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Photographs of Israelis still held hostage by Hamas terrorists in Gaza, at "Hostage Square" in Tel Aviv. March 10, 2024. (Miriam Alster/FLASH90)
Miriam Alster/FLASH90
Israeli officials reportedly know where most of the hostages are
There is no indication that Hamas has yet provided a list of which captives are alive.
By Vered Weiss, World Israel News
Israeli officials are reportedly aware of the locations of most of the hostages in Gaza. However, there is no indication that Hamas has yet provided a list of which captives are alive, the Jewish Chronicle reports.
As negotiations for a hostage release deal continue in Qatar, an Israeli official said, “We know the whereabouts of most of the hostages.”
Israel has not agreed to a complete cessation of the war, something Hamas has, until recently, has indicated as a non-starter.
However, the terror group apparently is willing to agree to what the Israeli source calls “a prolonged ceasefire” that would allow ongoing negotiations and the delivery of humanitarian aid while still not forcing Israel to relinquish its military goal.
According to reports by Al-Ghad, an Egyptian news outlet, Israel has requested the release of 11 men in the first phase of the deal in addition to women, ill and elderly hostages.
In exchange, Israel will free 250 Palestinian prisoners. The identity and the conditions of release for these prisoners have been the subject of ongoing negotiations between both sides.
Although 96 hostages are believed to be still held in Gaza, the IDF has confirmed that as many as 34 have died.
Although a BBC report on Sunday indicated that the hostage deal negotiations were “90% complete,” Israeli officials are recommending caution in expecting a quick outcome.
Issues still being discussed are control of the Gaza-Egypt border, humanitarian corridors, and the creation of a buffer zone between the Israel and Gaza border.
A Palestinian official said, “Once these issues are resolved, a potential ceasefire could begin within days.”
As part of the deal now under consideration, Israel would permit the large-scale return of Gazans to the northern Strip under the oversight of Egypt and Qatar, with some 500 trucks entering the Gaza Strip daily to deliver international aid.
In the third stage of the ceasefire, the war between Israel and Hamas would be terminated, and the Gaza Strip would be handed over to a committee of non-partisan technocrats endorsed by various Palestinian factions, including Hamas and Fatah.