
Israel approves Gaza offensive plan amid Hamas condemnation
Sabah Fatoum, 51, who lives in a tent in the city's Tal al-Hawa neighbourhood, told AFP by phone that 'the explosions are massive' in the area.
There are 'many air strikes and tanks are advancing in the southern area of Tal al-Hawa with drones above our heads', she said.
Abu Ahmed Abbas, 46, who lives in a tent in the Zeitoun neighbourhood, said that tanks had been advancing into the southeastern part of Zeitoun and southern Tal al-Hawa 'for several days' and demolishing houses.
'The air strikes are extremely intense, they have intensified, and sometimes there is artillery shelling since last Sunday.'
'Just escaped death'
Gaza's civil defence agency also reported intensified Israeli air strikes on residential neighbourhoods of Gaza City in recent days.
Agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP that Israeli attacks had killed at least 40 people across the territory on Wednesday.
AFP footage from Gaza City on Tuesday showed Palestinians fleeing Israeli strikes on the Zeitoun and Asqoola neighbourhoods using overloaded carts, vans and bikes.
'I didn't bring a mattress or anything, and we just escaped death and now we're running away and we don't know where to go,' said displaced Palestinian Fidaa Saad.
Israel's plans to expand its offensive into Gaza City come as diplomacy aimed at securing an elusive ceasefire and hostage release deal has been stalled for weeks, with the latest round of negotiations breaking down in July.
Egypt said Tuesday it was still working with fellow Gaza mediators Qatar and the United States to broker a 60-day truce 'with the release of some hostages and some Palestinian detainees, and the flow of humanitarian and medical assistance to Gaza without restrictions'.
Hamas said early on Wednesday that a senior delegation had arrived in Cairo for 'preliminary talks' with Egyptian officials.
Israel's plans to expand the fighting have sparked international outcry as well as domestic opposition.
Reserve and retired pilots who served in the Israeli air force rallied on Tuesday in Tel Aviv to demand an end to the conflict.
'This war and expansion will only cause the death of the hostages, death of more Israeli soldiers, and death of many more innocent Palestinians in Gaza,' said Guy Poran, a former air force pilot.
Dire conditions
UN-backed experts have warned of widespread famine unfolding in the territory, where Israel has drastically curtailed the amount of humanitarian aid it allows in.
The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza says at least 235 people, including 106 children, have died of hunger since the war began in October 2023, with many of the cases recorded in recent weeks.
Netanyahu on Tuesday revived calls to 'allow' Palestinians to leave Gaza, telling Israeli broadcaster i24NEWS that 'we are not pushing them out, but we are allowing them to leave'.
Past calls to resettle Gazans outside of the war-battered territory, including from US President Donald Trump, have sparked fears of displacement among Palestinians and condemnation from the international community.
Hamas' October 2023 attack on Israel that triggered the war resulted in the deaths of 1219 people, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
Of the 251 hostages taken during the attack, 49 are still held in Gaza, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead.
Israel's offensive has killed at least 61,722 Palestinians, according to figures from the health ministry in Gaza which the United Nations considers reliable.
- Agence France-Presse
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Many of the NGOs now told they are not "authorized" to deliver aid have worked in Gaza for decades, are trusted by communities and experienced in delivering aid safely. Their exclusion has left hospitals without basic supplies, children, people with disabilities, and older people dying from hunger and preventable illnesses, and aid workers themselves going to work hungry. The obstruction is tied to new INGO registration rules introduced in March. Under these new rules, registration can be denied on the basis of vague and politicized criteria, such as alleged "delegitimization" of the state of Israel. INGOs warned the process was designed to control independent organizations, silence advocacy, and censor humanitarian reporting. This new bureaucratic obstruction is inconsistent with established international law as it entrenches Israel's control and annexation of the occupied Palestinian territory. 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Today, INGOs' fears have proven true: the registration system is now being used to further block aid and deny food and medicine in the midst of the worst-case scenario of famine. "Since the full siege was imposed on 2 March, CARE has not been able to deliver any of our $1.5 million worth of pre-positioned supplies into Gaza," said Jolien Veldwijk, Country Director of CARE. "This includes critical shipments of food parcels, medical supplies, hygiene kits, dignity kits, and maternal and infant care items. Our mandate is to save lives, but due to the registration restrictions civilians are being left without the food, medicine, and protection they urgently need." "Oxfam has over $2.5 million worth of goods that have been rejected from entering Gaza by Israel, especially WASH and hygiene items as well as food," said Bushra Khalidi, Oxfam Policy Lead. "This registration process signals to INGOs that their ability to operate may come at the cost of their independence and ability to speak out." These restrictions are part of a broader strategy that includes the so-called "GHF" scheme - a militarized distribution mechanism promoted as a humanitarian solution. In reality, it is a deadly tool of control, with at least 859 Palestinians killed around "GHF" sites since it began operating. "The militarized food distribution scheme has weaponized starvation and curated suffering. Distributions at GHF sites have resulted in extreme levels of violence and killings, primarily of young Palestinian men, but also of women and children, who have gone to the sites in the hope of receiving food," according to Aitor Zabalgogeazkoa, MSF emergency coordinator in Gaza. 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We call on all states and donors to: Press Israel to end the weaponization of aid, including through bureaucratic obstruction, such as the INGO registration procedures. Insist that INGOs are not forced to share sensitive personal information, in violation of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), or compromise staff safety or independence as a condition for delivering aid. Demand the immediate and unconditional opening of all land crossings and conditions for the delivery of lifesaving humanitarian aid.

