Qatar reassessing role as mediator in Gaza ceasefire talks

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  • By Wyre Davies & David Gritten
  • BBC News, in Jerusalem and London

Image caption, A woman reacts as she watches a search for bodies near Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on Wednesday

Qatar is reassessing its role as a mediator between Israel and Hamas, the country’s prime minister has said.

Qatar has had a key role – along with Egypt and the US – in trying to secure a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas and the release of Israeli hostages.

But Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdul Rahman Al Thani said Doha had been exploited and abused and was being undermined by those trying to score political points.

He also said the current peace talks were in a “delicate phase”.

Attempts to secure a ceasefire have been delicate and largely unsuccessful, but the links Qatar has with all sides – including close ties to Hamas – are regarded as crucial to achieving any breakthrough.

Mediators have proposed a six-week truce during which Hamas would free 40 women, children and elderly or sick hostages – an offer Hamas publicly rejected over the weekend.

Qatar is now openly questioning chances of those talks succeeding and says it is re-evaluating its role as a mediator.

Sheikh Mohammed – who also serves as Qatar’s foreign minister – said its efforts were being undermined by politicians seeking to score points.

“Unfortunately, I mean, we have seen that there has been an abuse of this mediation and an abuse of this mediation in favour of narrow political interests,” he said at a news conference in Doha on Wednesday.

“This means that the state of Qatar has called for a comprehensive evaluation of this role. We are now at this stage to evaluate mediation and also evaluate how the parties engage in this mediation.”

He did not identify any individuals, but some critical voices from within the US Congress have accused Qatar of not putting enough pressure on Hamas to make concessions.

The US accused the Palestinian armed group of being “the obstacle to a ceasefire” after it rejected the latest ceasefire offer.

With new fears that the damaging war in Gaza could escalate into a wider regional conflict, as tensions rise between Israel and Iran, the Qatari premier warned against the expansion of the conflict and called on the wider international community to assume its responsibilities and stop the war.

Meanwhile, the Israeli military said 14 Israeli soldiers had been injured, six of them severely, by anti-tank missiles and drones launched from Lebanese territory towards a village in northern Israel.

The Iran-backed Lebanese armed group Hezbollah said it had fired on a military target in the Arab al-Aramshe area in retaliation for recent Israeli strikes that had killed Hezbollah commanders and other fighters.

Hezbollah – which like Hamas is proscribed as a terrorist organisation by Israel, the US, UK and other countries – has been exchanging fire with Israeli forces almost every day along the border since the start of the war in Gaza.

That conflict erupted when Hamas gunmen carried out an unprecedented attack on southern Israel on 7 October, killing about 1,200 people, mainly civilians, and taking 253 others back to Gaza as hostages.

More than 33,800 people have been…

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