The Gaza ceasefire deal was plunged into crisis on Saturday after Hamas delayed a second hostage release and accused Israel of violating the truce agreement by blocking aid from reaching the northern part of the strip and flying drones in the south.
But late on Saturday Qatari negotiators claimed that the deal was back on course and that 13 Israeli hostages would be transferred in exchange for 39 Palestinian women and children held in Israeli jails. Seven other civilians, probably citizens of other countries working in the area, would also be released.
“After a delay in implementing the release of prisoners from both sides, the obstacles were overcome through Qatari-Egyptian communications with both sides,” said Dr Majed al-Ansari, official spokesperson for Qatar’s ministry of foreign affairs.
The delay was a reminder of how fragile the truce agreement is. Israel has vowed to resume its campaign to destroy Hamas after a brief pause, despite growing international pressure for a longer break in a campaign that has so far killed almost 15,000 Palestinians, the majority of them women and children.
The weekend had begun with some optimism that a four-day break in hostilities could be extended. Israel had made a unilateral offer to extend the ceasefire in return for more hostage releases, proposing an extra day for every 10 people freed.
A Qatari delegation made a rare trip to Israel to broker talks on the ground, Egypt said all sides had given “positive signals” about a longer pause in fighting, and US President Joe Biden said “the chances [of an extension] are real”.
Inside Israel, there was joy over the return of 13 hostages on Friday, including four children aged nine or younger who were seized by Hamas gunmen on 7 October, and endured 49 days in captivity. Video showed Ohad Munder, who turned nine in captivity, racing down a hospital corridor to hug his father.
Initially yesterday there seemed to be a smooth path to further releases. Hamas had given ceasefire mediators Egypt and Qatar a list of another 14 hostages it planned to hand over, which was shared with Israel.
The truce agreement specifies that 50 hostages are to be exchanged over four days for 150 Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails.
About 240 people were kidnapped and taken to Gaza on 7 October, when Hamas broke through the border fence and launched a brutal assault that killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians. There are believed to be dozens of children among those still held.
But an expected afternoon transfer of hostages, through the Rafah border crossing to Egypt, did not go ahead. Hours later Hamas said it had delayed the release, and accused Israel of breaking both aid and military terms of the deal.
Hamas spokesperson Osama Hamdan said a total of 340 aid trucks had entered Gaza since Friday and that 65 of those trucks had reached northern Gaza, “which was less than half of what Israel agreed on”. A senior Hamas official told the BBC that Israel flew drones over southern Gaza, in a further violation of the deal.
Israel denied it had broken the terms of the truce. A military spokesman declined to say what might follow if that deadline was not met, but one source close to the government said that if hostages were not released by midnight, Israel would start bombing Gaza again.
Egypt and Qatar raced to resolve the delay before it derailed the ceasefire. The Qatari diplomats who flew into Israel were an operations team; while they may have originally hoped to focus on extending the ceasefire, their brief was also thought to include keeping the deal on track.
Inside Gaza, a population battered by weeks of intense bombardment, which has brought death and mass displacement, and a blockade that has caused hunger and illness on a massive scale, tried to take stock.
More than two-thirds of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million has been forced to leave their homes, according to UN estimates, and most have crowded into shelters and homes in the south, where food supplies are so low that the UN has warned of starvation and where lack of clean water is spreading diseases.
Gaza residents said a pause that lasts just a few days would do little to relieve their suffering after weeks of heavy bombing, even in the south where Israel urged civilians to flee for their safety.
“We hope the truce will continue and be permanent, not just four or five days. People cannot pay the cost of this war,” Ayman Nofal told Reuters in a street market in Khan Younis, in southern Gaza.
Supplies that had been brought in were not enough to meet desperate needs. Mohammed Ghandour, who waited five hours to fill his cylindrical metal canister with cooking fuel in Rafah, left empty-handed. “I’m now going home without gas,” he said.
Some tried to visit their homes, or the remains of their homes, including in northern Gaza, despite Israeli military warnings to avoid the area that has been the focus of their campaign so far.
“We are civilians,” said Mahmud Masood, standing in front of flattened buildings in Jabalia, northern Gaza. “Why have they destroyed our houses?”
Beyond the region, demonstrations calling for a permanent ceasefire were held in cities including London, where tens of thousand of demonstrators turned out.
About 1,500 police officers were deployed to the streets for the protest, but there were no reports of violence. One protester was arrested on suspicion of inciting racial hatred, police said. On Sunday London will see a first large march against antisemitism.
"course" - Google News
November 26, 2023 at 02:49AM
https://ift.tt/05kaqDc
Israeli hostage deal ‘on course’ after Hamas delay prompts crisis - The Guardian
"course" - Google News
https://ift.tt/CXxr5q3
https://ift.tt/JIgzmaR
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "Israeli hostage deal ‘on course’ after Hamas delay prompts crisis - The Guardian"
Post a Comment