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U.S. envoy visits controversial aid site as Gaza starvation crisis worsens

U.S. envoy visits controversial aid site as Gaza starvation crisis worsens

CBC3 days ago
WARNING: Video contains distressing images | U.S. Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff visited Gaza on Friday to inspect a controversial aid distribution site, backed by the U.S. and Israel after meeting with Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday.
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He made no mention of any ceasefire negotiations during the parts of the government meeting that were open to the public. Israeli forces kill over 20 Palestinians seeking food in Gaza, health officials say Mr. Netanyahu's insistence on a military solution goes against the advice of much of the country's security establishment. On Sunday, 600 former senior officers of the Israeli military, as well as the Mossad and Shin Bet intelligence services, wrote to U.S. President Donald Trump, urging him to use his influence to force Mr. Netanyahu to end the almost 22-month-old war. 'We urge you to end the Gaza war,' reads the letter, which was signed by a group called Commanders for Israel's Security, and published by several Israeli media outlets. The group said Israel had 'long accomplished' all it could militarily, and that only a negotiated solution could return the 22 living hostages that have been held by Hamas since the militia's Oct. 7, 2023, attack on southern Israel. 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'Whereas Netanyahu is going towards achieving his total victory, his military victory, the total diplomatic victory is going to the Islamic resistance movement, to Hamas,' he said. Calls from inside Israel for their government to accept a ceasefire deal spiked after Hamas and its ally Islamic Jihad released videos over the weekend showing two emaciated Israeli men being held in the tunnels beneath Gaza. Videos of Israeli hostages increase pressure for ceasefire as warnings about famine in Gaza grow The videos of 24-year-old Evyatar David and 22-year-old Rom Braslavsky – who were both taken hostage during the Oct. 7 attack on southern Israel that killed more than 1,200 people – provoked large demonstrations in Tel Aviv on Saturday night, including a protest that blocked the highway to the country's main airport. Mr. David was shown digging his own grave, while Mr. Braslavsky, in a separate video, said he was too weak from hunger to stand or walk. 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'So, it's not relevant that 80 or 70 per cent of the country want to stop it.'

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