
Israel's military and political leadership clash over proposed camp for Palestinians
The 'humanitarian city' project has become a sticking point in ceasefire talks with Hamas. Israel wants to keep troops stationed across significant parts of Gaza, including the ruins of Rafah city in the south, where defence minister, Israel Katz, says the camp will be built.
Hamas is pushing for a more comprehensive withdrawal. Husam Badran, a senior member of the group said the camp plans were a 'deliberatively obstructive demand' that would complicate talks, the New York Times reported.
'This would be an isolated city that resembles a ghetto,' he said in a message to the paper. 'This is utterly unacceptable, and no Palestinian would agree to this.'
Katz last week revealed that he had ordered the army to draw up plans for a camp.
It envisages Palestinians crammed into an area between the Egyptian border and the Israeli military's 'Morag corridor', which cuts across the strip.
He said initially 600,000 people would move there, and eventually Gaza's entire population. Those inside would only be allowed to leave for another country, he told Israeli journalists at a briefing.
The plan was unveiled while prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, was in Washington DC for an official visit, but was understood to have his backing. The plan caused immediate alarm both among Israel's allies, including the UK, and domestically.
Olmert, who led Israel from 2006 to 2009, has been the most high-profile domestic critic of the project. He also warned that if Palestinians were forced to move to the camp, it would constitute ethnic cleansing.
His comments evoking comparisons with Nazi-era Germany were fiercely attacked inside Israel. Heritage minister, Amichai Eliyahu, effectively called for Olmert to be jailed over the comments, with a barely veiled reference to time he served for corruption offences after leaving office.
'(Olmert) already knows prison very well,' Eliyahu said. 'There is no other way to shut him down from the hatred and antisemitism he spreads around the world.'
The military has also opposed the project, even as they followed orders to draw up plans to implement it. In a security cabinet meeting on Sunday night, tensions broke out into the open as IDF chief of staff, Eyal Zamir, clashed with Netanyahu, Israeli media reported.
Zamir reportedly said the project would divert funds and other resources from the military, sapping its ability to fight and undermining efforts to rescue hostages.
His office had previously argued that moving and 'concentrating' civilians was not a goal of the war, in response to a legal petition brought by reservists concerned they would face illegal orders to commit war crimes.
Netanyahu reportedly lashed out at Zamir, saying the plans he presented – which estimated several months of construction work, and perhaps up to a year – were 'too expensive and too slow', Israel's channel 12 reported, citing official sources.
'I asked for a realistic plan!' the prime minister reportedly said, demanding a cheaper, faster timeline for construction be delivered by Tuesday.
Finance ministry officials raised other practical objections to the 'humanitarian city' plan, Yedioth Ahronoth reported. They said an estimated 15 billion shekels annual cost would be a huge drain on the state's budget. That cost would probably fall on the Israeli taxpayer, taking money away from schools, hospitals and welfare, the paper added.
Senior Israeli officials estimate that constructing a proposed 'humanitarian city' in the Rafah area would cost between $2.7bn and $4bn, Ynet reported. They added that, if the plan proceeds, Israel would initially bear nearly the entire cost.
The row came as Israeli strikes across Gaza killed at least 31 people, according to local hospitals.
Twelve people were killed by strikes in southern Gaza, including three who were waiting at an aid distribution point, according to Nasser hospital in Khan Younis, which received the bodies. Shifa hospital in Gaza City also received 12 bodies, including three children and two women, after a series of strikes in the north, according to the hospital's director, Dr Mohammed Abu Selmia.
Al-Awda hospital reported seven killed and 11 wounded in strikes in central Gaza.
UN agencies, including those providing food and health care, reiterated a warning made at the weekend that without adequate fuel, they 'will likely be forced to stop their operations entirely.'
In a joint statement, they said that hospitals are already going dark and ambulances can no longer move. Without fuel, transport, water production, sanitation and telecommunications will shut down and bakeries and community kitchens cannot operate, they said.
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