Islamic Jihad accuses Israel of reneging on Gaza truce terms

Islamic Jihad accuses Israel of reneging on Gaza truce terms
The Islamic Jihad has accused Israel of backtracking on the commitments it made earlier this month during a negotiated truce between the two
2 min read
Israel's attack on Gaza left 49 Palestinians killed, 17 of them children, and more than 350 wounded [Getty]

The leader of Palestinian Islamic Jihad group in the besieged Gaza Strip accused Israel on Thursday of reneging on its commitments under a truce that ended a deadly three-day Israeli assault earlier this month.

The televised remarks of Ziad Al-Nakhala came as the armed group held simultaneous rallies in the Gaza Strip, Damascus and Beirut, weeks after the assault that ended in the Egyptian-brokered truce.

"The enemy is still evading the commitments it made to our brothers in Egypt," Al-Nakhala said.

"The enemy government must bear full responsibility for that," he said, referring to Israel.

Israel claimed that its air strikes launched on August 5 on positions of the Islamic Jihad in Gaza were a "pre-emptive" operation to avert an imminent attack.

The bombardment left 49 Palestinians killed, 17 of them children, and more than 350 wounded.

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In response, Islamic Jihad fired more than 1,000 rockets - but many of them either hit farmland or were intercepted by Israel's air defence system.

In Israel, shrapnel wounded three people.

After the truce took effect, Islamic Jihad said it contained an Egyptian commitment to work towards the release of two prisoners --Bassem Al-Saadi, a senior figure in the group's political wing, and hunger-striking prisoner Khalil Awawdeh.

Saadi, who was arrested on August 1 in the occupied West Bank, was charged in an Israeli military court with affiliation with the Islamic Jihad, as well as "incitement and aiding contact with enemy elements", the army said on Thursday.

According to the army, Saadi received Jihad funding from Gaza and had called for Palestinian attacks on Israelis.

Awawdeh, from the southern West Bank, has been held without charge by Israel since December and has been refusing food since March, apart from a brief period of a few days.

The 40-year-old, held in custody in an Israeli hospital, is said to be in critical condition and his life in danger.

Israel's supreme court on Sunday rejected an appeal to release him from custody on the grounds that the army had agreed to freeze his administrative detention while he remains hospitalised.

Awawdeh has vowed to keep up the protest fast until his detention is revoked.