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Qatar urges the urgency of a Gaza ceasefire after 'positive response' from Hamas

Qatar urges the urgency of a Gaza ceasefire after 'positive response' from Hamas

Yahoo5 hours ago
APTOPIX Israel Palestinians Gaza
JERUSALEM (AP) — A key mediator on Tuesday stressed the urgency of brokering a ceasefire in Gaza after Hamas showed a 'positive response' to a proposal, but Israel has yet to weigh in as its military prepares an offensive on some of the territory's most populated areas.
The prospect of an expanded assault on areas sheltering hundreds of thousands of civilians has sparked condemnation inside Israel and abroad. Most war-weary Palestinians see no place in Gaza as safe, not even declared humanitarian zones, after 22 months of war.
Many Israelis, who rallied in the hundreds of thousands on Sunday, fear the offensive will further endanger the remaining hostages in Gaza. Just 20 of the 50 remaining are thought to be alive.
'If this (ceasefire) proposal fails, the crisis will exacerbate,' Majed al-Ansari, a spokesperson for Qatar's foreign ministry, told journalists, adding they have yet to hear from Israel on it.
Witkoff is invited to rejoin the talks
Qatar is among the countries mediating to end the war. Al-Ansari said Hamas had agreed to terms under discussion. He declined to provide details but said the proposal was 'almost identical' to one previously advanced by U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff.
That U.S. proposal was for a 60-day ceasefire, during which some of the remaining hostages would be released and the sides would negotiate a lasting ceasefire and the return of the rest.
'If we get to a deal, it shouldn't be expected that it would be instantaneously implemented,' al-Ansari said. 'We're not there yet.'
That cautious assessment came a day after the foreign minister of Egypt, another mediator, said they were were pushing for a phased deal and noted that Qatar's prime minister had joined the talks between Hamas leaders and Arab mediators.
Witkoff has been invited to rejoin the talks, Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty told The Associated Press. Witkoff pulled out of negotiations less than a month ago, accusing Hamas of not acting in good faith.
It was not clear how Witkoff has responded to the invitation.
An Israeli official on Monday said the country's positions, including on the release of all hostages, had not changed. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak with the media.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said a final push is needed to 'complete the defeat of Hamas" He has vowed to continue the war until all the hostages are returned and Hamas has been disarmed.
28 Palestinians killed in Gaza
Hospitals in Gaza said they had received the bodies of 28 Palestinians killed Tuesday, including women and children, as Israeli strikes continued across the territory. Among them were nine people killed while seeking aid, officials at two hospitals told The Associated Press.
The deaths were recorded across Gaza, including in central Deir al-Balah, southern Khan Younis and near aid distribution points, hospital officials said.
The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, an Israeli-backed private American contractor that has become the primary distributor of aid in Gaza since May, operates those sites.
Nasser Hospital also said an airstrike killed a mother, father and three children in their tent overnight in Muwasi, a camp for hundreds of thousands of civilians.
'An entire family was gone in an instant. What was their fault?' the children's grandfather, Majed al-Mashwakhi, said, sobbing.
Neither the GHF nor Israel's military immediately responded to questions about the casualties reported by Nasser, Awda and al-Aqsa hospitals.
The Palestinian death toll in the war surpassed 62,000 on Monday, according to Gaza's Health Ministry, which is part of the Hamas-run government and staffed by medical professionals. The ministry does not say how many of the dead were civilians or combatants, but says women and children make up around half of them.
In addition to that toll, other Palestinians have died from malnutrition and starvation, including three reported in the past 24 hours, the ministry said Tuesday. It says 154 adults have died of malnutrition-related causes since late June, when it began counting such deaths, and 112 children have died of malnutrition-related causes since the war began with the Hamas-led attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.
Aid groups continue to struggle to deliver supplies to Gaza. Israel imposed a full blockade in March, then allowed limited aid to resume two and a half months later. The Israeli military body in charge of humanitarian aid to Gaza, COGAT, said 370 trucks of aid entered Tuesday — still below the 600 per day that the United Nations and partners say is needed.
A new attempt to deliver aid by sea
Israel has controlled all Gaza border crossings since seizing the Palestinian side of Rafah in May 2024. With land routes restricted, aid groups have attempted to deliver supplies by air and sea.
COGAT said Tuesday that 180 pallets of aid were airdropped into Gaza with help from countries including Jordan, the United Arab Emirates and France. The U.N. and partners have called airdrops expensive, inefficient and even dangerous for people on the ground.
A ship carrying 1,200 tons of food left Cyprus on Tuesday for the Israeli port of Ashdod loaded with pasta, rice, baby food and canned goods that were pre-screened in Cyprus.
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Magdy reported from Cairo and Gambrell from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Melanie Lidman contributed from Tel Aviv, Israel.
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Follow AP's war coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war
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Tents abandoned as Palestinians flee Israeli advance into Gaza City
Tents abandoned as Palestinians flee Israeli advance into Gaza City