RNZ News
3 hours ago
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'Full sovereignty and independence': New Caledonia's FLNKS rejects France's Bougival project
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He said document demonstrated "the administrating power's (France) contempt towards our struggle for recognition as the colonised people". However, he called on the FLNKS to "remain open to dialogue", but only focusing on ways to obtain "full sovereignty" after bilateral talks only with the French State, and no longer with the opposing local political parties (who want New Caledonia to remain a part of France). Some of the mentioned deadlines, he said, were 24 September 2025 and eventually before the end of President Macron's mandate in April 2027, when French Presidential elections are scheduled to take place. Téin was also part of the 13 August media conference, joining via videoconference, to confirm the FLNKS resolutions made at the weekend. Apart from reiterating its calendar of events, the FLNKS, in its final document, endorses the "total and unambiguous rejection" of the French-fostered document" because it is "incompatible" with the right to self-determination and bears a "logic of recolonisation" on the part of France. The document, labelled "motion of general policy", also demands that as a result of the rejection of the Bougival document, and since the previous 1998 Nouméa Accord remains in force, provincial elections previously scheduled for no later than November 2025 should now be maintained. Under the Bougival format, the provincial elections were to be postponed once again to mid-2026. "This will be a good opportunity to verify the legitimacy of those people who want to discuss the future of the country", FLNKS member Sylvain Pabouty (head of Dynamique Unitaire Sud -DUS-) told reporters. Signatures on the last page of New Caledonia's new agreement Photo: Philippe Dunoyer As for the five negotiators who, initially, put their signatures on the document on behalf of FLNKS (including chief negotiator And Union Calédonienne Chairman Emmanuel Tjibaou), they have been de-missioned and their mandate deemed null and void. "Let this be clear to everyone. This is a block rejection of all that is related to the Bougival project," FLNKS political bureau member and leader of the Labour party Marie-Pierre Goyetche told local reporters. "Bougival is behind us, end of the story. The fundamental aim is for our country to access full sovereignty and independence through a decolonisation process within the framework of international law, including the right of the peoples to dispose of themselves." She said that, from now on, the FLNKS will refuse to engage in any aspect of the Bougival document. Part of this further Bougival engagement is a "drafting committee" suggested by French Minister for Overseas Manuel Valls, aiming at elaborating all documents (including necessary bills, legal and constitutional texts) related to the general agreement signed in July. Anticipating the FLNKS decision, Valls has already announced he will travel to New Caledonia next week to pursue talks and further "clarify" the spirit of the negotiations that led to the signing. He said he would not give up and that a failure to go along with the agreed document would be "everyone's failure". The Bougival document envisages a path to more autonomy for New Caledonia, including transferring more powers (such as foreign affairs) from France. It also proposes to augment its status by creating a "State" of New Caledonia and creating a dual French/New Caledonia citizenship. The FLNKS stressed it still wanted to talk to Valls, albeit on their own terms, especially when he visits New Caledonia next week. However, according to the FLNKS "motion", this would mean only on one-to-one format (no longer inclusively with the local pro-France parties), with United Nations "technical assistance" and "under the supervision" of the FLNKS president. The only admitted subjects would then be related to a path to "full sovereignty" and further talks were only to take place in New Caledonia. As for the timeline, the FLNKS "motion" states that a "Kanaky Agreement" should be signed before 24 September, which would open a transitional period to full sovereignty not later than April 2027, in other words "before (French) Presidential elections". Goyetche also stressed that the FLNKS motion is warning France against "any new attempt to force its way", as was the case in the days preceding 13 May 2024. This is when a vote in Parliament to amend the French constitution and change the rules of eligibility for voters at New Caledonia's local provincial elections triggered deadly and destructive riots that killed 14 and caused damages worth over €2 billion (as a result of arson and looting). "It seems as if the French government wants to go through the same hardships again", Téin was heard saying through his telephone at the Wednesday conference. "Don't do the same mistake again", Pabouty spoke in a fictitious warning to Valls. In his message posted on social networks on Sunday (10 August), the French minister had blamed those who "refuse the agreement" and who "choose confrontation and let the situation rot away". At the same media conference on Wednesday, FLNKS officials also called on "all of pro-independence forces to do all in their power to peacefully stop the (French) State's agenda as agreed in Bougival". The FLNKS text, as released on Wednesday, also "reaffirms that FLNKS remains the only legitimate representative of the Kanak people, to carry its inalienable right to self-determination". Téin is the leader of the CCAT (field action coordinating cell), a group set up by Union Calédonienne late 2023 to protest against the proposed French Constitutional amendment to alter voters' rules of eligibility at local elections. The protests mainly stemmed from the perception that if the new rules were to come into force, the indigenous Kanaks would find themselves in a position of minority in their own country. Téin was arrested in June 2024 and was charged for a number of crime-related offences, as well as his alleged involvement in the May 2024 riots. He was released from jail mid-June 2025 pending his trial and under the condition that he does not return to New Caledonia for the time being. 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They confirm they will meet Valls along Bougival lines when he visits next week and are now calling on a "bipartisan" committee of those supporting the Bougival text, including parties from all sides, as well as members of the civil society and "experts". They maintain that the Bougival document is "the only viable way to pull New Caledonia out of the critical situation in which it finds itself" and the "political balances" it contains "cannot be put into question".


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