(Reuters) - Palestinian officials said on Tuesday a Gaza ceasefire deal with Israel has been reached under Egyptian mediation and a formal announcement of an agreement was imminent. There was no immediate confirmation from Israel, where a spokesman for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declined to comment. "An
agreement has been reached between the two sides and we are awaiting
the announcement from Cairo to determine the zero hour for
implementation," Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said in Gaza. A
spokesman for the Popular Resistance Committees, one of the Gaza
militant groups that has been firing rockets into Israel, said the
announcement could be made within two hours. Cairo's
initiative, Palestinians officials said, called for an indefinite halt
to seven weeks of hostilities, the immediate opening of Gaza's blockaded
crossings with Israel and Egypt and a widening of the enclave's fishing zone in the Mediterranean. Under
a second stage that would begin a month later, Israel and the
Palestinians would discuss the construction of a Gaza sea port and an
Israeli release of Hamas prisoners in the occupied West Bank, the
officials said. Both Israel and Egypt view Hamas as a security threat and are demanding guarantees that weapons will not enter the economically crippled territory. Increasing
pressure on Palestinian militants to end their rocket strikes, Israel
bombed more of Gaza's tallest structures on Tuesday, bringing down a
13-storey apartment and office tower and destroying most of a 16-floor
residential building. The
strikes flattened the Basha Tower and wrecked the Italian Complex, after
occupants were warned to get out, and no deaths were reported. Declining
to comment specifically on the attacks, the Israeli military said it
had hit 15 "terror sites", including some in buildings that housed Hamas
command and control centers. WARNING MISSILES Hamas,
the dominant militant group in the Gaza Strip, accused Israel of an
"unprecedented act of revenge against civilians" aimed at deterring
Palestinians from supporting the Islamist movement. Israel
has now attacked three of Gaza's most prominent high-rise buildings
since Saturday, when it destroyed the 13-storey Al Zafer Tower. The
strikes were preceded by non-explosive warning missiles that sent
residents fleeing, but 20 people were wounded in the attack on the
Italian Complex. Six
Palestinians were killed in other Israeli strikes on Tuesday, medical
officials said. Israel's military said 70 rockets were fired from Gaza
and that one damaged a house in the southern coastal town of Ashkelon,
lightly wounding 10 people. Palestinian
health officials say 2,129 people, most of them civilians, including
more than 490 children, have been killed in Gaza since July 8, when
Israel launched an offensive with the declared aim of ending the rocket
salvoes. Sixty-four Israeli soldiers and four civilians in Israel have been killed. Thousands
of homes in the Gaza Strip have been destroyed or damaged in the
conflict. The Palestinian Center for Human Rights said 540,000 people
had been displaced in the territory where Palestinians, citing Israeli
attacks that have hit schools and mosques, say no place is safe. Israel
has said Hamas bears responsibility for civilian casualties, because it
operates among non-combatants. The group, it said, uses schools and
mosques to store weapons and as launch sites for rockets.
Gaza ceasefire deal reached, Palestinian groups say
Reuters
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