Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese speaks during a Joint Media Statement with Prime Minister of Laos Sonexay Siphandone during the 2024 ASEAN-Australia Special Summit in Melbourne, Australia, 06 March 2024. EFE-EPA/JOEL CARRETT AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND OUT

Australia’s Albanese asks Benjamin Netanyahu to avoid Rafah invasion

Sydney, Australia, Apr 9 (EFE).- Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Tuesday that he had asked his Israeli counterpart, Benjamin Netanyahu, to avoid a ground invasion of Rafah in the south of the Gaza Strip due to the humanitarian consequences on thousands of displaced Palestinians.

“I have directly put to Prime Minister Netanyahu Australia’s concern about a ground invasion of Rafah,” Albanese said at a press conference.

The Australian leader spoke on the telephone with Netanyahu last week following the killing of seven aid workers of the nonprofit World Central Kitchen in Gaza, including an Australian, during an Israeli airstrike.

Since then, Canberra has stepped up pressure on the Israeli authorities.

“The consequences that would be there for the civilian population who, of course, were told in Gaza to go south from the north to the center, were then told to go to the center to the south, and are now confronting a potential ground invasion there,” Albanese said on public broadcaster ABC.

“We’re very concerned about the humanitarian consequences, as are like-minded countries including the United States,” he added.

On Monday, Netanyahu said that there was already a “date” for the Israeli invasion of Rafah.

“This victory requires entry into Rafah and the elimination of the terrorist battalions there. It will happen – there is a date,” he said in a video message without specifying for when the invasion was planned.

Israel declared war on Hamas in Gaza following an attack in southern Israeli towns on Oct. 7 by the Islamist group.

Hamas killed at least 1,200 people during the attack, while the Israeli military’s brutal response has claimed the lives of more than 32,620 civilians in Gaza, including 13,000 children. EFE

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