
Hamas agrees to the release of 10 hostages amid Gaza ceasefire talks
'In its commitment to the success of the current efforts, the movement has shown the necessary flexibility and agreed to release 10 prisoners,' the group added. The announcement comes as delegations from Hamas and Israel continue negotiations in the Qatari capital Doha to end the war that has claimed more than 57,000 Palestinian lives since October 2023. Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took 251 hostages in the October attack.
Of 251 hostages seized during the attack, 49 are still held in Gaza, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead. Hamas has 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 pose a threat to its security. The announcement also comes after Israel struck an upbeat note about the prospects for a ceasefire and hostage-release deal in Gaza.
With Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Washington, indirect talks stretched into a fourth day in Qatar, with reported complaints of Israeli intransigence on aid distribution to starving civilians. 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 seized by militant group Hamas. 'We have achieved many significant results, we have caused great damage to the governance and military capabilities of Hamas,' he said.
'Thanks to the operational power that we have demonstrated, the conditions have been created to advance a deal to release the hostages.' Earlier Netanyahu, who after talks with Donald Trump 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 program. '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,' he added. Netanyahu is insistent he wants to permanently neutralize the threat to Israel from Hamas. But he is under increasing pressure domestically and politically to end the war, particularly as the death toll of soldiers killed by home-made bombs and ambushes in Gaza increases.
Hamas has vowed 'Gaza will not surrender' and a Palestinian official close to the ceasefire talks indicated that Israel was still holding back a deal by refusing to allow free entry of aid in Gaza. Another 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'. Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff nevertheless said the US administration was 'hopeful' of agreement for a 60-day ceasefire by the end of this week.
The deal would include the return of 10 living hostages held by Palestinian militants since October 2023, and nine dead hostages, he said. On the ground, Gaza's civil defense agency said Wednesday that 26 people were killed in Israeli strikes, at least six of them children. The military said it was looking into two of the strikes which killed 20.
'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'. 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.

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