Palestinians hope Blinken visit can deliver Gaza truce

Palestinians hope Blinken visit can deliver Gaza truce

The top US diplomat met Saudi Arabia’s de-facto ruler today in a visit that Palestinians hope will deliver a truce in Gaza before a threatened Israeli assault on Rafah, the border city where about half of the enclave’s population is sheltering.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrived in Riyadh at the start of his first Middle East trip since the US brokered an offer, with Israeli input, for the first extended ceasefire of the war.

Mr Blinken’s meeting with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman lasted about two hours, and the secretary did not answer reporters’ questions as he returned to his hotel.

Antony Blinken waves as he boards a plane at Joint Base Andrews en route to Saudi Arabia

Mr Blinken and Prince Mohammed discussed “regional coordination to achieve an enduring end to the crisis in Gaza”, said State Department spokesman Matthew Miller.

The offer, delivered to Hamas last week by Qatari and Egyptian mediators, awaits a reply from militants who say they want more guarantees it will bring an end to the four-month-old war in Gaza.

“Impossible to say if we’ll get a breakthrough, when we’ll get a breakthrough,” a senior US official told reporters during the flight to the Saudi capital. “The ball right now is in Hamas’ court.”

Beyond the truce itself, Mr Blinken aims to win backing for US plans for what would follow: rebuilding and running Gaza, and ultimately for a Palestinian state — which Israel now rejects — and for Arab countries to normalise ties with Israel.

The US is also seeking to prevent further escalation elsewhere in the Middle East, after days of US air strikes against pro-Iranian armed groups across the region.

A displaced Palestinian man cooking bread on an open fire on a street in Rafah

British defence minister Grant Shapps told parliament that the air strikes had depleted the ability of Yemen’s Houthis to target Red Sea shipping but the threat was “not fully diminished”.

Israel has pressed on with its offensive and threatened a new ground assault on Rafah, a small city on the southern border with Egypt where over half of Gaza’s 2.3 million people are now living, mostly in makeshift tents.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, visiting troops, said Israeli forces had killed or wounded more than half of Hamas’ fighting forces and would carry on until “total victory”.

Senior Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri dismissed Mr Netanyahu’s assertions, and said he was “playing the game of making delusional victories” in the face of continued resistance.

The ceasefire proposal, as described by sources close to the talks, would see a truce of at least 40 days when Hamas would free civilians among remaining hostages they are holding, followed by later phases to hand over soldiers and dead bodies.

The only truce so far lasted just a week in November.

“We want the war to end and we want to go back home, this is all that we want at this stage,” said Yamen Hamad, 35, a father of four reached by messaging app at a UN school in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza.

The area is one of the few where Israeli tanks have yet to advance and is jammed with tens of thousands of displaced families.

“All we do is listen to the news through small radios and view the internet looking for hope. We hope that Blinken will tell Netanyahu enough is enough, and we hope our factions decide in the best interest of our people.”


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Fighting in Khan Younis, Gaza City

In one of the war’s biggest battles, Israeli tanks have been advancing for two weeks in Khan Younis, the main southern city. Fighting has also resurged in Gaza City in the north of the enclave, in areas Israel said it subdued in the war’s first two months.

The Israeli military claimed its forces had killed dozens of Palestinian fighters in combat in areas in northern, central and southern Gaza over the last 24 hours.

As night fell, Khan Younis residents said Israeli tanks had stepped up shelling in residential areas around Nasser Hospital, the largest functioning medical facility in the south, setting some houses ablaze.

A picture taken from Rafah in southern Gaza shows smoke rising over buildings in Khan Younis

The Palestinian Red Crescent Society said some 8,000 displaced people had been evacuated from its headquarters in Khan Younis and the Al-Amal hospital after being surrounded by Israeli troops for two weeks, mainly to Rafah to the south and Deir Al-Balah in the north.

At the hospital, only 40 elderly individuals, around 80 patients and 100 administrative and medical staff remained.

Palestinians described heavy fighting in Gaza City, particularly its western areas close to the Mediterranean shore, which had come under bombardment from Israeli warships.

UNRWA, the UN aid agency for Palestinians, said a food convoy headed there had come under fire though nobody was hurt.

UNRWA, a source of critical aid for Palestinians, has said it may be forced to shut down its operations across the region by the end of this month after donors withdrew funding following Israeli allegations some of its staff were involved in the 7 October attack by Hamas militants on Israel that precipitated the war.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said he had appointed former French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna to lead an independent review into the allegations.

Gaza authorities say more than 27,000 Palestinians have been confirmed killed in Israel’s assault, with thousands more feared unrecovered in the rubble.

People try to remove the debris of the destroyed al-Shuheda Mosque in Deir al-Balah

Israel says 226 of its soldiers have been killed in its military offensive in Gaza, launched after aound 1,200 people were killed and 253 hostages captured in the 7 October attack by Palestinian militants on southern Israel.

The Gaza war has stoked violence in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, another territory where Palestinians seek statehood.

Israeli police said officers killed a knife-wielding male today who tried to attack them near Maale Adumim, a large West Bank settlement.

The official Palestinian news agency WAFA said a 14-year-old Palestinian was killed in the incident.

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