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Saudi Arabia, Russia focus on crises in Syria and Iraq

By - Jun 21,2014 - Last updated at Jun 21,2014

JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia — Russia and Saudi Arabia Saturday stressed the importance of preserving Syrian and Iraqi territorial integrity after talks in the Western city of Jeddah.

Riyadh and Moscow have opposing positions on the conflict in Syria, with Russia backing President Bashar Assad and Saudi Arabia supporting the rebels seeking to topple him for more than three years.

But Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al Faisal and his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov said they had agreed “to work together to apply the Geneva I agreement that provides for a peaceful transfer of power in Syria,” a Saudi spokesman said after the meetings.

The ministers also said they were keen to “preserve the independence and territorial integrity of Syria”, the spokesman said in comments reported by the Saudi state news agency SPA.

Lavrov and Prince Saud also highlighted the importance of “combatting terrorist organisations that have exploited the crisis to find safe haven on Syrian territory”.

The spokesman made no mention of differences on the conflict in Syria, saying the ministers discussed the “deterioration of the situation in Iraq and its consequences in the region”.

Sunni militants in Iraq, including jihadists from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), launched a major offensive on June 9, seizing swathes of territory.

ISIL also operates in Syria, and seeks to carve out an Islamic state straddling the border between the two states.

Lavrov and Saud also said efforts should be made to “maintain the integrity of Iraq and the unity of all the components of the Iraqi people, who should benefit from equality of rights and duties”.

However, Saudi Arabia said that this would be difficult to achieve “without the formation of a national unity government representing all Iraqis without discrimination or exclusion”.

“Any foreign intervention at this stage would only exacerbate the crisis and deepen sectarian resentment,” the Saudi spokesman said.

The oil-rich Sunni Gulf kingdom has accused Iraq’s Shiite Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki of leading the country to the current crisis by marginalising its Sunni Arab minority.

Prince Saud took over the kingdom’s oversight of its Syria policy from the head of Saudi intelligence, Prince Bandar Bin Sultan, in February.

The latter, who was asked by Riyadh to step down in April, was an ardent backer of funding, arming and unifying the rebels in Syria.

His last public assignment was a failed attempt in December to press Russian President Vladimir Putin to stop supporting Assad.

Maliki’s Iraq: Kerry’s new diplomatic mission impossible

By - Jun 21,2014 - Last updated at Jun 21,2014

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State John Kerry this weekend plunges back into the tumultuous Middle East seeking to overcome sectarian divisions in Iraq, amid US frustration with Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki.

While American leaders have stopped short of calling for Maliki to step down — arguing that it is up to the Iraqis to choose their own leaders — they have left little doubt that they feel the Shiite premier has squandered the opportunity to rebuild his country since US troops withdrew in 2011.

“We gave Iraq the chance to have an inclusive democracy. To work across sectarian lines, to provide a better future for their children,” President Barack Obama told CNN Friday.

“Unfortunately what we’ve seen is a breakdown of trust.”

Obama last week unveiled a plan to send 300 military advisers back to Iraq, but he made it clear that without political changes, the United States would not invest lives and resources in the country US forces invaded in 2003.

In a two-pronged approach, the US commander in chief also dispatched Kerry to the Middle East and Europe to wield the powers of his diplomacy to try to bring political stability to Iraq, where Shiite fighters paraded in Baghdad on Saturday in a dramatic show of force.

That came after Sunni militants seized a Syrian border crossing, the latest victory for insurgents led by the jihadist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) who have grabbed large areas of northern Iraq since launching a swift offensive on June 9.

“There’s no amount of American firepower that’s going to be able to hold the country together. And I made that very clear to Mr Maliki and all of the other leadership inside of Iraq,” Obama told CNN.

Kerry, who is already juggling heavy portfolios including the war in Syria and nuclear negotiations with Iran, will travel to Jordan, Brussels and Paris from Sunday until June 27.

While the top US diplomat is also expected to travel to Iraq soon — on what would be his second visit since taking over as secretary of state in early 2013 — there is no clear timetable for when the trip will happen.

