JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
South African officials Monday said they would be recalling all of their diplomats based in Israel to "signal" the nation's concern over the situation in Gaza.
While addressing a press
briefing, Khumbudzo Ntshavheni, a minister in the president's office, said all
diplomatic staff in Tel Aviv would be asked back to Pretoria for consultations,
without providing further details.
Ntshayheni's sentiments were
re-iterated by Foreign Minister Naledi Pandor.
Speaking during a press
conference, Pandor said, "we are... extremely concerned at the continued
killing of children and innocent civilians in the Palestinian territories and
we believe the nature of response by Israel has become one of collective punishment."
"We felt it important
that we do signal the concern of South Africa while continuing to call for a
comprehensive cessation (of hostilities)," Pandor added.
The recall of the diplomats
was "normal practice," Pandor said, adding the envoys would give a
"full briefing" on the situation to the government, which will then
decide whether it can be of assistance or if a "continued relationship is
actually able to be sustained."
Fighting has raged in the Gaza
Strip for about a month since Hamas militants launched an unprecedented attack
over the border from the territory into Israel on October 7.
Israeli authorities report
over 1,400 people, most of them civilians, have been killed in the Middle
Eastern nation since the attack, during which Hamas took more than 240 people
as hostages.
In response, Israel has
relentlessly bombarded Gaza and sent in ground troops, with the health ministry
in the Hamas-run Palestinian territory saying more than 9,700 people have been
killed, also mainly civilians.
President Cyril Ramaphosa's
administration has been a vocal supporter of the Palestinian cause, with the
ruling African National Congress, ANC, often linking it to its own struggle
against apartheid.
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