Jerusalem : A huge explosion at a Gaza hospital has derailed the diplomatic efforts led by the US to mobilise support for "Israel's right to defend itself" with a summit meeting between American President Joe Biden and other leaders in Jordan's Amman being called off. Hundreds of people are feared dead after a deadly blast at a hospital in Gaza for which Hamas and Israel traded charges holding each other responsible for the incident.
Biden is scheduled to arrive in Israel on Wednesday on a solidarity visit to express support for Israel. Jordan's Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi announced that Biden's summit in Amman scheduled to take place on Wednesday with Jordan's King Abdullah, Egypt's President Abdel Fattah El-Sissi and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has been cancelled.
Biden has been backing Israeli calls for eliminating Hamas following the attacks carried out by it on Israel on October 7 in which more than 1,300 people were killed and between 200 and 250 Israelis are said to have been taken to Gaza as hostages. Hamas was quick to blame an Israeli air strike for causing the explosion at the Al Ahli hospital in Gaza City on Tuesday, but Israel vehemently denied the charges insisting that a misfired rocket by the Islamic faction caused the explosion.
Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, widely considered to be the faction's overall leader, in a surprising move, blamed the US as responsible for the attack stressing that Washington gave Israel the cover for its aggression. The hospital massacre confirms the enemy's brutality and the extent of his feeling of defeat, Haniyeh said in a televised address.
He called upon all the Palestinian people to get out and confront the occupation and the settlers and for all Arabs and Muslims to stage protests against Israel. Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan and Turkey also accused Israel of bombing the Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza City. However, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held the "barbaric terrorists in Gaza" responsible for the deaths.