Thu, Oct 10, 2024 | Rabi al-Thani 6, 1446 | DXB ktweather icon°C

Kerry says no Gaza ceasefire reached yet as toll nears 850

Kerry says no Gaza ceasefire reached yet as toll nears 850

Benjamin Netanyahu’s security cabinet had turned down a peace plan because it did not let Israel carry on hunting down Hamas’s tunnel network.

  • (Agencies)
  • Updated: Sat 4 Apr 2015, 5:23 AM

US Secretary of State John Kerry said on Friday no ceasefire deal had been reached yet in the conflict in Gaza as he and UN chief Ban Ki-moon urged a seven-day halt in fighting.

Kerry, who has been leading international efforts to reach a truce, said at a Press conference in Cairo with Ban that both sides “still have some terminology” to agree to on a ceasefire, but added they had “fundamental framework” on a truce.

Egypt’s Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukri said “both sides have not shown till now enough willingness to negotiate.”

Kerry said he had not submitted any formal truce proposal.

“They may have rejected some language in the proposal within the framework ... but there was no formal proposal submitted from me,” he said.

Sameh Shukri called on for a seven-day humanitarian truce for the Eid Al Fitr holidays.

“We call for the humanitarian ceasefire ... at the end of the holy month of Ramadan and Eid Al Fitr for a period of 7 days,” he told reporters in Cairo at a Press conference with Kerry and Ban Ki-moon.

Earlier, Israel rejected international proposals for a ceasefire, but continued discussing changes to the truce plan with Kerry, a government source said.

Mediators struggled to resolve seemingly irreconcilable demands from Israel and Hamas-led fighters, locked in conflict since July 8.

Hamas, which wants an end to an Israeli-Egyptian blockade of Gaza before agreeing to halt hostilities, has yet to respond to the ceasefire proposition, which has not been made public.

The Israeli source, who declined to be named, said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s security cabinet had turned down the plan because it did not let Israel carry on hunting down Hamas’s tunnel network that criss-crosses the Gaza border.

“Kerry’s proposal leans (too much) towards Hamas’s demands,” said the source.

As diplomacy faltered, fighting raged.

Gaza officials said Israeli strikes killed 55 people on Friday, including a pregnant woman and the head of media operations for Hamas ally Islamic Jihad and his son. They put the number of Palestinian deaths in 18 days of conflict at 848, most of them civilians.

Surgeons saved the life of the 23-year-old woman’s unborn child after the air strike hit a house in the central Gaza town of Deir Al Balah, emergency services spokesman Ashraf Al Qudra said

Militants fired a barrage of rockets out of Gaza, triggering sirens across much of southern and central Israel, including at the country’s main airport. No injuries were reported, with the Iron Dome interceptor system knocking out many of the missiles.

The Gaza turmoil stoked tensions in the nearby occupied West Bank, where U.S.-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas governs in uneasy coordination with Israel.

Medics said six Palestinians were killed in separate incidents near the cities of Nablus and Hebron, including one shooting that witnesses blamed on an apparent Jewish settler.

On Thursday night, 10,000 demonstrators marched in solidarity with Gaza near the Palestinian administrative capital Ramallah - a scale recalling mass revolts of the past. Protesters surged against an Israeli army checkpoint, throwing rocks and Molotov cocktails, and Palestinian medics said one was shot dead and 200 wounded when troops opened fire.

Israel said three more of its soldiers were killed in Gaza on Friday, bringing the army death toll to 35, as troops battled militants in the north, east and south of Gaza — a tiny Mediterranean enclave home to 1.8 million Palestinians.

It also announced that a soldier unaccounted for after an ambush in Gaza six days ago was definitely dead, although his body had not been recovered. Hamas said on Sunday it had captured the man, but did not release a photograph of him.

Three civilians have also been killed in Israel by rockets from Gaza - the kind of attack that surged last month amid Hamas anger at a crackdown on its activists in the West Bank, prompting the July 8 launch of the Israeli offensive.

The growing Israeli casualty list has only strengthened resolve in the country to pursue this latest campaign against Hamas until the group is significantly weakened.

Kerry, based in neighbouring Egypt for much of the week, is seeking a limited humanitarian truce under which Palestinian movement would be freed up to allow in aid and for the dead and wounded to be recovered.

A Palestinian official close to the negotiations said Turkey and Qatar had proposed a 7-day halt to the fighting, which had been relayed to Israel by Kerry while Hamas considered it.

Israel insisted that, even if such a ceasefire was agreed, its army should continue digging up tunnels along Gaza’s eastern frontier, a mission that could take between one and two weeks.

Netanyahu has said a truce should also lead to the eventual stripping of Gaza’s rocket arsenals - something Hamas rules out.


Next Story