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US says that Israel accepts Gaza ceasefire plan; Hamas cool to it

Update This picture taken from the Israeli side of the border with the Gaza Strip shows destroyed buildings in the northern sector of the besieged Palestinian territory on May 29, 2025. (AFP)
This picture taken from the Israeli side of the border with the Gaza Strip shows destroyed buildings in the northern sector of the besieged Palestinian territory on May 29, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 30 May 2025

US says that Israel accepts Gaza ceasefire plan; Hamas cool to it

This picture taken from the Israeli side of the border with the Gaza Strip shows destroyed buildings in territory.
  • Deep differences between Hamas, Israel have stymied ceasefire efforts
  • US-backed aid operation expands to third site in Gaza

WASHINGTON/UNITED NATIONS/CAIRO: I srael has agreed to a US ceasefire proposal for Gaza, the White House said on Thursday, and Hamas said it was reviewing the plan although its terms did not meet the group’s demands.
As a US-backed system for distributing food aid in the shattered enclave expanded, Israeli media reported that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the families of hostages held in Gaza that Israel had accepted a deal presented by US President Donald Trump’s Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff.
Netanyahu’s office did not confirm the reports, but White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told reporters in Washington that Israel had signed off on the proposal.
She did not detail its contents. A source briefed on the matter, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the initial phase of the proposed deal would include a 60-day ceasefire and the flow of humanitarian aid into the enclave.
The Palestinian militant group Hamas said it was studying the proposal, and senior Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri told Reuters the group was still discussing it.
But Abu Zuhri said its terms echoed Israel’s position and do not contain commitments to end the war, withdraw Israeli troops or admit aid as Hamas has demanded.
Deep differences between Hamas and Israel have stymied previous attempts to restore a ceasefire that broke down in March after only two months.
Israel has insisted that Hamas disarm completely and be dismantled as a military and governing force and that all 58 hostages still held in Gaza must be returned before it will agree to end the war.
Hamas has rejected the demand to give up its weapons and says Israel must pull its troops out of Gaza and commit to ending the war.

Aid effort expands
The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a private group backed by the United States and endorsed by Israel, expanded its aid distribution to a third site on Thursday.
Heavily criticized by the United Nations and other aid groups as inadequate and flawed, the group’s operation began this week in Gaza, where the UN has said 2 million people are at risk of famine after Israel’s 11-week blockade on aid entering the enclave.
The aid launch was marred by tumultuous scenes on Tuesday when thousands of Palestinians rushed distribution points and forced private security contractors to retreat.
The chaotic start to the operation has raised international pressure on Israel to get more food in and halt the fighting in Gaza. GHF has so far supplied about 1.8 million meals and plans to open more sites in the coming weeks.
Witkoff told reporters on Wednesday that Washington was close to “sending out a new term sheet” about a ceasefire to the two sides in the conflict that has raged since October 2023.
“I have some very good feelings about getting to a long-term resolution, temporary ceasefire and a long-term resolution, a peaceful resolution, of that conflict,” Witkoff said then.
Israel has come under increasing international pressure, with many European countries that have normally been reluctant to criticize it openly demanding an end to the war and a major relief effort.
Israel launched its campaign in Gaza in response to the devastating Hamas attack in southern Israel on October 7, 2023, that killed some 1,200 people and saw 251 taken hostage into Gaza, according to Israeli tallies.
The campaign has killed more than 54,000 Palestinians, Gaza health officials say, and left the enclave in ruins.


US envoy meets Israeli hostage families in Tel Aviv

US envoy meets Israeli hostage families in Tel Aviv
Updated 02 August 2025

US envoy meets Israeli hostage families in Tel Aviv

US envoy meets Israeli hostage families in Tel Aviv
  • Yotam Cohen, brother of 21-year-old hostage Nimrod Cohen, told AFP in the square: “The war needs to end. The Israeli government will not end it willingly”
  • Israel’s top general warned that there would be no respite in fighting in Gaza if the hostages were not released

TEL AVIV: US envoy Steve Witkoff on Saturday met the anguished families of Israeli hostages still held in Gaza, as fears for the captives’ survival mounted almost 22 months into the war sparked by Hamas’s October 2023 attack.

Witkoff was greeted with some applause and pleas for assistance from hundreds of protesters gathered in Tel Aviv, before going into a closed meeting with the families.