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Tents abandoned as Palestinians flee Israeli advance into Gaza City

Thousands have fled parts of Gaza City in recent days amid airstrikes and advancing Israeli troops, new satellite imagery shows. Israel's advance comes as it prepares to mount a full-scale invasion of the city, where the UN says around one million Palestinians are sheltering. Satellite imagery shows that entire tent camps in southeast Gaza City were emptied between 9 and 17 August as families fled the renewed attacks. The video below shows the moment of an airstrike in southeastern Gaza City on 13 August. Sky News geolocated the footage to a building less than 200 metres from a major tent camp. Another video, taken on 15 August, shows a strike on a building right next to the camp. By the following day, almost all the camp's residents had fled, along with people sheltering at 30 other locations in the area. Fresh vehicle tracks in the area indicate extensive troop movements on the ground. The satellite image below, taken on 17 August, shows at least nine military vehicles in the streets surrounding one former tent camp. Sky News counted 58 military vehicles in the area on 17 August, including 17 bulldozers. The image below shows four IDF vehicles, including a bulldozer, parked next to the remains of one tent camp. Several nearby buildings had been levelled in the days beforehand. Between 9 and 17 August, at least 132 buildings were destroyed in less than one square kilometre of the city. It's unclear how much of the destruction was carried out by IDF bulldozers and how much was a result of airstrikes. On Monday, eyewitnesses reported that Israeli tanks had made further advances into eastern Gaza City. The advances came as Hamas said it had approved a ceasefire deal presented by mediators Egypt and Qatar. Israel has yet to respond to the proposal. Earlier this month, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu instructed his country's military to prepare for a full-scale invasion and occupation of the city in order to "free Gaza from Hamas". The UN has said that the invasion risks "catastrophic consequences" for the estimated one million Palestinians sheltering in the city, while UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said the plan would "only bring more bloodshed". The Data and Forensics team is a multi-skilled unit dedicated to providing transparent journalism from Sky News. We gather, analyse and visualise data to tell data-driven stories. We combine traditional reporting skills with advanced analysis of satellite images, social media and other open source information. Through multimedia storytelling we aim to better explain the world while also showing how our journalism is done.

Analysis: Did Trump really end six wars?
Analysis: Did Trump really end six wars?

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time24 minutes ago

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Analysis: Did Trump really end six wars?

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His record is also blotted by the failure of his first-term peace efforts with North Korea. Leader Kim Jong Un now has more nuclear weapons than before Trump offered him fruitless, photo-op summits. Some of Trump's biggest successes have been behind the scenes. 'I'm struck by the fact that the ones that were helpful, especially India-Pakistan, were conducted in a professional way, quietly, diplomatically … laying the ground and finding common ground between the parties,' said Celeste Wallander, a former assistant secretary of defense who is now with the Center for a New American Security. The most recent triumph was a joint peace declaration signed by Armenia and Azerbaijan on their long-running conflict in the Caucasus. The agreement, inked at a lavish White House ceremony, commits the two former Soviet republics to recognizing each other's borders and to renouncing violence against the other. 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'Hamas must give up control': Fatah official lays out vision for Gaza after war
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'Hamas must give up control': Fatah official lays out vision for Gaza after war

