Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Gaza cease-fire talks fail again

Negotiatio­ns falter as food crisis worsens in embattled enclave

- By Samy Magdy, Tia Goldenberg and Wafaa Shurafa The New York Times contribute­d to this report.

CAIRO » Three days of negotiatio­ns with Hamas over a cease-fire in Gaza and the release of Israeli hostages failed to achieve a breakthrou­gh on Tuesday, Egyptian officials said, less than a week before the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, the informal deadline for a deal.

The nearly five months of fighting left much of Gaza in ruins and created a worsening humanitari­an catastroph­e, with many, especially in the devastated northern region, scrambling for food to survive.

“We must get more aid into Gaza,” U.S. President Joe Biden said Tuesday. “There's no excuse. None.”

Aid groups have said it has become nearly impossible to deliver supplies within most of Gaza because of the difficulty of coordinati­ng with the Israeli military, the ongoing hostilitie­s and the breakdown of public order.

The United States, Qatar and Egypt have spent weeks trying to broker an agreement in which Hamas would release up to 40 hostages in return for a sixweek cease-fire, the release of some Palestinia­n prisoners and an major influx of aid to the isolated territory.

Two Egyptian officials said that the latest round of discussion­s ended on Tuesday.

They said Hamas presented a proposal that mediators would discuss with Israel in the coming days. One of the officials said that mediators would meet Wednesday with the Hamas delegation, which didn't leave Cairo.

Hamas has refused to release all of the estimated 100 hostages it holds, and the remains of around 30 more, unless Israel ends its offensive, withdraws from Gaza and releases a large number of Palestinia­n prisoners, including senior militants serving life sentences.

U.S. officials have said that they are skeptical that Hamas actually wants a deal, because the group has balked at a number of what the U.S. and others believe are legitimate requests, including giving the names of hostages to be released.

“It is on Hamas to make decisions about whether it is prepared to engage,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Tuesday.

“We have an opportunit­y for an immediate cease-fire that can bring hostages home, that can dramatical­ly increase the amount of humanitari­an aid getting in to Palestinia­ns who so desperatel­y need it, and can set the conditions for an enduring resolution,” Blinken said.

Senior Hamas official Osama Hamdan said Tuesday that his group demands a permanent ceasefire, rather than a six-week pause, and a “complete withdrawal” of Israeli forces.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has publicly rejected Hamas' demands and repeatedly vowed to continue the war until Hamas is dismantled and all the hostages are returned. Israel didn't send a delegation to the latest round of talks.

Israel was still waiting for Hamas to hand over a list of hostages who are alive as well as the hostageto-prisoner ratio it seeks in any release deal, an Israeli official said. It wasn't clear if that informatio­n was included in the latest proposal.

The Israeli and Egyptian officials spoke on condition of anonymity.

When asked whether Hamas has a list of the surviving hostages, Hamdan said that the matter wasn't relevant to the talks and accused Israel of using it as an excuse to avoid engaging in the negotiatio­ns.

Benny Gantz, a member of Netanyahu's War Cabinet and his main political rival, met with senior U.S. officials in Washington on a visit that drew a rebuke from the prime minister, the latest sign of a growing rift within Israel's leadership.

Mediators had hoped to broker an agreement before Ramadan, the month of dawn-to-dusk fasting that often sees heightened Israeli-Palestinia­n tensions linked to access to a major holy site in Jerusalem. Ramadan is expected to begin around March 10, depending on the sighting of the moon.

“The negotiatio­ns are sensitive. I can't say there is optimism or pessimism, but we haven't yet reached a point at which we can achieve a cease-fire,” Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry said Monday.

The war began with a Hamas attack on southern Israel on Oct. 7 in which Palestinia­n militants killed around 1,200 people and took about 250 hostages. More than 100 of them were released during a weeklong cease-fire in November.

The attack sparked an Israeli invasion of the enclave of 2.3 million people that Gaza's Health Ministry says has killed more than 30,000 Palestinia­ns.

Aid groups say the fighting has displaced most of the territory's population and pushed a quarter of the population to the brink of famine.

The U.N. children's agency said Monday that at least 10 children have reportedly died in isolated northern Gaza because of dehydratio­n and malnutriti­on.

Meanwhile, Israelis largely welcomed a U.N. report that supported allegation­s of sexual violence during the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attack, even as a top Israeli official accused the United Nations of not doing enough to address the findings — a sign of the rising tensions between them.

The U.N. report, released Monday, found both “reasonable grounds to believe” that sexual violence against multiple people had occurred in at least three locations in Israel, and “clear and convincing informatio­n” that hostages taken to the Gaza Strip on Oct. 7 had been subjected to sexual violence, including rape.

On Tuesday, President Isaac Herzog of Israel said on social media that the report was “of immense importance,” and he lauded it for its “moral clarity and integrity.”

But Israel Katz, Israel's foreign minister, accused U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres in a social media post of making a concerted effort to “forget the report and avoid making the necessary decisions.”

 ?? LEO CORREA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Smoke rises following an explosion in the Gaza Strip, as seen from southern Israel, on Tuesday.
LEO CORREA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Smoke rises following an explosion in the Gaza Strip, as seen from southern Israel, on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States