GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories: Envoys pushed on with efforts for a Gaza truce and hostage release deal in Cairo talks Wednesday, hoping to halt nearly five months of fighting with days to go before Ramadan.
US President Joe Biden had urged Hamas to accept a ceasefire plan with Israel before the Muslim fasting month begins, which could be as early as Sunday depending on the sighting of the crescent moon.
As negotiators in Egypt sought to overcome tough stumbling blocks, deadly fighting again rocked Gaza where the UN warns famine looms and desperate crowds have stopped and looted food aid trucks.
Gazans were waiting to collect bags of flour outside an office of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, in Rafah, now home to nearly 1.5 million Palestinians, most of them displaced by the war.
âThe flour they provide is not enough,â said displaced man Muhammad Abu Odeh. âThey do not provide us with sugar or anything else except flour.â
In Khan Yunis, dozens of people went to inspect their homes before streaming out along streets lined by bombed-out buildings carrying what belongings they could recover after Israeli forces pulled out of the city center, an AFP correspondent said.
The army has yet to respond to an AFP request to confirm such a withdrawal.
Biden on Tuesday called on Hamas to accept the truce plan brokered by US, Qatari and Egyptian mediators, saying âitâs in the hands of Hamas right now.â
The proposed deal would pause fighting for âat least six weeks,â see the ârelease of sick, wounded, elderly and women hostagesâ and allow for âa surge of humanitarian assistance,â the White House said.
One known sticking point centers on an Israeli demand for Hamas to provide a list of about 100 hostages believed to still be alive â a task Hamas says it is unable to complete while bombing continues.
The Palestinian Islamist group said in a statement it had âshown the required flexibility with the aim of reaching an agreement,â insisting on a complete halt to the fighting.
In past years, violence has flared during Ramadan in annexed east Jerusalemâs Al-Aqsa mosque compound â Islamâs third-holiest site and Judaismâs most sacred, known to Jews as the Temple Mount.
Hamas has urged Muslims to flock there in great numbers, as they do every year, while some Israeli far-right politicians have urged restrictions.
Israel has said Muslims will initially be allowed into the site âin similar numbersâ as in recent years, but that this will be followed by a weekly âsituation assessment.â
The war began after Hamas launched the October 7 attack on southern Israel that resulted in about 1,160 deaths, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
The militants also took around 250 hostages, and Israel believes 99 of them remain alive in Gaza and that 31 have died.
Israelâs retaliatory offensive has killed at least 30,717 people, mostly women and children, according to the Gaza health ministry.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to push on with the campaign to destroy Hamas, before or after any truce deal.
The Israeli army said Wednesday it lost one more soldier in Gaza, taking the total killed to 247 since ground operations began on October 27.
While the war has reduced vast stretches of Gaza to a wasteland of gutted buildings and rubble, the siege has sparked a humanitarian disaster for its 2.4 million people.
Hunger has reached âcatastrophic levelsâ in the north, the UN World Food Programme has warned.
âChildren are dying of hunger-related diseases and suffering severe levels of malnutrition,â it said, with the latest victim according to the health ministry being a 15-year-old girl who died at Gaza Cityâs Al-Shifa Hospital.
Health ministry spokesman Ashraf Al-Qudra said âthe famine in northern Gaza has reached lethal levelsâ and could claim thousands of lives unless Gaza receives more aid and medical supplies.
South Africa on Wednesday petitioned the International Court of Justice to impose more emergency measures against Israel over what it described as the âwidespread starvationâ occurring in Gaza as a result of its offensive.
It is the second time Pretoria has asked the court for additional measures â its first request in February was denied.
British foreign minister David Cameron on Wednesday pressed Israel to increase the flow of aid into Gaza.
âWe are still not seeing improvements on the ground. This must change,â Cameron said he told Israeli war cabinet member Benny Gantz during a meeting.
More than 100 people were reported killed in bloody chaos last week when thousands of people swarmed aid trucks. Gaza officials blamed the deaths on Israeli gunfire, while the army insisted most were trampled or run over.
Another truck convoy was diverted by Israeli troops within Gaza late Tuesday and then stopped by âa large crowd of desperate people who looted the food,â said the WFP.
Jordanian, US and other planes have repeatedly airdropped food into Gaza.
But WFP deputy chief Carl Skau said âairdrops are a last resort and will not avert famine.â
Israel, which has recalled its UN envoy in a sign of growing tensions, said the Security Council should âdesignate Hamas immediately as a terrorist organizationâ and impose sanctions on it.
Government spokesman Eylon Levy also demanded âa fierce condemnationâ of sexual violence committed during the Hamas attack, after a UN report found âreasonable grounds to believeâ there had been instances of rape on October 7.
Envoys push for Gaza truce before Ramadan starts next week
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Updated 07 March 2024
Envoys push for Gaza truce before Ramadan starts next week

- As negotiators in Egypt sought to overcome tough stumbling blocks, deadly fighting again rocked Gaza where the UN warns famine looms