Gulf News
The recent announcement by Hamas that it would consider a ceasefire with Israel if it lifted its blockade of Gaza should be built on and taken forward. Not only would this prompt the possibility of resuming peace talks, but it would also, more importantly, bring an end to the current human suffering of the Palestinians. Recent discussions between Hamas and Egyptian officials have ended positively. But in order to make the offer more fruitful, various important factors should be taken into account. For one thing, it is a fact that there is no option but to liaise and speak with Hamas.
Cutting off Gaza indefinitely or isolating Hamas has thus far proven to be a weak policy. In fact, all that this approach has done was to complicate the situation and heighten tensions further.
But more important than this is the extent of the suffering that the people in Gaza are enduring. According to the United Nations, a total of 80 per cent of Gaza's 1.5 million people are now dependent on food aid. "I have been shocked by the grim and miserable things I have seen and heard about during the day. [They] are the result of the current restrictions on the crossings into Gaza, and the very limited amounts of foods and other materials being allowed in. All this makes for a grim human and humanitarian situation here in Gaza, which means that people are not able to live with the basic dignity to which they are entitled," said UN Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs John Holmes, following his tour of Gaza.
With the widespread of poverty and unemployment, there is a serious crisis brooding and taking shape in Gaza. If an intervention to change this course is not introduced soon, the situation could possibly reach a point of no return.
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