
Hamas says 'armed resistance' will go on until Palestinian state is established
In a statement on Saturday, the Palestinian group said its "armed resistance ... cannot be relinquished except through the full restoration of our national rights, foremost among them the establishment of an independent, fully sovereign Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital."
Hamas also criticised Mr Witkoff's visit to the US and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) amid mass starvation in the enclave and reports of hundreds of Palestinian aid seekers being killed near the agency's distribution sites since May.
'The American administration is a full partner in the crime of starvation and genocide,' Hamas said. It described Mr Witkoff's visit as 'nothing more than a pre-arranged theatrical performance' to provide Israel with 'political cover' as it starves Palestinians.
Mr Witkoff said he and US ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee spent more than five hours inside Gaza on Friday "assessing conditions" and speaking to staff from the Israeli and US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
The visit by Mr Witkoff and Mr Huckabee came after Mr Trump lamented the dire aid situation in Gaza. He described it as 'terrible', despite Israeli claims that there is 'no starvation policy' in the enclave.
Mr Witkoff reportedly told hostage families during a visit to Tel Aviv on Saturday that Arab countries were calling on Hamas to disarm, according to Hebrew media accounts. He also reportedly said the group was ready to give up its arms.
Videos online showed him arriving to meet the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, as families chanted "Bring them home!" and "We need your help."
Of the 251 hostages taken during the Hamas attack, 49 are still being held in Gaza, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead.
After the meeting, the forum released a statement saying Mr Witkoff had given them a personal commitment that he and US President Donald Trump would work to return the remaining hostages.
Indirect negotiations between Hamas and Israel aimed at winning a 60-day ceasefire in the Gaza war and deal for the release of half the hostages ended last week in deadlock.
In an attempt to further pressure Israel into a ceasefire, Hamas released a second video in two days of a hostage on Saturday.
"The deliberate starvation of our son as part of a propaganda campaign is one of the most horrifying acts the world has seen. He is being starved purely to serve Hamas's propaganda," the family said.
French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot on Saturday also denounced the videos as "despicable".
"They must be freed, without conditions," he posted on X. "Hamas must be disarmed and excluded from ruling Gaza."
The US, along with Egypt and Qatar, has been mediating ceasefire talks between Hamas and Israel that would allow the hostages to be released and humanitarian aid to flow.
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The National
8 minutes ago
- The National
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun pledges to disarm Hezbollah despite resistance
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun pledged on Thursday that the state would assert full control over arms nationwide 'despite the difficulties', as Hezbollah rejected a government plan to disarm the group by end of the year. Lebanese authorities are pushing ahead with a plan to disarm the group and other non-state actors and are expected to vote to officially adopt the plan on Thursday afternoon, after failing to adopt it during a turbulent meeting earlier this week. The 'arms monopoly will be achieved despite the difficulties and obstacles', Mr Aoun told Saudi news channel Al Arabiya. Tuesday's heated cabinet session ended without a vote but resulted in the announcement of a disarmament timeline, expected to conclude by the end of the year. The cabinet is set to revisit the plan and vote during Thursday's session. Mr Aoun said that authorities are waiting to 'discuss and approve' an army plan to consolidate weapons under state authority which will be discussed in the session. 'Monopolising arms in the hand of the state does not harm Lebanon's rights and sovereignty,' he said. The Iran-backed group has rejected the motion outright and said it will deal with it 'as if it does not exist'. Ministers in Hezbollah and its ally the Amal Movement staged a walkout of Tuesday's government meeting to protest the disarmament plan, with Hezbollah condemning it as a 'great sin'. In an interview with Qatar based Al Jazeera news channel on Thursday, Ghaleb Abu Zeinab, a member of the party's political council, said that the government had bypassed all the issues that had been discussed and to which the party was open to, adopting a plan that served Israel's interests under pressure from the US. Mr Abu Zeinab added that the government even bypassed Mr Aoun's proposals, and 'adopted a plan by US envoy Thomas Barrak, which clearly bears Israeli influence'. The government's adoption of Mr Barrak 's plan represents 'an attempt to help Israel achieve what it was unable to achieve through war', according to Mr Abu Zeinab, who warned 'of the seriousness of the situation and the impasse the country is heading towards due to its position, which it took under American pressure'. The cabinet's efforts to adopt a motion to bring arms under its control comes as the US exerts intense pressure on the government to commit to a timetable for Hezbollah's disarmament. The small country, which for decades has been caught in the competing tides of US and Iranian influence, finds its self caught between the two once again: pressed for time as US pressure mounts and Israel continues its daily spree of air strikes and assassinations, and Hezbollah's refusal to disarm. Tuesday's high-stakes government meeting coincided simultaneously with a forceful speech by the group's leader Naim Qassem in which he rejected disarmament. It was one of the most defiant public stances by the group – which suffered significant losses in leadership and infrastructure during its war with Israel – in months. Hezbollah has consistently rejected discussions over its arms until Israel stops its daily bombardment and withdraws from five points of Lebanese territories occupied during last year's Hezbollah-Israel war. On Wednesday, Hezbollah said the government decision weakened Lebanon's position amid Israeli and US 'threats' against the country. The announcement by the Lebanese government also evoked a strong reaction from Iran, Hezbollah's main backer. Foreign Minister Abbas Aragchi said 'this is not the first time they have tried to disarm Hezbollah'. 'Now they think they can disarm Hezbollah, but the position of the Hezbollah leader showed that they stood firm and have a strong position.' Mr Aragchi said Iran supported Hezbollah's decisions, but 'would not interfere in the matter'. Hours after Hezbollah's statement on Wednesday evening, Israel launched a heavy bombing campaign against alleged weapons depots and other infrastructure belonging to the group. The Lebanese Ministry of health said one person was killed and another two injured in one of the attacks on Deir Seryan in the south of the country.


