Hamas rejects 'new' Gaza truce conditions as Biden says deal closer than ever
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In scorching weather, a boy walks through a puddle of sewage water surrounded by mounds of garbage and rubble in Jabalia, northern Gaza -- health workers say diseases are spreading (Omar AL-QATTAA)
Hamas said Friday the Palestinian group rejected "new
conditions" in a Gaza ceasefire plan the United States presented after two
days of talks with Israeli negotiators in Qatar.
As international pressure mounted for a ceasefire after more
than 10 months of war between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip, US President
Joe Biden said: "We are closer than we have ever been."
Washington has joined its European allies in pushing for a
swift ceasefire in Gaza since the July 31 killing of Hamas political leader
Ismail Haniyeh in an attack in Iran blamed on Israel prompted threats of
retaliation and fears of a wider Middle East war.
Egyptian, Qatari and US mediators have been seeking to
finalise details of a framework initially outlined by Biden in May, and which
he said Israel had proposed.
But months of talks have so far failed to pin down the
details of a truce and hostage release deal.
The mediators said that the two days of talks in Doha were
"serious and constructive".
In a joint statement, they said the United States had
presented a "bridging proposal" that sought to secure a rapid deal at
a new round of talks in Cairo next week.
Hamas swiftly announced its opposition to what it called
"new conditions" from Israel in the latest plan.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meanwhile called
on the mediators to put "pressure" on Hamas "to accept the May
27 principles", referring to Biden's framework.
An informed source told AFP that the conditions Hamas
objected to included keeping Israeli troops inside Gaza along the territory's
border with Egypt, veto rights for Israel on the Palestinian prisoners to be
exchanged for Israeli hostages, and the ability to deport some prisoners rather
than send them back to Gaza.
Qatar's lead mediator, Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin
Abdulrahman Al-Thani spoke with Iran's acting foreign minister Ali Bagheri to
brief him about the talks, the foreign ministry in Doha said.
"During the call, they reviewed ... the
latest developments in the joint mediation efforts to end the war on the Strip,
and stressed the need for calm and de-escalation in the region," the
Qatari statement said.
Diplomatic pressure on Israel to agree a truce has
increased in recent weeks.
Hamas officials, some analysts and protesters in Israel have
accused Netanyahu of prolonging the war.
Ahead of a visit to Israel on Friday with French Foreign
Minister Stephane Sejourne, British Foreign Secretary David Lammy said:
"The risk of the situation spiralling out of control is rising."
Britain's foreign ministry said the two ministers would
"stress there is no time for delays or excuses from all parties on a
ceasefire deal" in Gaza.
Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz told his visiting
counterparts he expects foreign support "in attacking" Iran if it
strikes Israel in revenge for Haniyeh's killing.
Sejourne replied that it would be "inappropriate"
to discuss responding to any attack while diplomacy is in high gear to stop it
happening.
A deadly attack by Israeli settlers in the occupied West
Bank late Thursday drew international condemnation and calls for sanctions
against those within the Israeli government who had enabled the upsurge in
settler violence against Palestinians, particularly since the Gaza war began.
The Israeli military said "dozens of Israeli civilians,
some of them masked", entered the village of Jit, west of Nablus, and
"set fire to vehicles and structures in the area, hurled rocks and Molotov
cocktails". A Palestinian man was shot dead.
Villager Hassan Arman said the settlers were armed with
knives, a machine gun and a silencer.
"It was horrific," said UN human rights office
spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani.
"What is striking and important to remember is that
yesterday's killing in Jit is not an isolated attack, and it is the direct
consequence of Israel's policy of settlement in the West Bank," she added.
The Palestinian foreign ministry described the attack as
"organised state terrorism".
The British foreign minister called the attack
"abhorrent". The French minister said it was
"unacceptable".
The EU's top diplomat Josep Borrell said he would propose
sanctions against Israeli government "enablers" of Jewish settler
violence.
"Day after day, in an almost total impunity, Israeli
settlers fuel violence in the occupied West Bank, contributing to endanger any chance
of peace," Borrell posted on X.
"The Israeli government must stop these unacceptable
actions immediately," he wrote, vowing to "table a proposal for EU
sanctions against violent settlers' enablers, including some Israeli government
members".
The last was an apparent allusion to far-right ministers in
the Israeli government.
One of them, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, was quick to
join other Israeli leaders in condemning Thursday night's attack by
"criminals".
Hamas's unprecedented October 7 attack on Israel triggered
the war that resulted in the deaths of 1,198 people, mostly civilians,
according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures.
Militants also seized 251 hostages, 111 of whom are still
held in Gaza, including 39 the military says are dead. More than 100 were freed
during a one-week truce in November.
On Thursday, the toll from Israel's retaliatory military
campaign in Gaza topped 40,000, according to the health ministry in Hamas-run
Gaza, which does not provide a breakdown of civilian and militant casualties.
As the Gaza truce talks drag on, bombs have continued to
fall in the Palestinian territory.
"Why did Netanyahu send a delegation to the talks while
we are being killed here?" in Jabalia, Mohammed al-Balwi asked among the
concrete debris left from a deadly air strike Thursday in north Gaza.
Witnesses reported air raids on Friday in central Gaza
and near the southern city of Khan Yunis.
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