespread starvation, malnutrition and disease' are causing hunger‑related deaths, the UN's food security watchdog IPC said. West Jerusalem has rejected claims of deliberate starvation, placing the blame on poor coordination in aid flows and accused Hamas of hijacking convoys and stealing food. In March, Israel entirely cut off the flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza to pressure Hamas into a ceasefire, but later relented. On Sunday, following mounting international pressure, Israel pledged to resume food airdrops and allow pauses in fighting to let humanitarian aid trucks into Gaza. According to the UN, more than 100 trucks made it into the enclave on Sunday. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has stressed that the volume of assistance needs to increase. 'The trickle of aid must become an ocean,' he wrote on Tuesday, calling for Israel and Hamas to agree on an immediate ceasefire.


Russia Today
6 days ago
- Russia Today
Kremlin reveals details of Putin-Netanyahu call
Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday in a phone call focused on developments in the Middle East, according to the Kremlin. The two leaders discussed the situation in Syria and the recent escalation between Israel and Iran. Moscow reaffirmed its commitment to a peaceful resolution of regional conflicts, the Kremlin said in a statement. Putin stressed the importance of preserving Syria's unity, sovereignty, and territorial integrity. He also offered Russia's assistance in establishing dialogue between Israel and Iran following the recent conflict between the two nations. Moscow is ready 'to contribute in every possible way to finding a negotiated solution' to the tensions around the Iranian nuclear program. Putin and Netanyahu also agreed to continue the dialogue on pressing bilateral and international issues, the Kremlin added. After Bashar Assad's government fell late last year, Israel expanded its presence in Syria beyond the Golan Heights, citing the need to prevent hostile actors from gaining a foothold near its borders. Earlier this month, the Israel Defense Forces also launched multiple airstrikes on the Syrian Defense Ministry in Damascus, claiming the strikes were in defense of the Druze minority in southern Syria. Netanyahu and Syria's interim leader, Ahmad al-Sharaa, a former commander of Islamist Hayat Tahrir al-Sham militia, then agreed to a US-mediated ceasefire. In June, Israel carried out US-supported air strikes on Iranian nuclear and military sites, triggering a retaliation from Tehran. The two countries exchanged strikes for 12 days. Russia was among the few nations to contact both Israel and Iran immediately after the first strikes were launched, in an attempt to defuse tensions. It also proposed several compromise frameworks to all parties, according to Putin.