Dubai Telegraph - Six months into war, Israel pulls troops out of south Gaza

EUR -
AED 4.236516
AFN 72.660513
ALL 96.076566
AMD 435.018833
ANG 2.064579
AOA 1057.614991
ARS 1608.357353
AUD 1.634275
AWG 2.0789
AZN 1.960958
BAM 1.965724
BBD 2.323923
BDT 141.578444
BGN 1.971419
BHD 0.435654
BIF 3425.427746
BMD 1.153343
BND 1.480344
BOB 7.973635
BRL 6.046286
BSD 1.153845
BTN 107.498905
BWP 15.745241
BYN 3.567914
BYR 22605.516438
BZD 2.320626
CAD 1.582305
CDF 2618.087925
CHF 0.912098
CLF 0.026705
CLP 1054.443846
CNY 7.926982
CNH 7.953001
COP 4272.661742
CRC 539.855899
CUC 1.153343
CUP 30.563581
CVE 111.932173
CZK 24.471391
DJF 205.468201
DKK 7.470858
DOP 67.98988
DZD 152.246963
EGP 60.250043
ERN 17.30014
ETB 181.07503
FJD 2.572242
FKP 0.865783
GBP 0.861697
GEL 3.13133
GGP 0.865783
GHS 12.577179
GIP 0.865783
GMD 85.347878
GNF 10126.348898
GTQ 8.826446
GYD 241.401278
HKD 9.033972
HNL 30.644463
HRK 7.545511
HTG 151.350658
HUF 391.100229
IDR 19545.69832
ILS 3.600041
IMP 0.865783
INR 107.460742
IQD 1510.878905
IRR 1516645.617921
ISK 143.78754
JEP 0.865783
JMD 181.269643
JOD 0.817726
JPY 182.486467
KES 149.415527
KGS 100.857395
KHR 4624.904034
KMF 493.630678
KPW 1037.994543
KRW 1723.751138
KWD 0.353557
KYD 0.961601
KZT 554.897876
LAK 24739.200343
LBP 103281.837076
LKR 359.666052
LRD 211.465763
LSL 19.399179
LTL 3.405521
LVL 0.697646
LYD 7.358471
MAD 10.811145
MDL 20.221051
MGA 4809.439469
MKD 61.751423
MMK 2421.719114
MNT 4135.704941
MOP 9.309885
MRU 46.271835
MUR 53.6416
MVR 17.831118
MWK 2002.202766
MXN 20.548703
MYR 4.543598
MZN 73.698163
NAD 19.399519
NGN 1564.51317
NIO 42.351136
NOK 10.965238
NPR 171.992801
NZD 1.972192
OMR 0.443447
PAB 1.153885
PEN 3.953085
PGK 4.962545
PHP 69.163653
PKR 322.090373
PLN 4.270978
PYG 7497.624391
QAR 4.202794
RON 5.103658
RSD 117.405646
RUB 99.211165
RWF 1682.726963
SAR 4.330321
SBD 9.278918
SCR 16.396484
SDG 693.159201
SEK 10.762706
SGD 1.476025
SHP 0.865306
SLE 28.429804
SLL 24185.031717
SOS 659.140589
SRD 43.106152
STD 23871.864791
STN 24.796868
SVC 10.096278
SYP 127.477541
SZL 19.399309
THB 37.77255
TJS 11.048348
TMT 4.036699
TND 3.364881
TOP 2.776972
TRY 51.114069
TTD 7.820857
TWD 36.70632
TZS 2995.810114
UAH 50.740886
UGX 4361.206714
USD 1.153343
UYU 46.737373
UZS 14041.947004
VES 520.091621
VND 30321.378937
VUV 137.718825
WST 3.151186
XAF 659.31989
XAG 0.016348
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.116966
XCG 2.079516
XDR 0.819979
XOF 653.366781
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.15868
ZAR 19.430709
ZMK 10381.470639
ZMW 22.587207
ZWL 371.375871
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5900

    16.01

    -3.69%

  • BCC

    -2.4900

    69.35

    -3.59%

  • NGG

    -2.0750

    85.325

    -2.43%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    22.95

    +0.26%

  • GSK

    0.1000

    52.16

    +0.19%

  • RIO

    -3.0500

    84.67

    -3.6%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.83

    -0%

  • BCE

    -0.1000

    25.65

    -0.39%

  • VOD

    -0.0350

    14.335

    -0.24%

  • BTI

    0.3710

    58.461

    +0.63%

  • JRI

    -0.1530

    12.17

    -1.26%

  • RELX

    -0.1900

    33.67

    -0.56%

  • BP

    1.5550

    46.165

    +3.37%

  • AZN

    -0.1730

    188.247

    -0.09%

Six months into war, Israel pulls troops out of south Gaza
Six months into war, Israel pulls troops out of south Gaza / Photo: MOHAMMED ABED - AFP

Six months into war, Israel pulls troops out of south Gaza

Israel pulled its forces out of the southern Gaza Strip on Sunday in a partial withdrawal that came half a year into the war sparked by the attack by Hamas militants on October 7.

