Foreign Minister Anita Anand Anand and 24 His colleagues have signed a common statement saying “Gaza’s war must end now”, prompting Israel to stop displacing the Palestinians.
The signatories – who include Foreign Ministers of France, Japan and the United Kingdom, and the Commissioner of Equity, Emergency and Crisis Management in the European Union – appointed the Israeli Distribution System as “dangerous”.
The ministers also condemned Hamas for extending the hostages imprisoned in Israel on October 7, 2023, and demanded their immediate liberation.
They said “horrifying that over 800 Palestinians have been killed in search of help”.
This death is based on figures published by the UN Human Rights Office and Hamas Ministry of Health Gaza Hamas Ministry of Health.
“The suffering of civilians in Gaza has reached new depths. The Israeli government’s assistance model is dangerous, burns instability and takes Gazans’ dignity. We condemn the drip and civilians, including children, in the inhuman killing.”
The ministers reject the proposals of Israeli officials to concentrate Gaza’s Palestinians in one city.
“Permanent forced transition is contrary to the international humanitarian law,” the statement states.
It also aims to propose the expansion of the Israeli government in the Palestinian areas it uses, especially as it seeks to distribute the West Bank of Eastern Jerusalem.
This would “critically weaken the decision of two states,” the statement stated that the increase in the construction of settlements in Canada illegal was at a time when “the violence of the settlers against the Palestinians”.
Israel rejects the statement
Oren Marmorstein, a spokesman for Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said that Israel rejects a common statement, calling it “detached from reality” and saying that “sends the wrong message to Hamas”.
“The statement does not focus on Hamas and does not recognize the role and responsibility of Hamas for the situation. Hamas is the only party responsible for continuing the war and on both sides of the suffering,” Marmorstein wrote in the social media.
“In these sensitive moments of the ongoing negotiations, it is better to avoid such statements.”
Marmorstein said that Hamas is merely the culprit of the lack of fire break and the release of hostage prisoners. He “deliberately” accused Hamas of increased tension and civilian disorders at humanitarian relief stations.
Warning: The video contains graphic images According to the Gaza Ministry of Health, at least 85 people died near Gaza’s relief sites in Gaza. There are some areas in the area, which instead chooses smaller places.
The ministers who sign the statement are urged the Israeli government to raise all the delivery restrictions and the “UN and humanitarian NGO” safely and efficiently.
Most of Israel’s food supplies have accessed Gaza’s Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a supportive American contractor in Israel. Witnesses and health authorities say that the Israeli Army fire has killed the group’s activities at the end of May hundreds of Palestinians in trying to achieve relief sites.
Israel presented his assistance for three months before the establishment of the GHF areas, effectively closing the hundreds of sites used by Gaza’s international agencies.
Israel says it had to take this step to prevent help from Hamas, who had sold vital supplies and food to pay the fighters. But the UN agencies say that this did not happen largely.
Although the United States, Qatar and Egypt did not sign the letter, the signatory ministers say they support these three countries to negotiate the ceasefire.
The United States and Germany were the only G7 countries that did not support the statement.
In addition to Canada, the signatories include Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Slovenia, Spain, Swedish, Sveit and united kingdom.
The signatories added that they were ready to take “additional action to support an immediate ceasefire and set up a political path in the area.