GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories: Hopes rose Wednesday that Israel and Hamas may be inching toward another truce and hostage-release deal in the Gaza war, following talks in Europe and a visit to Egypt by the head of the Palestinian militant group.
While some talked of a truce, fighting raged and Gaza’s Hamas government
said the death toll in the Palestinian territory reached 20,000.
Right-wing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said there can be
no Gaza cease-fire until Hamas militants are destroyed, but the White
House expressed hope that the truce talks can bring results.
“These are very serious discussions and negotiations and we hope that
they lead somewhere,” National Security Council spokesman John Kirby
told reporters.
His comments came shortly after Netanyahu, under pressure from
Washington and other allies over civilian casualties, reiterated his
goal of destroying Hamas and said there will be no cease-fire until that
is accomplished.
“We won’t stop fighting until we’ve achieved all the objectives we’ve
set ourselves: the elimination of Hamas, the release of our hostages and
the end of the threat from Gaza,” Netanyahu repeated.
Late Tuesday he had told relatives of some of the remaining 129 captives
held in Gaza that his spy chief was working on efforts to free them.
He said he had “just sent the head of Mossad to Europe twice to promote a process to free our hostages.”
The bloodiest-ever Gaza war began when Hamas attacked southern Israel on
October 7, killing around 1,140 people in Israel, mostly civilians, and
abducting about 250, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli
figures.
In response, Israel began a relentless bombardment alongside a ground
invasion. Hamas authorities say most of those killed in Gaza have been
women and children.
Netanyahu has faced protests from hostage relatives seeking an urgent deal to free the captives.
“Every moment the hostages are there, is danger. They have no time,”
Ofir Engel, 17, a Dutch-Israeli former captive, said at a press
conference.
Mossad director David Barnea held a “positive meeting” in Warsaw this
week with CIA chief Bill Burns and Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed
bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, a source familiar with the talks told AFP,
asking not to be named.
Talks were ongoing “with the aim of reaching an agreement around the
release of the remaining hostages in Gaza in exchange for a truce and
the potential release of Palestinians held in Israeli prisons,” said the
source.
Qatar, backed by Egypt and the United States, last month helped broker a
first week-long truce in which 80 Israeli hostages were freed in
exchange for 240 Palestinian prisoners.
The Qatar-based chief of Hamas, Ismail Haniyeh, on Wednesday arrived in Egypt for talks with intelligence chief Abbas Kamel.
A Hamas official, speaking Wednesday on condition of anonymity, told AFP
in Gaza that “a total cease-fire and a retreat of the Israeli
occupation army from the Gaza Strip are a precondition for any serious
negotiation” on a hostage-prisoner swap.
A source close to Hamas earlier said the Egypt talks would focus on
proposals including a week-long truce that would see the release of 40
Israeli hostages.
Before leaving Qatar, Haniyeh met Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian but no details were released.
In Rafah, where fireballs and black smoke rose after explosions, residents expressed hope that talks would succeed.
“I wish for a complete cease-fire, and to put an end to the series of
death and suffering. It’s been more than 75 days,” said Kassem Shurrab,
25.
Bassil Khoder, 63, said a cease-fire would allow displaced Palestinians
like him to return home but it would also be good for Israelis. “The
Jews are also our neighbors,” he said. “We won’t give up on them.”
An AFPTV live camera on Wednesday filmed two bombs hitting Rafah, in
southern Gaza where many of the territory’s estimated 1.9 million
displaced have fled.
The Hamas health ministry said Israeli strikes killed at least 12
Palestinians when houses and a mosque in Rafah “were targeted.”
Crowds swarmed the rubble, digging with shovels and a backhoe to try to
free the victims. One body, blackened and open-mouthed, lay under a
bright blue blanket on the blood-soaked ground.
“Enough, enough of this. We have lost everything and we can’t take it
anymore,” Samar Abu Luli, a woman in Rafah, said after Israeli strikes
on the city’s Al-Shabura neighborhood.
The Israeli army reported close-quarter combat and more than 300 strikes
over the past day, while the death toll among its own forces rose to
134 inside Gaza.
It said “ground, aerial and naval operations were carried out on dozens”
of militants and their infrastructure including rocket launch sites and
military command and control centers in Khan Yunis, southern Gaza.
They also found underground infrastructure “with water and electricity
systems” during a raid on residences of senior Hamas figures in Khan
Yunis, the military said.
The United Nations Security Council was due to vote Wednesday on a
much-delayed resolution calling for a pause to the war after members
wrangled over wording.
The latest version of the text seen by AFP calls for the “urgent suspension” of hostilities.
The United States vetoed a previous cease-fire resolution.
Israel, which declared a total siege on Gaza at the start of the war,
has since allowed in aid trucks through the Rafah border crossing with
Egypt and, as of this week, its own Kerem Shalom crossing.
The UN’s World Food Progamme said Wednesday it had delivered food
through Kerem Shalom in a first direct aid convoy from Jordan as
“millions face the risk of starvation.”
Fuel, water and medical supplies are also scarce, diseases are spreading, and communications have been repeatedly cut.
An Israeli military agency, COGAT, said it had started laying a pipeline
from Egypt to deliver drinking water from a mobile desalination plant
in a project led by the United Arab Emirates.
Visiting nearby Cyprus on Wednesday, Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen
expressed support for plans to send humanitarian aid to Gaza from the
Mediterranean island.
“We aim to create a fast track for humanitarian aid to Gaza through this corridor,” he told reporters.
The Gaza war has sparked fears of regional escalation, with exchanges of
fire over the Lebanon border, and missiles from Iran-backed Yemeni
rebels disrupting Red Sea shipping.
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