Israel continues strikes in Gaza while Palestinians pin on Trump’s peace plan
Israeli aircraft and tanks have crossed areas across the Gaza Strip during the night and Sunday, destroying several residential buildings, witnesses said, while the Palestinians hoped for an American plan to end the war would soon facilitate their suffering.
US President Donald Trump, who called for the end of the bombing, said on his Truth social platform on Saturday that Israel had accepted an “initial removal line” inside Gaza and that “when Hamas confirms, the ceasefire is immediately effective”.
Israel has maintained military pressure in Gaza while Egypt was preparing to welcome delegates from Hamas, Israel, the United States and Qatar to launch discussions on the implementation of the most advanced efforts to date to stop the conflict.
Local Palestinian health authorities have said that Israeli fires killed at least 16 people through the Gaza Strip on Sunday, including four of which seeking aid south of the enclave and five people killed on an air strike in Gaza City.
Shadi Mansour was held in the destruction left by an Israeli air strike in the suburbs of Gaza City in Tuffah on Saturday who killed his son Ameer, 6 and 16 other people.
“Is he a member of the Resistance? Is he a fighter? All the targets of the Israeli army are children,” said Mansour.
Israeli forces warned residents who left the city against the return, saying it was a “dangerous combat zone”.
Israeli planes and tanks have destroyed several residential buildings overnight and on Sunday when the soldiers continued to attack the Gaza Strip, witnesses, in the midst of the Palestinian hopes that a new peace plan will succeed.
Multiple ceasefire efforts have failed
The Israeli army accused the Palestinian militant group of Hamas, which controls Gaza, of using human shields, an allegation it denies. Hamas and many Palestinians accuse Israel of blind bombing that kills many civilians.
Some Palestinians, who have seen multiple ceasefire efforts failed since the start of the war two years ago and spread in the Middle East, lose patience.
Ahmed Assad, a Palestinian moved to the center of Gaza, said that he hoped when the news broke out of Trump’s plan.
“Unfortunately, there is no translation for this on the field. We see no change in the situation, on the contrary. We do not know which action to take, what will we do? Are we going to stay in the streets? Are we going?” He said.
Interviews in Egypt to tackle unresolved problems
Hamas had made a welcoming response from Trump on Friday by saying that he had accepted certain key parts of his 20 -point peace proposal, in particular by finishing the war, the withdrawal of Israel from Gaza and the liberation of Israeli hostages and Palestinian captives.
But the group has left problems for additional negotiations in Egypt, as well as unanswered questions, for example if it would be willing to disarm – a key demand from Israel to end the war.
“Progress would depend on whether Hamas would accept the card, which shows that the Israeli army would remain in control of most of the Gaza Strip,” said a Palestinian official who is close to talks and asked not to be appointed.
“Hamas can also request a strict calendar for the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza. The first phase of talks will determine how things will happen,” he told Reuters.
Israel slowed down his Gaza offensive on Saturday after US President Donald Trump demanded that he end up bombing in response to Hamas saying he was ready to release hostages under the American plan to end the two -year war. Paul Hunter of CBC breaks down the latest developments.
In a sign of Israeli optimism in terms of Trump, Shekel’s currency reached a three -year summit compared to the US dollar, and Tel Aviv’s actions have reached a summit of all time.
Some people from Tel Aviv shared the optimistic feeling. “This is the first time in months that I really hope. Trump has really instilled us a lot of hope, and we believe in him and in his leadership,” said Gil Shelly.
At the national level, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is taken between increasing pressure to end the war – hostage families and a tired war audience – and requests for hard members of his coalition which insist that he must not be raised in the Israel campaign in Gaza.
Far-right Minister of Finance, Bezalel Smotrich, said on the social media platform X that attacking attacks on Gaza would be a “serious error”.
Smotrich and the Minister of National Security Itamar Ben-Gvir, also a hardliner, have a significant influence in the government of Netanyahu and have threatened to drop him if the Gaza War ends.
But the head of the opposition, Yair Lapid, of the centrist Yesh Atid, said that political coverage would be provided so that the Trump initiative can succeed and “we will not let them torpedo the agreement”.
Return of the hostages
According to Trump’s plan, all Israeli, living and deceased hostages are released. Israel says that 48 hostages remain, 20 of which are alive.
There may be logistical challenges. Sources close to Hamas have told Reuters that the delivery of living hostages could prove to be relatively simple, but the recovery of the bodies of those who died in the midst of the devastation and the Gaza rubble would take more than a few days.
Trump said on Friday that he thought Hamas had shown that he was “ready for lasting peace” and that he called Netanyahu’s government to stop the air strikes in Gaza.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Sunday that the war in Gaza was not yet over despite Israel and Hamas both accepting Trump’s parts for the band, while Gazans called for its quick implementation to end their suffering.
“We will know very quickly whether Hamas is serious or not by the way these technical discussions take place in terms of logistics,” Rubio told NBC News’ Meet the press About the exit of the hostages of Gaza.
Hamas had made a welcoming response from Trump on Friday by saying that he had accepted certain key parts of his 20 -point proposal, in particular by finishing the war, the withdrawal of Israel and the liberation of Israeli hostages and Palestinian captives.
But the group has left problems for additional negotiations in talks in Egypt, as well as unanswered questions, for example if it would be willing to disarm, a key request from Israel to end the war.
“Priority n ° 1, the one we think that we can do something very quickly, is the publication of all the hostages in exchange for Israel which goes back to the yellow line, where Israel was held in Gaza in mid-August, said Rubio.
He described the second phase of Gaza’s long -term future as “even more difficult”.
“How do you create this Palestinian technocratic leadership which is not Hamas?” Said Rubio. “How to disarm the terrorist groups that will build tunnels and carry out attacks against Israel? How to get them to demobilize?”
Israel began to strike Gaza after an attack led by Hamas against southern Israel on October 7, 2023, in which some 1,200 people, mainly civilians, were killed and 251 hostage, according to Israeli accounts.
Israel’s campaign killed more than 67,000 people in Gaza, most civilians, according to the health authorities in Gaza, destroyed a large part of the enclave and leads to a humanitarian crisis.
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