(Reuters) - Mediators worked against the clock on Thursday to extend a Gaza truce between Israel and the Palestinians as the three-day ceasefire went into its final 24 hours. Israel
has said it is ready to agree to an extension as Egyptian mediators
pursued talks with Israelis and Palestinians on an enduring end to a war
that devastated the Hamas-ruled enclave, while Palestinians want an
Israeli-Egyptian blockade of Gaza to be lifted and prisoners held by
Israel to be freed. “Indirect
talks are ongoing and we still have today to secure this,” an Egyptian
official said when asked whether the truce was likely to go beyond
Friday. “Egypt’s aims are
to stabilise and extend the truce with the agreement of both sides and
to begin negotiations towards a permanent agreement to cease fire and
ease border restrictions.” After a month of bitter fighting, the two sides are not meeting face to face. Gaza
officials say the war has killed 1,874 Palestinians, most of them
civilians. Israel says 64 of its soldiers and three civilians have been
killed since fighting began on July 8, after a surge in Palestinian
rocket salvoes into Israel. An
Israeli official said late on Wednesday that Israel "has expressed its
readiness to extend the truce under its current terms" beyond Friday
morning's deadline for the three-day deal that took effect on Tuesday
and has so far held. But a
Hamas leader based in Cairo, Moussa Abu Marzouk, said: “If there had
been an opportunity for peace, it was lost with the remains of our
children and the rubble of our homes." A Hamas source said the group's military wing was ready to resume fighting once the truce ended unless its demands were met. A Hamas refusal to extend the truce could further alienate Egypt,
whose government has been hostile to the Islamist group and which
ultimately controls Gaza's main gateway to the world, the Rafah border
crossing. Earlier a
senior official with the Islamist movement's armed wing threatened to
quit the talks without progress towards achieving its demands to lift a
Gaza blockade and free prisoners held by Israel. Israel has resisted
those demands. Israel's
armed forces chief, Lieutenant-General Benny Gantz, said that if Hamas
broke the truce, Israel would use "whatever force necessary to ensure
the security of Israeli citizens". Finance
Minister Yair Lapid, accusing Hamas of threatening to "restart the
fire", told Reuters Israel's armed forces were ready to respond with
"very heavy fire". GROUND FORCES Israel withdrew ground forces from Gaza on Tuesday shortly before the 72-hour truce started at 8 a.m. (0500 GMT). It
showed signs of expecting the truce to last by lifting official
emergency restrictions on civilians living in Israel's south near Gaza,
permitting more public activities and urging everyone to resume their
routines. In Gaza, where
some half-million people have been displaced by a month of bloodshed,
some residents left U.N. shelters to return to neighbourhoods devastated
by Israeli shelling. President Barack Obama,
backing efforts to broker a durable ceasefire, called for a longer-term
solution that provides for Israeli security while offering Gaza
residents hope they will not be permanently cut off from the world. While
condemning Hamas for launching rockets against Israel from population
centres, Obama urged an eventual formula to ease the hardships of
ordinary Palestinians. "Long
term, there has to be a recognition that Gaza cannot sustain itself
permanently closed off from the world and incapable of providing some
opportunity - jobs, economic growth - for the population that lives
there," Obama said in Washington. An
Israeli official who declined to be identified said Israel wanted
humanitarian aid to flow to Gaza's 1.8 million inhabitants as soon as
possible. But, the
official said, the import of cement - vital for reconstruction - would
depend on achieving guarantees that it would not be used by militants to
construct more infiltration tunnels leading into Israel and other
fortifications. Efforts to
achieve a lasting truce could prove difficult, with the sides far apart
on their central demands, and each rejecting the other's legitimacy.
Hamas rejects Israel's existence and vows to destroy it, while Israel
denounces Hamas as a terrorist group and refuses any contact.
Mediators race against clock to extend Gaza truce
Reuters
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