The Hostages and Missing Families Forum confirmed the meeting was underway and videos shared online showed Witkoff arriving as families chanted “Bring them home!” and “We need your help.”

The visit came one day after Witkoff visited a US-backed aid station in Gaza, to inspect efforts to get food into the devastated Palestinian territory.

Yotam Cohen, brother of 21-year-old hostage Nimrod Cohen, told AFP in the square: “The war needs to end. The Israeli government will not end it willingly. It has refused to do so.

“The Israeli government must be stopped. For our sakes, for our soldiers’ sakes, for our hostages’ sakes, for our sons and for the future generations of everybody in the Middle East.”

After the meeting, the Forum released a statement saying that Witkoff had given them a personal commitment that he and US President Donald Trump would work to return the remaining hostages.

The United States, along with Egypt and Qatar, had been mediating ceasefire talks between Hamas and Israel that would allow the hostages to be released and humanitarian aid to flow more freely.

But talks broke down last month and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is under increasing domestic pressure to come up with another way to secure the missing hostages, alive and dead.

He is also facing international calls to open Gaza’s borders to more food aid, after UN and humanitarian agencies warned that more than two million Palestinian civilians are facing starvation.

But Israel’s top general warned that there would be no respite in fighting in Gaza if the hostages were not released.

“I estimate that in the coming days we will know whether we can reach an agreement for the release of our hostages,” said army chief of staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir, according to a military statement.

“If not, the combat will continue without rest,” he said, during remarks to officers inside Gaza on Friday.

Of the 251 people who were kidnapped from Israel during Hamas’s attack in October 2023, 49 remain in Gaza, 27 of them dead, according to the military.

Palestinian armed groups this week released two videos of hostages looking emaciated and weak.

Zamir denied that there was widespread starvation in Gaza.

“The current campaign of false accusations of intentional starvation is a deliberate, timed, and deceitful attempt to accuse the IDF (Israeli military), a moral army, of war crimes,” he said.

“The ones responsible for the killing and suffering of the residents in the Gaza Strip is Hamas.”

Hamas’s 2023 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to a tally based on official figures.

A total of 898 Israeli soldiers have also been killed, according to the military.

Israel’s campaign in Gaza has killed at least 60,332 people, mostly civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry, deemed reliable by the UN.

Gaza’s civil defense agency said Israeli strikes killed 21 people in the territory on Saturday.

Civil defense spokesman Mahmud Bassal said two people were killed and another 26 injured after an Israeli strike on a central Gaza area where Palestinians had gathered before a food distribution point run by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).

He added that Saturday’s bombings mostly targeted the areas near the southern city of Khan Yunis and Gaza City in the north.

Witkoff visited another GHF site for five hours on Friday, promising that Trump would come up with a plan to better feed civilians.

Adnan Abu Hasna, of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, told AFP that the agency had “approximately 6,000 trucks ready for the Gaza Strip, but the crossings are closed by political decision. There are five land crossings into the Strip through which 1,000 trucks can enter daily.”

The UN human rights office in the Palestinian territories on Friday said at least 1,373 Palestinians seeking aid in Gaza had been killed since May 27, most of them by the Israeli military.

Israel’s military insist that soldiers never deliberately target civilians and accuses Hamas fighters of looting UN and humanitarian aid trucks.


Jordan says two armed people killed after ‘infiltration attempt’ via Syrian border

Jordan says two armed people killed after ‘infiltration attempt’ via Syrian border
Updated 02 August 2025

Jordan says two armed people killed after ‘infiltration attempt’ via Syrian border

Jordan says two armed people killed after ‘infiltration attempt’ via Syrian border
  • Rest of the armed group were pushed back to the Syrian territory – Jordanian Armed Forces
  • Jordan’s armed forces often report foiling border infiltration attempts, sometimes for drug smuggling

Jordan’s armed forces said on Saturday that its forces killed two armed people after a ‘foiled infiltration attempt’ through its border with Syria the previous day.

The Jordanian Armed Forces did not provide further details in its statement but said that the rest of the armed group were pushed back to the Syrian territory.

Jordan’s armed forces often report foiling border infiltration attempts, sometimes for drug smuggling.