Washington had initially favoured Maliki when he first became prime minister in 2006 as he was seen to be cracking down on Shiite militias while reaching out to Sunni leaders.

But in recent months, he has grown increasingly sectarian, triggering calls from US leaders to be the man for all Iraqi people — including Sunnis, Kurds and Christians.

Marginalisation 

 

The stunning offensive by ISIL, which has drawn help from other Sunni militias, shows how deep the fractures in Iraqi society run.

Sectarian divisions are also partly blamed for the ineptitude of Iraqi army forces, who evaporated in face of ISIL’s assault.

Despite billions of US dollars spent in training and military hardware, experts say Iraqi troops care little about protecting Sunni towns or propping up Maliki.

“Maliki should go,” said Michael Hanlon, director of research with the Brookings Institution.

“He is seen by most Sunnis, and Kurds, as a Shiite chauvinist who no longer has their interests at heart. They could be right. In any case, these perceptions will be very hard to change, eight years into the Iraqi prime minister’s rule.”

But he warned that as Maliki’s party just won the largest number of seats in April parliamentary elections “it might be too late to get him to step down”.

Maliki’s State of Law alliance won 92 out of 328 seats in the parliament, putting him in the driver’s seat for a third term despite fierce opposition.

Parliament is set to reconvene by the end of June, and will first have to elect a new president who will then appoint a prime minister.

But top US officials are already in Iraq urging Iraqi leaders to speed up the ponderous process, insisting “the country is in a serious crisis and it’s really incumbent upon all of them to come together.”

All parties need urgently to hold “serious and concerted” negotiations to form the next government, a senior US administration official told reporters last week.

10.8 million Syrians need aid — UN

By - Jun 21,2014 - Last updated at Jun 21,2014

UNITED NATIONS — The number of Syrians in urgent need of humanitarian aid has jumped to 10.8 million — nearly half of Syria’s population of 22 million — United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon said Friday.

In his monthly report to the UN Security Council, Ban said that a total of 4.7 million Syrians are now in areas that are “difficult or impossible” for humanitarian workers to reach, including 241,000 in besieged areas.

That’s an increase from the previous estimate of 3.5 million people. The report warned that advances made by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant militants in Iraq would only further worsen the situation in Syria.

“Efforts to expand humanitarian assistance to those most in need have been met with continued delays and obstruction,” the report said.

“Far from improving access, new procedures rolled out two months ago have resulted in more delays and reduced the reach of humanitarian partners further.”

Of the 10.8 million total people in need of aid — a 17 per cent, or 1.5 million increase from previous estimates — about 6.4 million are internally displaced.

An estimated 160,000 people have been killed in the conflict.

The report comes as Western powers work towards a new Security Council resolution that would guarantee the delivery of aid.

But in a letter to the UN Security Council, dated Wednesday, the Syrian mission warned it would consider any enforced cross-border delivery of humanitarian aid without prior agreement from Damascus as an “attack” on the state.

The letter, signed by Syrian and Arab lawyers, warned that the state must give consent for imports of any humanitarian aid.

“Importing aid in coordination with terrorist organisations and without consultation with the Syrian state would amount to an attack on the Syrian state,” said the letter.

It claimed it could be used as a “pretext for aggression”.

Syria opposes the delivery of cross-border aid that would send supplies directly to areas held by the armed opposition in its more than three-year brutal civil war.

Council members have been discussing for weeks a draft resolution that would enforce humanitarian aid deliveries across the Jordanian, Iraqi and Turkish borders into Syria.

Russia, president of the council in June, said it had proposed an “elegant innovative formula” that Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said Western partners have not yet accepted.

Australian Ambassador Gary Quinlan said the Russian proposal was “not good enough” and potentially counterproductive.

“We need to make sure it works on the ground and generates greater access but we are not convinced it is the case,” he told reporters.

Russia has already vetoed four Security Council resolutions on the Syrian conflict, protecting its close ally Damascus, and the impasse has paralysed international response to the catastrophe.