Text size:

After the troops left areas in and around the largely destroyed city of Khan Yunis, a stream of displaced Palestinians walked there, hoping to return to their homes from temporary shelters in far-southern Rafah.

An Israeli security expert said the withdrawal in no way means the war is over.

The Israeli army said a "significant force" would stay on elsewhere in the besieged territory as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel was "one step away from victory".

Muhammad Yunis, 51, a Palestinian in northern Gaza, sees nothing but loss.

"Isn't the bombing, death and destruction enough?" he asked. "There are bodies still under the rubble. We can smell the stench."

On a day when talks toward a truce deal were set to resume in Cairo, Netanyahu also stressed that "there will be no ceasefire without the return of hostages".

He is facing intense pressure at home, from families and supporters of hostages seized by the militants, and from a resurgent anti-government protest movement.

- Aid workers killed -

"Israel is ready for a deal, Israel is not ready to surrender," he told his cabinet in a speech to mark six months since Hamas's unprecedented attack on southern Israel.

Israel has faced growing global opposition to the war, and a chorus of outrage over the killing of seven aid workers of the US-based food charity World Central Kitchen in a drone strike on April 1.

Vast areas of Gaza have been turned into a rubble-strewn wasteland, and British Foreign Secretary David Cameron on Sunday warned the "prospect of famine is real" in Gaza.

Charities have accused Israel of blocking aid, but Israel has defended its efforts and blamed shortages on groups' inability to distribute assistance once it gets in.

Netanyahu has come under heightened pressure from Israel's top ally the United States to work toward a truce and hostage deal and to allow vastly more aid into the territory.

Trucks entered Sunday via Egypt's Rafah crossing, the main aid entry point, and medical supplies were delivered for the first time through Israel's Erez border point with northern Gaza, AFP TV footage showed.

Months of fighting in Khan Yunis left the city in ruins.

The city is the hometown of Hamas's Gaza chief Yahya Sinwar, whom Israel accuses of being the mastermind of the October 7 attacks.

Israel's "98th commando division" left the city, and Gaza, "in order to recuperate and prepare for future operations," the army told AFP.

An army official told the Haaretz daily that the forces had "dismantled Hamas's Khan Yunis brigades and killed thousands of its members.

"We did everything we could there."

- 'Bombing and starvation' -

Israeli security expert Omer Dostri said the withdrawal was tactical and did not mean the war was anywhere near over.

He predicted that, as more displaced Palestinians leave densely crowded Rafah, "within two months there will be a move in Rafah to destroy the remaining Hamas brigades".

The partial withdrawal came as talks towards a truce and hostage release deal were expected to resume in Cairo, including United States, Qatari and Egyptian mediators.

The US envoy, CIA chief Bill Burns, met Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi ahead of the talks.

He and Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani will join Egyptian officials for indirect talks between the Israeli and Hamas delegations, Egypt's Al-Qahera News said.

Netanyahu had long threatened a ground offensive in Rafah city on the Egyptian border, sparking global concern for around 1.5 million Palestinians sheltering there.

United States President Joe Biden told Netanyahu on Thursday he wants to see a ceasefire and hostage release deal and ramped-up aid deliveries.

After the deaths of the seven aid workers, Biden -- whose government is Israel's top arms supplier and political backer -- also hinted at making US support for Israel conditional on curtailing the killing of civilians and improving humanitarian conditions.

Hours after Biden's comments, Netanyahu said Israel would allow "temporary" aid flow through Erez and Ashdod.

Yunis, the Palestinian father of six in northern Gaza, told AFP the territory's people desperately need a reprieve.

"It's been half a year and the bombing and starvation continue," said the man from Beit Lahia, now a broken landscape of shattered buildings.

"Watching the thin bodies of our children takes away our souls... I feel helpless and humiliated," he said.

- Mass Israeli protests -

Hamas and Islamic Jihad militants also took more than 250 hostages, 129 of whom remain in Gaza, including 34 the army says are dead.

People gathered Sunday at the site of the Nova desert music festival to pay tribute to the young revellers who were killed or kidnapped there on October 7.

Israel's retaliatory offensive has killed at least 33,175 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory.

Most of Gaza's hospitals no longer function and the largest, Al-Shifa, is "now an empty shell with human graves", said World Health Organization head Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

Tens of thousands rallied in Tel Aviv and other cities on Saturday, demanding "elections now". They were joined by families and supporters of the Gaza hostages.

Among the protesters was Israel's centrist opposition leader Yair Lapid, who was later headed to Washington, his Yesh Atid party said.

Fears that the war could spread have intensified after Iran vowed retaliation for the killing of seven Revolutionary Guards in an air strike April 1 on the consular annex of its embassy in Damascus.

Yahya Rahim Safavi, senior adviser to Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was quoted as saying by the ISNA news agency that "the embassies of the Zionist regime are no longer safe".

burs-jd/fz/it

J.Alaqanone--DT