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Media Summary

The BBC, Sky News, Reuters, ITV News, The Telegraph, The Times, The Financial Times and the Independent all report that Israeli war cabinet member Benny Gantz has warned that unless Hamas frees all hostages held in Gaza by March 10th an offensive will be launched in Rafah.

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The BBCSky News, ReutersITV News, The TelegraphThe TimesThe Financial Times and the Independent all report that Israeli war cabinet member Benny Gantz has warned that unless Hamas frees all hostages held in Gaza by March 10th an offensive will be launched in Rafah. It is the first time Israel has said when its troops might enter Gaza’s overcrowded southern city. The BBC reports on Israelis who are protesting for Netanyahu to resign. The Telegraph adds an article claiming that “the US is offering Netanyahu the chance to become the face of a new alliance against Iran, formed with the US and several Gulf nations. Mr Netanyahu would become the US’s point person in the great geopolitical fight of the coming years – a globally important role that would see him go down in history not just as the man who let Oct 7 happen.”

The Telegraph and The Guardian report that Israel has formally opposed international efforts to create a two-state solution as a rift with its allies widens.

Reuters reports that the United Nations’ top court on Monday opens a week of hearings on the legal consequences of Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories, with more than 50 states due to address the judges. Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki will speak first in the legal proceedings at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague.

Lord Ian Austin writes for The Times and The Daily Mail over housing organisation Midland Heart misunderstanding the term ‘Islamist’, saying they are wrong to sack him for it.

The Times reports that the Houthis have attempted to launch an attack with an underwater drone for the first time, which the US destroyed. The Sun reports on UK ships abandoned due to Houthi strikes.

The Times also publishes an article interviewing a British NHS surgeon who volunteered in Khan Yunis about her experience.

The BBC and The Guardian report that the World Health Organisation has said Gaza’s Nasser hospital has ceased to function following an Israeli raid. IDF troops entered the complex on Thursday, saying intelligence indicated hostages taken by Hamas were being held there. The WHO said it had not been allowed to enter the site to assess the situation.

The BBC publishes an article on the personal story of Gazans who have found safety in Egypt. The BBC also publishes a similar piece on how the war is impacting Palestinians in the West Bank.

The Telegraphand The BBC report that Israel has condemned Brazil’s president after he accused Israel of committing genocide in Gaza, comparing its actions to the Holocaust.

The Daily Mail reports on a video claiming to show an UNRWA worker taking part in the October 7 massacre, with the video ‘showing UN aid worker bundling limp body of shot Israeli into the back of an SUV’.

The Daily Mail publishes the experience of a ZAKA rescue official who recounts what he saw in the aftermath of October 7.

The Guardian speaks to the mother of Yotam Haim, an Israeli hostage who was mistakenly killed by the IDF.

Adam LeBor reviews Melting Point by Rachel Cockerell for The Times, a book recounting early attempts to find and actualise a Jewish homeland.

The TimesThe Sun and Reuters report that Labour leader Keir Starmer said on Sunday there should be a lasting ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, setting out his stance before parliament is expected to debate a conflict that has caused division in the opposition party.

The Telegraph reports that the UK Green Party has been criticised for a “perverse and wrong-headed” social media post calling for Israel to be banned from international sporting and music events.

In The Telegraph, Zoe Strimpel writes that ‘Britain has raised a generation of antisemites. It might be too late to fix’.

The Telegraph reports that red poppies have begun blooming on the site of the Nova music festival, massacred on October 7.

Kan Radio reports Prime Minister Netanyahu’s remarks to the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organisations in Jerusalem yesterday, in which he called on the US Jewish leaders to pressure Qatar into pressuring Hamas to agree to a hostage deal. “Qatar can press Hamas as no one else can,” Netanyahu said. “They host Hamas leaders, Hamas is dependent on them financially, and I urge you to press Qatar to press Hamas because we want our hostages released.” Netanyahu also declared Israel’s determination to fight in Rafah, comparing Israel’s choice to that of the US and its allies in the fight against ISIS. “We cannot leave a quarter of Hamas’s terrorist battalions intact,” he said. “You wouldn’t leave a quarter of ISIS intact in a defined territory. You wouldn’t even think about that. America finished the job with its allies, we will finish the job here, with our brave soldiers.”

