Nadene Goldfoot
Rafah Border Crossing in 2012On Nov 2023, (Reuters) - People hoping to leave the Gaza Strip converged on the Rafah crossing to Egypt on Thursday, with those whose names were on a list vetted by Israel gradually passing through while others held up their foreign passports in vain.
The Rafah Border Crossing (Arabic: معبر رفح, or Rafah Crossing Point is the sole crossing point between Egypt and the Gaza Strip. It is located on the Gaza–Egypt border. The crossing was open for limited evacuations for a second day under a Qatar-brokered deal between Israel, Egypt, Hamas and the United States, aimed
at letting some foreign passport holders and their
dependents, and some wounded Gazans, out of the
besieged enclave.
Mohammed Abed/AFP/Getty Images
Fatima Shbair/AP
One purpose of the Philadelphi Route was to prevent the movement of illegal materials (including weapons and ammunition) and people between Egypt and the Gaza Strip. Palestinians, in cooperation with some Egyptians, have built smuggling tunnels under the Philadelphi Route to move these into the Gaza Strip.
The Philadelphi Corridor is a 14-km long (8.6 miles) and 100-meter (109 yards) wide area between Gaza and Egypt.
IDF soldiers uncover a tunnel near the Philadelphi Route shortly before the disengagementPrime Minister Ariel Sharon (2001-2006) General b: 1928 was Ariel (Arik) Scheinerman. Ariel was born in Kfar Malal, an agricultural moshav, then in Mandatory Palestine, to Shmuel Scheinerman (1896–1956) of Brest-Litovsk and Vera (née Schneirov) Scheinerman (1900–1988) of Mogilev.
His parents met while at university in Tiflis (now Tbilisi, Republic of Georgia), where Sharon's father was studying agronomy and his mother was studying medicine. They immigrated to Mandatory Palestine in 1922 in the wake of the Russian Communist government's growing persecution of Jews in the region.
The Egypt–Israel peace treaty was signed in Washington, D.C., United States, on 26 March 1979, following the 1978 Camp David Accords. The Egypt–Israel treaty was signed by Anwar Sadat, President of Egypt, and Menachem Begin, Prime Minister of Israel, and witnessed by Jimmy Carter, President of the United States.
President George W. Bush, center, discusses the Israeli–Palestinian peace process with Prime Minister Ariel Sharon of Israel, left, and Prime Minister of the Palestinian National Authority Mahmoud Abbas in Aqaba, Jordan, 4 June 2003.Under U.S. pressure, especially from U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Ariel Sharon signed an agreement in September 2005, called "Agreed Arrangements," that withdrew Israeli forces from the Philadelphi Corridor, a 14-km long (8.6 miles) and 100-meter (109 yards) wide area between Gaza and Egypt. This was 18 years ago.
This is what the Gazans will be traveling on in getting out of Gaza to freedom. It is under this corridor that Hamas and other Palestinian terrorist entities have dug hundreds of tunnels through which they smuggle their weapons into Gaza. The retreat from the Philadelphi Corridor at the urgings of Condoleezza Rice was one of many disastrous concessions and risks taken by Israeli leaders in their naïve search for peace with the Muslim and Arab world.
The first Egyptian brokered ceasefire on July 14th, 2014, was accepted by Israel but immediately broken by Hamas, which launched salvos of missiles against Israeli towns and villages. Rumors abound that now Hamas seeks a 10 year hudna – another bogus ceasefire – complete with outrageous demands and conditions.
No comments:
Post a Comment