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Gaza residents hope dissolution of Hamas-run government leads to true end of war

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Gaza residents hope dissolution of Hamas-run government leads to true end of war

2026-07-07 16:51 Last Updated At:19:27

Gaza's residents are hoping the war will truly end after Hamas dissolved its governing body in the enclave on Monday.

The head of Hamas's Government Emergency Committee and the Government Follow-up Committee has announced resignation on Monday and the emergency committee is being dissolved. Hamas also announced the transfer of the enclave's administration to a 15-member transitional Palestinian technocratic committee for administering the strip.

The dissolution is responding to provisions of the ceasefire agreement brokered by the United States, Egypt and Qatar last October, as well as demands from the population — including clan leaders, factions, and all other segments of Palestinian society.

"Hamas' decision today to have the Government Follow-up Committee submit its resignation is a new step toward arranging the situation in the Gaza Strip in a way that allows the national committee based in Cairo to enter Gaza. We hope the mediators will seize this opportunity and pressure the Israeli occupation to allow the national committee into the Strip so that we can begin a genuine relief and reconstruction process, because the conditions we are living through here are truly catastrophic," said Hazem Qassem, the Hamas spokesperson in the Gaza Strip.

Residents affected by almost three years of war say they hope life will finally start to return to normal.

"We hope the war will truly come to an end and that conditions and daily life will improve. We hope enough supplies will be allowed in to restore electricity and water, and that our lives can return to normal. We also hope our children can go back to school and that the war will finally end for everyone," said Tahrir Abu Aadhra, a displaced Palestinian.

"This is an important step, and Hamas and its government deserve credit for it. But as citizens, we do not want to see any security or administrative vacuum in the coming days. We hope Israel and the United States will honor their commitments and allow the administrative committee for the Gaza Strip to enter and carry out its responsibilities," said Wael Al-Mabhouh, another displaced resident.

Gaza residents hope dissolution of Hamas-run government leads to true end of war

Gaza residents hope dissolution of Hamas-run government leads to true end of war

Singaporean scholar Lim Shao Bin, who has been studying World War II history and the Japanese army's wartime atrocities, has shed light on Japan's extensive network of bacterial experiments in Southeast Asia -- alongside its germ-warfare crimes in China -- through his research.

In 2025, Lim published a collection of historical records compiled by Singaporean and Chinese scholars, "Oka 9420 Unit, Japanese South Army BW Troops", bringing together nearly a decade of archival digging, exposing Japan's wartime inhumane atrocity to the public.

Lim's interest in Japanese germ warfare was sparked by Nobuyoshi Takashima, an honorary professor at Japan's University of the Ryukyus. In Feb 2016, Takashima took Lim to the outskirts of Johor Bahru, Malaysia, and pointed out a building that had been used for Japanese army's experiments involving plague bacteria.

"Professor Takashima took me to the site and pointed out to me that this building was the factory where Japanese Army Unit 731 produced those plague bacteria bombs. I was really shocked. I never imagined that Unit 731 would be so close to my doorstep. After that, I started my research trying to find out what Unit 731 was doing in Singapore and across Southeast Asia," Lim said.

To facilitate its aggression in the Pacific theater, the Japanese Imperial Army in World War II began deploying a biowarfare troops unit in Southeast Asia in March 1942, similar to the notorious Unit 731 in northeastern China's Harbin.

In May, a biowarfare unit was formed in Nanjing, China, and was dispatched to Singapore a month later. The detachment, publicly known as the Epidemic Prevention and Water Purification Department of the Southern Expeditionary Army Group, was referred to as the Oka 9420 Unit within the Japanese Imperial Army, according to historical records.

"On March 30, 1942, a military order was issued, and all troops began preparations to establish the Oka 9420 accordingly," Lim said.

Through his research, Lim found out why the Japanese army needed to build Oka 9420 in Southeast Asia despite already operating Unit 731 in China.

"Around Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia, temperatures stay at about 30 degrees Celsius year-round, with humidity reaching 80 to 90 percent. For the bacteria cultivators in Harbin, Singapore and Malaysia were almost like paradise: they didn't have to spend much money, and fleas could survive simply by being placed on the ground. That's why the Japanese army decided to move their cultivation base to Singapore and Malaysia," Lim said.

The Singapore-based biowarfare unit crept into what are today Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam and Myanmar. Records show one of its central missions was raising rats and cultivating plague-infected fleas.

"Their goal was to cultivate large quantities of plague bacteria in preparation for bombing the U.S. West Coast. The Japanese army was cultivating the equivalent of about five tons of fleas, and Singapore was one of the important plague cultivation centers," Lim said.

The Japanese army established mass production lines for plague fleas in Singapore and Malaysia, and then transported those fleas to Bangkok, sealed in glass bottles, according to witnesses. Based on that evidence, Lim deduced that these flea bombs were likely intended for use in the China-Burma-India Theater.

"The fleas sealed inside the glass bottles have a lifespan of only 20 to 30 days, so the bombs must be dropped quickly before the fleas die. I suspect their goal was to disrupt the Yunnan-Burma Road, cutting off supplies donated by overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia from reaching China," Lim said.

The unit destroyed a large amount of equipment and materials after Japan's unconditional surrender in 1945, and many members hid their identities, according to Lim.

Unit 731 was a covert biological and chemical warfare research and development unit of the Imperial Japanese Army that engaged in lethal human experimentation and biological weapons manufacturing in China during World War II.

Singaporean scholar's study exposes Japan's bacterial experiment network in Southeast Asia

Singaporean scholar's study exposes Japan's bacterial experiment network in Southeast Asia

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