CAIRO,
Egypt
An Egyptian-brokered ceasefire agreement came into effect at 2:00 a.m. on Friday Palestinian time between Israel and militant groups led by the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas).
At
2:00 a.m., the words "Allahu Akbar" (God is great) rang out from
loudspeakers of mosques all over the Gaza Strip, celebrating the end of more
than 11 days of tit-for-tat attacks between Israel and Hamas-led militants in
the Gaza Strip.
Militants
fired into the air, while tens of thousands of people took to the streets,
whistling and shouting "Allahu Akbar."
Earlier
on Thursday, Hamas' armed wing said it had stopped firing rockets at Israel in
response to the ceasefire agreement, which Qatar, the United Nations and other
countries, helped negotiate alongside Egypt.
"We
had prepared strikes of rockets that cover all (Israel) from the city of Haifa
in the north to Ramon in the south, but we responded to the ceasefire to watch
the enemy's behavior until 2:00 a.m.," spokesman Abu Obeida said in a
short recorded speech aired on the movement's Al-Aqsa Television.
He
added that "starting the rocket strikes depends on the behavior of the
enemy of totally halting its aggression on our people in the Gaza Strip."
Abu
Obeida also said that "the leaders of the occupation are under a real test
and the decision to resume the rocket strikes on all Israel is on the
table."
Over the past 11 days of tension, Israeli fighter jets carried out hundreds of airstrikes on the Gaza Strip and Hamas-led militants fired hundreds of rockets at Israel.
Israel said that 12 Israelis were killed and more than 100 injured by the rockets fired from the Gaza Strip at towns and cities in central and southern Israel.
On Thursday, the health ministry in Gaza said that 232 Palestinians had been killed, including 65 children, 39 women and 17 elderly, and that 1,900 were injured over the 11 days.
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