Egyptian Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly attends a press conference during his visit to the the Rafah border crossing for possibility of aid humanitarians to enter Gaza, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in the city of Al-Arish, Sinai peninsula, Egypt, October 31, 2023. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany
On Tuesday, Egypt’s prime minister expressed the country’s readiness to make significant sacrifices, even at the cost of millions of lives, for the sake of the Sinai Peninsula. This statement appears to be in response to reports about a wartime draft proposal from Israel’s intelligence ministry, suggesting the relocation of the Gaza Strip’s 2.3 million inhabitants to the Sinai region.
“Egypt will never allow anything to be imposed on it,” Mostafa Madbouly said, adding regional issues would not be solved at the country’s “expense.”
Madbouly’s comments came in a speech during his visit to al-Arish in northern Sinai.
He was accompanied by hundreds of government officials and public figures.
Reports of the Israeli proposal have drawn condemnation from the Palestinians and worsened tensions with Cairo.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office, however, downplayed the paper as a hypothetical exercise.
But its conclusions deepened long-standing Egyptian fears that Israel wants to make Gaza into Egypt’s problem, and revived for Palestinians memories of their greatest trauma — the uprooting of hundreds of thousands of people who fled or were forced from their homes during the fighting surrounding Israel’s creation in 1948.
So far more than 8,300 Palestinians, the vast majority of them civilians, have been killed since Israel went to war against Hamas after its October 7 attack.
The document is dated October 13, six days after Hamas militants killed more than 1,400 people in southern Israel and took over 240 hostages in an attack that provoked a devastating Israeli war in Gaza.
It was first published by Sicha Mekomit, a local news site.
The intelligence ministry – a junior ministry – conducts research but does not set policy.