CAIRO/JERUSALEM
Israeli strikes killed at least 130 Palestinians across Gaza overnight, health officials said on Sunday, as Israel said talks with Hamas included a proposal to end the war but sources on both sides said there had been no progress in the talks.
The office of Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the latest indirect talks in Doha included
discussions on a truce and hostage deal as well as a proposal to end the war in
return for the exile of Hamas militants and the demilitarization of the
enclave, terms Hamas has previously rejected.
The substance of the statement
was in line with previous declarations from Israel, but the timing, as
negotiators meet, offered some prospect of flexibility in Israel’s position. A
senior Israeli official said there had been no progress in the talks so far.
A Hamas official told Reuters:
“Israel’s position remains unchanged; they want to release the prisoners
(hostages) without a commitment to end the war.”
He reiterated that Hamas was
proposing releasing all Israeli hostages in return for an end to the war, the
pull-out of Israeli troops, an end to a blockade on aid for Gaza, and the
release of Palestinian prisoners.
The overnight airstrikes on
Gaza hit as Israel prepares for a new ground offensive aimed at achieving
“operational control” in parts of Gaza.
Gaza’s Health Ministry said at
least 464 Palestinians were killed in the week to Sunday as a result of
Israel’s escalated bombardment. The deaths of at least 130 Palestinians
overnight are in addition to that figure.
“Complete families were wiped
off the civil registration record by (overnight) Israeli bombardment,” Khalil
Al-Deqran, Gaza health ministry spokesperson, told Reuters by phone.
The Israeli military had no
immediate comment on the casualties.
Israel has blocked the entry of medical, food and fuel supplies into Gaza since
the start of March to try to pressure Hamas into freeing Israeli hostages and
has approved plans that could involve seizing the entire Gaza strip and
controlling aid.
Reports in Israeli and Arab
media that Hamas leader Mohammed Sinwar may have been killed could potentially
complicate the Doha talks, which began on Saturday.
Hamas neither confirmed nor
denied the reports. Israel’s Defense Ministry had no immediate comment.
Gaza medics said contrary to
earlier reports Zakaria Al-Sinwar, a history lecturer at a Gaza university and
the brother of Hamas’ leader, was alive but in critical condition.
He was placed in the morgue
earlier with his three children, before medics realized he was still breathing
and moved him to an intensive care unit.
“Hospitals are overwhelmed
with a growing number of casualties, many are children,” health ministry
spokesman Deqran said.
In Israel, Einav Zangauker,
the mother of Hamas hostage Matan Zangauker, said Netanyahu was refusing to end
the war in exchange for Hamas releasing the remaining hostages because of his
political interests.
“The Israeli government still
insists on only partial deals. They are deliberately tormenting us. Bring our
children back already! All 58 of them,” Zangauker said in a post on the X
social media platform.
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