Wennesland Says Gaza Ceasefire ‘Fragile,’ Urges Israel to Halt Settlements

Families in Sheikh Al-Jarrah neighborhood in Jerusalem protest against the forced eviction. (AFP)
Families in Sheikh Al-Jarrah neighborhood in Jerusalem protest against the forced eviction. (AFP)
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Wennesland Says Gaza Ceasefire ‘Fragile,’ Urges Israel to Halt Settlements

Families in Sheikh Al-Jarrah neighborhood in Jerusalem protest against the forced eviction. (AFP)
Families in Sheikh Al-Jarrah neighborhood in Jerusalem protest against the forced eviction. (AFP)

The United Nations Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, Tor Wennesland, has described the cessation of hostilities reached in May between Israel and Hamas as “very fragile.”

He expressed concern by the attempt to exploit the “sensitive status” of Jerusalem and to use it to justify a “broader armed conflict,” urging the “immediate cease” of Israel’s advancement of all settlement activity.

His remarks were made during his monthly briefing via video conference to the UN Security Council on the situation in the Middle East, including the Palestinian cause.

He devoted his regular briefing to the 18th report on the implementation of Security Council Resolution 2334 (2016).

Wennesland said the UN is working closely with all concerned parties and partners, including Egypt, to solidify a ceasefire, allow the entry of urgent humanitarian assistance and stabilize the situation in the Gaza Strip.

He stressed that he remains deeply troubled by continued Israeli settlement expansion in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem.

In particular, he said he is concerned by the approval of a plan to expand the Har Homa settlement in East Jerusalem.

“If implemented, this plan would further consolidate the continuum of illegal settlements separating East Jerusalem from Bethlehem and other Palestinian communities in the southern part of the West Bank.”

“I am also concerned by the continued establishment of settlement outposts, illegal also under Israeli law,” the UN official said.

He once again underscored that Israeli settlements constitute a “flagrant violation of UN resolutions and international law.”

They are a major obstacle to the achievement of a two-state solution and a just, lasting and comprehensive peace, he stressed.

In occupied East Jerusalem, 15 Palestinian households still face the imminent threat of eviction by the Israeli authorities from their homes in Sheikh Jarrah, he stressed.

“The High Court has scheduled a hearing on August 2 to consider a leave to appeal request by some of the families.”

Separately, the Jerusalem District Court postponed until July 8 its decision on an appeal against an eviction order related to two residential buildings in the Batan al Hawa neighborhood of Silwan in East Jerusalem, he added.

Wennesland said he regrets the violent incidents that have “unfortunately, continued on a daily basis throughout the occupied Palestinian territory since the submission of the written report,” pointing to the clashes that have repeatedly broken out in Beita village near Nablus in the West Bank.

In light of protests against the construction of a new Israeli settlement outpost, Evyatar, Israeli soldiers shot dead two 16-year-old Palestinians.

“Since May 3, five Palestinians have been killed and some 100 Palestinians have been injured by live ammunition in and around this area.”

“Israeli civilian security guards shot dead a Palestinian woman at the Qalandiya checkpoint near Jerusalem, after she reportedly ran towards them holding a knife,” he added.

Also, he pointed out that several thousand right-wing Israeli activists, including members of Knesset, marched through Jerusalem’s Old City, with many participants chanting racist slogans against Arabs and Muslims.

“In protests and clashes that occurred in the context of the march, in East Jerusalem as well as other parts of the West Bank, 66 Palestinians, including 12 children, were injured by rubber-bullets, sound grenades and physical assaults.”

On the same day, rallies were organized throughout the Gaza Strip and protests erupted at the fence. Armed men in Gaza released incendiary balloons towards Israel, starting dozens of fires, he noted.

A Palestinian woman was also shot dead by Israeli forces at the Hizma checkpoint near Jerusalem after reportedly attempting to carry out a ramming and stabbing attack against Israeli soldiers.



Lebanon Army Receives Additional $20 Mln from Qatar in Support to Troops

27 June 2024, Lebanon, Jounieh: Lebanese army soldiers from the airborne brigade secure an area as medics help civilians acting as dead and injured of an attack during a drill carried by the Lebanese army, Red Cross and Civil defense in the town of Jounieh, north of Beirut.  Photo: Marwan Naamani/dpa
27 June 2024, Lebanon, Jounieh: Lebanese army soldiers from the airborne brigade secure an area as medics help civilians acting as dead and injured of an attack during a drill carried by the Lebanese army, Red Cross and Civil defense in the town of Jounieh, north of Beirut. Photo: Marwan Naamani/dpa
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Lebanon Army Receives Additional $20 Mln from Qatar in Support to Troops

27 June 2024, Lebanon, Jounieh: Lebanese army soldiers from the airborne brigade secure an area as medics help civilians acting as dead and injured of an attack during a drill carried by the Lebanese army, Red Cross and Civil defense in the town of Jounieh, north of Beirut.  Photo: Marwan Naamani/dpa
27 June 2024, Lebanon, Jounieh: Lebanese army soldiers from the airborne brigade secure an area as medics help civilians acting as dead and injured of an attack during a drill carried by the Lebanese army, Red Cross and Civil defense in the town of Jounieh, north of Beirut. Photo: Marwan Naamani/dpa

The Lebanese army has received an additional $20 million from Qatar in support of Lebanese troops, Lebanon's state agency NNA said on Monday.

The support comes at a crucial time, with the Israeli military and Hezbollah trading fire across Lebanon's southern border in parallel with the Gaza war. The Lebanese army is not involved in the hostilities but one Lebanese soldier was killed by Israeli shelling in December.

A security source told Reuters that the new Qatari aid was a continuation of an earlier
$60 million package announced in 2022 that was distributed in installments to soldiers to support their salaries.

The source said $100 would be distributed to each soldier every month.

A five-year economic meltdown has slashed the value of the Lebanese pound against the dollar, driving down most soldiers' wages to less than $100 per month.

The amount is barely enough to afford a basic subscription to a generator service that could offset the 22-hour cuts in the state electricity grid.

To supplement their low salaries, many troops have taken extra jobs and some have quit, raising concerns that the institution - one of few in Lebanon that can rally national pride and create unity across its fractured sectarian communities - could be fraying.