Gunbattle flares as Israeli soldiers seek missing teens

By - Jun 19,2014 - Last updated at Jun 19,2014

HEBRON, West Bank — Israeli forces traded gunfire with Palestinians on Thursday, the military said, in the fiercest street battles in the occupied West Bank since a search began for three Israeli teenagers missing for a week.

Hospital officials said three Palestinians suffered bullet wounds in the overnight clashes in Jenin, a stronghold of fighters and the scene of deadly fighting during a Palestinian uprising a decade ago. There were no reported Israeli casualties.

A military statement said about 300 Palestinians, including some who “hurled explosives and opened fire”, confronted soldiers who entered Jenin looking for the three seminary students.

Israel says the Hamas Islamist group abducted them last Thursday as they were hitchhiking near a Jewish settlement.

“The soldiers responded with live fire, identifying hits,” the statement said. It said 30 “terror suspects” were detained in the West Bank, bringing to 280 the number of Palestinians taken into custody over the past week.

Reuters photographers in Jenin heard heavy gunfire during the night but were kept away from the scene of the clashes by Israeli forces.

Israel has said its West Bank operation is twofold: to find Gil-Ad Shaer and US-Israeli national Naftali Fraenkel, both aged 16, and Eyal Yifrah, 19, and to deal a substantial blow to Hamas, a group dedicated to its destruction.

Hebron searches 

A statement issued by the office of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas accused Israel of using the teenagers’ disappearance as “a pretext to impose tough punishment against our people and besiege them” in violation of international humanitarian law.

Israeli raids have spread from house-to-house searches in Hebron, a flashpoint town in the area where the three went missing, to raids across the West Bank of institutions believed to provide funding and other support for Hamas.

“The policy of collective punishment conducted by the occupation government against our people and our land requires condemnation by the whole world,” the Palestinian presidential statement said.

While military operations inside Hebron continued, the heavy troop presence around the city appeared to have been scaled back. Some road blocks at entrances to the city were left unmanned, allowing vehicles to enter and leave freely. Paratrooper platoons that had camped by a road nearby were gone.

“We know more today than we did a few days ago, but we still have a way to go,” Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu said at a West Bank military headquarters, near the site where the teens are believed to have been abducted.

Charity banned

As part of the crackdown, Israel said on Thursday it was banning the British-based charity Islamic Relief Worldwide (IRW) from operating in the occupied West Bank. It accuses the IRW of being a funding source for the Hamas movement.

No comment was immediately available from the IRW in Britain. Officials in an affiliate office in the Gaza Strip, International Relief in Palestine, said they had no information about the Israeli decision.

At Bir Zeit University, near the Palestinian town of Ramallah, Israeli soldiers on Thursday seized Hamas posters and flags from a student group affiliated with Hamas.

Soldiers have searched about 900 locations so far, the military said. There has been no word from the missing teenagers nor any public claim of responsibility or ransom demands, including from Hamas.

Hamas, however, has not issued any denial of involvement and on Thursday appeared to praise the apparent abduction.

“Regardless of who was responsible for the operation... the Palestinian people have the right to use all forms of resistance in order to liberate land and people,” Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said in a news conference in the Gaza Strip.

Tunnel explosion 

Hamas’ armed wing in Gaza said at least six members of its group were killed in the collapse of a tunnel the group had dug close to the border with Israel to infiltrate Israel.

Abbas roundly condemned the kidnappers on Wednesday and promised to hold to account those responsible. His words in turn were denounced by Hamas and other factions, who accused him of betraying the national cause.

On Tuesday, Hamas and 10 other Palestinian factions issued a joint communique warning Israel that they would not “stay handcuffed” in the face of its West Bank dragnet — a threat of armed resistance.

Security experts expect the frustration of ordinary Palestinians at Israeli restrictions in the West Bank to mount as the holy month of Ramadan is due to begin on June 28 or 29.

