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Written by James Sturcke and agencies, The Guardian James Sturcke and agencies, The Guardian
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Category: News News
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Published: 17 June 2008 17 June 2008
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Last Updated: 17 June 2008 17 June 2008
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Created: 17 June 2008 17 June 2008
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Hits: 4166 4166
Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas have agreed on a truce
that will begin on Thursday, Egypt's state-owned news agency said today.
A senior Egyptian official told the Mena agency that both sides had
"agreed on the first phase" of a package to end the violence on the
Gaza Strip.
The apparent agreement comes despite Israeli aircraft targeting a car in southern Gaza today, killing all five militants inside.
Egypt has spent months attempting to broker a truce to end months of
daily Palestinian rocket and mortar assaults on Israeli border towns.
Mena reported that the first phase of the agreement was a "mutual and
simultaneous calm" in the coastal strip that will start 6am (4am BST)
on Thursday.
A Hamas official in Gaza confirmed the truce. Israeli officials
declined to confirm a deal, but said Israel's negotiator in the truce
talks was rushing to Cairo and they were "cautiously optimistic".
An Israeli government spokesman, Mark Regev, said: "What is important
is not only words but deeds. If there is a total absence of terror
attacks from Gaza into Israel, and if there is an end to arms build-up
in Gaza Strip and movement on the hostage Gilad Shalit, that will
indeed be a new reality."
Israeli defence officials said they expected negotiations on Shalit, an
Israeli soldier captured two years ago, to begin on Sunday, effectively
confirming that a truce was in the works.
A Hamas spokesman, Ismail Ridwan, accused Israel of trying to derail
the ceasefire efforts with today's bombing, but said the group remained
open to a truce.
The smaller Islamic Jihad group was also leaving the door open to a
halt in fighting, but said it would respond to the air strike.
Israel confirmed details of strike, saying it hit a car "carrying
terror activists" in the southern town of Khan Younis. Two other
Palestinians were wounded in a second air strike, Palestinian medical
officials said.
The first stage of the deal would involve a 72-hour cessation of
hostilities and an easing of the Israeli economic blockade that has
deepened the poverty in already destitute Gaza, an Hamas official said.
Phase two would focus on Hamas returning Shalit and a deal to reopen
Gaza's main gateway, the Rafah crossing with Egypt. The closure of
Rafah has kept Gaza's 1.4 million people confined to the tiny seaside
territory, and unable to bring in goods from Egypt.
"We are close to declaring an agreement on the calm, barring unforeseen
developments," Sami Abu Zuhri, another Hamas spokesman, told the
Associated Press before the air strike.
Khalil Abu Leila, a senior Hamas leader, told a Palestinian radio
station today that "after the implementation of the calm, there will be
non-stop meetings regarding the captured soldier".
The ceasefire would extend beyond Hamas and Israel to include other Palestinian militant groups.
Iranian-backed Gaza militants have been bombarding southern Israel with
rockets and mortars for seven years. The rate of fire increased after
Israel pulled its troops and settlers out of Gaza in 2005, and stepped
up further last year after Hamas wrested power from forces loyal to the
moderate Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas.
Israel has responded with air and ground attacks that have killed
hundreds of Palestinians, many of them civilians. It has also imposed a
strict blockade on Gaza, letting in only limited amounts of
humanitarian aid, restricting fuel supplies and widening already
rampant unemployment.
Ending the economic sanctions by opening Gaza's crossings with Israel
and Egypt has been a key Hamas demand in the ceasefire talks.
This article was first published on guardian.co.uk on Tuesday June 17 2008. It was last updated at 15:26 on June 17 2008.