Israel And Hamas Officers are meeting in one Egyptian Resort in hopes of a possible ceasefire on Monday Gaza On the eve of the second anniversary of the disastrous war.
The indirect talks will be held at the Red Sea Resort of Sharm al-Sheikh, where the Israeli delegation led by top negotiator Ron Dermer, is ready to come on Monday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said.
Hamas’s delegation headed by Khalil al-Hayyah arrived in Egypt on Sunday, the group said in a statement.
It states that the conversation will focus on the first phase of a ceasefire, including a partial return of the Israeli armies as well as the release of hostages organized by terrorists in Gaza in exchange for Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli’s custody.
Jered Kushner, son-in-law of US Middle East Envoy Steve Witcoff and President Donald Trump, is also expected to attend the conversation, the Egyptian state-run Al-Aaram said.
This is a step welcomed by Trump after accepting some elements of the latest push for peace, after accepting some elements of the American peace plan. Israel has said that it has supported the new American attempt. Under the scheme, Hamas will release the remaining 48 hostages – about 20 is considered alive – within three days. It will leave power and disarray.
Negotiations in Egypt are expected to move forward rapidly as Netanyahu stated that they will “be limited to maximum for a few days,” although some Hamas officials warned that the body buried under the rubble may require longer to detect the body of the bourgeois.
Reduce bombing
The heavy bombing of Israel’s Gaza will have to stop to release the Israeli hostages. Israel says it is focusing on Trump’s call to eliminate bombing to a large extent. The Israeli army said that it is carrying out defensive attacks to protect most of the soldiers, although dozens of Palestinians have died since Saturday night when the army announced.
The Israeli army said on Monday that it abolished “a terrorist cell equipped with explosive equipment and mortar, which was intended to attack the Israeli soldiers on Sunday.
It also destroyed another “terrorist cell”, which launched a mortar injuring a soldier, as well as a structure from where an anti-tax missile was launched against the Israeli army engineering machinery.
Hamas -led militants kidnapped 251 people and killed around 1,200 people, mostly in October 2023, most of the citizens triggered the war. Most hostages have been released in ceasefire or other deals.
Gaza’s Health Ministry said that the toll of Palestinian death in the war reached 67,139 on Sunday, injuring around 170,000. The ministry does not suggest how many of the killed people were citizens or fighters, but say that women and children make about half of the dead. The ministry is part of the Hamas-Interested Government, and the United Nations and many independent experts consider its figures to be the most reliable estimates of the war-time casualties.
‘Stay in fear, war and displacement’
In Gaza, the Palestinian children were born on the day when the war began, who were expecting to celebrate their second birthday for the sound of laughter and cheers instead of bombs, missiles and bullets.
Mothers hope to bring their children into some glimpse of generality, which has long been thin between the disappointment of frequent displacement for many people, a constant fear for their safety and lack of access to proper health care.
Rola Sakar said that since giving birth to his daughter Masa, two years have been suffering and filled with grief.
“I was hoping that (MASA) would be bigger with a strong personality, but he is weak. She has faced malnutrition. The girl has now weighed eight kilos for five months,” said Rola, which was displaced from Gaza’s northern city of Beat Lahia, said.
Rola and her husband Mohammad Zakout have been trying to have a child for five years.
“I am scared for my daughter. She is two, and she is living in fear, war and displacement,” Sakar said. Hanging laundry, a plastic chair, a carpet and a basic setty Nusrat makes family property in their tent in the refugee camp.
Amal al-Tayll and her husband, Mustafa, were her son Ali after three years of attempt for a child. Now living in a tent inside a street of Anirwar schools, Amal said that Ali is being denied proper hygiene, food, vaccination and even toys.
“I disappoint because I could not provide everything to my son. I was imagining a different life for him … He could not stay in his house and he found him to see his room. He couldn’t feel how a safe family life feels. The attacks, destruction and displacement are,” said Amal.
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Lidman reported from Tel Aviv, Israel. ,
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