Jordanian Foreign Minister: We do not accept the scenarios of the Gaza administration after the end of the war
In response to more than seventy years of occupation of Palestine and more than a decade of siege of the Gaza Strip, as well as the imprisonment and torture of thousands of Palestinians, the Palestinian Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) launched Operation Al-Aqsa Storm on October 7. The operation is considered one of the deadliest attacks against the regime. Hamas fighters entered the occupied territories through border barriers at several points, attacked villages and, in addition to killing large numbers of Israelis, captured some of them. To compensate for its defeats in resistance operations, the Zionist regime has repeatedly bombed various areas of the Gaza Strip since October 7, killing at least 11,000 Palestinians and injuring at least 27,000. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu proposed Monday that Israel should take control of Gaza's security after the war. According to the Al Jazeera news channel, Ayman al-Safadi added on Thursday: “We are against any talk of governing the Gaza Strip after the end of the war with the help of Arab or non-Arab forces.” The Jordanian Foreign Minister added that Hamas is an inexhaustible ideology, and anyone who wants a different situation must respect the rights of the Palestinian people. Al-Safadi stressed: “There must be no forced displacement of Palestinians from Gaza, either now or after the war, but there must be guarantees that Gaza will not be used as a platform for terrorism or other violent attacks, and that after the end of the conflict there will be no Gaza re-occupied."