Middle East Eye
11 minutes ago
- Middle East Eye
Why Gaza's genocide ranks among the gravest horrors of human history
A prevalent fallacy is to view modern brutal policies as less severe than previous atrocities that have scarred human history, including the horrors of the Second World War. The core of this fallacy lies in neutralising the element of time, and overlooking the evolution of deterrents and constraints designed to prevent the recurrence of past monstrosities. These constraints are not limited to the development of global values-based and legal frameworks, nor to the growth of a general ethical conscience across humanity, regardless of the degree to which such standards are upheld. They also include the fact that many of today's crimes are exposed in real time through pervasive media coverage, making concealment far more difficult than in the past, when empires, states and armies could sweep grave offences under the rug. Some early signals of the Nazi extermination programme were publicly apparent via racist and inflammatory rhetoric, coercive legislative and procedural measures, and horrifying policies of persecution and deportation to concentration camps. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Yet many of these horrors remained hidden behind fortified walls until the Nazi regime collapsed, revealing the terrifying atrocities committed under the deceitful slogan mounted above the gates of Auschwitz: 'Arbeit macht frei' ('Work sets you free'). A few decades prior, Germany committed acts of genocide in Africa - horrors that remain largely unknown even today, despite belated official recognition by the German state. During the genocide against the Herero and Nama peoples in the early 20th century in what is now Namibia, German colonisers killed tens of thousands. In stark contrast to the historical veil over such atrocities, Israel's current slaughter in the Gaza Strip is being transmitted live from the field through screens and networks, despite Israel's ban on global media entering the territory. Savage violations In this narrow stretch of land, human lives and dignity are being savagely violated in an era that has seen the elevation of international law and human rights principles, alongside the development of the United Nations and other global mechanisms for accountability, most notably the International Court of Justice and the International Criminal Court. Were the atrocities of the past to be reactivated in the present day, they might find no more advanced or horrifying mode of execution than Israel's genocidal programme in the Gaza Strip, which continues under the gaze of the entire world. Indeed, they could derive an operational blueprint from the systematic policies and practices of Israeli war leaders, and the propaganda narratives they use to justify each fresh atrocity. Follow Middle East Eye's live coverage of the Israel-Palestine war Likewise, if the horrors unfolding today in Gaza had occurred during previous eras, they would likely have reached even more monstrous scales, liberated from modern constraints and spared the need for the elaborate justifications required in the 21st century. Today, any atrocity systematically committed by a modern regime, such as the Israeli army's programme of occupation and extermination against the Palestinian people, must be classified among the gravest horrors in human history - for these crimes are committed despite the existence of multiple deterrents. One must then ask: how would Israel's actions look unshackled from modern constraints, enjoying the same unchecked impunity granted to empires, states, regimes and armies of times gone by? These atrocities are coming today in full colour, broadcast live from the field of carnage, moment by moment It is essential to highlight this reality in order to fully grasp the immense dangers posed by Israel's programme of genocide and ethnic cleansing in Gaza. Such ghastly atrocities - mass killing, total destruction, starvation as a method of warfare, impoverishment, humiliation, and biological and environmental warfare - are not confined to the past, appearing solely in black-and-white footage, as some might assume. These atrocities are coming today in full colour, broadcast live from the field of carnage, moment by moment. Their harrowing details unfold relentlessly before the world's eyes, committed by a modern state through its administrative institutions and a contemporary army, as politicians adorned in silk ties ascend to podiums, justifying these crimes and blaming the victims. Another danger of neutralising the element of time lies in forgetting that the atrocities of the first half of the 20th century were primarily carried out amid two world wars - cataclysmic events that reduced the modern world to ashes and killed tens of millions of people across cities reduced to rubble and smoke. The genocide in Gaza, by contrast, is unfolding in a context where modern warfare has been shaped to justify the use of force and mass destruction, and to minimise civilian bloodshed. Race against time To fully grasp the severity of Israel's crimes - committed with western-supplied weaponry and technologies - it is crucial to consider the scale of killing, destruction, displacement and starvation relative to the exceptionally small geographic area of Gaza, which is home to around two million Palestinians. During nearly two years of genocide, the Israeli army has killed or wounded hundreds of thousands of people, some of whom have become permanently disabled. The United Nations and its humanitarian agencies have warned that the Israeli military is killing the equivalent of an entire classroom of children in Gaza every single day, without any international power stepping in to stop it. The direct civilian death toll has already soared to more than 61,000 people, around half of whom are children and women - and it continues to rise unrelentingly, with vast swathes of residential neighbourhoods wiped off the map. Factoring