Al-Hayek stresses that the Palestinian Authority should govern Gaza after the war and urges international backing for reconstruction. GAZA CITY - Munther Al-Hayek, spokesperson for the Palestinian Fatah Movement in the Gaza Strip, spoke with The Media Line about Fatah's vision for post-war Gaza. He described a future government under Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa, the removal of Hamas from power, coordination with Arab states, and the role of the Palestinian Authority (PA). Discussing governance after the war, Al-Hayek said Gaza should be administered by a government headed by Mustafa and stressed that Hamas should be pressured to step down. He explained that Fatah is engaged in 'intensive and ongoing communications' with Egypt and other Arab countries about postwar arrangements. Al-Hayek pointed out that an Arab-Islamic plan—endorsed by both the Arab Summit and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation in Jeddah - calls for the PA to 'impose its legal jurisdiction over the Gaza Strip.' 'The day following the war must be distinctly Palestinian,' he told The Media Line, noting that Israel has rejected proposals giving the PA control. He added that the PA is 'the official and legitimate face of the State of Palestine.' According to Al-Hayek, Fatah believes the Mustafa government should take full legal authority in Gaza, backed by 'all political parties, including Fatah and the Palestinian factions,' so it can 'fulfill its administrative and governance responsibilities in Gaza, particularly the day after the war.' He said that afterward, the process should move toward 'legislative, presidential, and National Council elections, allowing the Palestinian people to choose their future leadership.' Ending war is immediate priority Ending the war, he continued, was the immediate priority. 'Right now, all we are thinking about is ending the war in the Gaza Strip,' he said, 'and then moving towards a political process that leads to the establishment of the Palestinian state and its embodiment on the ground in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, with Jerusalem as its capital.' Al-Hayek made clear that Hamas should relinquish its governing role. 'We have requested Hamas to exit the governmental and administrative scene,' he told The Media Line. 'We have not asked Hamas members and their families to leave the Gaza Strip, as they remain an integral part of the Palestinian people. However, Hamas is now required to step back from this governing role.' He said Hamas 'currently finds itself in a difficult situation' and that 'all Palestinian factions desire nothing but to reach a clear and well-defined agreement' allowing the PA to take over governance in Gaza, as it already does in the West Bank. One reason Hamas must step aside, he argued, is that 'the situation after October 7 is entirely different from what it was before October 7.' The war, he said, has created 'complex security circumstances,' including the occupation of large parts of Gaza, demographic and geographic shifts, and 'the presence of occupying forces in the Strip.' 'To alleviate all the suffering and harsh pain endured by our people,' he said, 'Hamas must step aside and allow the Palestinian National Authority to assume responsibility.' Responding to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's remark that 'neither Fatahstan, nor Hamastan, nor the Palestinian Authority will exist in the Gaza Strip,' Al-Hayek cited international support for a PA role. He noted that when the European Union called for the PA's presence at the Rafah crossing, 'it meant the Palestinian Authority, regardless of the form or nature of its presence.' Turning to humanitarian concerns, Al-Hayek said Gaza will face an enormous task of rebuilding once the war ends. 'The Gaza Strip needs reconstruction. It needs the world to mobilize for food and reconstruction,' he said. But he added, 'this world will not mobilize, pay, or undertake reconstruction except through the legitimate body.' That legitimate body, he emphasized, is 'the Palestinian National Authority, which represents the Palestinians in the territories occupied in 1967.' He said there are ongoing contacts with 'the entire international community, the United Nations, and the European Union,' and added, 'There will certainly be contacts with the United States.' Speaking about Washington's role, Al-Hayek criticized the lack of American action so far. 'Unfortunately, up to this moment, the United States and the administration of President Trump—who personally spoke about extinguishing fires across the entire Middle East—have not yet acted regarding Gaza,' he said. 'We have not found any initiative from the United States to stop the war in Gaza.' He urged the US to recognize 'there was already a proposed solution on the table, which is the two-state solution.' Without it, he warned, 'hatred will persist within this generation that experienced the war of October 7. This generation will fully realize that if the Palestinian issue is not resolved, there will be neither security nor peace in the Middle East region, especially in Palestine.' 'Therefore,' he said, 'the United States is required to take a step forward—first to stop the war, then to assist the Palestinian people in obtaining their rights.' Those rights, he concluded, 'can only be achieved through the realization of a Palestinian state, with Jerusalem as its capital—this is for sure.' The Fatah spokesperson also emphasized the importance of regional and global backing. 'We have experienced a war in the Gaza Strip that targeted our people. The international community, our Arab brothers, our friends, and the European Union must stand by the Palestinian people.' Asked whether Gazans would be allowed to leave, Al-Hayek was unequivocal. 'The Palestinian people do not want to leave Gaza,' he told The Media Line. 'We repeat each time: We will remain in Gaza until Judgment Day. Here we were born, and here we shall die.' He acknowledged that some residents might travel temporarily 'for leisure, education, or medical treatment,' but rejected the idea of permanent departure. To abandon Gaza, he said, in the way envisioned by 'Netanyahu's extremist government, along with Smotrich and Ben-Gvir—that is an illusion. We emphasize clearly: this is an illusion. We will remain in Gaza until Judgment Day.' 'We are the rightful owners of this land; we will build it, develop it, live upon it, and be buried beneath its soil,' he said. 'Some of us might leave temporarily due to difficult living conditions, for education or medical treatment. But to leave and abandon our homes, houses, history, and lives—that certainly is an illusion.' No Palestinian, he added, 'would accept leaving their property, life, and memories behind simply because of a war.' Only the National Security Forces, Al-Hayek said, should be deployed 'to protect public properties and the properties of citizens.' Any administrative or support committees, he argued, must 'be part of the Palestinian Authority and the Palestinian government. We do not say 'coordinate' with the Authority, as 'coordination' is a vague term.' He called the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) 'the representative of the Palestinian people' and said it will determine Gaza's future. 'Whoever wishes to govern the Strip must go to the ballot box, because it is the Palestinian people who choose their future leadership,' he said. The spokesperson pointed to a 'clear plan proposed by Fatah' through Egypt that affirms 'on the day after, legitimacy belongs exclusively to the official body representing the Palestinian people.' He concluded by calling for a ceasefire 'at least during this phase' that would include 'the release of hostages from the Gaza Strip' and the release by Israel of prisoners who, he said, 'fought for freedom and independence.' 'Regarding pressure,' he finished, 'we have repeatedly demanded—and we demand once again for the thousandth time—that Hamas exit the governmental scene. Hamas must leave the Gaza Strip to the legitimate government, which represents Palestinian citizens in both the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.'

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