Palestinian groups to respect Gaza truce 'as long as Israel does
Factions in the besieged Gaza Strip say they have agreed to an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire to end flare-up of violence.
Palestinian groups in the besieged Gaza Strip say they have agreed to an
Egyptian-brokered ceasefire with Israel to end the worst violence
between the two sides in years.
Al Jazeera's Harry Fawcett, reporting from Nahal-Oz near the Gaza-Israel
fence, said Hamas-led factions on Tuesday accepted the truce "to
restart the situation that prevailed up until this latest military
escalation".
Hamas is the group administering the besieged Gaza Strip.
Fawcett added: "The Israelis do not confirm or deny such things, but
Israeli media are reporting, citing an unnamed official, that
Palestinian factions tried through four separate mediators to request a
ceasefire."
A statement by Palestinian groups in Gaza said: "Egypt's efforts have
been able to achieve a ceasefire between the resistance and the Zionist
enemy.
"The resistance will respect this declaration as long as the Zionist enemy respects it."
The announcement set off celebrations in Gaza City with hundrerds of Palestinians taking to the streets to declare victory.
Earlier, senior Hamas official Ismail Haniya said that the Palestinian
group was prepared to return to a ceasefire agreement if Israel "stops
its aggression" on the Gaza Strip.
"Should the Occupation [Israel] stop its aggression a return to the
ceasefire understandings will be possible," Haniya said in a statement.
'Israel provoked the Palestinians'
At least seven Palestinians have been killed in Israeli attacks on the
coastal enclave since Monday, in the worst violence between the two
sides since the 2014 war.
The latest escalation erupted late on Sunday when Israel launched a
botched raid in Gaza that killed seven other Palestinians and one of its
commanders.
Hamas and other armed factions on Monday fired over 400 rockets or
mortar bombs at Israel, with Israel responding with dozens of air raids.
The Palestinian Shehab news agency reported that civilian buildings, the
Al-Aqsa TV channel and the Al-Amal hotel were all targeted by Israeli
strikes.
Turkey criticised Israel's response to the rocket fire, with Ibrahim
Kalin, a spokesman for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, calling
the strikes "brutal" and illegal, state news agency Anadolu said.
The German Foreign Office also condemned Israel's air strikes, saying:
"There can be no justification for this violence against innocent
civilians."
Meanwhile, the Palestine Liberation Organisation said Israel was solely
responsible for the surge in fighting. In a statement, it called on the
international community to protect citizens in Gaza.
Mohammad Oweis, a Palestinian-American political analyst, told Al
Jazeera that the ceasefire would only hold "as long as the Israelis do
not provoke the Palestinians".
"The Israelis provoked the Palestinians into this latest round of fighting. They are the ones who need to stop.
"They seem to have learnt from Donald Trump that by provoking people,
attacking them verbally and physically, [can] change facts and the
reality on the ground."
'A different approach'
Gaza - a territory of more than two million people - has been under a
devastating Israeli-imposed blockade for the past 11 years, which has
severely restricted the movement of Palestinians in and out of it.
Israel withdrew its troops and settlers from the Strip in 2005 but,
citing security concerns, maintains tight control of its land and sea
borders, reducing its economy to a state of collapse.
Egypt also restricts movement in and out of Gaza through its border.
Mohammed Daraghmeh, a columnist and political analyst, said this latest
escalation could be an important moment in the future of the Gaza
blockade.
"Both sides have realised that after a series of wars they need to have a different approach.
"After a period of calm in Gaza, Israel finally allowed Qatari money to
be funnelled to Gaza, to have oil imported, to offer some relaxation
amid the blockade. This escalation has come at a critical moment."
Gideon Levy, a columnist at Haaretz and member of the newspaper's
editorial board, said unless Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
ended the siege, the violence would continue.
"Both parties are not interested in a war, but both are not doing enough to prevent one," he said.
"Netanyahu has no intention to put an end to the siege, so as long as it
continues, we will, again and again, witness one violent action leading
to another violent act."
Israel and Hamas have fought three wars since the group seized control of Gaza after it won elections in the enclave in 2006.
In the most recent one in 2014, more than 2,200 Palestinians were killed
- the majority of whom were civilians - and tens of thousands were left
homeless. Seventy-three people, most of them soldiers, were killed on
the Israeli side.
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