In January, Jordan and Syria agreed to form a joint security committee to secure their border, combat arms and drug smuggling and work to prevent the resurgence of Daesh militants.


Israeli drone followed Gazan doctor home to kill his family: Colleague

Israeli drone followed Gazan doctor home to kill his family: Colleague
Updated 02 August 2025

Israeli drone followed Gazan doctor home to kill his family: Colleague

Israeli drone followed Gazan doctor home to kill his family: Colleague
  • Drone operator ‘waited until he was in his tent and greeted his three children and killed all of them’
  • British doctor: Situation in Palestinian enclave ‘absolutely desperate’

LONDON: A British doctor who recently returned from Gaza told Sky News that an Israeli drone pursued her colleague home and killed his family.

Nada Al-Hadithy said the situation in Gaza is “absolutely desperate.” One of her patients, a 21-year-old woman who was six months pregnant, lost her baby after an Israeli bomb detonated near her tent, seriously injuring her.

“Her husband was killed, she lost her eye, she had an open fracture and both her legs were completely destroyed from the bomb blast,” Al-Hadithy said.

“This woman is completely emaciated, with no vitamins, no food. And one day her baby stopped moving.”

A “school classroom’s worth of children” are dying in Gaza every day, the doctor said, adding that many Gazan health workers are suffering from starvation along with the general population there.

In the three weeks she worked in Gaza, Al-Hadithy said there was a “tangible difference in the amount of starvation and the emaciation of our patients.”

She added: “Even the severity of and relentlessness of the bombings was worse. It was mass casualty after mass casualty, with people being blown up in their tents, which were meant to be in green zones. The situation was catastrophic.”

She described her colleague whose family was killed by an Israeli drone as “patient, joyful and hardworking.”

He was followed home, according to eyewitness testimony from Al-Hadithy and other medical workers, by an Israeli quadcopter first-person-view drone.

The drone’s operator chose not to “kill him on the route where he was on his own,” she said. Instead, the operator “waited until he was in his tent and greeted his three children and killed all of them.”

Al-Hadithy said she regularly saw emaciated children while working in Gaza, adding: “You’ve got 2 million starving people in (an area) the same size as Exeter, which in our country and in our census in 2021 had 130,000 people in it. That’s 2 million people with no water, no sanitation, no food, no medical supplies.”

She praised her Palestinian colleagues in Gaza’s besieged health sector, saying: “Never before have I seen such dignified, committed people.”


American family has not spoken to 15-year-old son in Israeli prison since February, Arab News told

American family has not spoken to 15-year-old son in Israeli prison since February, Arab News told
Updated 02 August 2025

American family has not spoken to 15-year-old son in Israeli prison since February, Arab News told

American family has not spoken to 15-year-old son in Israeli prison since February, Arab News told
  • Son was abducted by 20 masked Israeli soldiers carrying automatic weapons
  • He was blindfolded and handcuffed, says father

CHICAGO: The parents of 15-year-old American Muhammad Ibrahim, who was abducted by 20 masked Israeli soldiers carrying automatic weapons who kicked down the front door of their home in Al-Mazra’a Ash-Sharqiya on Feb. 16, said they have been prevented from seeing their son since the abduction.

The father, Zaher Ibrahim, said masked Israeli soldiers arrived at their home at 3 a.m., grabbed his son without any explanation, and incarcerated him at the notorious Megiddo Prison, denying visits from family and legal representatives.

“My son Muhammad is 15 years old. He looks like he is 12. The Israeli soldiers interrogated and beat him for hours until he was forced to confess to throwing a rock. He has been in prison now since Feb. 16 and we have not been allowed to speak with him, see him or get him any representation,” Zaher Ibrahim told Arab News.

“But when the Israeli settlers beat and killed his cousin Sayfollah (Musallet) last February, no one was arrested or charged, and they know who the Israeli settlers were who killed him. We’re Americans and yet it means nothing to the Israelis. They must release my son.”

Zaher Ibrahim said the Israeli soldiers “blindfolded my son, placed handcuffs on him, and put him in their military Jeep without any explanation. His mother and I haven’t seen him since.”

The tragedy of the Ibrahim family is directly connected to the case of Musallet, the 20-year-old American who was beaten to death by Israeli settlers on July 11.

Zaher Ibrahim is the brother-in-law of Kamel Musallet, the father of Sayfollah. Their wives are sisters, he said.

The two American families live in Florida and have homes in the West Bank village near Ramallah where the killing of Sayfollah Musallet and the abduction of Muhammad Ibrahim took place. Zaher Ibrahim says he holds out hope for his son, but remains concerned.

Kamel Musallet told Arab News that US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee visited his home about 10 days after his son was killed and promised to look into the attack and other attacks against other Americans, but that nothing had happened.

Musallet said: “He promised to do something about the murder of my son, but I haven’t heard anything more.

“Huckabee said he was concerned about the safety of American citizens but, so far, we haven’t heard anything about my nephew Muhammad or anything about the settlers who killed my son.”

Musallet said that three weeks before Muhammad Ibrahim was taken from his home, the two cousins had been working together in the family’s ice cream shop in Tampa, Florida.

Zaher Ibrahim said: “These are just boys. They have been attacked and falsely accused and, worse, they get no justice. No representation. They are Americans.”

He added that it took four days following the arrest for the Israeli military to tell him his son had been held for “throwing a rock,” but that no one had been arrested for the killing of his nephew Sayfollah. “How is that possible?” Zaher Ibrahim asked.

He had been told by a boy released from the prison that his son was alive, and added that the US Embassy had contacted him twice to say it would look into his son’s health.

Zaher Ibrahim added: “The Israelis don’t give you any clothes. You wear the same clothes that you have when they arrested you the entire time in the prison, and they are not washed. It causes skin disease and unhealthy situations.

“We haven’t been able to see him or speak to him, or get him clothes or check on his health. It’s wrong.”

He said he had learned that the son of another American Palestinian family living nearby had also been abducted eight days earlier by Israeli soldiers, and that his family had also not been able to learn anything about his status or the reasons for his abduction.

He said: “This is happening and someone needs to do something about this. It’s wrong.”

Kemel Musallet said he was disappointed by the response of the US government to the abduction and killing of Americans by Israeli settlers and soldiers.


Israel army chief warns of combat ‘without rest’ unless hostages are freed

Israel army chief warns of combat ‘without rest’ unless hostages are freed
Updated 02 August 2025

Israel army chief warns of combat ‘without rest’ unless hostages are freed

Israel army chief warns of combat ‘without rest’ unless hostages are freed
  • Of the 251 people who were kidnapped from Israel during Hamas’s attack in October 2023, 49 remain in Gaza
  • Israel’s campaign in Gaza has killed at least 60,332 people in Gaza, mostly civilians

JERUSALEM: Israel’s top general has warned that there will be no respite in fighting in Gaza if negotiations fail to quickly secure the release of hostages held in the Palestinian territory.

“I estimate that in the coming days we will know whether we can reach an agreement for the release of our hostages,” said army chief of staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir, according to a military statement.

“If not, the combat will continue without rest,” he said, during remarks to officers inside Gaza on Friday.

Footage released by the Israeli military showed Zamir meeting soldiers and officers in a command center.

Of the 251 people who were kidnapped from Israel during Hamas’s attack in October 2023, 49 remain in Gaza, 27 of them dead, according to the military.

Palestinian armed groups this week released two videos of hostages looking emaciated and weak.

Negotiations – mediated by the United States, Egypt and Qatar – to secure a ceasefire and their release broke down last month, and some in Israel have called for tougher military action.

This comes against the backdrop of growing pressure – both internationally and domestically, including from many of the hostages’ families – to resume efforts to secure a ceasefire in the nearly 22-month conflict.

Aid agencies have meanwhile warned that Gaza’s population is facing a catastrophic famine, triggered by Israeli restrictions on aid.

Zamir nonetheless rejected these allegations out of hand.

“The current campaign of false accusations of intentional starvation is a deliberate, timed, and deceitful attempt to accuse the IDF (military), a moral army, of war crimes,” he said.

“The ones responsible for the killing and suffering of the residents in the Gaza Strip is Hamas.”

Hamas’s 2023 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to a tally based on official figures.

A total of 898 Israeli soldiers have also been killed since ground troops were sent into Gaza, according to the military.

Israel’s campaign in Gaza has killed at least 60,332 people in Gaza, mostly civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry, deemed reliable by the UN.