
Displaced Palestinians walk through a makeshift tent camp
in Muwasi area of Khan Younis, in the Gaza Strip, on Monday, May 5, 2025. (AP
Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana)
- TEL AVIV — Israel approved plans Monday to capture the entire Gaza Strip and to
stay in the Palestinian territory for an unspecified amount of time, two
Israeli officials said, a move that, if implemented, would vastly expand
Israel's operations there and likely draw fierce international opposition.
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- Israeli Cabinet ministers approved the plan in an early
morning vote, hours after the Israeli military chief said the army was calling
up tens of thousands of reserve soldiers.
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- The new plan, which the officials said was meant to help
Israel achieve its war aims of defeating Hamas and freeing hostages held in
Gaza, also calls for hundreds of thousands of Palestinians to move to Gaza's
south. That would likely amount to their forcible displacement and exacerbate
an already dire humanitarian crisis.
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- A third person, a defence official, said the new plan would
not begin until after US President Donald Trump wraps up his expected visit to
the Middle East this month, allowing for the possibility that Israel might
agree to a ceasefire in the meantime. All three officials spoke on condition of
anonymity because they were discussing military plans.
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- Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005 after a decades-long
occupation and then imposed a blockade on the territory along with Egypt.
Capturing and potentially occupying the territory again for an indefinite
period would not only further dash hopes for Palestinian statehood, it would
embed Israel inside a population that is deeply hostile to it and raise
questions about how Israel plans to govern the territory, especially at a time
when it is considering how to implement Trump's vision to take over Gaza.
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- Since Israel ended a ceasefire with the Hamas militant
group in mid-March, Israel has unleashed fierce strikes on the territory that
have killed hundreds. It has captured swaths of territory and now controls
roughly 50 per cent of Gaza. Before the truce ended, Israel halted all
humanitarian aid into the territory, including food, fuel and water, setting
off what is believed to the be the worst humanitarian crisis in nearly 19
months of war.
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- The war began when Hamas-led militants attacked southern
Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking about 250 hostages. Israel says 59
captives remain in Gaza, although about 35 are believed to be dead.
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- Israel's offensive has displaced more than 90 per cent of
Gaza's population and, Palestinian health officials say, killed more than
52,000 people there, many of them women and children. The officials do not
distinguish between combatants and civilians in their count.
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- The Palestinian Health Ministry in Gaza said Monday that
the bodies of 32 people killed by Israeli strikes have been brought to hospitals
over the past 24 hours.
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- Israel is trying
to ratchet up pressure on Hamas'
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- The Israeli officials said the plan included the
“capturing of the strip and the holding of territories.”
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- The plan would also seek to prevent Hamas from
distributing humanitarian aid, a role that Israel says strengthens the group's
rule in Gaza. It also accuses Hamas of keeping the aid for itself, without
providing evidence. Aid workers deny there is a significant diversion of aid to
militants, saying the UN strictly monitors distribution.
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- The officials said Israel was in touch with several
countries about Trump's plan to take over Gaza and relocate its population,
under what Israel has termed “voluntary emigration." That proposal has
drawn widespread condemnation, including from Israel's allies in Europe, and
rights groups have warned it could be a war crime under international law.
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- Hamas officials did not return calls and messages seeking
comment on the plans.
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- For weeks, Israel has been trying to ratchet up pressure
on Hamas to get the group to agree to its terms in ceasefire negotiations. But
the measures do not appear to have moved Hamas away from its negotiating
positions.
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- The previous ceasefire was meant to lead the sides to
negotiate an end to the war, but that has remained elusive. Israel says it
won't agree to end the war until Hamas' governing and military capabilities are
dismantled. Hamas, meanwhile, has sought an agreement that winds down the war
without agreeing to disarm.
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- Israel's expansion announcement angered families of
hostages who fear that any extension of the conflict endangers their loved
ones. The Hostages and Missing Families Forum, which supports families, urged
Israel's decision-makers to prioritise the hostages and secure a deal quickly.
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- At a Knesset committee meeting Monday, Einav Zangauker,
whose son Matan is being held hostage, called on soldiers “not to report for
reserve duty for moral and ethical reasons."
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- Some reservists have indicated they will refuse to serve
in a war they increasingly view as politically motivated.
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- Israel wants to
prevent Hamas from handling aid
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- The defence official said the plan would “separate” Hamas
from the aid by using private firms and by using specified areas secured by the
Israeli military. The official added that Palestinians would be screened to
prevent Hamas from accessing the aid.
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- According to a memo circulated among aid groups and seen
by The Associated Press, Israel told the United Nations that it will use
private security companies to control aid distribution in Gaza. The UN, in a
statement Sunday, said it would not participate in the plan as presented,
saying it violates its core principles.
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- The memo summarised a meeting between the Israeli defence
body in charge of coordinating aid to Gaza, called COGAT, and the UN. It was
written by a group briefed on the meeting and sent Sunday to aid organisations.
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- According to the memo, under COGAT's plan, all aid will
enter Gaza through the Kerem Shalom crossing, on approximately 60 trucks daily,
and be distributed directly to people. Some 500 trucks entered Gaza every day
before the war.
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- The memo said that facial-recognition technology will be
used to identify Palestinians at logistics hubs and text message alerts will
notify people in the area that they can collect aid.
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- COGAT did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
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- The UN accuses
Israel of wanting to control aid as a 'pressure tactic'
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- After Israel said it was going to assert more control
over aid distribution in Gaza, the UN. Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs sent an email to aid groups, urging them to “collectively
hold the line” and reject any “draconian restrictions on humanitarian
work."
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- The email, which OCHA sent Monday to aid groups and was
shared with the AP, further stated that there are mechanisms in place to ensure
aid is not diverted.
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- Earlier, OCHA said in a statement that the plan would
leave large parts of the population, including the most vulnerable, without
supplies. It said the plan “appears designed to reinforce control over
life-sustaining items as a pressure tactic – as part of a military strategy.”
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- Aid groups have said they are opposed to using any armed
or uniformed personnel to distribute aid that could potentially intimidate
Palestinians or put them at risk, and they fiercely criticised the new plan.
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- Israeli officials “want to manipulate and militarise all
aid to civilians, forcing us to deliver supplies through hubs designed by the
Israeli military, once the government agrees to reopen crossings,” Jan Egeland,
secretary general of the Norwegian Refugee Council, posted on X, saying the
group would not participate.
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- Hamas decried Israel's efforts to control distribution of
humanitarian aid in Gaza as a violation of international law.
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- In a statement Monday, the militant group said the effort
is “an extension of the starvation policy” adopted by the Israeli government in
Gaza.
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- Earlier this month, the AP obtained notes summarizing
various Israeli proposals on aid distribution and aid groups' concerns about
them. In those documents, the groups expressed fears that Palestinians would be
required to retrieve aid from a small number of sites, forcing families to move
to get assistance and putting their safety at risk if large crowds gathered at
the sites.