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For gas, a 60-day ceasefire, which is conducted between Israel and Hamas, will become a savior.
The window for making a lot of desperate food, water and medicine after heavy – and sometimes – Israeli restrictions on assistance.
But for Israeli Defense Minister Katsa, a two -month pause in hostilities would have created the opportunity to build what he called the “humanitarian city” in the ruins of the Southern city of Rafa, to hold virtually every gas, except for those who belong to armed groups.
According to the plan, the Palestinians will be examined before being allowed and not allowed to leave.
Critics, both domestically and internationally, have condemned this proposal with human rights groups, scientists and lawyers who call it a “concentration camp”.
It is unclear to which it is a specific plan of the Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu government, or this is the talks to put more pressure on Hamas in the ceasefire and the hostage transaction.
In a noticeable lack of any Israeli plan for Gaza after the end of the war, this idea fills a strategic vacuum.
Katz informed a group of Israeli journalists that there would be about 600,000 Palestinians in the new camp – and eventually a whole 2.1 million population.
In his plan, the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF), which secured the site from afar, will see the international bodies ruled by the area. He said four aid distribution sites will be created in the area.
Katz also resumed his desire to encourage Palestinians to “voluntarily emigrate” from gas to other countries.
But he did not receive cravings and support among other senior figures in Israel, and the proposal has even caused a collision between the Prime Minister and the head of IDF.
Israeli media say that the office of the Chief of the General Staff, which Leidie General Eyal Zamir made it clear that the army was not obliged to forcibly transfer civilians because it requires a plan.
It is claimed that the Zamir and Netanyahu gene participated in an angry exchange during a recent meeting with the military office.
Tal Schneider, the political correspondent of the Central Time of Israel, said that he would be in a strong position to push off because the government “practically asked him to take a job.
Not only the main military brass opposite this idea. There is also embarrassment among ranks and files.
“Any civilian transfer is a form of war crime, it is a form of ethnic purification, which is also a form of genocide,” said the IDF Yotam Vilk reservist at the BBC in his home in Tel -Aviv.
A 28-year-old former armoredist refuses to serve more in the army after 270 days of active fighting.
He describes himself as a patriot and claims that Israel should defend himself, but in the current war there is no strategy or ends.
Wilk is also part of the hostage soldiers, a group calling for the end of the war to ensure the release of 50 Israelis, who are still held captive by Hamas in Gaza, up to 20 of whom are believed to be alive.
Meanwhile, 16 Israeli experts on international legislation issued a joint letter on Friday, which announced a plan that, they say, would be a war crime. The letter urged “all the relevant parties to publicly get out of the plan, refuse it and refrain from fulfilling it.”
The plan unexpectedly disappointed the Palestinians in Gaza.
“We completely reject this proposal, and we refuse to move any Palestinian from our land,” said Sabrin, who was forced to leave Khan UNIS, BBC. “We will be resistant and will stay here until our last breath.”
Ahmad Al Mgaer of Rafa said: “Freedom above all. This is our land, we must move freely anywhere. Why is we putting on?”
It is unclear how much the Katz’s plan is supported among the general public, but recent surveys have shown that most Jews in Israel prefer the expulsion of Palestinians from Gaza.
One poll published in the left daily newspaper Haarets claimed that 82 percent of the Jewish Israelis supported such a step.
But there was an interesting lack of public support for the proposals among the extreme right-wing, including well-known ministers in the Coalition of Itamar Ben-Gvir and Lesal Smot.
Both were vocal supporters of the Palestinians who left gas and Jewish returns.
Tal Schneider said both ministers could still weigh, giving support for a mass camp.
“Perhaps they are waiting to find out where the wind is blowing to find out if it is serious. Both Ben-Gwir-Member Cabinet and have more access to internal discussions. Maybe they think it’s just political pressure on Hamas to come to the table.”
Outside Israel, the proposal for a new camp for all gases has provoked extensive criticism.
In the UK, the Minister of the Middle East Hamish Socaler posted on social media that his “horrified” plan.
“The Palestinian territory cannot be reduced,” he wrote. “Citizens should be able to return to their communities. We need to move towards the ceasefire and open the path to lasting peace.”
British human rights lawyer Baronez Helena Kennedy Criminal Code said the BBC that the project would force the Palestinians to the “concentration camp”.
The description used by other critics, including scientists, NGOs and high -ranking UN officials, has significant resonance in the light of the role of concentration camps in Holocaust.
Baronez Kennedy said the plan – as well as the latest actions of Israel – made her conclude that Israel is making genocide in Gaza.
“I was very reluctant to go there because the threshold should be very high. There must be a specific intention to the genocide. But what we see now is a genocidal behavior,” she said.
Israel harshly rejected the accusation of genocide and says it is not aimed at civilians.
The Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs also told the BBC that “the concept that Israel creates concentration camps is deeply offensive and drawn parallels with the Nazis.” Israel “adheres to the Geneva Convention,” he added, citing international rules governing civilians in the occupied territories.
In addition to the gloomy warnings about what may happen, the prospect of a new camp has an impact on the efforts to stop the gas war.
Palestinian sources at the ceasefire negotiations that are grinding in the capital of Qatar stated that the BBC plan was disturbed by the Hamas delegation and created a new obstacle to the transaction.
Additional reporting by Joyce Liu and John Landy