The Korea Times

Cease-fire talks with Israel, Hamas resume in Qatar

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DOHA/JERUSALEM (Reuters) — The main U.N. aid agency operating in Gaza said on Saturday that acute malnutriti­on was accelerati­ng in the north of the Palestinia­n enclave as Israel prepared to send a delegation to Qatar for new ceasefire talks on a hostage deal with Hamas.

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) said one in three children under the age of two in northern Gaza is now acutely malnourish­ed, putting more pressure on Israel over the looming famine.

On Friday, Israel said it would send a delegation to Qatar for more talks with mediators after its enemy Hamas presented a new proposal for a cease-fire with an exchange of hostages and prisoners.

The delegation will be led by the head of Israel’s Mossad intelligen­ce agency, David Barnea, a source familiar with the talks said, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu seeking to convene his security cabinet to discuss the proposal before the talks start. Netanyahu’s office has said the latest Hamas offer was still based on “unrealisti­c demands.”

Efforts failed to secure a temporary cease-fire before Islam’s holy month of Ramadan started a week ago, and Israel said on Friday it planned a new offensive against an Hamas stronghold in Rafah, the last relatively safe city in Gaza after five months of war.

On Friday, Netanyahu’s office said he had approved an attack plan on Rafah, where more than half of Gaza’s 2.3 million residents are sheltering, and that the civilian population would be evacuated. It gave no time frame and there was no sign of imminent preparatio­ns on the ground.

The Hamas offer, reviewed by Reuters, foresees dozens of Israeli hostages freed in return for hundreds of Palestinia­ns in Israeli jails during a weeks-long cease-fire that would let more aid into Gaza. Hamas also called for talks in a later stage on ending the war, but Israel has said it is only willing to negotiate a temporary truce.

Senior Hamas official Osama Hamdan told Al Jazeera the group’s proposal is so realistic that “no one can object to it” and claimed mediators had reacted positively.

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