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Hamas agrees partial hostage release in 'difficult' truce talks

Hamas agrees partial hostage release in 'difficult' truce talks

CNA2 days ago
GAZA/DOHA: Hamas on Wednesday (Jul 9) said it would release 10 hostages as part of Gaza ceasefire talks after Israel struck an upbeat note about the prospects for a deal to stop the fighting in the embattled Palestinian territory.
The Palestinian militant group's statement came after four days of indirect talks brokered by Qatar and as the United States signalled its belief that agreement for a 60-day truce would be struck before the end of the week.
US special envoy Steve Witkoff said part of the deal would be the return of 10 living hostages held by militants since Hamas's Oct 7, 2023 attack on Israel, which sparked the war.
Of 251 hostages seized during the assault on Israeli border communities near Gaza, 49 are still held in the territory, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead.
In its statement, Hamas said key hurdles remained in the talks, notably the free flow of aid into Gaza, Israeli military withdrawal from the territory and "real guarantees" for a lasting peace.
But it added: "The movement displayed the required flexibility and agreed to release 10 prisoners (hostages).
"Despite the difficulty of negotiations over these issues until now due to the intransigence of the occupation, we continue to work seriously and with a positive spirit with the mediators to overcome the hurdles and end the suffering of our people and ensure their aspirations to freedom, safety and a dignified life."
Israel earlier appeared to fall in behind US President Donald Trump and his optimism for an end to the conflict, as the talks in Doha stretched into a fourth day with reported complaints on its stance on aid.
Israeli army chief Eyal Zamir said in a televised address that military action had prepared the ground for a deal that would bring home the Israeli hostages.
Netanyahu, who, after talks with Trump in Washington on Tuesday night, was still uncompromising in his determination to crush Hamas, said he believed an agreement was on the horizon.
"I think we're getting closer to a deal," he told FOX Business Network's Mornings with Maria programme. "There's a good chance that we'll have it."
Foreign Minister Gideon Saar also said he thought a temporary deal was "achievable" and could even herald talks for a more lasting peace, while President Isaac Herzog talked of "a historic opportunity" for change.
"We are in an era of tectonic shifts, where the global balance of power and the regional strategic landscape are being reshaped," Herzog said.
"We must not miss this moment."
"MOSTLY LISTENING"
Netanyahu is insistent that he wants to permanently neutralise the threat to Israel from Hamas.
But he is under increasing pressure at home and abroad to end the war, particularly as the death toll of soldiers killed by homemade bombs and ambushes in Gaza increases.
The military announced on Wednesday another soldier had been killed in combat in Gaza.
Hamas has vowed "Gaza will not surrender".
One Palestinian source familiar with the negotiations in Doha said the Israeli delegation was "mostly listening rather than negotiating, which reflects Netanyahu's ongoing policy of obstruction and sabotaging any potential agreement".
The militant group had previously rebuffed pressure to release all the hostages, demanding an end to the war and a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, while Israel wants to ensure militants in Gaza never again threaten its security.
Qatari mediators had warned on Tuesday it would take time to seal a deal.
"LIKE AN EARTHQUAKE"
On the ground, Gaza's civil defence agency said Wednesday 26 people were killed in Israeli strikes, at least six of them children.
"The explosion was massive, like an earthquake," said Zuhair Judeh, 40, who witnessed one of the strikes, which prompted frantic scenes as people scrabbled in the rubble for survivors.
"The bodies and remains of the martyrs were scattered," he added, calling it "a horrific massacre".
In response to an AFP request for comment on a strike on the Al-Shati camp near Gaza City, the Israeli military said it "struck a number of Hamas terrorists".
Due to restrictions imposed on media in the Gaza Strip and difficulties accessing the area, AFP is unable to independently verify the death tolls and details shared by the parties involved.
Hamas's October 2023 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures.
Israel's retaliatory campaign has killed at least 57,680 people in Gaza, also mostly civilians, according to the Hamas-run territory's health ministry. The United Nations considers the figures reliable.
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State Department starts firing more than 1,350 workers in Trump's shake-up of diplomatic corps
State Department starts firing more than 1,350 workers in Trump's shake-up of diplomatic corps

AsiaOne

timean hour ago

  • AsiaOne

State Department starts firing more than 1,350 workers in Trump's shake-up of diplomatic corps