Egypt court calls for death sentence for Brotherhood leader

By - Jun 19,2014 - Last updated at Jun 19,2014

CAIRO — An Egyptian court signalled on Thursday that it wanted death sentences for the leader of the Muslim Brotherhood and 13 other defendants charged with murder and firearms possession, when it referred the case to the country’s religious authorities.

Judicial sources said a judge at a court session held at a Cairo police institute had referred all 14 of the defendants to the Mufti, the highest Islamic legal official, who must give an opinion on death sentences before they can be confirmed. The court’s final decision is expected on August 3.

More than a thousand suspected supporters of Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood have already been given death sentences this year which were referred to the Mufti. Their cases have provoked outrage among rights groups and Western governments.

Thirty-seven of the sentences have been upheld, and more than six hundred others are awaiting a final decision. But so far none of the sentences has been carried out.

The court decision came less than two weeks after former army chief Abdel Fattah Al Sisi took office as president. Sisi ousted president Mohamed Morsi of the Brotherhood last July.

Morsi’s ouster was followed by the bloodiest period in Egypt’s modern history, with widespread protests by his supporters and a crackdown by security forces in which hundreds of Islamists were killed and thousands jailed.

The movement emerged after the 2011 revolt as the country’s best-organised political force. But it has been driven underground and designated a terrorist organisation since Morsi was overthrown.

Sisi has said the Brotherhood would cease to exist in his presidency.

The Thursday ruling related to clashes during protests in July following the army’s ouster of Morsi after mass protests nine people and incitement to kill that led to 21 other deaths, judicial sources said.

Brotherhood leader Mohamed Badie, who faces charges in several other cases, was already referred to the Mufti on a separate set of charges.

A court in the town of Minya, south of Cairo, is expected to deliver a final verdict on Saturday in that case.

Among the defendants were senior Brotherhood members Mohamed Al Beltagi and Essam Al Erian and former members of the Morsi government. Six of the accused are on the run.

Obama to send up to 300 military advisers to Iraq

By - Jun 19,2014 - Last updated at Jun 19,2014

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama said on Thursday the United States would send up to 300 military advisers to support Iraqi forces confronting an Al Qaeda-inspired insurgency and was prepared to take targeted military action if it was necessary.

But the US president, speaking to a news conference after meeting with his national security team, insisted: “American combat troops are not going to be fighting in Iraq again.”

“We do not have the ability to simply solve this problem by sending in tens of thousands of troops and committing the kinds of blood and treasure that has already been expended in Iraq,” he said. “Ultimately, this is something that is going to have to be solved by the Iraqis.”

Obama said the military advisers would support Iraqi security forces and create joint operation centres in Baghdad and northern Iraq to share intelligence and coordinate planning to confront the insurgents.

He said the US military forces had beefed up intelligence gathering over Iraq in recent days and would be prepared to take “targeted and precise military action” if the situation required.

He said Secretary of State John Kerry would go to the Middle East and Europe this weekend to lead diplomatic efforts to promote stability in the region.

The United States invaded Iraq in 2003 to topple president Saddam Hussein. It withdrew its troops from the country in 2011, handing over responsibility for security to the government of Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki.

US officials have been critical of Maliki’s performance as prime minister, saying he has worsened the country’s sectarian divisions. Some senior US lawmakers have said Maliki should step down to make way for someone able to work more effectively across sectarian lines.

Obama has said the Iraqi government must take steps to heal the political rift among Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds before he will agree to any military action against the insurgency led by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, or ISIL, an Al Qaeda splinter group.

‘Deep division’ 

Obama said on Thursday the administration had discussed these issues with Maliki privately. He said it was not the job of the United States to pick Iraq’s leaders, but added: “There is deep division between Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish leaders and as long as those deep divisions continue or worsen, it’s gonna be very hard for an Iraqi central government to direct an Iraqi military to deal with these threats.”

The president has taken several steps in response to the Iraq crisis. He told Congress on Monday the United States was deploying up to 275 military personnel to provide support and security for the US embassy and US citizens in Iraq.

