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Israel reopens Gaza crossing as truce talks press on

By AFP - Aug 16,2018 - Last updated at Aug 16,2018

Members of Palestinian security forces watch as a fuel tanker arrives at Kerem Shalom crossing in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on Wednesday (AFP photo)

GAZA CITY — Israel reopened its only goods crossing with the Gaza enclave on Wednesday after closing it to most deliveries on July 9 over months of border tensions, as relative calm returned and truce talks pressed ahead.

The crossing is a vital lifeline for Gazans and their crippled economy, but Israel had closed it to goods except for food and medicine to pressure Hamas, the Islamist movement that runs the blockaded Palestinian enclave.

The opening came as speculation mounted over negotiations mediated by Egypt and UN officials to reach a long-term truce between Israel and Hamas.

Israel's Cabinet reportedly met Wednesday to discuss the indirect talks, but Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman said any deal must include Hamas returning the remains of two soldiers it is believed to be holding — a major sticking point.

Israel and Palestinian fighters in Gaza, including Hamas, have fought three wars since 2008 and tension since late March has led to fears of yet another full-blown conflict.

There have been three heavy flare-ups since July, the latest on Thursday, when Israel responded to some 180 rockets and mortars fired from Gaza with widespread air strikes.

In your hands

 

Lieberman warned that the crossing would again be closed if there was further violence and called on Gazans to pressure Hamas.

“Our message is that you must put pressure on the Hamas leadership,” he told Israeli public radio.

“It is all in your hands. If calm prevails, you benefit. If the violence resumes, you will lose.”

An AFP journalist at the goods crossing, known as Kerem Shalom, said dozens of trucks began passing into the Gaza Strip on Wednesday morning.

Israel also returned the fishing zone it enforces off the strip to nine nautical miles in the south of the enclave, after having reduced it. The maximum allowed for Gaza fishermen is six nautical miles in the north bordering Israel.

On July 9, Israeli authorities closed the crossing to most deliveries, partly in response to kites and balloons being flown across the border carrying firebombs to burn Israeli farmland, causing hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages.

Food and medicines have been allowed through, but fuel and cooking gas had been intermittently blocked, including since August 2. All other goods were turned away.

The fuel ban exacerbated an electricity crisis in Gaza, which already suffers from severe power shortages and relies on generators in many cases.

UN officials have repeatedly called for the blockade to be lifted, citing deteriorating humanitarian conditions in the enclave of two million people.

Israel says it is necessary to stop Hamas from obtaining weapons or materials that could be used for military purposes.

Gaza’s only other goods crossing is at Rafah on the Egyptian border.

That checkpoint had largely been kept closed in recent years, but Egypt opened it in mid-May and it is has mostly remained so since.

The Rafah crossing is currently only open to people, according to Egyptian sources, but a Hamas source said goods such as cement and fuel have passed through since May.

 

Truce talks

 

Gaza border protests broke out on March 30 and have led to months of tension.

At least 169 Gazans have since been killed by Israeli fire, mostly during clashes and protests. One Israeli soldier was shot dead by a Palestinian sniper in July.

The efforts by Egypt and UN officials to reach a long-term truce face major hurdles.

Officials from Hamas and its allies Islamic Jihad travelled to Egypt on Tuesday for talks, a Hamas source said.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, whose Fateh has been deeply divided from Hamas for more than a decade, was due to address a Palestine Liberation Organisation meeting later Wednesday in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank.

Egypt has also been seeking to reconcile Hamas and Fateh, and the meeting of the PLO’s Central Council was expected to address those efforts.

The truce negotiations have led to political recriminations in Israel.

Education Minister Naftali Bennett of the far-right Jewish Home Party said Tuesday he would oppose a deal based on “a temporary calm”.

Bennett, who has ambitions to be prime minister and is a member of the security cabinet, also used the statement to criticise Lieberman, a political rival.

He said he opposed a ground offensive into Gaza, but noted he had put forward an alternative plan to exact “a decisive price from Hamas”.

Lieberman said Wednesday: “We have never spoken with Hamas and we will never do so. We receive proposals from the UN.”

The defence minister dismissed Bennett’s comments as “slogans”.

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