*** ----> EU debates Gaza truce call, as top diplomat urges more aid | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

EU debates Gaza truce call, as top diplomat urges more aid

AFP |  Luxembourg

The Daily Tribune – www.newsofbahrain.com

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell yesterday urged faster aid deliveries to Gaza, and said the bloc was debating calling for a “humanitarian pause” in Israel’s conflict with Hamas.

“What’s important (is) more, quicker, and in particular to enter the basic things that make water and electricity supply being restored,” Borrell said, ahead of a meeting of European Union foreign ministers.

Borrell said that the few dozen trucks of humanitarian aid that had been allowed into Gaza from Egypt was “not enough” and said fuel to produce power and drinking water was particularly needed.

He said ministers would discuss calls from United Nations’ secretary-general Antonio Guterres for a “humanitarian ceasefire” and the issue would be on the table at an EU leaders summit on Thursday.

“Personally, I think that a humanitarian pause is needed in order to allow the humanitarian support to come in and be distributed, seeing that half of the population of Gaza has been moving from their houses,” Borrell said.

He said “the attacks of missiles, rockets from Hamas, from Gaza, has to stop and the hostages, people who have been kidnapped, have to be released”. “It is part of any step towards de-escalation.” The 27-nation EU bloc has long been split over its policy on Israel and the Palestinians.

It has struggled with conflicting messaging since the surgein violence  following the October 7 attack by Hamas and Israel’s reprisals against Gaza.

Israel , and key ally United States, have so far opposed any calls for a halt in the military campaign against Hamas. Ireland’s foreign minister, Micheal Martin, said his country understood “Israel’s need to deal with Hamas because this was an appalling attack”.

“But the degree of suffering -- innocent civilians in Gaza are suffering -- it’s not acceptable at all and in our view that’s why we believe a humanitarian pause is required to at a minimum get aid and supplies in.”

Czech foreign minister Jan Lipavsky, however, cast doubt on the feasibility of achieving a temporary ceasefire with the group in charge of Gaza.

Italian minister Antonio Tajani echoed that, saying: “We can’t tell Israel to stop defending itself when Hamas is firing missiles at its cities.”

‘Squaring the circle’

Latvian counterpart Krisjanis Karins insisted: “It’s not at all an easy situation.

I think there is no black and white solution.” And Germany’s Annalena Baerbock said the “fight against terrorism, which has brought so much suffering to the people of Gaza, is essential”. “At the same time, everything must be done to alleviate the unbelievable suffering of the two million people in Gaza,” she said.

“This is squaring the circle. But we must face this squaring of the circle together.” Officials said the central town of Deir al-Balah had been particularly badly hit overnight Saturday to Sunday

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A convoy of Israeli army trucks carrying mortar shells advances on a road near the southern city of Sderot

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A young Palestinian girl has her hand held by a relative as a medic treats her wounds at a hospital following an Israeli air strike in Rafah, in the southern Gaza

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