The United States also is flying F-18 attack aircraft launched from the carrier USS George H.W. Bush on missions over Iraq to conduct surveillance of the insurgents who have seized part of the country, a US official said on Thursday.

US officials have said while Obama is considering manned or unmanned air strikes, Washington lacks the kind of precise intelligence it needs to conduct the strikes effectively.

Tehran, world powers ‘begin drafting nuclear deal’

By - Jun 19,2014 - Last updated at Jun 19,2014

TEHRAN — Iran and world powers started drafting Wednesday a comprehensive nuclear agreement but still face many sticking points, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said.

“Today we have slowly begun to draft the final agreement... but there are still many differences” over the text, ISNA news agency quoted Zarif as saying from Vienna.

“This does not mean we have reached an agreement,” said Zarif, according to IRNA news agency.

“Fundamental disagreements” continue to divide Iran and the P5+1 powers — Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States plus Germany — he said.

But Zarif said the two sides have agreed on a title for the text, which will be known as the “General Joint Plan of Action”.

A new round of negotiations between Iranian diplomats and those of the six powers, which opened Monday in Vienna, had been “very difficult” so far.

The talks, which run through Friday, are aimed at clinching a comprehensive nuclear deal by a July 20 deadline set up by an interim agreement.

Iran’s top negotiator Abbas Araqchi earlier told IRNA news agency that Iran hoped to settle all differences with the six powers by the target date.

The main sticking points are the timetable for a full lifting of crippling US and EU sanctions, and the scale to which Iran would be allowed to continue uranium enrichment, he said.

Enrichment is the sensitive process at the centre of Western concerns about Iran’s nuclear ambitions, as it can produce both fuel for nuclear power stations and, in highly extended form, the core of an atomic bomb.

The P5+1 want Iran — which insists its nuclear drive is purely for civilian use — to drastically reduce its uranium production capacity, and keep only a few hundred centrifuges active.

They want to ensure that Iran’s nuclear activities are purely peaceful. In return, Iran wants the removal of international sanctions that have choked its economy.

US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said Wednesday Iran’s economy remained in a “state of distress” despite limited sanctions relief.

“Iran sanctions are the toughest the world community has imposed on any country, and its economy is suffering a serious blow as a result — an impact that is not being reversed,” Lew said at a meeting in Jerusalem of the Joint Economic Development Group.

‘Still a long way to go’  

In the remarks to IRNA, Araqchi said “it won’t be a catastrophe” if the July 20 target date is not met.

“We hope to start work on Wednesday on drafting the text of a final agreement, not the big issues but the general framework and the introduction,” Araqchi said.

“There is a still a long way to go before we reach an agreement acceptable to all sides.”

An interim deal struck last November led the six powers to release $7 billion from frozen funds in return for a slowdown in Iran’s controversial uranium enrichment.

Iran began implementing the November deal in January.

Tehran said Wednesday that successful nuclear talks could lead to cooperation with the US over their shared interest in Iraq — where Sunni militants have seized large swathes of territory in a lightning offensive.

President Hassan Rouhani’s chief of staff Mohammad Nahavandian told reporters in Oslo that the nuclear talks were a “test for confidence building”.

“If that comes to a final resolution, then there might be opportunities for other issues to be discussed.”

Egypt’s breadbasket Nile Delta under threat from illegal building

By - Jun 19,2014 - Last updated at Jun 19,2014

KAHA, Egypt — In the Nile Delta province of Qalubiya, lifelong residents remember the days when lush farmland stretched as far as the eye could see.

Today, their view is marred by unfinished brick tenement buildings with metal rods jutting into the sky — signs of the growing problem of illegal construction in Egypt’s agricultural heartland.

The unlicensed building is more than an eyesore — it threatens plans by the world’s top wheat importer to cut its costly imports bill by growing more locally.

Scarce farmland has been eroded for decades by relentless population growth and urban sprawl, and the pace of unlicensed building exploded since 2011 when the overthrow of President Hosni Mubarak led to a security vacuum.