in indirect casualties - deaths from lack of medicine and healthcare, or because of spoiled food and a toxic environment - would raise these figures to even more horrifying levels. Israel's genocide is the terminal stage of a settler-colony in crisis Read More » The Israeli leadership is fully aware that it has been allowed to perpetrate these atrocities despite the ethical and legal constraints of the modern era, under the watch of international institutions and courts. It has thus resumed the ethnic cleansing campaign that it started three-quarters of a century ago with the Nakba in 1948. Israel is now racing against time to enforce a definitive outcome in Gaza and the occupied West Bank through various means. Aware of its dilemma amid the constraints of the current era - including an unprecedented and growing chorus of dissent among western leaders - it seeks to circumvent all of this by reinforcing the notion of 'Israeli exceptionalism', a status that has long granted it license to override the international system and its conventions. It does so by invoking a fabricated dual identity of the 'exceptional victim', allegedly entitled to commit crimes that others may not; and by selectively interpreting sacred texts, misrepresenting them as a genocidal manual immune to modern treaties and obligations. In a further attempt to bypass the element of time, the Israeli leadership constantly reminds Americans and Europeans of the war crimes committed by their own states in decades past - a cheap trick aimed at silencing criticism, while simultaneously suggesting that the evolved colonial experiment in Palestine remains forever linked to the western context that first implanted it in this land. The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.

Gulf Today
15 minutes ago
- Gulf Today
Sisi says Israel's war in Gaza ‘systematic genocide'
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said on Tuesday Israel was pursuing 'a war of starvation and genocide' in Gaza, and denied accusations Cairo prevented life-saving aid from entering the Palestinian territory. 'The war in Gaza is no longer merely a war to achieve political goals or release hostages,' Sisi told a press conference in Cairo along with his Vietnamese counterpart. Israel launched its offensive in response to Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack, vowing to crush the Palestinian group and to free hostages. The Israeli cabinet is set to convene on Thursday at 6 pm (1500 GMT) as Israel considers a full Gaza takeover, Israeli media reported on Tuesday. To Sisi, 'this war has long since surpassed any logic or justification, and has become a war of starvation and genocide'. 'There is systematic genocide to eradicate the Palestinian cause,' he said. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday Israel must 'complete' the defeat of Hamas to free hostages held in Gaza, a day after Israeli media reported the army could occupy the entire territory. Israel has heavily restricted aid into Gaza which is slipping into a catastrophic famine 22 months into the war. It has killed more than 61,000 Palestinians, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run Gaza Strip. Following mounting international pressure on Israel, in late May aid has only began trickling into Gaza, which borders Israel and Egypt. In response to what Sisi said were 'bankrupt' accusations of Egypt's complicity in the siege, the president reiterated that the Rafah border crossing with Gaza was 'never closed'. The crossing at Rafah was a vital entry point of aid in the early months of the war, until Israeli troops took over its Palestinian side in May 2024, forcing it shut. 'The crossing was able to bring in aid as long as there were no Israeli troops stationed on the Palestinian side of the crossing,' Sisi said, adding that there are 5,000 trucks loaded with aid waiting to enter Gaza. He also defended what he said was Egypt's consistently 'positive' role seeking an end to the conflict. Since the war began, Cairo has undertaken a delicate balancing act, retaining its position as a mediator between Israel and Hamas -- along with the United States and Qatar -- while repeatedly criticising Israel's assault. Cairo has also repeatedly refused US plans to displace Palestinians into Egypt, lobbying for a reconstruction plan for the territory that has fallen by the wayside as truce talks repeatedly folded. 'Egypt will always remain a gateway for aid, not a gateway for the displacement of the Palestinian people,' Sisi said on Tuesday. 'We are prepared to allow aid in at any time, but we are not prepared to receive or displace Palestinians from their land.' Last week, Sisi urged US President Donald Trump -- who had touted the plan to displace Palestinians into Egypt -- to intervene, saying he 'is the one capable of ending the war, brining in aid and ending this suffering'. Despite intense international pressure for a ceasefire to ease hunger and appalling conditions in the besieged Palestinian enclave, efforts to mediate a truce between Israel and Palestinian group Hamas have collapsed. Eight more people died of starvation or malnutrition in the past 24 hours, Gaza's health ministry said, while another 79 died in the latest Israeli firing. An Israeli official had earlier told Reuters that Defence Minister Israel Katz and Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, a confidant of Netanyahu, would also attend the meeting to decide on a strategy to take to cabinet this week. A Palestinian official said the suggestion of a full takeover of Gaza may be a tactic to pressure Hamas into concessions, while the Palestinian Foreign Ministry urged foreign nations to take heed of the reports. 'The ministry urges countries and the international community to treat these leaks with utmost seriousness and to intervene urgently to prevent their implementation, whether these leaks are meant to exert pressure, test international reactions, or are genuine and serious,' it said. Agencies