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Costs of Israel’s intransigence

The Netanyahu administration, by stymieing a peace agreement, is complicit in Hamas’s brutal killing of six Israeli hostages

Published on: Sep 02, 2024 09:14 PM IST
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The recovery of the bodies of six Israeli hostages held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip has understandably triggered a wave of anger in Israel, adding to the complexity of negotiations underway for months now for a ceasefire that could both bring back the remaining hostages and end the bombardment of Palestinian civilians in Gaza. The bodies of the six men and women were found in a tunnel in Rafah area, with authentic accounts suggesting they were all killed only recently, after enduring more than ten months in captivity. Even more despicable than Hamas’s act of taking about 250 people hostage during the October 7 terror attacks last year is the killing of defenceless women and men while in the group’s custody. Such killings will only add to the anger on the Israeli side and complicate the work of negotiators from Egypt, the United States, Qatar, and other States working desperately behind the scenes to end the bloodshed that has continued for close to a year now.

A man waves the Palestinian flag as a convoy of Israeli military bulldozers drive by during an army raid in Jenin, West Bank, Monday, Sept. 2, 2024. (AP Photo/Majdi Mohammed) (AP)
A man waves the Palestinian flag as a convoy of Israeli military bulldozers drive by during an army raid in Jenin, West Bank, Monday, Sept. 2, 2024. (AP Photo/Majdi Mohammed) (AP)

The latest killings have also set off a fresh wave of protests in Israel, with much of the anger and frustration of the public directed against prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who, according to most accounts, is the person most responsible for holding up efforts to put in place a truce and bring home the remaining 100-odd hostages. If Netanyahu had signed off on various peace formulas negotiated by mediators in recent months, there may have been the possibility of these six hostages returning home alive. While the hostages were brutally shot by Hamas, there can be no doubt that Netanyahu’s government too was complicit in the matter. A ceasefire would also prevent further carnage in Gaza, where nearly 41,000 people have been killed by Israel’s senseless campaign of bombardment and attacks.