Entry into force of truce between Israel and Hamas delayed

Entry into force of truce between Israel and Hamas delayed
Entry into force of truce between Israel and Hamas delayed

The entry into force of a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas, initially scheduled for Sunday at 06:30 GMT, has been delayed, Palestinian Hamas having not yet submitted the list of hostages to be released during the day as Israel demanded.

Hamas affirmed, in a statement, that it had every intention of respecting the agreement but acknowledged a delay “in providing the names of the hostages to be released”, and this “for technical reasons on the ground “.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “informed the army that the ceasefire scheduled to take effect at 8:30 a.m. (06:30 GMT) will not begin until Israel has a list of hostages expected to be released and which Hamas has undertaken to provide,” according to a press release.

The ceasefire negotiated by Qatar with the help of the United States and Egypt is supposed to come into effect at 06:30 GMT. It must be followed by the release of Israeli hostages held in Gaza.

The agreement, reached by mediators on Wednesday, a few days before the inauguration of the new American president Donald Trump, fueled hopes for lasting peace despite another warning from Benjamin Netanyahu.

The latter warned that it was “a provisional ceasefire” and that his country retained “the right to resume the war if necessary and with the support of the United States”.

Under the terms of the agreement, hostilities must cease and 33 Israeli hostages must be released, in a first phase spread over six weeks.

In exchange, Israel will release 737 Palestinian prisoners, according to the Israeli Ministry of Justice, with Egypt reporting “more than 1,890 Palestinian prisoners” to be released during this first phase.

Hostages will be released on Sunday, the Israeli government announced, without specifying their number or at what time.

Three reception points have been set up on Israel’s southern border with Gaza, at the Kerem Shalom and Eretz crossings and at the one near Kibbutz Reim, a military official said. The captives will be taken care of by doctors;

“Breathe again”

© GPO/AFP

This image from a video released by the Israeli Government Press Office (GPO) shows Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu giving a televised speech in Jerusalem on January 18, 2025

According to sources close to Hamas, the first group of hostages released should include three Israeli women.

Israel designated 95 Palestinian detainees for release on Sunday, the majority women and minors, most of them arrested after October 7. Their release will take place after 2:00 p.m. GMT, according to the authorities.

Among the prisoners expected to be released is Zakaria al-Zoubeidi, responsible for anti-Israeli attacks and former local leader of the armed wing of Fatah, arrested and imprisoned in 2019.

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Two Franco-Israelis, Ofer Kalderon, 54, and Ohad Yahalomi, 50, are among the 33 hostages who can be released, according to . They were kidnapped from Kibbutz Nir Oz along with several of their children, released during an initial one-week truce in November 2023.

“When they cross the (Gaza) border and are reunited with their families, then maybe we can breathe again,” Shahar Mor Zahiro, nephew of a deceased hostage, told AFP on Saturday evening , during a demonstration in Tel Aviv.

On Sunday morning, before the truce came into effect, the Israeli army ordered Gazans not to approach its soldiers or head towards the buffer zone. “At this point, heading towards the buffer zone or moving from south to north puts you in danger,” Arabic-language army spokesperson Avichay Adraee warned on Telegram.

600 aid trucks

According to US President Joe Biden, the first phase also includes an Israeli withdrawal from densely populated areas in Gaza and an increase in humanitarian aid in the territory threatened by famine according to the UN.

Egyptian authorities specified that the agreement provided for “the entry of 600 aid trucks per day”, including 50 fuel trucks.

During the first phase, the modalities of the second will be negotiated, which should allow the release of the last hostages, before the third and final stage devoted to the reconstruction of Gaza and the restitution of the bodies of hostages who died in captivity.

In the conflict-ravaged Gaza Strip, many displaced Palestinians said they were in a hurry to return home.

“We are looking forward to this moment. We want to be safe,” Ahmed Hamouda, a displaced Palestinian, told AFP in Deir el-Balah (center).

The agreement aims, according to Qatar, to lead to a definitive end to the war, triggered by a bloody attack by the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas in Israel on October 7, 2023.

AFP

© AFP

Hostages in Gaza

The attack resulted in the deaths of 1,210 people on the Israeli side, the majority civilians, according to an AFP count based on official data. Of the 251 people kidnapped that day, 94 are still hostages in Gaza, 34 of whom are dead according to the Israeli army.

At least 46,899 people, mostly civilians, were killed in the Israeli retaliatory offensive in Gaza, according to data from the Hamas Health Ministry deemed reliable by the UN.

Considerably weakened, Hamas, which took power in Gaza in 2007, is however still far from being wiped out, contrary to the objective set by Benjamin Netanyahu, according to experts.

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