Israel, Hamas agree to restore calm in Gaza

Military spokesperson says civilian life should return to normal in areas next to Gaza


Reuters July 21, 2018
An explosion is seen following an Israeli air strike in the southern Gaza Strip July 20, 2018. PHOTO: REUTERS

GAZA: Hamas said on Saturday it had agreed a truce with Israel in the Gaza Strip, a day after clashes killed an Israeli soldier and four Palestinians along the volatile border.

The Israeli military declined to comment on the reported ceasefire. Israel’s government and army rarely acknowledge ceasefires with Hamas, but a military spokesperson said civilian life should return to normal in areas next to Gaza.

Deadly Israeli strikes pound Gaza after soldier killed

In what appeared to be an isolated incident, with no reports of casualties, an Israeli tank fired on a Hamas post in Gaza after Palestinian suspects breached the border fence and entered Israeli territory before retreating back into Gaza, the military said. There were no other reports of unrest in the area.

On Friday, Palestinian gunmen killed an Israeli soldier and the Israeli military launched dozens of strikes that killed four Palestinians, including three Hamas fighters. At least 120 Gazans were wounded.

“With Egyptian and United Nations efforts it has been agreed to return to the era of calm between (Israel) and Palestinian factions,” said Fawzi Barhoum, spokesperson for the Hamas group that controls Gaza.

The soldier was the first member of Israel’s army to be killed on the Gaza front since a 2014 war between Israel and Hamas, a military spokesperson said.

During the flare-up which lasted several hours, the Israeli military said its jets and tanks hit 68 Hamas targets, and destroyed “buildings and infrastructures and revoked significant military and command and control capabilities.”

Egyptian security officials and a diplomat from another unnamed state held contacts with Hamas and Israel in an effort to restore calm and prevent further deterioration, a Palestinian official told Reuters.

If confirmed, it would be the third ceasefire between Israel and Hamas to be brokered by Egypt this year and the second truce to be agreed this week after a day-long flare up on Saturday.

Weekly clashes at the Israel-Gaza border have kept tensions high for months. At least 140 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces during protests at the frontier held every week since March.

Protest organizers say they are demanding the right to return to lands lost to Israel in the 1948 war of its foundation and for an Israeli-Egyptian blockade to ease.

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Israel says Hamas has been orchestrating the demonstrations, dubbed "The Great March of Return", to provide cover for militants’ cross-border attacks. Hamas denies this.

The surge in violence comes as Palestinian hopes for an independent state have dwindled and peace talks remain stalled. Gaza, home to 2 million people, most of whom depend on foreign aid, has been under Israeli economic sanctions for 12 years.

COMMENTS (1)

Bunny Rabbit | 6 years ago | Reply Gaza is too small a strip of land to fight over like this for decades and eons and generations ...Both Arabs and yahudis should try to find a solution like use that land for a common play ground etc.,
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