Qatar seeking Israel-Hamas deal to free 50 hostages and 3-day truce,
sources say
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[November 15, 2023]
By Andrew Mills and Ahmed Mohamed Hassan
DOHA/CAIRO (Reuters) -Qatari mediators were on Wednesday seeking to
negotiate a deal between Hamas and Israel that includes the release of
around 50 civilian hostages from Gaza in exchange for a three-day
ceasefire, an official briefed on the negotiations told Reuters.
The deal, under discussion, which has been coordinated with the U.S.,
would also see Israel release some Palestinian women and children from
Israeli jails and increase the amount of humanitarian aid allowed into
Gaza, the official said.
It would mark the biggest release in hostages held by Hamas since the
Palestinian militant group burst over the Gaza border, attacked parts of
Israel and took hostages into the enclave.
Hamas has agreed to the general outlines of this deal, but Israel has
not and it is still negotiating the details, the official said.
It is not known how many Palestinian women and children Israel would
release from its jails as part of the agreement under discussion.
The scope of the Qatari-led negotiations has changed significantly in
recent weeks, but the fact that the talks are now focused on the release
of 50 civilian prisoners in exchange for a three-day truce and that
Hamas has agreed to the outline of the deal have not been reported
before.
The wealthy Gulf state of Qatar, which has ambitious foreign policy
goals, has a direct line of communication with Hamas and Israel. It has
previously helped mediate truces between the two.
Such a deal would require Hamas handing over a complete list of
remaining living civilian hostages held in Gaza.
A more comprehensive release of all hostages is not currently under
discussion, the official said.
There was no immediate response from Israeli officials, who have
previously declined to provide detailed comment on the hostage
negotiations, citing reluctance to undermine the diplomacy or fuel
reports they deemed "psychological warfare" by Palestinian militants.
The Qatari Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Hamas political office in
Doha declined comment.
Qatar, where Hamas operates a political office, has been leading
mediation between the militant group and Israeli officials for the
release of more than 240 hostages. They were taken by Hamas militants
when they rampaged into Israel on Oct. 7. Israel says 1,200 people were
killed during the rampage.
Israel then launched an unrelenting bombardment of Hamas-ruled Gaza and
late last month began an armoured invasion of the enclave, where more
than 11,000 people have been killed, around 40% of them children with
more buried under the rubble, according to Palestinian officials.
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Palestinians inspect the site of Israeli strikes on houses in
Jabalia refugee camp, in northern Gaza, November 14, 2023. REUTERS/Anas
al-Shareef/File photo
Israeli Minister Benny Gantz, who is in the war cabinet, said at a
news conference on Wednesday: "Even if we are required to pause
fighting in order to return our hostages, there will be no stopping
the combat and the war until we achieve our goals."
Asked to elaborate on what is hindering the hostage deal, Gantz
declined to give any details.
Previously, talks had focused on Hamas releasing up to 15 hostages
and a pause in the Gaza fighting of up to three days, sources in the
Gulf and elsewhere in the Middle East said.
There was no immediate comment from Qatar's Ministry of Foreign
Affairs and the Hamas political office in Doha.
Two Egyptian security sources said there was only agreement so far
on limited truces in specific areas of Gaza. They said Israel had
shown reluctance to commit to any wider deal, but appeared to have
moved closer to doing so by Tuesday.
OBSTACLES
Hamas' armed wing, the Qassam Brigades, said on Monday that it had
told Qatari negotiators it was willing to release up to 70 women and
children in return for a five-day truce.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Tuesday that "we
have been working relentlessly for the release of the hostages,
including using increased pressure since the start of the ground
incursion".
Any deal faces many obstacles.
It is unclear whether Hamas is currently able to compile an accurate
list of hostages it holds since the war has caused it communications
and organizational problems in Gaza, a Western diplomat in the
region said.
Gathering the hostages for any simultaneous release, which Israel
wants, would be logistically difficult without a ceasefire, said
another source in the region with knowledge of the negotiations.
There had also been uncertainty over whether the military and
political leadership of Hamas were in agreement, though this was
later resolved, and also concern that Israeli military pressure was
making a deal harder, the same source said.
(Reporting by Andrew Mills in Doha, Maya Gebeily in Beirut, Aidan
Lewis and Ahmed Mohamed Hassan in Cairo; Additional reporting by Dan
Williams and Mayaan Lubell in Jerusalem; Writing by Andrew Mills and
Angus McDowall; Editing by Michael Georgy and Gareth Jones)
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