WASHINGTON - The State Department began firing more than 1,350 US-based employees on July 11 as the administration of President Donald Trump presses ahead with an unprecedented overhaul of its diplomatic corps, a move critics say will undermine US ability to defend and promote US interests abroad. The layoffs, which affect 1,107 civil service and 246 foreign service officers based in the United States, come at a time when Washington is grappling with multiple crises on the world stage: Russia's war in Ukraine, the almost two year-long Gaza conflict, and the Middle East on edge due to high tension between Israel and Iran. "The Department is streamlining domestic operations to focus on diplomatic priorities," an internal State Department notice that was sent to the workforce said. "Headcount reductions have been carefully tailored to affect non-core functions, duplicative or redundant offices, and offices where considerable efficiencies may be found," it added. The total reduction in the workforce will be nearly 3,000 including the voluntary departures, according to the notice and a senior State Department official, out of the 18,000 employees based in the US. The move is the first step of a restructuring that Mr Trump has sought to ensure US foreign policy is aligned with his "America First" agenda. Former diplomats and critics say the firing of foreign service officers risks America's ability to counter the growing assertiveness from adversaries such as China and Russia. "President Trump and Secretary of State Rubio are once again making America less safe and less secure," Democratic senator Tim Kaine from Virginia said, in a statement. "This is one of the most ridiculous decisions that could possibly be made at a time when China is increasing its diplomatic footprint around the world and establishing an overseas network of military and transportation bases, Russia is continuing its years-long brutal assault of a sovereign country, and the Middle East is careening from crisis to crisis," Mr Kaine said. Dozens of State Department employees crowded the lobby of the agency's headquarters in Washington holding an impromptu "clap-out" for their colleagues who have been fired. Dozens of people were crying, as they carried their belongings in boxes and hugged and bid farewell to friends and fellow workers. Outside, dozens of others were lined up continuing to clap and cheer for them with some holding banners that read, "Thank you America's diplomats." Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen attended the demonstration. Several offices were set up inside the Department's headquarters in Washington, DC, for employees who are being laid off to turn in their badges, laptops, telephones and other property owned by the agency. The offices were marked by posters that read "Transition Day Out Processing". One counter at the building was dubbed as an "Outprocessing service centre" with small bottles of water placed next to a box of tissue. Inside one office, cardboard boxes were visible. A five-page "separation checklist" that was sent to workers who are fired on July 11 and seen by Reuters tells the employee that they will lose access to the building and their emails at 5pm EDT (5am Singapore time) on July 11. Many members of a State Department office overseeing the US resettlement of Afghans who worked for the US government during the 20-year war have also been terminated as part of the overhaul. 'Wrong signal' Mr Trump in February ordered Secretary of State Marco Rubio to revamp the foreign service to ensure that the Republican president's foreign policy is "faithfully" implemented. He has also repeatedly pledged to "clean out the deep state" by firing bureaucrats that he deems disloyal. [[nid:719816]] The shake-up is part of an unprecedented push by Mr Trump to shrink the federal bureaucracy and cut what he says is wasteful spending of taxpayer money. His administration dismantled the US Agency for International Aid, Washington's premier aid arm that distributed billions of dollars of assistance worldwide, and folded it under the State Department. Mr Rubio announced the plans for the State Department shake-up in April, saying the Department in its current form was "bloated, bureaucratic" and was not able to perform its mission "in this new era of great power competition." He envisioned a structure that he said would give back the power to regional bureaus and embassies and get rid of programmes and offices that do not align with America's core interests. That vision would see the elimination of the role of top official for civilian security, democracy, and human rights and the closure of some offices that monitored war crimes and conflicts around the world. The reorganisation had been expected to be largely concluded by July 1 but did not proceed as planned amid ongoing litigation, as the State Department waited for the US Supreme Court to weigh in on the Trump administration's bid to halt a judicial order blocking mass job cuts. On July 7, the court cleared the way for the Trump administration to pursue the job cuts and the sweeping downsizing of numerous agencies. Since then, The White House Counsel's Office and the Office of Personnel Management has been coordinating with federal agencies to ensure their plans comply with the law.

State Department starts firing more than 1,350 workers in Trump's shake-up of diplomatic corps, World News
State Department starts firing more than 1,350 workers in Trump's shake-up of diplomatic corps, World News

AsiaOne

timean hour ago

  • AsiaOne

State Department starts firing more than 1,350 workers in Trump's shake-up of diplomatic corps, World News

