Israel on the Verge of Approving Six-Week Ceasefire in Gaza, According to US Official

Israel on the Verge of Approving Six-Week Ceasefire in Gaza, According to US Official

Israel on the Verge of Approving Six-Week Ceasefire in Gaza, According to US Official

Reports indicate that Israel‌ is close to ‍accepting a six-week ceasefire proposal ⁤for​ Gaza, according to⁣ a senior Biden ⁤administration official. This‌ comes after more than‍ 100 Palestinians died while attempting to access aid trucks in ⁣the territory.

The official stated that Israel has “more or less accepted” a ‍ceasefire to allow for the release of Hamas-held hostages in Gaza and to ​allow aid into ⁤the territory that has been ⁣devastated‍ by four months of bombardment, killing more than 30,000 people.

US aircraft carry out ⁢airdrops of aid​ to‌ Gaza with ‍38,000 mealsRead‌ more

However, Hamas has not yet agreed to a‌ “defined category of vulnerable hostages” – a sticking point to an agreement. Israel⁣ has reportedly said that ceasefire ⁤talks would not continue until Hamas presents a list of⁤ the hostages, including who is alive ​and who is dead.

The official added ‌that a second phase “to build something ⁢more enduring” would be worked out during the initial ceasefire.

On ⁢Friday, ‌US officials ‌said ​that talks to reach an agreement to halt⁣ the fighting by the Muslim holiday of Ramadan – which begins on ‍10⁢ March – appeared to be progressing, but warned‍ that a ceasefire agreement depended on a Hamas response to talks held in Paris and Doha involving⁤ Qatar, Egypt,⁢ Israel and the US.

More talks ⁣are planned in Cairo, with negotiators from the US, Israel, Egypt and ⁣Hamas expected to attend, a diplomatic source told CNN,‌ with or without the involvement⁢ of Qatar.

The first airdrops of US aid over ​the territory ‌began ‍Saturday, a ​day after ‌President‍ Biden issued a⁢ call for an “immediate⁢ ceasefire” – ‍the ‌first Biden has issued since the conflict began in‌ October.

But the US⁣ president said in a post on X that the amount of aid flowing ⁣into Gaza was “not nearly enough”,⁢ adding ‌that⁢ the US “will continue to pull ‌out every stop we can to get‌ more aid in”.

The comments came after days of ​increasing​ signaling from the administration about a ceasefire. On Tuesday,⁣ Biden⁣ said he hoped for one by the following Monday. But on Friday he said “it’s not there yet”, adding that the US would insist that Israel facilitate more trucks and more routes to get⁢ more and more people⁢ the help they ‍need.

US Central Command⁢ said the humanitarian aid ⁣drops, co-ordinated between the US and Jordan, were “part of a sustained effort to get more aid into ⁤Gaza, including by expanding the flow of aid through land corridors and routes”.

The‍ aid, and repeat ⁤signals of progress in ⁣ceasefire talks, come days after ⁣more than 100,000 voters in⁣ the key swing state of‍ Michigan signaled their anger​ at the ⁤administration’s ‍handling‌ of the crisis⁤ by voting “uncommitted” in ​the state’s Democratic⁤ primary.

Signs that the administration is more ‌willing to make public⁣ its push​ for a ceasefire came Saturday when Reuters ‍reported⁤ that vice-president Kamala Harris will meet with Israeli war cabinet member ‌Benny…

2024-03-02 16:26:53
Article​ from www.theguardian.com

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