GAZA STRIP, Palestine
Israel and Hamas began a four-day truce with hostages to be released in exchange for prisoners on Friday, the first major reprieve in seven weeks of war that have claimed thousands of lives.
The pause began at 7:00 a.m.
(0500 GMT) after prolonged negotiations, silencing guns that have raged since
Hamas’s raids into Israel on October 7.
Later on Friday, 13 hostages
held in Gaza will be freed, followed by an undefined number of Palestinian
prisoners from Israeli jails, according to Qatari mediators.
Over the four days, at least
50 hostages are expected to be released, leaving an estimated 190 in the hands
of Palestinian militant groups.
Over the same period, 150
Palestinians prisoners are expected to be released.
For Gaza’s two million-plus
residents, the deal spells a respite from weeks of sustained Israeli
bombardment.
The territory’s Hamas
government says the war has so far killed about 15,000 people and displaced
countless more.
The exact number of casualties
is impossible to independently confirm, but it is clear that for many
Palestinian and Israeli families, the pause in violence has already come too
late.
“The living here are the ones
who are dead,” Fida Zayed, a Gazan whose 20-year-old son Udai was killed in a
recent air strike, said.
“The last thing he said to me
was that he was waiting for the truce on Friday,” she said. “He asked me to
prepare him a feast of rice and chicken.”
“I hope me and my children die
here so we don’t have to mourn each other.”
Qatari officials said the
“first batch” of 13 hostages released would be women and children from the same
families.
Teams of Israeli trauma experts and medics await them — along with specially trained soldiers who, according to guidelines, will promise to keep them safe and will carry a child’s favorite food item, be it pizza or chicken schnitzel.
An Egyptian security source
said that Israeli security officials, International Red Cross-Red Crescent
staff and an Egyptian team would deploy to Rafah, on the Egypt-Gaza border, to
receive the hostages, who will then be flown to Israel.
AFP has confirmed the
identities of 210 of the roughly 240 people abducted during cross-border
attacks by Hamas on military posts, communities and a desert music festival.
At least 35 of those taken
hostage were children, with 18 of them aged 10 or under at the time of the
Hamas attack.
Israel says around 1,200
people, mostly civilians, were killed in the October 7 attacks.
Little is publicly known about
which hostages remain alive, or in what conditions the hostages have been held.
The office of Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said it had received “a first list of names” of
those due to be released and been in contact with the families. It did not
specify who was on the list.
Palestinian prisoners held in
Israeli jails will also be released on Friday, Qatari foreign ministry
spokesperson Majed Al Ansari said, adding a list of names had been approved.
The agreement entailed a
“complete cease-fire with no attacks from the air or the ground” and the skies
clear of drones to “allow for the hostage release to happen in a safe
environment,” Ansari said.
Israel has published a list
comprising the names of a total of 300 Palestinians who could be released,
should the truce outlive the initial four-day period.
Among them are 33 women and
267 children and youths aged 19 and under. The list also includes 49 Hamas
members.
The armed wing of Hamas
confirmed the cessation of hostilities would start at 7:00 am under the deal
that is also intended to provide aid to Gazans struggling to survive with
shortages of food, water and fuel.
It said three Palestinian
prisoners would be released for each one of the hostages.
Palestinian prisoners will be
released from three jails in Israel and the occupied West Bank, then taken to
the Ofer military camp on buses, an Israeli official said on condition of
anonymity, adding that they were expected to be freed in the evening.
Most are from the West Bank
but five are from the Gaza Strip.
Governments around the world
have welcomed the agreement, with some expressing hope it will lead to a
lasting end to the war.
“This cannot be just a pause
before the massacre starts all over again,” Riyad Mansour, Palestinian
ambassador to the United Nations, told the Security Council.
Israeli officials, however,
say the truce will be only temporary.
“We are not ending the war. We
will continue until we are victorious,” Israel’s chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Herzi
Halevi, told troops he visited in Gaza.
Ahead of the expected pause,
fighting raged.
Anti-rocket alarms sounded in
an Israeli kibbutz near the Gaza border and explosions were heard and heavy
grey clouds hovered over northern Gaza, much of which has been reduced to
rubble.
Hamas health ministry official
Munir Al-Bursh said that Israeli soldiers had raided the Indonesian Hospital in
northern Gaza.
Israel did not immediately
comment on any operation at the facility, which has been the scene of days of
military activity.
Israel has repeatedly claimed
that hospitals have been used by Hamas to cloak underground command-and-control
facilities.
Israeli forces detained thedirector of Al-Shifa — Gaza’s largest hospital — Mohammad Abu Salmiya and other
medical personnel, another doctor said on Thursday.
Hamas and medical staff have
denied there was a base under Gaza’s largest hospital.
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