BSS
  18 Feb 2025, 18:57

Qatar says Palestinians to decide Gaza future

    
DOHA, Feb 18, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - Qatar, a key mediator in the Gaza conflict, 
said on Tuesday that Palestinians -- not outsiders -- must decide the 
territory's future after the Israel-Hamas war.

Foreign ministry spokesman Majed al-Ansari told a Doha news conference that 
the issue was "a Palestinian question", after Israel insisted on removing 
Hamas and the United States proposed taking over the territory.

"From our perspective, this is a Palestinian question on what happens post 
this conflict," said Ansari when asked about Israel's stated objective to 
eliminate Hamas.

"It is a Palestinian question on who represents the Palestinians in an 
official capacity and also the political groups and parties in the political 
sphere," he said.

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said earlier Tuesday that negotiations 
for the next phase of the Gaza ceasefire, which Qatar helped broker, would 
begin this week.

The second phase of the truce is meant to facilitate the release of all 
remaining hostages seized during Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack that sparked 
the war, and lead to a permanent end to the fighting.

Saar said Israel demanded the "complete demilitarisation of Gaza" and would 
"not accept the continued presence of Hamas or any other terrorist groups" in 
the territory, ruled by Hamas since 2007.

US President Donald Trump has proposed a takeover of the Gaza Strip, under 
which its 2.4 million inhabitants would be moved to Egypt or Jordan.

The plan has drawn widespread condemnation, with Arab states preparing a 
response.

Trump's proposal has added strains to the fragile Gaza ceasefire, which has 
largely halted the violence since it took effect on January 19, after more 
than 15 months of war.

The ongoing first phase of the truce, which is set to expire on March 1, has 
so far seen the release of 19 Israeli hostages in exchange for more than 
1,100 Palestinians in Israeli custody.

More hostage-prisoner exchanges are expected before the end of the first 
phase, which has also allowed humanitarian aid into besieged Gaza.

Hamas however has accused Israel of blocking the entry of prefabricated 
structures and heavy machinery to clear rubble.

Ansari, the Qatari spokesman, said that "the aid the enters the Gaza Strip 
today is insufficient".

"Using humanitarian aid as a bargaining chip in negotiations is a crime in 
and of itself."