A senior Hamas official has rejected the latest US proposal for a new Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal
Gaza correspondent
Reuters
A senior Hamas official has informed the BBC that the Palestinian armed group will reject the latest US proposal for a new Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal.
The White House announced on Thursday that Israel had “agreed” to US envoy Steve Witkoff’s plan, and was awaiting a formal response from Hamas.
Israeli media quoted Israeli officials as saying that Hamas would hand over 10 living hostages and the bodies of 18 deceased hostages in two phases, in exchange for a 60-day ceasefire and the release of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.
The Hamas official stated that the proposal did not meet the group’s core demands, including an end to the war, and that they would respond in due course.
The Israeli government has not commented, but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reportedly told the families of hostages on Thursday that he accepted Witkoff’s plan.
Israel imposed a complete blockade on Gaza and resumed its military operation against Hamas on 18 March, after a two-month ceasefire brokered by the US, Qatar, and Egypt collapsed.
It stated that it wanted to pressure Hamas into releasing the 58 hostages it still held, with at least 20 believed to be alive.
On 19 May, the Israeli military launched an expanded operation that Netanyahu said would see troops “take control of all areas” of Gaza. The next day, he said Israel would also ease the blockade and allow a “basic” amount of food into Gaza to prevent a famine.
Almost 4,000 people have been killed in Gaza over the past 10 weeks, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.
The UN reports that another 600,000 people have been displaced again by Israeli ground operations and evacuation orders, and a report by the UN-backed IPC warns that about 500,000 people face catastrophic levels of hunger in the coming months.
At a news conference in Washington DC on Thursday, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt was asked whether she could confirm a report by Saudi-owned Al-Arabiya TV that Israel and Hamas had agreed a new ceasefire deal.
“I can confirm that Special Envoy Witkoff and the president submitted a ceasefire proposal to Hamas that Israel backed and supported. Israel signed off on this proposal before it was sent to Hamas,” she said.
“I can also confirm that those discussions are continuing, and we hope that a ceasefire in Gaza will take place so we can return all of the hostages home,” she added.
However, a senior Hamas official later said the deal contradicted previous discussions between the group’s negotiators and Witkoff.
The official told the BBC that the offer did not include guarantees the temporary truce would lead to a permanent ceasefire, nor a return to the humanitarian protocol that allowed hundreds of trucks of aid into Gaza daily during the last ceasefire.
Nevertheless, he said Hamas remained in contact with the mediators and would submit its written response in due course.
Earlier, Israel’s Channel 12 TV reported that Netanyahu told the hostages’ families at a meeting: “We agree to accept the latest Witkoff plan that was conveyed to us tonight. Hamas has not yet responded. We do not believe Hamas will release the last hostage, and we will not leave the Strip until all the hostages are in our hands.
His office later issued a statement accusing one of the channel’s reporters of trying to “smuggle” a recording device into the room where the meeting took place. But it did not deny that he had agreed to the US proposal.
Netanyahu has previously said that Israel will end the war only when all the hostages are released, Hamas is either destroyed or disarmed, and its leaders have been sent into exile.
Hamas has said it is ready to return all of those held captive, in exchange for a complete end to hostilities and full Israeli pull-out from Gaza.
Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to a cross-border attack by Hamas on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
Another four people, two of them dead, were already being held captive in Gaza before the conflict.
So far, Israel has secured the return of 197 hostages, 148 of them alive, mostly through two temporary ceasefire deals with Hamas.
At least 54,249 people have been killed in Gaza during the war, including 3,986 since Israel resumed its offensive, according to the territory’s health ministry.
On Thursday, at least 54 people were killed by Israeli strikes across Gaza, according to the Hamas-run Civil Defence agency. They included 23 people who died when a home in the central Bureij area was hit, it said.
The Israeli military said it had struck “dozens of terror targets” over the past day.