Hamas to stay out of Gaza truce talks, Iran considers Israel attack
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[August 14, 2024]
By Nidal al-Mughrabi
CAIRO (Reuters) - The Palestinian Islamist group Hamas said on Wednesday
it would not take part in a new round of Gaza ceasefire talks slated for
Thursday in Qatar, dimming hopes for a negotiated truce that Iranian
sources say could hold back an Iranian attack on Israel.
The U.S. has said it expects indirect talks to go ahead as planned in
Qatar's capital Doha on Thursday, and that a ceasefire agreement was
still possible. However Axios reported that U.S. Secretary of State
Antony Blinken has postponed a trip to the Middle East that had been
expected to begin on Tuesday.
Three senior Iranian officials have said that only a ceasefire deal in
Gaza would hold Iran back from direct retaliation against Israel for the
assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh on its soil last month.
The Israeli government said it would send a delegation to Thursday's
talks, but Hamas, the Palestinian militant group that controls Gaza,
requested a workable plan to implement a proposal it has already
accepted rather than more talks.
"Hamas is committed to the proposal presented to it on July 2, which is
based on the U.N. Security Council resolution and the Biden speech and
the movement is prepared to immediately begin discussion over a
mechanism to implement it," Senior Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri told
Reuters.
"Going to new negotiation allows the occupation to impose new conditions
and employ the maze of negotiation to conduct more massacres," he added.
There has been no let-up in fighting in Gaza, where residents of the
southern city of Khan Younis said Israeli forces blew up homes in the
east and intensified tank shelling on eastern areas of the city centre.
Israel said it was responding to Hamas rocket fire towards Tel Aviv on
Tuesday and had struck rocket launching pads and militants among 40
military targets over 24 hours, including in central Gaza, Khan Younis,
and western Rafah in the south.
Armed groups of Hamas and the Islamic Jihad said they had attacked
Israeli forces in several areas, while Palestinian health officials said
Israeli strikes had killed at least 14 people so far on Wednesday,
mostly in the centre and south.
Hamas also said its fighters were engaged in fierce clashes with Israeli
forces in another Palestinian territory, the Israeli-occupied West Bank,
where Israel said it had killed a number of militants.
'UNCERTAIN OPPORTUNITIES FOR DIPLOMACY'
A ceasefire deal would aim to end fighting in Gaza and ensure the
release of Israeli hostages held in the enclave in return for many
Palestinians jailed by Israel, but the two sides remain divided by
sequencing and other issues.
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Palestinian children stand at the site of an Israeli strike on a
house, amid the Israel-Hamas conflict, in Maghazi refugee camp in
the central Gaza Strip, August 14, 2024. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed
Hamas wants an agreement to end the war and a withdrawal of Israeli
forces from Gaza as a basic pre-condition for releasing hostages,
while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says he will only
agree to a pause in fighting to allow as many hostages to return as
possible. He has repeatedly said the war can only end when Hamas is
eradicated.
A Hamas-led attack on Israeli communities around the Gaza Strip on
Oct. 7 killed some 1,200 people, with more than 250 taken into
captivity in Gaza, according to Israeli tallies, in one of the most
devastating blows against Israel in its history.
In response, Israeli forces have razed much of Gaza, displaced most
of the population, and killed around 40,000 people, according to the
Palestinian health ministry, causing horror around the world. Israel
says it has lost more than 300 soldiers. Hamas rocket attacks on its
territory have continued.
In an attempt to deter a separate escalation between Iran-backed
Hezbollah and Israel, after the latter killed a senior Hezbollah
commander in Beirut's southern suburbs last month, Amos Hochstein, a
senior adviser to U.S. President Joe Biden, landed in Beirut on
Wednesday.
Hochstein will meet with Lebanese caretaker Prime Minister Najib
Mikati and parliament speaker Nabih Berri, who heads the armed Amal
movement, which is allied to Hezbollah and has also fired rockets on
Israel.
"We are facing uncertain opportunities for diplomacy, which is now
moving to prevent war and stop Israeli aggression," Mikati said in a
speech ahead of a cabinet meeting on Wednesday.
Mikati said talks with Arab and Western leaders had intensified due
to the seriousness of the situation in Lebanon and the region.
(Reporting and writing by Nidal al-Mughrabi; additional reporting by
Riham Alkousaa; editing by Philippa Fletcher)
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