Efforts advance for truce in

Efforts advance for truce in
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April 29, 2024 – 00:41

(Keystone-ATS) Efforts to achieve a truce in the war between and Hamas in appeared to have made progress on Sunday. The Palestinian movement claims to have noted no “major problem” with a latest ceasefire proposal.

“The atmosphere is positive, barring new obstacles posed by Israel,” a Palestinian movement official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

“No major problem is raised in the observations and requests that Hamas will submit regarding the content of the Egyptian proposal” during this meeting, said this official on the eve of a tripartite meeting Monday in Cairo with Egypt and Qatar.

Response Monday

This meeting comes almost seven months after the start of the war, triggered by the bloody attack by the Palestinian Islamist movement against Israel on October 7. A Hamas delegation will give its response in Cairo on Monday.

On Saturday, Hamas announced that it was “studying” this counter-proposal, specifying that it “will submit its response once its study is completed”.

Meanwhile, the war knows no respite in the small besieged territory threatened with famine, where Hamas took power in 2007. The Israeli army said on Sunday that it had struck “dozens of terrorist targets” in the center of Gaza.

It also claims to be preparing a ground offensive in Rafah where there are a million and a half Palestinians, mainly displaced people. Many capitals and humanitarian organizations fear a bloodbath in this already regularly bombarded by the army.

From Saudi Arabia, where a special meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF) is being held from Sunday, the president of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas, called on the States to prevent a ground invasion in Rafah. If it were to take place, the operation would be the “greatest disaster in the history of the Palestinian people,” he said.

“Total failure”

In Riyadh, in front of senior Arab and Western leaders, Saudi Arabia described the inability of the international community to stop this war as a “total failure”.

US Secretary of State Blinken is also expected in Saudi Arabia, where he will notably discuss “ongoing efforts to achieve a ceasefire in Gaza that allows the release of the hostages”, according to the State Department . He will travel to Israel and Jordan on Wednesday, according to the same Source.

In Beirut, the French Minister of Foreign Affairs, Stéphane Séjourné, discussed on Sunday with Lebanese officials ways to avoid an extension of the conflict.

Since the start of the war, there have been daily exchanges of on Israel’s northern border between the Israeli army and the Lebanese Islamist movement Hezbollah.

“A deal now”

These diplomatic negotiations are taking place while awaiting Hamas’ response to the Israeli counter-proposal.

The details of this proposal have not filtered but according to the Axios site, which cites Israeli officials, it includes the desire to discuss “the establishment of lasting calm” in Gaza.

Meanwhile, internal pressure on Benjamin Netanyahu’s government continues to increase. On Saturday evening, thousands of people gathered in Tel Aviv to demand the release of hostages kidnapped on October 7.

“A deal, now!” protesters chanted Saturday evening, while calling on the Netanyahu government to resign. Shortly before, Hamas released a video showing two hostages, Keith Siegel, 64, and Omri Miran, 47. This is the second video released in several days by Hamas.

At the rally in Tel Aviv, Mr. Miran’s father urged Hamas to “show humanity,” also asking it to “make a decision now.”

Strikes and artillery fire

On the ground, throughout Saturday, the Israeli navy targeted Hamas targets and provided support to troops deployed in the center of the territory, the army said on Sunday.

According to an AFP correspondent, the Israeli army carried out airstrikes and artillery fire in several areas of the Gaza Strip, notably in Khan Younes and Rafah, two towns in the south of the territory, as well as in Gaza City (north).

In total, 66 Palestinians died in 24 hours, according to Hamas.

“We are tired after seven months of displacement and struggle in the camps. So we insisted on returning and staying in a tent on the rubble of our house,” in Khan Younes, Abdelqader Mohammed Qwaider told AFPTV.

On Saturday, a British ship left Cyprus to accommodate hundreds of US military personnel who are building an artificial pier in Gaza to facilitate the delivery of humanitarian aid.

In the process, Cyprus announced that a ship loaded with aid, which returned from Gaza in early April after an Israeli strike killed seven humanitarian workers, was heading back towards the Palestinian territory.

The Israeli army said on Saturday that 25,000 trucks of humanitarian aid had entered Gaza since October 7. The UN Office of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) puts the figure at 23,000 trucks.

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