Israel orders evacuations in northern Gaza as Trump calls for war to end

By Nidal Al-Mughrabi Reuters  The Israeli military ordered Palestinians to evacuate areas in northern Gaza on Sunday before intensified fighting against  Hamas , as U.S. President Donald Trump called for an end to the  war  amid renewed efforts to broker a ceasefire. “Make the deal in Gaza, get the hostages back,”  Trump  posted on his Truth Social platform early on Sunday. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was due to hold talks later in the day on the progress of Israel’s offensive. A senior security official said the military will tell him the campaign is close to reaching its objectives, and warn that expanding fighting to new areas in Gaza may endanger the remaining Israeli hostages. But in a statement posted on X and text messages sent to many residents, the military urged people in northern parts of the enclave to head south towards the Al-Mawasi area in Khan Younis, which Israel designated as a humanitarian area. Palestinian and U.N. offi...

Colombia moves to arrest guerrilla leaders behind wave of violence

By David SALAZAR AFP

Colombia on Wednesday reinstated arrest warrants for dozens of guerrilla commanders blamed for armed attacks that displaced 32,000 people and sparked the country’s most serious security crisis in years.

President Gustavo Petro’s government unfroze warrants for 31 leaders of the National Liberation Army — or ELN — a 5,800-strong leftist militia that is deeply involved in drug trafficking.

The ELN is accused of carrying out a series of attacks against rival militants in the country’s mountainous and lawless border region with Venezuela.

At least 80 people have died, dozens have been kidnapped and tens of thousands have been displaced, according to government and United Nations estimates.

In response, Petro declared a state of emergency, suspended peace talks and deployed some 5,000 soldiers to the area.

Forty-eight-year-old Zilenia Pana fled the fighting with her eight and 13-year-old children, finding the relative safety of Ocana, a small town on the western edge of the cordillera.

Seeing “the dead bodies was sad, painful. That breaks your soul, your heart” she told AFP.

She prays only that the fighters stop so she can return home with her children, saying “that’s all we want, that’s all we ask from those people”.

Despite Petro’s vow to bring “war” to the ELN, the Colombian military has so far only edged into rebel-controlled territory, establishing observation posts and carrying out patrols in urban areas.

In the frontier town of Tibu on Wednesday, AFP reporters heard at least five loud explosions, which the military said were artillery tests.

Still, there is little sign of a full-scale offensive targeting the guerrillas in their rural strongholds.

But the decision by Petro to reinstate arrest warrants is a further sign of escalating tensions.

– Total peace? –

For many Colombians, the recent bloodshed carries fearful echoes of a nearly six-decade civil war that killed some 450,000 people and made the country a byword for armed violence.

But polls also regularly show that more than half of Colombians are opposed to peace talks with the much-hated ELN and believe the government’s security strategy is flawed.

Despite its ideological foundations, the group is one of the world’s largest players in the cocaine trade and engages in extortion, hostage-taking and trafficking in various goods.

“They were trying to take control of the Colombian-Venezuelan border” said Colombian interior minister Juan Fernando Cristo, with a strategic aim of gaining “criminal incomes”.

Petro, himself a former leftist guerrilla, has tried for years to bring the ELN and other groups to the negotiating table.

After a short-lived ceasefire and on-again-off-again talks, the latest ELN offensive has shattered hopes that the group is ready to disarm.

Petro’s signature strategy of “Total Peace” — a dramatic scaling back of military operations in the hope of securing peace — seems now to be dead.

The president on Tuesday admitted the surge in violence represented a “failure” and he questioned how the ELN could have become so “strong today, when just months ago it was very weak, military speaking.”

Critics say it is the government’s light-handed approach to security that has allowed groups like the ELN to grow.

“‘Total peace’, coupled with the lack of effective security and justice policies, have allowed armed groups to expand their presence and brutal control over remote communities across Colombia” said Juanita Goebertus, a Colombian former lawmaker who is now Americas director at Human Rights Watch.

“The government should urgently overhaul its peace and security strategies to stop similar conflicts from growing throughout the country.”



from The Times Of Earth https://ift.tt/htyZ7DE

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