Kan Radio also quotes remarks yesterday by Defence Minister Gallant, to the effect that Hamas’s Khan Yunis Brigade has effectively been defeated. Gallant also claimed that Hamas’s foreign-based leadership was currently looking for someone to replace Yahya Sinwar, who has seemingly been unresponsive and out of touch with the foreign-based leadership. Yediot Ahronot’s Yossi Yehoshua writes that Gallant “aimed his comments at Hamas’s commanders as well as Gaza residents, for them to hear and to internalise.”

Israel Hayom’s Ariel Kahana and Shirit Avitan Cohen focus on Israel’s efforts to prevent US unilateral recognition of a Palestinian state. At yesterday’s cabinet meeting, Netanyahu spoke about the importance of securing “as broad a front as possible” to oppose the planned American initiative. To that end, he has asked opposition leader Yair Lapid to back a Knesset motion similar to the one the cabinet passed yesterday opposing recognition. Lapid said of Netanyahu that, “This is a transparent attempt to divert the conversation away from getting the hostages back and the draft-dodging bill. Regarding the issue itself, Yesh Atid has opposed throughout all the years every unilateral measure.” Benny Gantz, who joined the government from the opposition in the aftermath of October 7th, said “I wish to stress to our friends around the world: After the October 7 massacre, unilateral measures such as recognition of a Palestinian state are not the way to regional stability and to political settlements. The normalisation process with Saudi Arabia is an important  effort that we have to persist with, and I am acting personally to advance it. I believe that that step could be part of the solution, provided that Israel’s military superiority in the region is maintained.”

Yediot Ahronot’s Nahum Barnea focuses on the hostages. He first tackles the current state of negotiations: “There isn’t any delicate way to put this: the reports about negotiations with Hamas are lies that the Prime Minister’s Office has been feeding the public. On the eve of the last round of talks in Cairo, Netanyahu walked back the instructions he had previously given the Israeli team. The team was not informed about the reason for the change—was it because Netanyahu thought that taking tougher tactics might prompt Hamas to soften its terms or not, or was it because he panicked in response to the progress that had been made in the negotiations and made a strategic decision to act to derail them. If that was his intent, he succeeded. No negotiations are being held now.” Barnea then writes of what is known of the hostages’ location and conditions of captivity. “The IDF’s takeover of western Khan Yunis revealed the fact that a large number of hostages had been held in close proximity to senior Hamas officials as human shields,” he says. “That was the good news. The conditions in those locations had been relatively good. The worse news was that the IDF’s advances prompted top Hamas officials to relocate, and the hostages were taken to places that were less safe and with worse conditions in the Rafah area. The risk of them being killed in crossfire rose as a consequence. The risk to their health also rose and the quality of the food they were given deteriorated.”

Haaretz features Netanyahu meeting yesterday with senior officials in the security establishment for security consultations ahead of Ramadan. It quotes a source who took part in the meeting saying that “Netanyahu accepted National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir’s position to limit the entry of Israeli Arabs to the Temple Mount/Al Aqsa mosque compound. The source added that the decision was taken contrary to the Shin Bet security position.” Army Radio adds that “Teams of professionals will draft a detailed proposal to impose age-related restrictions on Israeli Muslim worshipers who wish to visit the Temple Mount during Ramadan.” According to Channel 13, Gallant and Gantz vocally opposed Netanyahu’s preference. “The prime minister is circumventing the security establishment and, due to that, we will make mistakes, ” Gallant reportedly said. “This is not unity and not a cabinet. This is not how we work,” Gantz reportedly said. Members of the parliamentary opposition and leaders of the Arab community were outraged by the decision to restrict Arab Israelis’ access to the Temple Mount during Ramadan, calling it a “Kahane-like” decision and blasting Prime Minister Netanyahu for “caving in to Ben Gvir once again.” Channel 12 features further reaction, including Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara saying that legal challenges would arise from setting overarching age restrictions on Israeli citizens, and that it is not clear it would be legally possible to do so.

Also in Haaretz¸ Amos Harel implies significant dissatisfaction from Gantz’s party regarding these discussions. “All this is happening while the hostages are running out of time and there is growing discomfort among War Cabinet ministers from the National Unity Party,” he says. “It seems that – if seen against the backdrop of the Al-Aqsa affair [the potential restrictions during Ramadan] and the hostage deal impasse – what happened on Sunday marks the beginning of the countdown to Gantz and Eisenkot’s departure from Netanyahu’s government.”