Loading...

mosque
partly-cloudy
°C,

Harris 'will not be silent' on Gaza after talks with Netanyahu

July 26, 2024 / 9:34 PM
Image for the title: Harris 'will not be silent' on Gaza after talks with Netanyahu
download-img
US Vice President Kamala Harris speaks to the press after meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
Sharjah 24 – AFP: Kamala Harris signaled a major shift on US Gaza policy Thursday, with the presidential hopeful telling Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to seal a peace deal and insisting she would not be "silent" on the suffering in the Palestinian enclave.
Ripping up outgoing President Joe Biden's playbook of mostly behind-the-scenes pressure on Israel, the vice president said after meeting Netanyahu that it was time to end the "devastating" war.

"What has happened in Gaza over the past nine months is devastating. The images of dead children and desperate hungry people fleeing for safety, sometimes displaced for the second, third or fourth time," Harris told reporters.

"We cannot look away in the face of these tragedies. We cannot allow ourselves to become numb to the suffering and I will not be silent."

The 59-year-old -- now the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee after Biden said over the weekend he would not stand in November's election -- said she pressed Netanyahu on the dire situation in the "frank" meeting.

She said she "expressed with the prime minister my serious concern about the scale of human suffering in Gaza, including the death of far too many innocent civilians."

"And I made clear my serious concern about the dire humanitarian situation there."

Harris also called for the establishment of a Palestinian state and, similar to Biden, urged both Netanyahu and Hamas to agree to a ceasefire and hostage release deal to end the war.

"As I just told Prime Minister Netanyahu, it is time to get this deal done," she said.

Harris's outspoken comments were a stark contrast to the largely amiable greetings between Biden and Netanyahu earlier in the day, even if it masked months of tensions between the two men as well as questions over the US president's relevance.


July 26, 2024 / 9:34 PM

More on this Topic

Rotate For an optimal experience, please
rotate your device to portrait mode.