Hamas Gets Mediator Assurances on Rafah Reopening, Israel Seeks Delay

Palestinians walk on Wednesday amid the rubble of residential buildings destroyed by Israel in Gaza City (Reuters)
Palestinians walk on Wednesday amid the rubble of residential buildings destroyed by Israel in Gaza City (Reuters)
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Hamas Gets Mediator Assurances on Rafah Reopening, Israel Seeks Delay

Palestinians walk on Wednesday amid the rubble of residential buildings destroyed by Israel in Gaza City (Reuters)
Palestinians walk on Wednesday amid the rubble of residential buildings destroyed by Israel in Gaza City (Reuters)

As Hamas says it has received firm assurances from mediators, including the US, that the Rafah border crossing between the Gaza Strip and Egypt will reopen, Israeli media report that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is working to slow the move as much as possible.

Sources from Hamas told Asharq Al-Awsat that the information and assurances received by the movement indicate that “the Rafah crossing will open during the current week, with Thursday the most likely date.”

Israeli media, however, offered conflicting timelines. While the public broadcaster said the crossing would open on Thursday, the Walla news site reported that it would reopen next Sunday.

According to Hamas sources, mediators have provided reassurances that the crossing will indeed open. They said that since efforts began to recover the body of the last Israeli captive, and after it was found, Hamas leaders were told the crossing would be reopened during the current week.

Entry of the Gaza Administration Committee

One Hamas source told Asharq Al-Awsat that it is “likely that some members of the Gaza Administration Committee will be allowed to enter the Strip through the Rafah crossing in the coming days” to hold meetings with Hamas government officials, in preparation for assuming some governmental duties as an initial step toward transferring authority to the committee.

The Palestinian Authority and the European Union mission have confirmed their readiness to begin operating at the crossing immediately under the terms of the 2005 agreement.

While Hamas sources say the crossing “is supposed to open under a full-movement mechanism as stipulated in the agreement,” Netanyahu said at a press conference on Tuesday that it would open in a limited manner and under agreed arrangements, allowing a specific daily number of Palestinians to enter and exit.

Netanyahu added that “Israel will maintain full security control over the crossing and over the entire Gaza Strip.”

What does complete security control mean?

Netanyahu’s remarks about “full security control” have raised widespread questions and concerns among Palestinian factions over how Israel intends to implement such control.

Factional sources estimate that Israel “may seek to remain along the so-called yellow line, which would allow it to retain control over more than 53% of Gaza’s territory.”

They said that while the conditions of the second phase call for an Israeli withdrawal to the limits of the buffer zone, Netanyahu’s government has linked that step to the disarmament of Hamas, an issue still under discussion and likely to face significant obstacles.

If the conditions of the second phase are not implemented, Israel may seek to impose security control by expanding its military presence inside Gaza and taking control of additional areas west of the yellow line, particularly in the north and east of the enclave, while maintaining its military presence in the south.

Even if Israel withdraws, it may seek to maintain a buffer zone larger than that specified in the agreed ceasefire withdrawal maps, extending to more than one kilometer in some areas and possibly up to two kilometers, while remaining smaller in others.

In the event of a withdrawal, Israel would also ensure its continued presence at the Rafah crossing and along the Philadelphi Corridor, which it considers crucial to preventing the smuggling of weapons, explosives, and other materials.

This follows Israel’s destruction of all tunnels along the corridor, strengthening its security grip there, extending to the maritime boundary.

Since Oct. 7, 2023, Israel has exercised complete control over Gaza’s coastal waters, preventing Palestinian fishing boats from approaching those areas or exceeding one nautical mile westward and up to five nautical miles southward toward Egypt’s maritime border.

Sources reiterated their assessment that Israel, by repeatedly emphasizing “full security control,” may aim to carry out surprise targeted killings similar to those conducted in Lebanon, or to strike targets on the pretext that they contain military objectives.

They did not rule out Israel carrying out special operations, including the abduction of faction members deep inside areas controlled by Hamas in Gaza or in the West Bank, to demonstrate its full security control over the enclave.



Israeli Troops Fire Tear Gas at Palestinian Schoolchildren in West Bank

 13 April 2026, Palestinian Territories, Hebron: Members of Red Crescent surround Palestinian children from Khirbet Umm al-Khair after Israeli settlers blocked the only road to their schools. (dpa)
13 April 2026, Palestinian Territories, Hebron: Members of Red Crescent surround Palestinian children from Khirbet Umm al-Khair after Israeli settlers blocked the only road to their schools. (dpa)
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Israeli Troops Fire Tear Gas at Palestinian Schoolchildren in West Bank

 13 April 2026, Palestinian Territories, Hebron: Members of Red Crescent surround Palestinian children from Khirbet Umm al-Khair after Israeli settlers blocked the only road to their schools. (dpa)
13 April 2026, Palestinian Territories, Hebron: Members of Red Crescent surround Palestinian children from Khirbet Umm al-Khair after Israeli settlers blocked the only road to their schools. (dpa)

Israeli forces fired tear gas at Palestinian schoolchildren staging a sit-in on Monday in the occupied West Bank, AFP footage showed, after settlers blocked access to their school.

The Israeli military confirmed to AFP it had dispersed an "unusual gathering", but did not specify whether its troops had fired tear gas at the children on the first day of class since the start of the Iran war.

The incident took place at Umm al-Khair, a small village in the southern West Bank region of Masafer Yatta.

Schoolchildren there had been due back in class on Monday for the first time in more than 40 days, after lessons were suspended following the outbreak of the Middle East war on February 28.

