Israel to relax Gaza blockade

JERUSALEM: Israel was expected to significantly ease its blockade of the Gaza Strip last night to blunt the international criticism over the deadly Israeli commando raid on a blockade-busting flotilla.

Senior cabinet ministers were meeting to limit restrictions to a short list of goods, such as cement and steel, which Israel says militants could use in their battle against the Jewish state.

But even those goods would be allowed in to an undetermined extent in co-ordination with the UN, officials said.

Israel, with Egypt’s co-operation, has blockaded the Palestinian territory by land and sea since Hamas militants, with a violent anti-Israel agenda, seized control of Gaza three years ago. For the most part, only basic humanitarian goods have been allowed in.

The blockade was designed to keep out weapons, turn Gazans against their militant Hamas rulers and pressure Hamas to free a captive Israeli soldier.

It did not achieve those aims, however, and both weapons and goods continued to flow into the territory through a large network of smuggling tunnels built under the Gaza-Egypt border.

But although the blockade deepened the poverty in Gaza and confined 1.5 million people to a tiny patch of land, it did not provoke an international outcry until Israeli commandos killed nine Turks two weeks ago during a raid on a Gaza-bound flotilla.

The Haaretz newspaper quoted international envoy Tony Blair yesterday as hailing the expected vote by the Israeli ministers.

“It will allow us to keep weapons and weapon materials out of Gaza, but on the other hand to help the Palestinian population there,” Mr Blair was quoted as saying.

“The policy in Gaza should be to isolate the extremists but to help the people.”

Mr Blair represents the quartet of Middle East negotiators – the US, European Union, UN and Russia.

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