logo
Israel makes new Gaza ceasefire proposal

Israel makes new Gaza ceasefire proposal

Gulf Today15-04-2025
Mediators Egypt and Qatar have presented a new Israeli proposal for a Gaza ceasefire to Hamas, Egyptian state-affiliated Al Qahera News TV said on Monday, but a senior Hamas official said at least two elements of the proposal were nonstarters.
Citing sources, Al Qahera said mediators awaited Hamas' response.
Hamas said in a statement later in the day that it was studying the proposal and that it will submit its response "as soon as possible". The Palestinian group reiterated its core demand that a ceasefire deal must end the war in Gaza and achieve a full Israeli pull-out from the strip.
Earlier, senior Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri told Reuters that the proposal did not meet the Palestinian group's demand that Israel commit to a complete halt of hostilities.
In the proposal, Israel also for the first time called for the disarmament of Hamas in the next phase of negotiations, which the group will not agree to, Abu Zuhri said.
"Handing over the resistance's weapons is a million red lines and is not subject to consideration, let alone discussion", Abu Zuhri said.
Mourners pray next to the bodies of Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes in Khan Younis, Gaza, on Tuesday. Reuters
Israel did not immediately comment on the reported proposal.
The head of the Egyptian state information service told Al Qahera: "Hamas knows very well the value of time now and I believe that its response to the Israeli proposal will be quick."
Israel restarted its offensive in the enclave in March, ending a ceasefire that went into effect in late January. The latest round of talks on Monday in Cairo to restore the ceasefire and free Israeli hostages ended with no apparent breakthrough, Palestinian and Egyptian sources said.
Hamas insists Israel commit to ending the war and pull out its forces from the Gaza Strip as agreed in the three-phase ceasefire accord that went into effect in late January.
Israel has said it will not end the war unless Hamas is eliminated and returns the remaining hostages held in Gaza.
"Hamas is ready to hand over the hostages in one batch in exchange for the end of war and the withdrawal of Israeli military" from Gaza, Abu Zuhri said.
Since restarting its military offensive last month, Israeli forces have killed more than 1,500 Palestinians, Gaza health authorities have said. It has displaced hundreds of thousands of people and imposed a blockade on all supplies entering the enclave.
Meanwhile, 59 Israeli hostages remain in the hands of the Palestinian group Hamas. Israel believes 24 of them are alive.
Reuters
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Canada intends to recognise Palestinian state at UN General Assembly: Carney
Canada intends to recognise Palestinian state at UN General Assembly: Carney

Al Etihad

timean hour ago

  • Al Etihad

Canada intends to recognise Palestinian state at UN General Assembly: Carney

31 July 2025 09:06 OTTAWA (AFP) Canada plans to recognise a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly in September, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said Wednesday, a dramatic policy shift that Israel immediately rejected. Carney said the move was necessary to preserve hopes of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a long-standing Canadian goal that was "being eroded before our eyes.""Canada intends to recognise the State of Palestine at the 80th Session of the United Nations General Assembly in September 2025," the prime minister said. It makes Canada the third country, following recent announcements by France and the United Kingdom, that could recognise a Palestinian state in said the worsening suffering of civilians in Gaza left "no room for delay in coordinated international action to support peace."Israel blasted Canada's announcement as part of a "distorted campaign of international pressure."Asked by reporters if there was a scenario where Canada could change its position before the UN meeting, Carney said: "There's a scenario (but) possibly one that I can't imagine."Canada's intention "is predicated on the Palestinian Authority's commitment to much-needed reforms," Carney said, referring to the body led by President Mahmoud Abbas, which has civil authority in parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Carney said his plans were further predicated on Abbas's pledge to "hold general elections in 2026 in which Hamas can play no part, and to demilitarise the Palestinian state."

Canada intends to recognise Palestinian state at UN General Assembly
Canada intends to recognise Palestinian state at UN General Assembly

Khaleej Times

time2 hours ago

  • Khaleej Times

Canada intends to recognise Palestinian state at UN General Assembly

Canada plans to recognise a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly in September, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Wednesday, a dramatic policy shift he said was necessary to preserve hopes of a two-state solution. "Canada intends to recognise the State of Palestine at the 80th Session of the United Nations General Assembly in September 2025," Carney said. With Wednesday's announcement, Carney positioned Canada alongside France, after President Emmanuel Macron said his country would formally recognise a Palestinian state during the UN meeting, the most powerful European nation to announce such a move. Macron's announcement drew condemnation from Israel, which said the move "rewards terror," while US President Donald Trump dismissed the decision as pointless. Carney said his decision was informed by Canada's "long-standing" belief in a two-state solution to the decades-long Israeli-Palestinian conflict. "That possibility of a two-state solution is being eroded before our eyes," the prime minister told reporters in Ottawa. He referenced Israel's "ongoing failure" to prevent humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza amid its war against Hamas, as well the expansion of settlements in the occupied West Bank and Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem. "For decades, it was hoped that (a two-state solution) would be achieved as part of a peace process built around a negotiated settlement between the Israeli government and the Palestinian Authority," he said. "Regrettably, this approach is no longer tenable."

