Tuesday, June 18, 2024

Israel-Hamas war: Netanyahu dissolves War Cabinet

 

Israel-Hamas war: Netanyahu dissolves War Cabinet

Deutsche Welle
ConflictsMiddle East
Published 06/17/2024
Published June 17, 2024
last updated 12 hours ago
last updated 12 hours ago

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has disbanded his War Cabinet in an expected move, officials have confirmed. Meanwhile, Norway has pledged more funding for UNRWA. DW has more.

Benjamin Netanyahu
Netanyahu has dissolved his War CabinetImage: Abir Sultan/AP/dpa/picture alliance

What you need to know

  • Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has dissolved his three-member War Cabinet
  • The head of the UN aid agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, is in Oslo

Here is a roundup of developments from the Israel-Hamas war on Tuesday, June 18. This blog has now closed.

12 hours ago
12 hours ago

Opponents of Netanyahu government protest in Jerusalem

Israeli opposition supporters took to the streets of Jerusalem on Monday, calling for snap elections and a more rapid return of the remaining hostages from Gaza. 

A large crowd gathered outside the Knesset parliament around sundown with some then moving on to the area of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's residence. Many waved Israeli flags and others carried banners or placards often critical of government policies.

People take part in a protest against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government, demanding new elections and the release of the hostages held in the Gaza Strip by the Hamas militant group, outside of the Knesset, Israel's parliament, in Jerusalem, Monday, June 17, 2024.
Thousands took to the streets of Jerusalem again on MondayImage: Ohad Zwigenberg/AP Photo/picture alliance

Protests of this kind have been quite common in the past weeks and months but may gain new impetus since Israel's wartime unity government fell apart a week ago, leaving Netanyahu's government with a narrower band of participants. 

A portion of the demonstration later turned unruly.

Police said that nine people were arrested, some for attacking police officers, when a group of protesters tried to break through barriers set up near Netanyahu's home.

Protesters stand, many holding signs or flags, near a small fire on a street in central Jerusalem. June 17, 2024.
Protesters say they plan to increase their visibility in response to the unity government disbandingImage: Ohad Zwigenberg/AP/dpa/picture alliance
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20 hours ago
20 hours ago

WATCH: UNICEF spokesperson tells DW of 'desperate' situation in Gaza

DW spoke with UNICEF spokesperson James Elder who's currently Rafah. He called on Israel to do more to facilitate the distribution to Palestinians in Gaza.

"There is nothing normal about children being deprived food. There's nothing normal about thousands of children being bombed. There's certainly nothing normal about the constant fear that people live in," he said.

WHO: Thousands of children in Gaza suffering malnutrition

06:15

https://p.dw.com/p/4hA7l
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22 hours ago
22 hours ago

Israel sees record defense exports in 2023

Israel's Defense Ministry says the country made record defense export sales last year.

The ministry said the country made $13 billion (€12.3 billion) in sales in 2023, a period that includes the Hamas terror attack against Israel on October 7 and the first three months of the war that it sparked.

"For the third consecutive year, Israel set a new record in defense exports, with over $13 billion in 2023, the highest figure to date," the ministry posted on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter. "Israel's defense exports have doubled within five years, with over a third of the agreements signed — missile, rocket, and air defense systems."

https://p.dw.com/p/4h9n3
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06/17/2024
June 17, 2024

Gaza 'most dangerous place in the world for aid workers': UNRWA

The UN aid agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, says 193 of its workers have been killed in Gaza since the Israeli offensive began there in October last year.

"Gaza is the most dangerous places [sic] in the world for aid workers," it wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

It said the death toll was the highest in UN history.

"Despite this, our colleagues keep working to support families & provide aid amid the dire humanitarian crisis," it wrote.

The agency faced severe funding difficulties earlier this year after Israel alleged that some of its members had been involved in the deadly October 7 raids by Hamas and other militant groups that triggered the offensive. The attacks claimed some 1,200 Israeli lives in what was the worst massacre in the country's history.

But most of the countries that suspended their contributions have resumed funding after an investigation led by former French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna said Israel had produced no proof to back its claims that UNRWA staff members were members of terrorist organizations.

The investigation did, however, note "neutrality-related issues" at the agency.

https://p.dw.com/p/4h8ez
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06/17/2024
June 17, 2024

Norway steps up contribution to UNRWA

Norway's international development minister, Anne Beathe Tvinnereim, has said her country will top up its contribution to the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, adding 100 million Norwegian kroner (€8.7 million) to the current 275 million kroner. 

Tvinnereim was speaking at a press conference with UNRWA head Philippe Lazzarini, who is visiting Oslo.

Norway is already one of the top donors to the agency.

Several donor countries temporarily suspended funding for the agency early in the year following Israeli allegations that some UNRWA employees were involved in the October 7 attacks by Hamas in which some 1,200 Israelis were killed. 

However, most countries resumed their payments after an investigation requested by the United Nations found no evidence to support Israeli allegations that the agency had been thoroughly infiltrated by the Palestinian militant group Hamas.

UN and other aid agencies have also complained that Israeli operations in Gaza have made it difficult or impossible to deliver humanitarian aid to people who are, or are close to, suffering from famine.

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06/17/2024
June 17, 2024

Netanyahu disbands War Cabinet after Gantz's departure

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has dissolved his War Cabinet, which was a main forum for making decisions on the course of the Israeli offensive in Gaza, Israeli officials say.