WASHINGTON - The State Department began firing more than 1,350 US-based employees on July 11 as the administration of President Donald Trump presses ahead with an unprecedented overhaul of its diplomatic corps, a move critics say will undermine US ability to defend and promote US interests abroad. The layoffs, which affect 1,107 civil service and 246 foreign service officers based in the United States, come at a time when Washington is grappling with multiple crises on the world stage: Russia's war in Ukraine, the almost two year-long Gaza conflict, and the Middle East on edge due to high tension between Israel and Iran. "The Department is streamlining domestic operations to focus on diplomatic priorities," an internal State Department notice that was sent to the workforce said. "Headcount reductions have been carefully tailored to affect non-core functions, duplicative or redundant offices, and offices where considerable efficiencies may be found," it added. The total reduction in the workforce will be nearly 3,000 including the voluntary departures, according to the notice and a senior State Department official, out of the 18,000 employees based in the US. The move is the first step of a restructuring that Mr Trump has sought to ensure US foreign policy is aligned with his "America First" agenda. Former diplomats and critics say the firing of foreign service officers risks America's ability to counter the growing assertiveness from adversaries such as China and Russia. "President Trump and Secretary of State Rubio are once again making America less safe and less secure," Democratic senator Tim Kaine from Virginia said, in a statement. "This is one of the most ridiculous decisions that could possibly be made at a time when China is increasing its diplomatic footprint around the world and establishing an overseas network of military and transportation bases, Russia is continuing its years-long brutal assault of a sovereign country, and the Middle East is careening from crisis to crisis," Mr Kaine said. Dozens of State Department employees crowded the lobby of the agency's headquarters in Washington holding an impromptu "clap-out" for their colleagues who have been fired. Dozens of people were crying, as they carried their belongings in boxes and hugged and bid farewell to friends and fellow workers. Outside, dozens of others were lined up continuing to clap and cheer for them with some holding banners that read, "Thank you America's diplomats." Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen attended the demonstration. Several offices were set up inside the Department's headquarters in Washington, DC, for employees who are being laid off to turn in their badges, laptops, telephones and other property owned by the agency. The offices were marked by posters that read "Transition Day Out Processing". One counter at the building was dubbed as an "Outprocessing service centre" with small bottles of water placed next to a box of tissue. Inside one office, cardboard boxes were visible. A five-page "separation checklist" that was sent to workers who are fired on July 11 and seen by Reuters tells the employee that they will lose access to the building and their emails at 5pm EDT (5am Singapore time) on July 11. Many members of a State Department office overseeing the US resettlement of Afghans who worked for the US government during the 20-year war have also been terminated as part of the overhaul. 'Wrong signal' Mr Trump in February ordered Secretary of State Marco Rubio to revamp the foreign service to ensure that the Republican president's foreign policy is "faithfully" implemented. He has also repeatedly pledged to "clean out the deep state" by firing bureaucrats that he deems disloyal. [[nid:719816]] The shake-up is part of an unprecedented push by Mr Trump to shrink the federal bureaucracy and cut what he says is wasteful spending of taxpayer money. His administration dismantled the US Agency for International Aid, Washington's premier aid arm that distributed billions of dollars of assistance worldwide, and folded it under the State Department. Mr Rubio announced the plans for the State Department shake-up in April, saying the Department in its current form was "bloated, bureaucratic" and was not able to perform its mission "in this new era of great power competition." He envisioned a structure that he said would give back the power to regional bureaus and embassies and get rid of programmes and offices that do not align with America's core interests. That vision would see the elimination of the role of top official for civilian security, democracy, and human rights and the closure of some offices that monitored war crimes and conflicts around the world. The reorganisation had been expected to be largely concluded by July 1 but did not proceed as planned amid ongoing litigation, as the State Department waited for the US Supreme Court to weigh in on the Trump administration's bid to halt a judicial order blocking mass job cuts. On July 7, the court cleared the way for the Trump administration to pursue the job cuts and the sweeping downsizing of numerous agencies. Since then, The White House Counsel's Office and the Office of Personnel Management has been coordinating with federal agencies to ensure their plans comply with the law.

Trump tours Texas flood sites and defends officials amid mounting questions about response
Trump tours Texas flood sites and defends officials amid mounting questions about response

CNA

time2 hours ago

  • CNA

Trump tours Texas flood sites and defends officials amid mounting questions about response

