Qatar negotiating hostage-prisoner swap between Israel, Hamas: Report

qatar-negotiating-hostage-prisoner-swap-between-israel,-hamas:-report

Qatari mediators have held urgent calls to try to negotiate freedom for Israeli women and children seized by the militant group and held in Gaza in exchange for the release of 36 Palestinian women and children from Israel’s prisons, a source briefed on the talks told Reuters. Israel-Palestine Latest: Smoke billows following Israeli artillery bombing on the outskirts of the Lebanese border village of Aita al-Shaab.(AFP) Qatar’s foreign ministry confirmed to Reuters its involvement in mediation talks with Hamas and Israeli officials, including over a possible prisoner swap. The ongoing negotiations, which Qatar has been conducting in coordination with the United States since Saturday night, are “moving positively” said the source, who has been briefed on them. “We are in constant contact with all sides at the moment. Our priorities are to end the bloodshed, release the prisoners and make sure the conflict is contained with no regional spillover,” foreign ministry spokesperson Majed Al-Ansari told Reuters, without elaborating. But there are no signs of breakthroughs as both sides dig in. Qatar has been in touch with Hamas officials in Doha and Gaza, the source said, after the Islamist group assaulted Israel from Gaza on Saturday, storming into towns, killing more than 700 Israelis, and escaping with dozens of hostages. Read more: Israel PM’s strong remarks: ‘Our response to Hamas will change Middle East’The exact number of Israeli women and children hostages Hamas is offering in the potential exchange of 36 Palestinian women and children prisoners the Islamist group identified is not clear, the source said. Details about negotiations focusing on the release of 36 Palestinians from Israeli jails have not previously been reported. The number of Israeli hostages held in Gaza also remains unclear, but it is widely believed that Hamas seized women, children, elderly people and soldiers on Saturday. A Palestinian official, familiar with mediation efforts with Hamas and Israel in the past, told Reuters that Qatar and Egypt have been in contact with the group but the intensity of the fighting cast shadows over any potential breakthrough. In Hamas-controlled Gaza, Israel has carried out its most intensive retaliatory strikes ever, killing more than 500 people since Saturday. Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said Israel’s blockade would be tightened to prevent food and fuel from being brought into the strip, home to 2.3 million people. Egypt has been in close contact with Israel and Hamas to try to prevent further escalation in fighting between them and to ensure the protection of the Israeli hostages, two Egyptian security sources said. Egypt had urged Israel to exercise restraint and Hamas to hold its captives in good condition to keep open the possibility of de-escalation soon, although Israeli strikes on the Gaza Strip made mediation difficult, the Egyptian sources said, speaking on condition of anonymity. The source who had been briefed on the Qatar-led talks, also speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters: “There has been no agreement on logistics or a mechanism for the release.” There was no immediate response to requests for comment sent to Hamas or the U.S. State Department. Israel’s prime minister’s office said it did not wish to comment. Eran Lerman, a former Israeli deputy national security adviser, said no Israeli would concede to conditions of the hostage takers, citing the brutality of the attack. “We should have to see how long they are going to hold the hostages when over the next few days there is no water, no electricity, no food, no medicine for the entire Gaza population”. Israelis are reeling from the assault and by images of captured fellow citizens being bundled into Gaza. Israel has said it will act to free the hostages, adhering to a longstanding principle of leaving no prisoner behind. However, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s options for hitting Hamas over its incursion into Israel could be reined in by concern for the many Israelis seized in the raid, as a nation scarred by past hostage crises faces perhaps its worst one yet. Qatar, a tiny but wealthy energy and investment powerhouse that holds ambitious foreign policy goals, has a direct line of communication with Hamas. Qatari envoys have previously helped mediate truces between the Islamist group and Israel. Doha has recently been under the global diplomacy spotlight, after hosting more than a year of talks between the United States and Iran, which led to prisoner exchanges and fund releases. While Hamas’ power base is in Gaza, some leaders are based in Qatar as well as other Middle Eastern countries. “Exciting news! Hindustan Times is now on WhatsApp Channels Subscribe today by clicking the link and stay updated with the latest news!” Click here! Get Latest World News along with Latest News from India at Hindustan Times.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest

Morgan Wallen’s ex KT Smith speaks out after his arrest, hopes he returns ‘to the good path that he was on’
Morgan Wallen is keeping a low profile after his arrest...
Kirsten Dunst says husband Jesse Plemons filmed chilling ‘Civil War’ scene as a favor: ‘Nobody wants to play a role like that’
Kirsten Dunst is truly grateful that her husband Jesse Plemons...
Water from arsenic-laced wells could protect the Pine Ridge reservation from wildfires
With decades of experience, Reno Red Cloud knows more than...
What the eclipse reveals about the progress and shortfalls of US energy
On April 8, millions of glasses-clad onlookers will, for the...
Jonathan Majors sentenced to 1 year of domestic violence counseling. What to know about the case.
Jonathan Majors has been sentenced to probation in his domestic...
Georgia’s Vogtle plant could herald the beginning — or end — of a new nuclear era
Few issues are as divisive among American environmentalists as nuclear...
Climate change is rewiring fish brains — and probably ours, too
This story is excerpted from THE WEIGHT OF NATURE: How...
The US aims to ‘crack the code’ on scaling up geothermal energy production
This story was originally published by The Guardian and is reproduced...
Disabled drivers can’t use many electric car chargers. It doesn’t have to be this way.
This story was originally published by Mother Jones and is reproduced...
What the eclipse reveals about the progress and shortfalls of U.S. energy
On April 8, millions of glasses-clad onlookers will, for the...
In Chicago, one neighborhood is fighting gentrification and climate change  at the same time
This coverage is made possible through a partnership between WBEZ...
These ‘green banks’ are getting billions to decarbonize disadvantaged communities
The idea of a national “green bank,” which would lend...

JOIN OUR FREE NEWSLETTER!

Subscribe to our news mailing list and recieve the top news headlines right in your inbox daily!

.

We respect your privacy and take protecting it seriously