- La supuesta nueva exigencia del Primer Ministro Biniamín Netanyahu, que requiera que un acuerdo de rehenes con Hamas impida el regreso de luchadores armados a la parte norte de la Franja de Gaza, ha suscitado preocupaciones entre los negociadores implicados en las negociaciones israelíes-Gaza.
- Las familias de rehenes, que han estado siguiendo de cerca las negociaciones, han manifestado su desasosiego y temen que la demanda de Netanyahu pudiera poner en peligro una oportunidad de paz y potencialmente llevar a nuevos incidentes de secuestro de rehenes.
- El secuestro de rehenes durante la guerra de Israel ha sido un punto de contención significativo, con Hamas enfrentando la condena internacional por su papel en los ataques y la detención de rehenes israelíes.
Informe: Netanyahu presenta a Hamas nueva exigencia
Israel's Premier's new demand in Hostage Deal with Hamas could derail an agreement: Insiders.
According to a media report, a new demand from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu could threaten diplomatic efforts to reach a hostage deal with the Islamic Hamas during the Gaza War. Netanyahu reportedly set this as an additional condition for the conclusion of an agreement, requiring it to include regulations preventing the return of armed fighters from the South to the Northern part of the Gaza Strip. Journalist Barak Ravid wrote this in the news portal "walla.co.il" based on an unnamed Israeli participant in the current indirect negotiations. Egypt, Qatar, and the US are mediating. Several participants in the negotiation team expressed concerns about this new demand, the source added. It is not feasible. It is unclear why Netanyahu raised this demand.
Recently, cautious optimism had emerged in negotiating circles as Hamas appeared to soften some of its rigid positions.
The families of the hostages are on alert due to reports of Netanyahu's alleged new demand. "We are appalled and shocked by this irresponsible behavior," the Hostage Families Forum stated. "It could lead to missing an opportunity that may never return again."
The trigger for the war was the unprecedented massacre committed by Hamas terrorists and other extremist Palestinian organizations in Southern Israel on October 7. The attackers killed over 1,200 people and took over 250 as hostages to the Gaza Strip.
The Prime Minister's Office rejected the claim in "walla.co.il" that Netanyahu made a new demand as "fundamentally false and baseless".
Critics suspect Netanyahu of not being interested in a negotiated solution. Netanyahu governs in a coalition with ultra-religious and right-wing parties, whom he must consider. In the slow-moving talks, mostly in Cairo or Doha, the discussions revolve around the exchange of the remaining Israeli hostages in Hamas custody for Palestinian prisoners in Israeli prisons and ways to achieve a lasting truce in the Gaza War.
Hamas seemed to be moving towards a more flexible stance
Recently, cautious optimism had emerged in negotiating circles as Hamas appeared to soften some of its rigid positions. However, reports of Netanyahu's alleged new demand have put the families of the hostages on alert. "We are appalled and shocked by this irresponsible behavior," the Hostage Families Forum stated. "It could lead to missing an opportunity that may never return again."
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