Hamas says agreement on long-term truce
EGYPT: The Deputy Leader of Hamas said Thursday night that the
Islamic militant group agreed to a long-term truce with Israel for the
Gaza Strip, the official Egyptian news agency reported.
Moussa Abu Marzouk told MENA that Egypt's government, which has been
mediating between Hamas and Israel, would announce the truce, which will
last for 18 months, in two days after consulting with other Palestinian
factions.
In Jerusalem, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's office said the Israeli
government had no comment on the report.
Earlier in the day, Egyptian and Hamas officials reported progress in
truce talks, which included Hamas' strongman from Gaza, Mahmoud Zahar,
and Egypt's top mediator, intelligence chief Omar Suleiman.
Egyptian diplomats have been working as go-betweens to try to arrange
a truce deal between Hamas and Israel to solidify a cease-fire that
ended Israel's devastating 22-day offensive in Gaza last month. Hamas
and Israel refuse to negotiate directly.
Marzouk told MENA that the Egyptian-brokered deal it agreed to calls
for Israel to reopen six border crossings into the Gaza Strip.
Hamas leaders centered its truce demands on a reopening of the tiny
coastal territory's borders, which have been largely sealed by Egypt and
Israel since Hamas gunmen seized control in Gaza in 2007.
Israel, in turn, insisted that any cease-fire must include an end to
militants firing rockets from Gaza into southern Israel and a halt to
Hamas arms smuggling.
It was not clear what effect recent elections in Israel would have on
any prospective deal over Gaza.
In talking to MENA, Marzouk did not discuss details. But earlier
Thursday he told Al-Jazeera television that Egypt had previously agreed
to work with Israel to forge new arrangements for reopening Gaza's
crossing into Egypt.
Marzouk said a deal for the release of a captured Israeli soldier
Gilad Shalit held in Gaza would be negotiated later, according to MENA.
Egypt has been trying to broker a prisoner exchange between Israel
and Hamas. Hamas is holding Shalit, who was abducted more than two years
ago in a cross-border raid from Gaza into southern Israel.
Besides mediating a truce for Gaza, Egypt also is trying to bring
Hamas and its Palestinian rival, President Mahmoud Abbas, into talks on
reconciling and forming a unity government that can move ahead with
peace negotiations with Israel. Egypt hopes to host a reconciliation
conference Feb. 22.
Meanwhile, an Egyptian security official said Egypt had arrested a
Palestinian who sneaked into Egypt through a tunnel from Gaza and was
trying to purchase weapons in Egypt. The official, who spoke on
condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the
media, said the man and two Egyptians who were sheltering him were
arrested in the coastal city of El-Arish Wednesday.
CAIRO, Friday, AP |