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Hamas demands changes to Witkoff's new Gaza ceasefire proposal

Hamas demands changes to Witkoff's new Gaza ceasefire proposal

Yahoo4 days ago

A source close to Hamas said that group claimed the new proposal is more biased in favor of Israel than previous proposals.
Hamas said on Thursday that it does not accept the outline for US envoy Steve Witkoff's ceasefire and hostage deal proposal at face value, and has demanded certain changes, according to sources familiar with the details.
A source familiar with the details told The Jerusalem Post that Hamas feels deceived by the US administration, believing it has been "screwed over" with a pro-Israel proposal that does not guarantee an end to the war.
The proposal also requires all hostages to be returned to Israel within a week, leaving Hamas without further leverage.
A source close to Hamas told Walla that the group claimed the new proposal is more biased in favor of Israel than previous proposals and that Witkoff accepted most of the demands presented by Ron Dermer in a meeting with him on Tuesday.
Additionally, the source noted that the new proposal does not provide a clear American guarantee that the temporary ceasefire will lead to a permanent one. Furthermore, the proposal does not specify that if negotiations extend beyond 60 days, the ceasefire will also continue, and Israel will not be able to unilaterally violate it as it did in March, Walla quoted.
According to a senior Israeli official, "Contrary to reports, the Witkoff agreement proposed in recent days did not determine the new deployment line of the IDF, nor the manner in which aid would be distributed within the framework of a ceasefire."
"The Hamas Movement's leadership has received the new Witkoff proposal from the mediators and is reviewing it responsibly to serve the interests of our people, provide them relief, and achieve a permanent ceasefire in the Gaza Strip," Hamas said in a statement.
The new proposal would include the release of 10 living hostages along with 18 deceased. The hostage release would take place in two rounds, a source told The Jerusalem Post.
Additionally, both sides would agree to a 60-day ceasefire that can be extended after the deadline if Hamas and Israel agree.
Lastly, the IDF would withdraw from areas in Gaza, and the United Nations would take over the distribution of humanitarian aid.

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