Egypt proposes 2-day Gaza cease-fire, release of 4 hostages
UNB
Publish: 28 Oct 2024, 03:22 PM
RAMAT
HASHARON, Oct 28 (AP/UNB) - Egypt's president announced Sunday his country has
proposed a two-day cease-fire between Israel and Hamas during which four
hostages held in Gaza would be freed.
There was no immediate
response from Israel or Hamas as the latest talks were expected in Qatar,
another key mediator.
President Abdel Fattah
el-Sissi said the proposal includes the release of some Palestinian prisoners
and the delivery of humanitarian aid to besieged Gaza. It aims to "move
the situation forward," he said, adding that negotiations would continue
to make the cease-fire permanent.
Talks in pursuit of a
longer, phased cease-fire have repeatedly stalled. Hamas wants Israeli forces
out of Gaza as a precondition, but Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
has said they will remain until destroying Hamas. There hasn't been a
cease-fire since November's weeklong pause in fighting in the earliest weeks of
the war.
Israel's Mossad chief was
traveling to Doha on Sunday for talks with Qatar's prime minister and the CIA
chief in the latest attempt to end the fighting and ease regional tensions that
have built since Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023 attack on southern Israel.
Those tensions now see
Israel at war with both Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon, and openly
attacking Iran, their backer, for the first time this weekend. Iran's supreme
leader on Sunday said Israel's strikes - in response to Iran's ballistic
missile attack this month - "should not be exaggerated nor
downplayed," while stopping short of calling for retaliation.
During a government
memorial for the Hebrew anniversary of the Oct. 7 attack, Israeli Defense
Minister Yoav Gallant said that "not every goal can be achieved through only
military operations," adding that "painful compromises will be
required" to return the hostages.
At the same event,
protesters disrupted Netanyahu's speech, shouting "Shame on you."
Many Israelis blame him for the security failures that led to the attack and
hold him responsible for not yet bringing hostages home.
Inside Gaza, the latest
Israeli strikes in the north killed at least 33 people, mostly women and
children, Palestinian officials said, as an offensive in the hard-hit and
isolated area entered a third week. The U.N. secretary-general called the
plight of Palestinians there "unbearable." Israel said it targeted
militants.
Netanyahu says strikes
on Iran achieved Israel's goals
Netanyahu in his first
public comments on the strikes said "we severely harmed Iran's defense
capabilities and its ability to produce missiles that are aimed toward
us."
Satellite images showed
damage to two secretive Iranian military bases, one linked to work on nuclear
weapons that Western intelligence agencies and nuclear inspectors say was
discontinued in 2003. The other is linked to Iran's ballistic missile program.
Iran said a civilian had been killed, with no details. It earlier said four
people with the military air defense were killed.
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
Iran's 85-year-old supreme leader, said "it is up to the authorities to
determine how to convey the power and will of the Iranian people to the Israeli
regime." Khamenei would make any final decision on how Iran responds.
The U.N. Security Council
scheduled an emergency meeting Monday at Iran's request. Switzerland, which
holds the council's rotating presidency, said Russia, China and Algeria, the
council's Arab representative, supported the request.
Iran's most powerful
proxy is Hezbollah, which has stepped up firing on Israel in response to
Israel's ground invasion in southern Lebanon in recent weeks.
Two Israeli strikes
killed eight people in Sidon in southern Lebanon, with 25 wounded, according to
Lebanon's health ministry.
The Israeli military
said four soldiers, including a military rabbi, were killed in fighting in
southern Lebanon, without providing details. An explosive drone and a
projectile fired from Lebanon wounded five people in Israel, authorities said.
Truck ramming in Israel
wounds dozens
A truck rammed into a
bus stop in Ramat Hasharon near Tel Aviv, killing one person and wounding more
than 30. Israeli police said the attacker was an Arab citizen of Israel and had
been "neutralized." The ramming occurred outside a military base and
near the headquarters of Israel's Mossad spy agency.
Hamas and the smaller
Islamic Jihad militant group praised the attack but did not claim it.
Tensions have soared
since the war in Gaza began, and Israel has carried out regular military raids
into the occupied West Bank that have left hundreds dead.
'Harrowing levels of
death' in northern Gaza
The Gaza Health
Ministry's emergency service said 11 women and two children were among 22
killed in strikes late Saturday in Beit Lahiya in the north. Israel's military
said it carried out a strike on militants.
Ministry official
Hussein Mohesin said 11 people were killed in an Israeli strike on a
school-turned-shelter in the Shati refugee camp in the north, with many
injured. "Most of the injuries are children and women, and most of them
are in very serious condition," he said. Israel's military did not
immediately comment.
Israel has waged a
massive air and ground offensive in northern Gaza since early October, saying
Hamas militants had regrouped there. Hundreds of people have been killed and
tens of thousands of Palestinians have fled in the latest wave of displacement.
Aid groups have warned
of a catastrophic situation. Israel has severely limited the entry of
humanitarian aid in recent weeks, and the three remaining hospitals in the
north say they have been overwhelmed. The U.N. secretary-general noted
"harrowing levels of death."
The war began when
Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. They killed
around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted around 250. Some 100 hostages
remain in Gaza, around a third of whom thought to be dead.
Israel's retaliatory
offensive has killed more than 42,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health
Ministry. It does not distinguish between civilians and combatants but says
more than half of those killed were women and children. Israel says it has
killed over 17,000 militants, without providing evidence.
The offensive has
devastated much of Gaza and displaced around 90% of its population of 2.3
million, often multiple times.
End/UNB/AP/MB