KERRVILLE, Texas: President Donald Trump on Friday (Jul 11) toured the devastation from catastrophic flooding in Texas and lauded state and local officials, even amid mounting criticism that they may have failed to warn residents quickly enough that a deadly wall of water was coming their way. Trump has repeatedly promised to do away with the Federal Emergency Management Agency as part of his larger pledges to dramatically shrink the size of government, and he's fond of decrying officials in Democrat-run states hit by past natural disasters and tragedies. But the president struck a far more sombre and sympathetic tone while visiting America's most populous Republican state, highlighting the heartbreak of what happened while effusively praising elected officials and first responders alike. 'The search for the missing continues. The people that are doing it are unbelievable,' Trump, seated with officials around a table emblazoned with a black-and-white 'Texas Strong' banner, said at a makeshift emergency operations centre inside an expo hall in Kerrville. He later added: 'You couldn't get better people, and they're doing the job like I don't think anybody else could, frankly." Since the Jul 4 disaster, which killed at least 129 people and left more than 170 missing, the president has been conspicuously silent on his past promises to shutter FEMA and return disaster response to the states. Instead, he's focused on the once-in-a-lifetime nature of what occurred in central Texas' Hill Country and its human toll. 'We just visited with incredible families. They've been devastated,' the president said of a closed-door meeting he and first lady Melania Trump had with the relatives of some of those killed or missing. HONOURING THE VICTIMS Trump's shift in focus underscores how tragedy can complicate political calculations, even though he has made slashing the federal workforce a centrepiece of his administration's opening months. He spent a lot of time Friday discussing the victims from Camp Mystic, the century-old all-girls Christian summer camp where at least 27 people were killed. 'They were there because they loved God. And, as we grieve this unthinkable tragedy, we take comfort in the knowledge that God has welcomed those little beautiful girls into his comforting arms in heaven,' Trump said. The first lady described meeting 'beautiful young ladies' from the area who she said gave her a 'special bracelet from the camp in honour of all the little girls that lost their lives'. She promised to return to support the camp in the future. Trump approved Texas' request to extend the major disaster declaration beyond Kerr County to eight additional counties, making them eligible for direct financial assistance to recover and rebuild. 'All across the country, Americans' hearts are shattered," he said. 'I had to be here as president.' Despite saying that he didn't want to talk politics, Trump couldn't help himself. During the roundtable, he bragged briefly about his administration reducing the cost of eggs around the country and, in response to a question about Democratic criticisms of the flood response, said: 'All they want to do is criticise.' 'They're getting just absolutely clobbered 'cause everyone sees what an incredible job the governor did," Trump said of Democrats. "Everybody in this room, everybody at this table in particular.' IN PRAISE OF FEMA He also still insisted 'we've got some good people' running FEMA. That is nonetheless a far cry from his call mere weeks ago to begin 'phasing out' FEMA. At the White House, Russell Vought, director of the Office of Management and Budget, similarly dodged questions Friday about FEMA's future. He said that the agency has billions of dollars in reserves 'to continue to pay for necessary expenses'. 'We also want FEMA to be reformed,' Vought said. 'The president is going to continue to be asking tough questions of all of us agencies, no different than any other opportunity to have better government.' On the ground in devastated communities, meanwhile, some state and local officials have faced questions about how well they were prepared and how quickly they acted - including if warning systems might have given more people time to evacuate. Asked about such concerns during his appearance at the operations centre in Kerrville, Trump called a reporter 'evil' and said he thought 'everyone did an incredible job under the circumstances'. 'I admire you, and I consider you heroes,' Trump said of the officials around him. He also praised a long list of Texas Republicans and had especially kind words for Republican Chip Roy, who represents some of the hardest-hit areas. A staunch conservative, Roy initially opposed Trump's sweeping tax-cut and spending package but ultimately supported it. 'He's not easy, but he's good,' Trump said of Roy. The congressman, for his part, bristled at questions about authorities' flood response, calling the queries about inadequate flood warnings 'ridiculous". SEEING THE DAMAGE CLOSE UP Prior to the roundtable, Air Force One landed in San Antonio and Trump deplaned in a suit while the first lady wore more casual clothing - although both wore ball caps against the heat. The Trumps then boarded a helicopter to Kerrville and saw the flooding aftermath from the air. They later walked close to the Guadalupe River to receive a briefing from officials near an overturned tractor trailer, numerous downed trees and other debris. Roads in the centre of town were shut down, and people lined the streets, some wearing Trump hats and T-shirts and waving American flags. Green ribbons recognising the lives lost at Camp Mystic were tied around trees, poles and along bridges, and marquees featured slogans such as 'Hill Country Strong' and 'Thank you first responders.' Harris Currie, a rancher from Utopia, Texas, near Kerrville, said the flood devastation can be fully understood only by seeing it firsthand. 'Pictures do not do it justice,' Currie said. Asked what officials on the ground needed most urgently from federal sources, Kerr County Commissioner Jeff Holt, who also is a volunteer firefighter, stressed the need for repairs to nonworking phone towers and 'maybe a little better early warning system.' Trump himself has suggested that a major warning system should be established, though few details have been offered on what that might eventually entail. Friday's visit was far different from the other times the first couple visited natural disaster sites, during Trump's first weekend back in the White House in January. They toured North Carolina to scope out damage from Hurricane Helene and saw the aftermath of wildfires in Los Angeles, and the president sharply criticised the administration of his predecessor, President Joe Biden, and officials from deep-blue California. 'The state of Texas, No 1, they do it right and they've done it right for a long time," Trump said. "And it's a very special place to me.'

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