The agriculture ministry estimates that some 30,000 feddans have been lost each year to unlicensed construction in the past three years, up from 10,000 feddans before the revolt.

Around the Qalubiya town of Kaha, about 50km north of Cairo, residents are building new homes on farmland on the outskirts of town in areas where crops such as wheat and corn or fruits and vegetables used to be grown.

Farmers like Omar Mahmoud saw an opportunity in the breakdown of law and order after Mubarak was toppled to build an enclosed pen for his livestock on his own land without interference from police or the local government.

Although he now faces a lawsuit and the threat of fines, he says he is considering building a larger structure for his family on the land.

Local farmers eke out a subsistence living on land they inherited from their fathers, but some are fed up with the ever-rising costs — and diminishing returns — of their trade.

“Farming no longer helps me get by,” said Mahmoud, standing amid the rice patties he just planted after harvesting his wheat crop last month. “I’d rather build on it, or sell it off if someone offered me a good price.”

Influx from towns 

Pressure on the land was noted by President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi during his election campaign last month, when he proposed that the state build cities in the desert, relieving demand on the thin ribbon of farmland which runs alongside the River Nile and the Delta north of the capital.

The Nile Delta is the one of the most densely populated parts of the country of 86 million people, and Egypt’s breadbasket. The vast majority of Egypt’s wheat production comes from the Nile Delta and valley.

Landowners in the Delta are not just building for themselves. Some families moving out of the increasingly expensive cities are buying new homes on converted farmland for less than the price of a small flat in town.

Near Mahmoud’s freshly harvested wheat fields, a new neighbourhood of recently built mud brick homes is further evidence of the influx of residents from the towns.

Abdel Latif Sabr, 65, was living in a small flat with his three sons and their growing families before he moved to a four-room home in a district that was, until two years ago, a fruit farm on the edge of wheat fields.

“God blessed us and gave us this complete life,” he said as proudly gestured to the bedroom where some of his 12 grandchildren sleep.

Sabr fears fines from the local government and possibility of eviction, but says there has been no word from the authorities since six months ago when he was told by the city council that it was bringing a lawsuit against him. 

Buildings dynamited

Authorities in the Delta provinces where lush fields hug the Nile River have stepped up efforts to confront the illegal buildings, but have struggled to keep up with the pace.

New neighbourhoods spring up as others lie in ruins, evidence of a dynamiting campaign that has intensified in recent months, according to Abdul-Mohsen Al Essily, the top local official in the town of Kaha.

“The extent of infringement [on farmland] since the [2011] revolution exceeds the total amount during the 30 years of Mubarak, given the lack of police presence,” he said.

“There must be a deterrent to building on agricultural land through punishment,” he said, flipping through a notebook with handwritten destruction orders.

While it is unclear if the public demolitions and the sight of whole neighbourhoods lying in ruin is deterring further construction, experts say the process could prevent efforts to reclaim farmland.

Between the clearing of land for building, the construction of brick and cement structures and their subsequent destruction, the land loses its agricultural value, says Cairo University agronomist Gamal Siam. Restoring it for agricultural use is difficult and takes years, he said.

“If the current rate of farmland loss continues, in 50 years or so, we will have lost every piece of our agricultural land.”

‘Iraqi capital out of danger; urgent need for US strikes eases’

By - Jun 19,2014 - Last updated at Jun 19,2014

BAGHDAD — Iraqi forces have blocked an immediate threat to the capital Baghdad, which means they no longer require immediate US air strikes to halt the advance of Sunni fighters, a senior ally of Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki said on Thursday.

US President Barack Obama announced on Thursday that he would send up to 300 military advisers to Iraq. Iraq has asked for air support for its forces battling advancing fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

The senior Maliki ally welcomed Obama’s announcement and said the advisers would help identify ISIL targets which could be hit by air strikes in the future, now that the urgent need to safeguard the capital had receded.

“The US was prepared to bomb certain positions, but once the danger to Baghdad was removed, it bought time,” said the politician, a leading member of Maliki’s ruling coalition, speaking on condition he not be identified.

