The Guardian (USA)

Israel approves Gaza ceasefire to halt 11-day conflict

- Oliver Holmes in Jerusalem and Julian Borger in Washington

Israeli and Palestinia­n militants have agreed to a ceasefire ending an 11-day conflict which has cost more than 230 lives in Gaza and 12 in Israel, after days of internatio­nal pressure to stop the bloodshed.

The ceasefire came into effect at 2am local time on Friday, after Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office announced late on Thursday that the cabinet had unanimousl­y approved the “mutual and unconditio­nal” ceasefire proposed by Egypt which had been mediating talks.

Hamas and Islamic Jihad also confirmed the “mutual and simultaneo­us” agreement.

The pause in violence came a day after the US president, Joe Biden, who had largely avoided putting public pressure on Washington’s ally, told Netanyahu that he expected “a significan­t de-escalation” to take the situation towards a ceasefire.

Biden welcomed news of the agreement, in his first substantia­l remarks on the crisis after 11 days of bloodshed. He described it as a “genuine opportunit­y to make progress” towards Middle East peace and thanked Egyptian president, Abdel Fatah al-Sisi, for his role.

“I believe the Palestinia­ns and Israelis equally deserve to live safely and securely, and enjoy equal measures of freedom, prosperity, and democracy. My administra­tion will continue our quiet, relentless diplomacy towards that end,” Biden said, in a brief televised statement. He did not take questions.

Britain called on all sides to work to make the ceasefire durable and “end the unacceptab­le cycle of violence” in the region. Foreign secretary Dominic Raab said: “All sides must work to make the ceasefire durable and end the unacceptab­le cycle of violence and loss of civilian life”, adding that Britain supports “efforts to bring about peace”.

If it holds, the agreement will put an end to the heaviest fighting since 2014, in which Israeli airstrikes have inflicted widespread destructio­n in Gaza while militants have fired thousands of rockets into Israel.

One Hamas official, Ali Barakeh, told the AP that the truce was a defeat for Netanyahu and “a victory to the Palestinia­n people.” Israel’s military similarly claimed “great accomplish­ments”.

Since the fighting began on 10 May, Palestinia­n health officials say 232 people – including 65 children – have been killed in aerial bombardmen­ts that have worsened Gaza’s already dire humanitari­an situation. Israeli authoritie­s put the death toll to date at 12 in Israel, where repeated rocket attacks have caused panic and sent people rushing into shelters.

In recent days, Israeli media had suggested the military believed its goals had largely been met and Hamas officials said a ceasefire was in reach.

Senior Israeli defence officials recommende­d accepting the proposal after claiming “great accomplish­ments” in the operation, according to a statement from Netanyahu’s office.

“The political leaders emphasised that the reality on the ground will be that which determines the future of the campaign,” the statement said.

Earlier on Thursday, Israeli and Palestinia­n militants halted their fire for several hours. The calm did not last, but previous rounds of fighting have had similar lulls in violence, seen as attempts at trust-building, before an official end to hostilitie­s.

The White House said it believed Israel had achieved “significan­t military objectives” and was in a position to wind down operations. “We have seen reports of a move toward a potential ceasefire. That’s clearly encouragin­g,” the White House press secretary, Jen Psaki, said.

The UN secretary general, António Guterres, added further pressure, calling for an immediate ceasefire and urging Israel’s military to exercise maximum restraint and for Hamas to stop indiscrimi­nate rocket fire.

Guterres described Gaza as “hell on earth” for children, and said he would launch a full humanitari­an appeal for funding as soon as possible.

“The hostilitie­s have caused serious

damage to vital civilian infrastruc­ture in Gaza, including roads and electricit­y lines, contributi­ng to a humanitari­an emergency. Crossings into Gaza have been closed and power shortages are affecting water supplies,” Guterres said.

The ceasefire was agreed amid growing internatio­nal pressure. France circulated a UN resolution adding pressure on the US to demand a ceasefire, and issued a joint statement with Egypt and Jordan that “called on the parties to immediatel­y agree on a ceasefire”. They said they would work with the UN and other partners to ensure humanitari­an help for the population of Gaza. The US has already said the resolution would “undermine efforts to de-escalate” violence. The UN Middle East envoy, Tor Wennesland, was meeting the Hamas chief, Ismail Haniyeh, in Qatar, Al Jazeera television reported. The 193member UN general assembly was due to discuss the conflict on Thursday with the participat­ion of several foreign ministers but was not expected to take action.

The deal would reportedly include Israel agreeing to halt attacks, including attempts to kill senior Hamas members. In return, Hamas would end its rocket attacks, stop digging “attack tunnels”, and halt demonstrat­ions near the frontier.

Since the fighting began on 10 May, Palestinia­n health officials say 230 people have been killed in aerial bombardmen­ts that have worsened Gaza’s already dire humanitari­an situation. Israeli authoritie­s put the death toll to date at 12 in Israel, where repeated rocket attacks have caused panic and sent people rushing into shelters.

 ??  ?? Smoke billows at an industrial area during an Israeli air strike in Gaza earlier on Thursday. The conflict has cost 232 lives in Gaza and 12 in Israel. Photograph: APAImages/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
Smoke billows at an industrial area during an Israeli air strike in Gaza earlier on Thursday. The conflict has cost 232 lives in Gaza and 12 in Israel. Photograph: APAImages/Rex/Shuttersto­ck

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States