GAZA, Palestine
As the first phase of the Gaza peace deal ended on Saturday and discussions on the second phase have yet to gain momentum, concerns are mounting that the hard-earned and fragile peace could be shattered again, impacting over 2 million people in the besieged coastal enclave.
The future for Gazans remains
uncertain, as various proposals have emerged over post-war governance and
rebuilding yet none has gained broad acceptance. Despite the instability, many
residents have expressed their determination to stay. However, they will
continue to endure displacement, destruction and uncertainty.
An Israeli delegation proposed
in Cairo extending the first phase of the Gaza ceasefire by 42 days, an
informed Egyptian security source told Xinhua on Friday.
However, negotiations have yet
to address the second phase of the deal, which seeks to end the war in Gaza and
secure Israel's complete withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, the source added.
In response, Hamas said
Saturday that the Israeli proposal of extending the first phase of the Gaza
ceasefire agreement is "unacceptable," adding that the mediators and
guarantor countries are required to oblige the occupation to abide by the agreement
in its various stages.
Hamas spokesman Hazem Qassem
said that there were still no negotiations with Hamas regarding the second
phase of the agreement, accusing Israel of "evading the commitment to end
the war and withdraw completely from Gaza."
On early Sunday, the Israeli
Prime Minister's Office said in a statement that Israel has accepted the U.S.
proposal for a temporary ceasefire with Hamas in Gaza for the Ramadan and
Passover holidays.
The Muslim holy month of
Ramadan began on Friday and will last until March 30, while the Jewish Passover
week will be marked from April 12 to 20.
The statement also stressed
that Israel may return to fighting if it believes that the negotiations are
ineffective, as the first 42-day phase of the ceasefire-hostages agreement
expired on Saturday.
The Israeli think tank
Institute for National Security Studies commented, "Israel has not met the
war objectives set by the political echelon: It did not fully destroy Hamas's
military and governmental capabilities, and the release of the hostages until
now has been only partial."
The Washington Institute for
Near East Policy said the Israeli prime minister sees phase one of the
ceasefire as beneficial due to the gradual release of hostages, but views phase
two as a trap that would force Israel's full withdrawal from Gaza, limiting its
ability to target Hamas.
Analysts told Xinhua that
Netanyahu is also under pressure from far-right Cabinet members, who support
only the first phase and demand guarantees that Gaza will no longer threaten
Israel, or they will leave the coalition. Their opposition has made the government
hesitant to advance negotiations.
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