He said the Americans were establishing an intelligence liaison centre to help improve the quality of Iraqi intelligence, which the politician described as lacking.

“Once they are down there they will be able to do targeting,” the politician said. “It will help the US prepare and see how it should be involved.”

The Shiite-led caretaker government of Maliki was stunned last week by the surprise fall of Mosul, the north’s biggest city, to ISIL and then watched as ISIL raced through central Iraq, within range of Baghdad.

Faced with mass desertions in the north, the army rallied outside Baghdad, backed by Shiite militia groups and volunteers answering a call by the country’s top Shiite cleric.

“They succeeded in blunting the advance and now the goal is to reclaim areas that were unnecessarily lost,” the politician said.

Palestinian families bear brunt as Israel hunts teens

By - Jun 19,2014 - Last updated at Jun 19,2014

TAFFUH, Palestinian Territories — It was the sound of the front door being kicked in that woke the Izrayqat family early Wednesday as Israeli troops barged into their home in Taffuh village near Hebron.

Even the four children were sleeping because school had ended and the summer holidays were already under way.

“They kicked in the doors at 7:30am (0430 GMT) and told us to get out,” Umm Omar Izrayqat told AFP, describing the moment when troops came searching for signs of three Israeli teenagers believed kidnapped by the Islamist fighters from Hamas.

“I took my four children. We didn’t even have time to get ready properly, so I put these dirty clothes on and left,” she said, gesturing towards her dress which had been in the laundry pile.

Like elsewhere in the southern West Bank, life in this village west of Hebron has been turned on its head since the three teenagers went missing late last week, prompting a massive military search operation.

Over the past six days, troops have turned properties upside-down and arrested more than 240 Palestinians, leaving no stone unturned in the search for the students, who disappeared while hitchhiking on Thursday.

Israel has accused Hamas fighters of kidnapping the youngsters, two of them minors, and has launched a major crackdown on its members.

But it is ordinary families who are bearing the brunt of the operation.

‘They searched everything’ 

 

After ordering the Izrayqat family out of their home, the soldiers began using the house as an operating base, Umm Omar said.

“I went back inside to get my mobile phone and found them asleep on my daughter’s bed,” she told AFP.

“If our relatives didn’t live nearby we’d have ended up in the street,” she said, explaining that they had found refuge with the family next door.

Other families have had the opposite problem, being forced to stay in just one room inside their own homes as soldiers took over the rest of the house.

Karima Khmayseh, 39, said she and her children were forced to cower in a corner of their main room as the army rifled through personal effects.

“They put us all in one room and then searched it, even going through our personal papers, even though I told them not to,” she said.

“They searched everything, even the bed.”

The three Israeli youths disappeared while trying to hitchhike from the Gush Eztion settlement bloc, with the army focusing its manhunt predominantly on Hebron and the surrounding area, which is home to some 663,000 Palestinians.

So far, there has been no formal claim of responsibility, and Hamas has dismissed Israel’s accusations as “stupid”.

But the scope of the searches and the tight lockdown imposed on the Hebron area has made life very difficult for the local population, with some accusing the army of lashing out.

“This is not an inspection to find kidnappers, this is just destroying out houses,” said 30-year-old Umm Mukhtar.

“I don’t think they’ll find the missing Israelis in the bathroom or the washing machine, or in the cupboard,” she retorted sarcastically.

But after six days of searches and still no sign of their whereabouts, there appeared to be no end in sight.

“A lot of time will pass until the situation in the West Bank returns to what it was, if it ever does,” an Israeli military official told Maariv newspaper on Wednesday.

And some are warning that “Operation Brother’s Keeper” may run into the holy month of Ramadan, which begins at the end of June.

“My feeling is their Ramadan is going to be disrupted,” a senior military official told Haaretz newspaper, acknowledging that life in the West Bank was becoming increasingly difficult for Palestinians.

“This event will have long-term ramifications.”

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