Nadene Goldfoot
Minister for Detainees and Ex-Detainees Affairs Fares is regarded as one of the principal architects of Fatah's 'young guard' movement, who briefly formed the al-Mustaqbal or "Future" list (2005) before joining with Mahmoud Abbas to form a united Fatah list for the upcoming elections.Qadura Fares, head of the Palestinian Prisoners Affairs Committee, who is responsible, among other things, for the issue of terrorists held in Israeli prisons, reportedly went to Qatar to meet with the negotiating team and prepare the list of Palestinian prisoners who will be released as part of a hostage deal. Fares claimed yesterday that more than 3,000 Palestinian prisoners will be released in the first phase of the deal. Have we been waiting all this time for this result of the deal? It's unbelievable!!!Israel has been doing a pretty good job of putting an end to Hamas terrorism and Fares's deal is to let out all the terrorists from prison !!!Where is it that the hostages are all returned? Nowhere!!!
Qatar has reportedly handed Israel and Hamas a "final" draft of a cease-fire and hostage release agreement after a breakthrough was reportedly reached in talks in Doha late last night.
Officials in Israel denied receiving the draft and said the final agreement is dependent on Hamas.
IDF soldiers uncover a tunnel near the Philadelphi Route shortly before the disengagementSome of the issues that still could derail an agreement include the status of the Philadelphi quarter and northern Gaza, the number of Palestinian prisoners to be released and veto power over that process, and the number of live hostages to be released in the initial 33 set to be freed in phase one.
Hamas is expected to release 33 hostages during the first
phase of an emerging ceasefire agreement being finalized by negotiators in
Doha, two Israeli officials said, the first positive sign in months that a truce in
the Israel-Hamas war may be in sight.
Officials have expressed cautious optimism that a deal could soon be announ
ced to halt 15 months of fighting that has destabilized the Middle East and
devastated Gaza,
allow for more aid into the besieged Palestinian enclave, and ensure the
return of dozens of hostages held by Hamas since its attack on Israel on
October 7, 2023.
Hamas and its allies still hold 94 of the 251 hostages taken from Israel,
including at least 34 of whom are dead, according to the Israeli government.
Israel believes that most of the 33 hostages to be released in the first phase of
the deal are alive, a senior Israeli official told reporters on Monday, but the
bodies of dead captives will also likely be among those released. The first
phase would take place over an initial 42-day ceasefire.
Meanwhile, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said he could not support the deal because he believes that it is catastrophic for Israel's security. He tweeted, "We will not be part of a capitulation deal that would include the release of arch-terrorists, stop the war and dissolve its achievement won in blood while sacrificing the lives of many hostages," he said in his post.
"This is the time to continue in full force, conquer and purify the entire Strip and finally take control of the humanitarian aid from Hamas and open the gates of hell until Hamas is defeated and all the hostages returned."
President Biden spoke with Prime Minister Netanyahu yesterday by phone. They discussed efforts underway to reach a deal to halt the fighting in Gaza and free the remaining hostages. The White House said that Biden "stressed the immediate need for a cease-fire in Gaza and return of the hostages with a surge in humanitarian aid enabled by a stoppage in the fighting under the deal." They also discussed "the fundamentally changed regional circumstances following the cease-fire deal in Lebanon, the fall of the Assad regime in Syria, and the weakening of Iran's power in the region." Netanyahu also thanked Biden for his lifelong support of Israel and "the extraordinary support from the United States for Israel's security and national defense."
The battle in Gaza is not over, and the casualties mount up for the IDF. "The IDF announced that 4 soldiers were killed in battle in Gaza’s Beit Hanoun by an explosive device detonated near their vehicle:"
- Sergeant Major (res.) Alexander Fedorenko, 37, from Bat Yam, a truck driver in the 79th Battalion, 14th 'Machatz' Brigade.
- Staff Sergeant Danila Diakov, 21, from Ma'ale Adumim, a soldier in the 931st Battalion, Nahal Brigade.
- Sergeant Yahav Maayan, 19, from Modi'in, a soldier in the 931st Battalion, Nahal Brigade.
- Sergeant Eliav Astuker, aged 19, from Ashdod, a soldier in the 931st Battalion, Nahal Brigade.
Five more soldiers were wounded in the incident. 4 + 5=9; nine young men in one day.
The IDF struck multiple locations across southern and eastern Lebanon, including areas far away from the border, last night. Targets included a rocket launch site, a military installation and transit routes along the Syria-Lebanon border used for smuggling weapons to Hezbollah.
IsraelAM