Veteran of Gaza aid flotillas refuses to allow Israel to steer her off course
Veteran of Gaza aid flotillas refuses to allow Israel to steer her off course

The National

time3 hours ago

  • The National

Veteran of Gaza aid flotillas refuses to allow Israel to steer her off course

Fifteen years ago, Palestinian American human rights lawyer Huwaida Arraf was sailing with a flotilla carrying 10,000 tonnes of aid to Gaza when Israeli forces intercepted the ships, killing 10 activists. It was not her first attempt to help civilians suffering under Israel's blockade of the Palestinian territory, which it tightened after Hamas seized control in 2007, nor would it be her last. Since then, Ms Arraf has attempted to make that trip several times, each time with different difficulties. The most recent was aboard the Handala, which was intercepted by Israel on Sunday and all 21 people on board detained. Israel said it was stopping the ship from 'illegally entering the maritime zone of the coast of Gaza', which is under a blockade by Israeli forces that is illegal under international law. 'To stop a small boat carrying baby formula and teddy bears for kids in Gaza, they sent their elite commando forces,' Ms Arraf said. 'We couldn't see in the dark but could see on the radar eight military warships.' That is when Ms Arraf sent her now famous radio message statement to the Israeli army, demanding that they stand down as they had no authority to enforce a blockade over Gaza. Men in Israeli military fatigues carrying weapons and cameras boarded the ship as the volunteers sat on the deck with life jackets on and their hands raised. 'They were filming themselves saying that we're safe, that they had doctors and giving us water. We rejected all of it and told them we're not taking anything from an entity that's deliberately starving children, and that our lives are not more valuable than theirs.' Ms Arraf, who also has an Israeli passport, was not deported and remains in Israel. Six other US nationals who were aboard the Handala are being held in an Israeli prison along with two Spanish citizens, a Tunisian and a Norwegian. The rest of those aboard the Handala were either released or deported. Lawyers for those detained issued a statement saying that their clients were being held in poor conditions in Israel's Givon prison in Ramlah – in unventilated cells infested with bed bugs, and with no time outdoors. The National contacted the Israeli Prison Services for comment. Ms Arraf's latest attempt to break the blockade on Gaza comes as the territory's population experiences famine after months of Israeli restrictions on the entry of food as part of its war against Hamas since October 2023. Israeli tactics Ms Arraf was part of the very first flotilla to attempt to break the Israeli blockade in 2008, under a coalition of rights and pro-Palestinian groups called the Free Gaza Movement. A total of 44 people from 17 countries set sail for Gaza from Cyprus in two small fishing boats. 'We were not a threat. We had parliamentarians, journalists and all kinds of people. They would have to attack us to stop us – so people can see that Israel's policy has nothing to do with security but punishing the Palestinian people as a form of collective punishment, which is a war crime,' she said. Although Israel threatened to stop the ships, and jammed their communications at sea, they did not intercept them. But everything changed after the first Israel-Gaza war broke out in December that year, as Israel launch an aerial and ground assault it called Operation Cast Lead. By the summer of 2009, activists had made three attempts to reach Gaza by sea and came under Israeli attack every time. 'At that point, we had a choice – either say that this isn't working any more and we stop or, we had to escalate. But we didn't want to give in to the notion that Israel is stronger than the rights we were seeking,' Ms Arraf said. But things only became worse. In May 2010, a flotilla carrying 10,000 tonnes of aid and 700 people from 36 countries were subjected to lethal force by Israeli forces. Nine activists on the Turkish ship MV Mavi Marmara were killed when boarders opened fire, with a tenth dying after four years in a coma. Ms Arraf laments how little has changed in terms of global silence and complicity with Israel's actions in Gaza. 'In what legal moral order do you allow a state under trial for genocide to control what aid is getting to the people it's exterminating?' But she says she is determined to keep going. 'They want us to accept a world in which there are no human rights protections or respect of international law and where might is right. But this is a world no one should accept.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store