Washingtonpost
Guns over Gaza fall silent, Israel-Hamas hostage release deal moves forward
E.Anderson3 months ago
JERUSALEM — The first break in Israel’s seven-week assault on Gaza began Friday with a temporary combat pause that gave besieged Gazans a chance to emerge and set the stage for an exchange of Israeli hostages held by Hamas and Palestinians imprisoned in Israel. The uneasy calm — a 96-hour intermission before the war is expected to resume — began at 7 a.m. per the terms of an accord brokered between Israel and Hamas in recent days. The Israeli military will keep its forces in place but cease attacks as captives are swapped in small tranches, starting with an expected 13 Israelis for 39 Palestinians prisoners later Friday. Additional Israelis are expected to be released in batches for a total of 50 over the four days, in exchange for 150 Palestinians. Humanitarian aid trucks immediately mobilized from Egypt as international agencies raced to take advantage of the long-sought pause in fighting. Within minutes of the halt, Gazans filled the rubble-strewn streets, many of them impassable, under skies that were clear of fighter jets and drones for the first time in weeks. Video posted on social media showed children running with what seemed to be pleasure rather than fear. Families carried bundles as some of the estimated 1.7 million displaced — 80 percent of the population — sought provisions and to secure better shelter. Ayman Amin ventured out for the first time in five days from his home in Gaza City, where he has been taking cover with his wife, three children and a sister. He stepped into a wasteland of ruined buildings where some neighbors were pulling bodies from the rubble. “We left the house, but our souls are still filled with fear, whether it’s from what we see or the possibility of returning to war after four days,” Amin told The Post. “Today is completely sunny, but fear still lingers in people’s eyes.” Israel warned Gazans not to treat the pause as a return to normal. Minutes before the scheduled halt in fighting, the military dropped leaflets telling residents “the war is not over” and forbidding those had fled to the southern sections of Gaza from trying to return to their homes in the north. Those still living in the northern areas saw evidence that Israel is prepared to back up the threats. In a voice message to The Washington Post, Mahmoud, 36, described a phalanx of Israeli tanks deployed along Nasser Street in northern Gaza City, a clear warning for civilians not to enter large sections of the city. There was heavy-caliber shooting nearby, he said. “The situation is so dangerous,” he said. Four tankers of fuel and four of cooking gas entered Gaza through Egypt, the first of what aid workers hope will be surge of relief materials for millions who are hanging on with dwindling food, power, sanitation and health care. Hamas has said 200 trucks would deliver aid daily during the pause. Hundreds of trucks are mobilizing after almost two months of fighting in which only limited amounts of aid have been allowed to cross. Fuel supplies are depleted, leaving many hospitals, bakeries, water supplies and phone networks unable to function without the electricity supplied by generators amid collapsing humanitarian conditions. Implementing the agreement, which the Israeli cabinet voted to approve early Wednesday morning, was delayed for 24 hours by last-minute wrangling over logistics, according to Qatari mediators. A final list of the first 13 hostages was delivered to Israel late Thursday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, and those families were told to be ready. Hundreds of family members of hostages braced for days of whipsaw emotions, ready to see some captives walk, or be carried, out of Gaza, but perhaps not their own loved ones. The hostages will emerge from 49 days of captivity into a region that has been transformed by war and devastation since their last contact with the outside on Oct. 7. Some may learn for the first time that the Hamas forces that captured them that day also killed their own parents, siblings and friends. “There are children with parents that have died or were murdered,” Ziv Agmon, adviser to the head of the National Public Diplomacy Directorate Israel, said in a briefing to reporters Friday. “And because there was no connection with the hostages, we don’t know what they know and what they don’t.” The fate of the captives has consumed the Israeli public and growing demonstrations demanding their release helped pushed the government into negotiations. Their return has been meticulously planned, said Agmon, and expected to begin about 4 p.m. local time. Hamas will transfer the hostages — it was unclear whether they will come individually or in groups — to representatives of the Red Cross, Agmon said, who will escort them across the border. He declined to say whether they would enter Egypt or Israel directly. The Israeli military would take custody and “identify them physically and via the lists that we have and see that these are the correct people that we are receiving,” he said. A medical doctor will perform a full physical examination on each, administer immediate aid as necessary and determine whether they should go to one of the five specially prepared hospitals or to their homes. Only then will hostages finally be able to call their families, either by phone or video call, with counselors on hand to assist with these conversations, particularly when the hostages will be hearing bad news. After that first family contact, hostages will be transported to hospitals where the reunion with loved ones will occur in private. Teams of male and female physicians, including pediatricians, gynecologists and psychiatrists, will be standing by. “Today is not going to be an easy day,” Agmon said. “We will begin the day hoping that we will really see a good picture at the end of the day.”
Read the full article:https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/11/24/israel-gaza-war-pause-hostages/
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