JERUSALEM – Two weeks ahead of Palestine’s opening game at the 2023 Asian Cup in Qatar, the team is struggling to focus as war rages on in Gaza, where thousands have been killed.
Some players have lost loved ones in Israel’s relentless bombardment of the besieged territory in response to Hamas’s October 7 attack on southern Israel.
Much of Gaza has been reduced to rubble, including stadiums, in air and artillery strikes and a ground offensive, and football fields have been used as makeshift graves for some of the dead as many cemeteries are either full or inaccessible.
“Everyone is glued to the news, before and after training, be it on the bus or at the hotel,” the team’s coach, Makram Daboub, said from Saudi Arabia where the players were training.
Qatar hosts the 2023 Asian Cup from January 12 to February 10, and Palestine will play its opening game on January 14 against Iran.
The players have “a co nstant feeling of anxiety for their families”, Daboub, a former Tunisia coach and player, said by telephone.
The Palestinian Football Association had celebrated in June last year when the national team won — for the third time — a spot in the Asian cup.
But with no end in sight to the Gaza war, the team now feels crushed as they try to prepare for the upcoming competition.
“We have physical, technical and tactical problems due to the suspension of the tournament… as w ell as psychological issues,” said Daboub.
Since the October 7 Hamas attacks on Israel, football matches in the Gaza Strip and Israeli-occupied West Bank have been suspended.
Many players are struggling, particularly those like Mahmoud Wadi and Mohammed Saleh who have family trapped in Gaza where their homes have been destroyed, said Daboub.
“They are suff ering,” he said.
Others have relatives who ha ve had to flee relentless Israeli bombardment in the north of the territory and seek safety in the south, “where conditions are difficult”, he added.
The UN says 85 percent of Gaza’s population has been displaced and no area of the crowded territory was safe, as Israel has extended its offensive from north to south.
The October 7 attack was the worst in Israeli history, and the Gaza war it unleashed has been the bloodiest yet in the long-blockaded Palestinian territory of 2.4 million people.
The Hamas attack res ulted in the deaths of around 1,140 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
Israel’s punishing offensive has killed at least 21,978 people, mostly women and children, according to the territory’s health ministry.
Daboub said the team hopes to “qualify for the latter stages of the Asian Cup and show the honorable face of Palestinian football”.
Most importantly, the coach said, “raising the Palestinian flag” in international arenas “affirms Palestinian identity and shows that in Palestine people deserve freedom and a better life”.
Palestinian Football Federation president Jibril Rajub said the Gaza war wreaked havoc on “sports and youth” movements.
“So far, more than 1,000 members of sports, youth and scout movements have been killed,” said Rajub.
He accused Israeli forces of “targeting Palestinian sports clubs… in flagrant violation of the Olympic charter”.
He mentioned specifically “horrible images” that emerged from the Yarmouk football stadium in Gaza which Israeli forces “turned into a detention, abuse and interrogation center”.
He was referring to Israeli media footage showing scores of stripped Palestinians, including children, sitting on the ground of the stadium.
The Israeli army has said those seen in the footage, which sparked an outcry on social media, were suspected of taking part in “terrorist activities”.
Rajub said Yarmouk stadium was built in 1939, making it one of the oldest in the Palestinian territories.
The federation has sent letters to the International Olympic Committee and FIFA demanding an “urgent international probe into (Israeli) occupation crimes against sports and athletes in Palestine”.
SEOUL, South Korea — South Korean opposition party leader Lee Jae-myung was stabbed in the neck on Tuesday while talking to reporters in the port city of Busan.
Lee was walking in a crowd of journalists after visiting the site of a new airport when a man in front of him lunged and struck him in the neck, footage on South Korean television channels showed.
The 59-year-old was seen collapsing to the ground as people rushed to aid him. One man was seen pressing a handkerchief on Lee’s neck.
He was “walking to his car while talking to reporters when the attacker asked for his autograph”, a witness told local broadcaster YTN, adding that Lee was then struck with what “looked like a knife”.
Emergency responders were seen carrying Lee into an ambulance. He was later taken to hospital on a helicopter, according to the Yonhap news agency.
The agency said he was bleeding but conscious as he was transported from the scene.
Police in Busan said Lee suffered a “one-centimetre laceration on his neck” and that he “remains conscious and bleeding is minor”, according to South Korean news outlet Chosun Ilbo.
TV footage showed police officials wrestling the attacker to the ground. He was seen wearing a hat with Lee’s name on it.
Yonhap said the assailant has been arrested.
Chief of the Democratic Party, Lee lost in 2022 to conservative Yoon Suk Yeol in the tightest presidential race in South Korea’s history.
Yoon expressed “deep concern over the safety of Lee Jae-myung upon hearing of the attack”, his spokeswoman Kim Soo-kyung said.
“Yoon emphasised our society should never tolerate this kind of act of violence under any circumstances.”
A former child factory worker who suffered an industrial accident as a teenage school drop-out, Lee rose to political stardom partly by playing up his rags-to-riches tale.
He is widely expected to run for president again in 2027, and recent polls have indicated that he remains a strong contender.
But Lee’s bid for the top office has been overshadowed by a string of scandals.
He avoided arrest in September when a court dismissed a request from the prosecution for him to be taken into custody pending trial on various corruption charges.
Lee still faces trial on charges of bribery in connection with a firm that is suspected of illicitly transferring $8 million to North Korea.
He is also accused of breaching his duties, allegedly resulting in a loss of 20 billion won ($15 million) for a company owned by Seongnam city during his term as its mayor.