The move comes after the departure from the government of the centrist former general Benny Gantz.

Although not a member of Netanyahu's far-right government, Gantz had agreed to join the War Cabinet to circumvent some of the more extremist members of the government. The third member of the War Cabinet was Defense Minister Yoav Gallant.

Netanyahu is now expected to hold consultations about the Gaza war with a small group of ministers, including Gallant and Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer.

Among those with whom he may also discuss sensitive issues regarding the war are other far-right members of his Security Cabinet who oppose cease-fire deals and have voiced support for reoccupying Gaza.
Gantz left the government last week, citing Netanyahu's alleged failure to have a postwar plan for Gaza.

Gantz exit boosts far-right faction in Israeli government

03:37

tj/ab (Reuters, AFP, dpa, AP)

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Euro 2024 host Germany pleased with security so far

 

Euro 2024 host Germany pleased with security so far

Deutsche Welle
Rule of LawGermany
23 hours ago

German officials praised the security situation at the start of the Euro 2024 football championship. But police did break up a violent incident between Serbia and England fans.

Police outside a stadium in Munich
Police were deployed at matches across GermanyImage: Matthias Koch/picture alliance

Germany's Interior Ministry said it was satisfied with the security situation over the first weekend of the Euro 2024 championship.

"The security measures are working," Interior Ministry spokesperson Maximilian Kall said on Monday.

He said that "so far, there have been no surprising events."

However, incidents did occur away from the pitch. In Saxony-Anhalt, police shot a man who fatally stabbed a guest at a viewing party. In Hamburg, police also shot a man wielding a hammer near where Dutch soccer fans were gathering, although authorities dismissed any connection to the Euros.

Police respond to Serbia-England clash

Kall nevertheless pointed to an isolated incident of violence between England and Serbia fans ahead of their match on Sunday.

"Of course there were incidents at the weekend, for example ... with hooligans yesterday in Gelsenkirchen, but that was a situation the police there tackled quickly and above all were prepared for," Kall said.

Police said a group of Serbia supporters were eating at a restaurant when a group of England fans tried to get in.

Footage posted to social media showed men throwing chairs at each other outside the restaurant, which was decorated with Serbian flags.

Hooligans clashed at a restaurant before the England v Serbia in GelsenkirchenImage: K. Hoeft/frontalvision/picture alliance

Senior Gelsenkirchen police official Peter Both told reporters that seven Serbia fans and one England fan were detained.

He added that one fan was taken to hospital with a head injury, but he later discharged himself in order to watch the game.

On Monday, an England fans' group called for an "urgent and thorough" review of transport arrangements after spectators faced delays getting home after the match.

"To see fans stranded in Gelsenkirchen Hauptbahnhof (central station) three hours after the game has finished due to transport problems at a major tournament is quite simply ridiculous," the Free Lions Fan Embassy said.

zc/lo (dpa, AP)


Germany faces threats from extremists, Russia and China

 

Germany faces threats from extremists, Russia and China

Deutsche Welle
3 hours ago
3 hours ago

German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser has warned of dangers to democracy amid rising domestic and external threats, including antisemitism and espionage.

 BfV head Thomas Haldenwang and Interior Minister Nancy Faeser
BfV head Thomas Haldenwang and Interior Minister Nancy FaeserImage: Axel Schmidt/REUTERS

German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said on Tuesday that while Germany's democracy was strong, it was coming under considerable pressure.

Among the threats she cited were far-right elements in German society and increasing espionage activities on the part of Russia and China.

Her comments came as Germany's domestic intelligence agency BfV presented its report for 2023.

What the interior minister said about threats to Germany

Faeser called for active support of democratic ideals. "We must actively defend our democracy," she said.

She also said the general security situation "is and remains tense," while stressing that it was clear that "we will not let ourselves be intimidated."

She named the Islamist scene with its antisemitic tendencies as one of the risks for security.

Faeser also spoke about the ongoing debate in Germany about whether to ban the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, which has gained a considerable following, particularly in the former communist east.

She said she was against any ban on the party, despite its having been classified as a "suspected case of far-right extremism" by the BfV, a status that was recently confirmed as legitimate by the higher regional court for North Rhine-Westphalia in Münster.

Faeser said that the party should instead be confronted politically.

She, however, called the ruling by the Münster court a "success for the BfV."

The AfD is considered by some observers to have fueled racist crime in Germany with its harsh anti-immigration platform.

BfV President Thomas Haldenwang also spoke of a "very high level of threats," with the risk of extremist Islamist attacks rising particularly since the deadly raids by Hamas in southern Israel on October 7.

He said the danger came both from jihadi terrorists and radicalized lone wolves.

The conflict in Gaza had also acted "like an accelerant for antisemitism in Germany," he added.

Antisemitic crime rates soar amid Gaza war

According to the 2023 report, there was a record number of crimes with an extremist background in 2023, climbing by around 4,000 to 39,433.

The report said the number of crimes motivated by right-wing extremist ideologies increased by 22.4% in 2023, with a 13% increase of violent offenses in this category.

Left-wing extremist offenses were up 10.4%, while violent crimes fueled by leftist ideologies rose by a whole 20.8%.

But the largest increase in ideologically motivated crime was in those committed in connection with the Israel-Hamas war. 

Here, there was a rise in 2023 of 56.6% overall, with a 45% increase in violent offenses.

tj/rc (Reuters, dpa, AFP)

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