May 6, 2024
The
militants have reportedly agreed to a truce ahead of an Israeli invasion of
Rafah
Hamas has
accepted a ceasefire proposal put forward by Egyptian and Qatari mediators, a
spokesman for the group told Al Jazeera on Monday. The announcement came
shortly after Israel ordered the evacuation of the city of Rafah ahead of a
long-planned assault.
Hamas leader
Ismail Haniyeh held phone calls with Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin
Abdul Rahman Al Thani and Egyptian Intelligence Minister Abbas Kamel, informing
them “of the Hamas movement’s approval of their proposal regarding the
ceasefire agreement,” the group said in a statement to Al Jazeera.
The details of
the proposal have not yet been made public. Hamas has previously demanded that
any ceasefire be permanent and include the withdrawal of all Israeli troops
from the besieged Palestinian enclave. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu has refused to issue these guarantees, warning last week that Israel
will not allow Hamas to remain in power in Gaza, and will invade Rafah with or
without a ceasefire deal.
Netanyahu has,
however, said that Israel is ready for a temporary pause in fighting to allow
the exchange of Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners.
The Israeli PM
has threatened for several months to launch a ground invasion of Rafah, a city
in southern Gaza currently home to around 1.4 million displaced Palestinians
from other parts of the territory. Despite condemnation from the US, EU, and
scores of other countries, the Israeli military ordered civilians to leave
Rafah on Monday, warning that it would strike the city with “extreme force”
shortly thereafter.
It is not clear
whether the threat of invasion influenced Hamas’ decision to accept the
ceasefire proposal. Despite Netanyahu’s insistence on entering Rafah, other
Israeli officials have suggested that Hamas could avoid an invasion by agreeing
to Israel’s temporary truce.
It is also
unclear whether the deal put forward by Egypt and Qatar has Israel’s support.
An unnamed Israeli official told Reuters that Hamas agreed to a “softened”
version of West Jerusalem’s initial offer, which included ‘far-reaching”
conclusions that Israel would not support.
Israel declared
war on Hamas after the Palestinian militants launched a surprise attack on
October 7, killing around 1,200 people and taking roughly 250 hostages back to
Gaza. The death toll from Israel’s retaliation in the enclave is approaching
35,000 as of Monday, according to the Palestinian health authorities.
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