Israeli army sets up new position to control Gaza ‘for years to come’: Report
The position will be assumed by Israeli officer Elad
Goren and will deal with 'day-to-day' civilian and security matters in Gaza
AUG 29, 2024
The Israeli army is planning to establish a new position within its ranks
aimed at overseeing long-term control over the Gaza Strip, Hebrew news
site Ynet reported on 29 August.
The decision comes “in the absence of clear strategic
goals for the future of the Gaza Strip,” the Hebrew outlet wrote.
“The Israeli army began yesterday through this
appointment to accept the fact that its responsibility for the Strip will
continue for years and will expand, and about two million Palestinians will
remain under its responsibility,” the report added.
Israeli officer Elad Goren has been chosen for this
appointment, Ynet revealed. Goren is a veteran of the Defense
Ministry unit, the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories
(COGAT).
According to Ynet, he will take up the
same role in Gaza as the head of COGAT’s West Bank branch, Israeli General
Hisham Ibrahim.
“This new position is not for show … It will have an
important role for years to come … Anyone who believes that Israeli control and
intervention in the Gaza Strip will end soon, whether by stopping or not
stopping the fighting and its decline, or even with or without a deal, is
mistaken,” a senior security official told the outlet.
The report explains that Goren will deal with daily
logistical issues such as humanitarian aid deliveries, repairing destroyed
infrastructure, and contacting international aid organizations. He will also
lead long-term civilian evacuation in order to “maintain international
legitimacy” to continue fighting in Gaza “without witnessing a humanitarian
crisis or famine.”
“On the agenda of the new unit in the Israeli army
will be major operations, which have already begun, to evacuate the seriously
wounded and sick to hospitals in Jordan, Egypt or the UAE … and preparing for
winter in the Gaza Strip, in light of the massive amount of destroyed
infrastructure, as well as coordinating the campaign to vaccinate more than a
million Gazans against polio,” Ynet said.
The unit will also “work with the international
community to restore all civilian facilities that collapsed in the
Strip.”
“It will play a major role in wide-scale civilian
operations that will be implemented soon if a deal is reached … the clear
return of about one million Gaza residents to their homes in the northern Gaza
Strip under the expected monitoring and inspection process on the Netzarim axis
… It will also be tasked with dealing with the Rafah crossing crisis,
especially in light of the possibility of the return of an international
European body to supervise work there as it was before 2005.”
Negotiations are failing to reach an agreement due to
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin's demand for an inspection mechanism for
displaced Gazans returning to the north, along with his insistence on keeping
troops along the Gaza–Egypt border – conditions which Hamas completely rejects.
According to satellite imagery reviewed by Ynet earlier this
week, Israeli forces have expanded the Netzarim corridor in the Gaza Strip to
include four large “outposts” designed to permanently house troops.
Forensic Architecture, a research group based at
Goldsmiths Univeristy, also revealed via satellite imagery on 20 August that the
Israeli army is building a new land corridor east of Gaza City.
Netanyahu confirmed last year that Israel is planning
“indefinite” security control over Gaza.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario