TEL AVIV: Former Israeli defence minister Benny Gantz has urged Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to establish a unity government with opposition members to facilitate the release of hostages held in Gaza.
Netanyahu’s current coalition relies on far-right partners who oppose ending the conflict and negotiating with Hamas following the group’s October 2023 attack on Israel.
Gantz proposed forming a temporary coalition that would exclude far-right parties and prioritise securing a hostage release agreement.
“I am here on behalf of the hostages who have no voice. I am here for the soldiers who are crying out, and whom no one in this government is listening to,“ Gantz told a televised press conference.
“The duty of our state is first and foremost to save the lives of Jews and all citizens,“ added Gantz, calling on fellow opposition party leaders Yair Lapid and Avigdor Lieberman to also consider the offer.
Both opposition chief Lapid and Lieberman have previously rejected joining any Netanyahu-led government.
Netanyahu’s coalition faces a risk of collapse after the parliament’s summer recess ends, following the loss of support from ultra-Orthodox Jewish parties over legislation seeking to draft students of religious seminaries into the military.
National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, a far-right member of Netanyahu’s ruling coalition who could be sidelined if Gantz’s plan succeeds, was quick to dismiss it.
“Right-wing voters chose a right-wing policy — not Gantz’s policy, not a centrist government, not surrender deals with Hamas, but yes to absolute victory,“ Ben Gvir said in a statement.
The government has faced increasing domestic pressure to secure an end to the war in Gaza, with mass protests calling for a deal that would see the hostages released.
Earlier this week, Netanyahu said he had ordered negotiations aimed at freeing the remaining hostages, adding that the diplomatic push would accompany a new offensive to take control of Gaza City.
The plan to expand the offensive in Gaza, which Netanyahu’s security cabinet approved earlier this month, has been met with opposition in Israel over concerns for the fate of the hostages.
It has also sparked fears that the onslaught would exacerbate already dire conditions on the ground after more than 22 months of war.
International mediators have been waiting for days for an Israeli response to their latest ceasefire proposal, which Hamas accepted earlier this week.
On Saturday thousands of protesters again took to the streets of Israel’s commercial hub Tel Aviv.
Yotam Cohen, whose brother Nimrod is held in Gaza, said that “instead of saving lives, Netanyahu is sentencing the living hostages to death and causing the fallen to be lost forever.”
Out of 251 hostages seized during Hamas’s 2023 attack, 49 are still held in Gaza including 27 the Israeli military says are dead.
Palestinian militants also hold the remains of an Israeli soldier killed in a 2014 war. – AFP