Israel government approves ceasefire-hostage deal with Hamas
By a vote of 24-8, the cabinet approved the deal, which is set to take effect on Sunday. The deal was approved in the early hours of Saturday.
ANI
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The agreement will initiate the first phase of the ceasefire in Gaza and facilitate the release of both Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners
TEL AVIV, 18 JAN
The
Israeli government has approved the ceasefire and hostage release deal with
Hamas, according to a report by Times of Israel.
By a vote of 24-8, the cabinet approved the deal, which is set to take effect
on Sunday. The deal was approved in the early hours of Saturday.
The agreement will initiate the first phase of the ceasefire in Gaza and
facilitate the release of both Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners.
The
Times of Israel further reported that as the government has now approved the
agreement, opponents of the deal can petition the High Court of Justice against
the release of Palestinian security prisoners who are set to be freed, though
the court is unlikely to intervene.
On Friday, the Israeli security cabinet had approved the hostage
release-ceasefire deal with Hamas and recommended the government to adopt it.
The Israel government's hostages and missing persons coordination unit on
Friday notified the families of the 33 Israeli hostages expected to be set free
in the first phase of the Gaza ceasefire deal.
Israel
has not been told how many of the 33 are alive, though it expects the majority
are. Israel will receive a full status report on all those on the list seven
days into the ceasefire.
The
order of release is not yet known. The identities of those set to return are
expected to be provided 24 hours before each release, as reported by Times of
Israel.
Beyond
the 33 hostages set for release in phase one, Israel says 65 more hostages are
currently held in Gaza, including the bodies of at least 36 confirmed dead. As
the first phase progresses, talks will focus on the release of remaining
hostages, ending the war, and Gaza's future reconstruction.
Netanyahu's
far-right coalition allies have pressured him not to agree to end the fighting,
with families of the remaining 65 hostages fearing the second phase may never
happen, and their loved ones could remain in terrorists' hands.
Israeli
and Hamas negotiating teams signed the deal in Doha early Friday after clearing
the final hurdles. Both the US and Qatar, who mediated the negotiations,
announced on Wednesday that an agreement had been reached to end the 15-month
war in Gaza triggered by Hamas' 7 October, 2023, attack, killing over 1200
civilians and holding over 250 as hostages, of which around 100 are still in
captivity.
In
response, Israel launched a massive counter-attack targeting Hamas units in the
Gaza Strip. The response, however, has also drawn criticism from several
humanitarian groups over the high number of civilian killings.
According
to the Gaza health ministry, over 45,000 people have been killed in Gaza, with
half of whom are women and children
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