A group of schoolchildren and Palestinian residents had gathered near a barbed wire fence erected by Israeli settlers, which blocked access to the school, an AFP journalist reported.

Schoolchildren and some local adults were holding an open-air class as a sit-in to demand access when troops fired the tear gas, witnesses said.

"We were sitting and they threw a grenade (tear gas canister) at us. I got scared and started screaming and ran away," 12-year-old Sarah al-Hathaleen told AFP.

"I started crying. A woman hugged me and stayed with me. We were very scared."

Bassam Jabr, director of education for the Masafer Yatta area, confirmed the children were staging a sit-in at the time of the incident.

"Settlers are trying to tighten the noose on us in every way. One of these methods is cutting off the road for school students and expanding the settlement," Jabr said of settlers from the nearby Carmel settlement whose residents erected the fence.

"Sadly, there are no solutions. We will continue this sit-in today and tomorrow until we find a solution so the students can return to their schools," he said.

Israel's military said troops had been dispatched to the area.

"Soldiers were dispatched to the area of Umm Al-Khair due to reports of an unusual gathering of Palestinians in the area," the military told AFP.

"The gathering was dispersed and no injuries were reported," it said, without specifying whether tear gas had been fired.

AFP footage showed canisters being fired, with children screaming and fleeing.

"Last night we were excited for school today. The Israelis came and closed the road with barbed wire... we want to be back in school," said 11-year-old Rashid al-Hathaleen.

The Masafer Yatta region is a known hotspot for settler violence and Palestinian home demolitions.

It was in Umm al-Khair village that Palestinian activist Awdah Hathaleen was killed by a settler in August 2025.

Settler violence has also surged across the West Bank since the outbreak of the Iran war.

Excluding east Jerusalem, more than 500,000 Israelis now live in the West Bank in settlements that are illegal under international law, among some three million Palestinians.

Israel has occupied the West Bank since 1967.


Israel Army Ups Hezbollah Death Toll from April 8 Strikes to Over 250

 12 April 2026, Lebanon, Beirut: People and civil defense workers search for human remains amid the debris of a collapsed building following an Israeli air strike at the Beirut seafront. (dpa)
12 April 2026, Lebanon, Beirut: People and civil defense workers search for human remains amid the debris of a collapsed building following an Israeli air strike at the Beirut seafront. (dpa)
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Israel Army Ups Hezbollah Death Toll from April 8 Strikes to Over 250

 12 April 2026, Lebanon, Beirut: People and civil defense workers search for human remains amid the debris of a collapsed building following an Israeli air strike at the Beirut seafront. (dpa)
12 April 2026, Lebanon, Beirut: People and civil defense workers search for human remains amid the debris of a collapsed building following an Israeli air strike at the Beirut seafront. (dpa)

Israel's military said Monday that a massive wave of strikes in Lebanon last week killed five Hezbollah commanders, as well as more than 250 of the Iran-backed group's fighters.

The Lebanese health ministry has said Wednesday's attacks killed more than 350 people in total and wounded more than 1,200.

Israel had previously put the number of Hezbollah members killed at around 180.

"During the largest strike conducted in Lebanon, more than 250 Hezbollah terrorists and commanders were eliminated" across the country, including in the country's south, the Bekaa region and Beirut, the military said in its statement Monday.

The military named five commanders killed, including Hassen Nasser, chief of Hezbollah's logistics support headquarters, and Abu Muhammad Habib, deputy commander of the group's missile unit.

The army said Monday that it continued to operate in Lebanon, with troops surrounding the southern town of Bint Jbeil.

Last week's punishing wave of strikes came on the same day as the start of a fragile two-week truce agreed between the US and Iran in the Middle East war, which has killed thousands across the region and plunged the global economy into turmoil.

Lebanon was pulled into the war when Hezbollah fired rockets at Israel on March 2, days after the opening salvo of US-Israeli strikes killed Iran's supreme leader Ali Khamenei.

Israel responded with massive strikes and a ground invasion.

While Iran and mediator Pakistan had insisted Lebanon was included under the ceasefire, Israel and the US have disputed this.

Israeli and Lebanese officials are set to hold negotiations on Tuesday in Washington.


Red Cross Calls Attacks on Medical Workers in Lebanon 'Gravely Concerning'

Lebanese Red Cross volunteers inspect the damage to their rescue vehicles at the site of an Israeli drone strike that targeted their headquarters in the southern city of Tyre on April 13, 2026. (Photo by Kawnat HAJU / AFP)
Lebanese Red Cross volunteers inspect the damage to their rescue vehicles at the site of an Israeli drone strike that targeted their headquarters in the southern city of Tyre on April 13, 2026. (Photo by Kawnat HAJU / AFP)
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Red Cross Calls Attacks on Medical Workers in Lebanon 'Gravely Concerning'

Lebanese Red Cross volunteers inspect the damage to their rescue vehicles at the site of an Israeli drone strike that targeted their headquarters in the southern city of Tyre on April 13, 2026. (Photo by Kawnat HAJU / AFP)
Lebanese Red Cross volunteers inspect the damage to their rescue vehicles at the site of an Israeli drone strike that targeted their headquarters in the southern city of Tyre on April 13, 2026. (Photo by Kawnat HAJU / AFP)

The International Committee of the Red Cross said it was deeply concerned by attacks on medical workers in Lebanon following a strike on a Lebanese Red Cross centre in the south of the country on Monday, as well the killing on Sunday of a Lebanese Red Cross volunteer, Reuters reported.

"The loss of those who dedicate their lives to saving others is gravely concerning, given the impact on the civilians who depend on their help," said Agnes Dhur, head of delegation of the ICRC in Lebanon.