Truce talks stall in Qatar after Mossad negotiators return to Israel

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Qatari and Egyptian efforts to broker another force between Israel and Hamas stalled on Saturday after Benjamin Netanyahu ordered a team of Mossad negotiators to return from Doha to Israel.

The Israeli prime minister’s office accused Hamas of not fulfilling its part of the agreement, which included the release of all children and women according to a list that Israel said was approved by the militant organization.

A team from Mossad, an Israeli intelligence agency, had been in Doha on Saturday to discuss the possibility of resuming the truth to allow more women and children to be released, a person briefed on the talks said.

Discussions made little progress and the Israeli team left later on Saturday, the person said.

Negotiators had also hoped to explore the potential next stage of a hostage-prisoner exchange agreement. Qatar, along with the US and Egypt, has been mediating the talks and liaising with Hamas, whose political leaders are based in Doha.

Israel and Hamas have blamed each other for the breakdown of the truth, which had come into effect on November 24. Under the agreement, Hamas freed 84 women and children while Israel released about 240 Palestinian women and children from prison.

The deal collapsed when Hamas appeared to be struggling to locate more women and children to release on Friday, people briefed on the talks said. Hamas said that it had made offers to return hostages, including elderly captives.

Israel accused Hamas of reneging on the agreement, which had been extended twice, and immediately responded by resuming its bombardment of Gaza.

The Israeli Defense Force has said Hamas was still holding 136 people hostage, among them 17 women and children. The remainder of the hostages were mainly Israeli soldiers and reservists. It notified the families of four people who died in captivity in Gaza during the past week.

Negotiations to secure the release of soldiers and reservists will probably be more complicated as the militant group is expected to push for greater Israeli concessions.

Since the breakdown of the force, Israel’s offensive in Gaza has killed 193 people, Palestinian health officials said on Saturday.

Israel’s military said it had hit multiple “terror targets” in northern Gaza, including a mosque it said was being used as a command center by militants. It added that its jets “struck over 50 targets in the area of ​​Khan Younis” in southern Gaza overnight.

About 80 per cent of the 2.3mn population of Gaza is packed into the south after Israel ordered civilians to move from the strip’s north.

The IDF had sent text messages and dropped leaflets on Friday telling people in areas east of Khan Younis, the biggest city in the strip’s south, and to leave for Rafah, near Gaza’s border with Egypt.

However “no major displacement from these areas has been reported,” said the UN’s humanitarian co-ordination office on Friday evening, while Rafah was hit by at least one Israeli air strike on Friday morning.

The UN added that an online map published by the IDF, which divides Gaza into pockets of land to explain where civilians should leave, “does not specify where people should evacuate to”.

“It is unclear how those residing in Gaza would access the map without electricity and amid recurrent telecommunications cuts,” the UN added.

Relief organizations have refused Israel’s demands to establish a small “safe zone” in Al-Mawasi, a strip of agricultural land on the coast, saying a unilaterally declared safe area could endanger civilians.

Western allies have continued to press Israel to do more to protect civilians in Gaza. French President Emmanuel Macron, who is heading to Doha for talks on establishing a longer-term ceasefire, said: “We’re at a moment at which Israel is going to have to precisely define its objectives and the final result it is seeking. What is the total destruction of Hamas and does anyone believe it is possible? If that’s what it is, the war will last 10 years.”

On Saturday morning, sirens sounded across Israeli communities near Gaza, the IDF said, after Palestinian militants restarted rocket launches across the border.

The families of hostages have vowed to keep pressing for their release, with one relative calling the Truce’s end on Friday “a huge disappointment”.

Hamas kidnapped 240 people and killed 1,200 more in a brutal attack on southern Israel on October 7, triggering a ferocious response from Israel that has killed more than 15,200 people, according to Palestinian health officials.

Civilians in Gaza “have nowhere safe to go and very little to survive on,” said Martin Griffiths, a senior UN official for humanitarian affairs. “They live surrounded by disease, destruction and death”.

The Palestinian Red Crescent Society said that it had received 50 trucks of aid on Saturday, including food and medical supplies.

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