Hamas says Gaza truce talks remain deadlocked despite reports of
progress
Send a link to a friend
[April 08, 2024]
By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Ahmed Mohamed Hassan
CAIRO (Reuters) - A Hamas official said on Monday no progress was made
at a new round of Gaza ceasefire talks in Cairo also attended by
delegations from Israel, Qatar, and the U.S., shortly after Egyptian
sources said headway had been made on the agenda.
Western powers have voiced outrage over what they see as an unacceptably
high Palestinian civilian death toll and humanitarian crisis in Gaza
arising from Israel's military onslaught to destroy Hamas in tiny,
densely populated Gaza.
Israel and Hamas sent teams to Egypt on Sunday after the arrival on
Saturday of CIA Director William Burns, whose presence underlined rising
U.S. pressure for a deal that would free hostages held in Gaza and get
aid to stricken civilians.
"There is no change in the position of the occupation and therefore,
there is nothing new in the Cairo talks," the Hamas official, who asked
not to be named, told Reuters. "There is no progress yet."
Earlier on Monday, Egypt's state-affiliated Al-Qahera News TV channel
quoted a senior Egyptian source as saying progress had been made after a
deal was reached among participating delegations on issues under
discussion.
Six months into its offensive against Palestinian Islamist movement
Hamas that has devastated Gaza and left most of its 2.3 million people
homeless and many facing famine, Israel also voiced cautious optimism
about the latest mediated negotiations.
In Jerusalem at the weekend, Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz
described the Cairo talks as the closest the sides have come to a deal
since a November truce under which Hamas freed dozens of hostages.
"We have reached a critical point in the negotiations. If it works out,
then a large number of hostages will come home," he told Israel's Army
Radio.
Hamas seized 253 people during an Oct. 7, cross-border killing spree in
southern Israel that sparked the war. Of those, 129 hostages remain, and
negotiators have spoken of around 40 going free in the first stage of a
prospective deal with Hamas.
Two Egyptian security sources and Al-Qahera News said progress had been
made in the Cairo talks.
The security sources said that both sides had made concessions that
could help pave the way for a ceasefire deal in parallel meetings with
mediators on Sunday.
The concessions related to the release of Israeli hostages held by
Hamas, and the Palestinian militant group's demand for the return of
displaced residents to northern Gaza, they added, without giving further
details.
Consultations were expected to continue within the next 48 hours, Al-Qahera
reported.
[to top of second column]
|
A person walks past posters with pictures of hostages kidnapped in
the deadly October 7 attack on Israel by the Palestinian Islamist
group Hamas from Gaza, in Tel Aviv, Israel April 8, 2024.
REUTERS/Hannah McKay
NOT FLEXIBLE ON MAIN DEMANDS, HAMAS SAYS
A Palestinian official close to mediation efforts told Reuters that
deadlock continued to reign over Israel's refusal to end the war,
withdraw its forces from Gaza, allow hundreds of thousands of
displaced civilians to return to their homes and lift a 17-year-old
blockade to allow speedy reconstruction.
These steps take precedence over Israel's prime demand for a release
of hostages in exchange for Palestinians held in Israeli prisons,
said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity.
"Regarding the exchange of prisoners, Hamas was and is willing to be
more flexible, but there is no flexibility over our...main demands,"
he told Reuters.
Israel has ruled out winding up the war shortly or withdrawing from
Gaza, saying its forces will not relent until Hamas no longer
controls Gaza or threatens Israel militarily.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would not give in to
"extreme" Hamas demands.
But Israeli officials have signaled willingness to allow some
Palestinians displaced from northern Gaza to return there.
Hamas killed 1,200 people in its rampage into southern Israel on
Oct. 7, according to Israeli tallies. More than 33,100 Gaza
Palestinians have been killed in the Israeli response, according to
the health ministry in Gaza. More than 600 Israeli soldiers have
been killed in Gaza combat, the army says.
Under international pressure to ease Gaza's humanitarian crisis and
not follow through on plans to storm Rafah, a southern town packed
with a million displaced people, Israel said on Sunday it had pulled
more soldiers from southern Gaza.
This left just one brigade there, but Defence Minister Yoav Gallant
said the troops would be preparing for future military operations,
including "their coming mission in the Rafah area".
A day after Israeli forces retreated from the heart of residential
areas of the southern city of Khan Younis after months of
bombardment and raids, Palestinian medics said they recovered eight
more bodies of people killed by Israeli gunfire. They had retrieved
12 bodies from the rubble the day before.
But a few miles to the south hard up on the border with Egypt,
residents of Rafah, the last Palestinian refuge from Israeli ground
forces, said Israel carried out at least five airstrikes on parts of
the city, causing a number of injuries.
(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi, Ahmed Mohamed Hassan, Dan Williams
and Aidan Lewis; editing by Mark Heinrich)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.]This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |