Egypt makes new truce offer as Israeli strikes in Gaza kill 65, say local officials

Cairo’s plan calls for Hamas to release five Israeli hostages each week, according to security sources

Palestinians attempt to extinguish a fire at the emergency department of the Nasser hospital in the southern Gaza Strip after it was hit in an Israeli air strike on Sunday. Photograph: AFP via Getty Images
Palestinians attempt to extinguish a fire at the emergency department of the Nasser hospital in the southern Gaza Strip after it was hit in an Israeli air strike on Sunday. Photograph: AFP via Getty Images

Egypt has advanced a proposal aimed at restoring the Gaza ceasefire deal, said security sources said on Monday, as Palestinian health authorities indicated Israeli strikes had killed at least 65 people in the enclave in the previous 24 hours.

The proposal, made last week, follows an escalation in violence after Israel resumed air and ground operations against Hamas on March 18th, ending two months of relative calm after 15 months of war.

Officials from Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry said Israeli air strikes and shelling have killed nearly 700 Palestinians since then, including at least 400 women and children.

Among those killed on Monday were two local journalists, Mohammad Mansour and Hussam Shabat, said medics. The Palestinian Journalist Syndicate said at least 206 journalists have been killed by Israeli fire in Gaza since early October 2023, when the conflict erupted. There was no immediate Israeli comment.

READ SOME MORE

Hamas said several of its senior political and security officials had also been killed.

The Egyptian plan calls for Hamas to release five Israeli hostages each week, with Israel implementing the second phase of the ceasefire after the first week, said two security sources.

Hamas is holding 59 hostages, with 24 thought to be alive, among the more than 250 it seized in its October 7th, 2023 cross-border attack on Israel. Most of the rest have been released, or the bodies handed over, in negotiated exchanges.

The US and Hamas have agreed to the proposal, said the security sources but Israel has not yet responded.

A Hamas official did not confirm the proposed offer, but said “several proposals are being discussed with the mediators to bridge the gap and to resume negotiations to reach common ground that would pave the way to start the second phase of the agreement”.

The sources said the Egyptian proposal includes a timeline for a full Israeli military withdrawal from Gaza, backed by US guarantees, in exchange for the release of remaining hostages.

Hamas has accused Israel of breaking the terms of the January ceasefire agreement but has said it is willing to negotiate a renewed truce and was studying proposals from US president Donald Trump’s special envoy, Steve Witkoff.

Israel says it resumed its military operations to force Hamas to release the remaining hostages it is holding in Gaza.

On Monday, Hamas released a video it said showed hostages Elkana Bohbot (35), and Yosef Haim-Ohana (24), who were abducted from the Nova music festival site on October 7th.

Israel says it does its best to reduce harm to civilians and has questioned the death toll provided by health authorities in the Hamas-run enclave.

Palestinian officials on Sunday put the number of dead from nearly 18 months of conflict at more than 50,000.

Israel launched its offensive in Gaza after Hamas fighters stormed southern Israel on October 7th, 2023, killing 1,200 people, mostly civilians, according to Israeli tallies.

In Gaza’s southernmost city of Rafah, the municipality said thousands of people were stuck inside the Tel Al-Sultan district where some Israeli military forces had entered, with families trapped among the ruins, with no water, food, or medicine.

The Palestinian Civil Emergency Service said 50,000 residents remained cornered in Rafah, which abuts the border with Egypt.

The Israeli military said troops had encircled Tel Al-Sultan to dismantle “terror infrastructure sites and eliminate terrorists in the area”.

A United Nations spokesperson said on Monday it would reduce its footprint in Gaza after five staff members of its Palestinian relief agency Unrwa were killed in the renewed conflict but remains committed to providing aid to civilians.

Separately, Unrwa said 124,000 Palestinians have been displaced in Gaza in recent days.

“Families carry what little they have with no shelter, no safety, and nowhere left to go. The Israeli authorities have cut off all aid. Food is scarce and prices are soaring. This is a humanitarian catastrophe. The siege must end,” Unrwa said on X. – Reuters