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Israel-Hamas truce extended by two days, Qatar says

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Qatar said mediators had secured an agreement to prolong the temporary truce between Israel and Hamas by two days to allow the release of more hostages held in Gaza.

The announcement on extending the original four-day pause, which had been due to expire after Monday, came as Benjamin Netanyahu’s government faced mounting pressure to provide more time for hostages to be freed.

Majed al-Ansari, spokesperson for the Qatari foreign ministry, announced the agreement “to extend the humanitarian truce for an additional two days in the Gaza Strip” as part of his country’s mediation between Israel and Hamas.

Hamas confirmed it had agreed to extend the pause in fighting by two days “under the same conditions as the previous truce.”

Israel has not yet commented on the deal.

Al-Ansari did not specify how many hostages would be released. But negotiators had said earlier that, if the ceasefire was extended by two days, Hamas would release another 20 women and children held in Gaza. In return, Israel would free another 60 Palestinian women and children held in Israeli prisons.

Under the original four-day ceasefire brokered by Qatar, Egypt and the US last week, Hamas had agreed to the staggered release of 50 women and children held in Gaza. Israel in turn had said it would allow more aid into the besieged strip and to free 150 Palestinian women and children held in Israeli prisons.

Palestinians celebrate the release of prisoners from Israeli jails, in exchange for Hamas freeing hostages held in Gaza, on Sunday in Ramallah © Fadel Senna/AFP/Getty Images

Hamas and other militants seized about 240 civilians and soldiers during the Islamist group’s deadly October 7 attack on southern Israel.

Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani told the FT on Sunday that, for the truce to be extended Hamas, would have to locate women and children being held by other militants, civilians and gangs in Gaza.

He said Israel had provided Qatar with a list of more than 90 women and children seized during Hamas’s October 7 attack. But when the hostage deal was brokered last week, it was agreed 50 women and children would be released because that was the number Hamas said it had been able to secure, Sheikh Mohammed said.

It was not immediately clear who was holding the 20 additional women and children due to be released during the two day extension of the truce.

Hamas has already released 39 Israeli women and children, some of them dual nationals, in batches of about a dozen each day. It was expected to release another 11 on Monday, while Israel would free another 33 Palestinian prisoners.

The success of the delicate hostage-for-prisoner swaps — which over the weekend had threatened to break down — has lifted Israel’s national mood and raised hopes that the deal could be extended to allow for more civilians to be returned to their families.

The hostage releases have received near wall-to-wall media coverage in Israel, while thousands of Palestinians have gathered each evening outside Ofer Prison, between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, letting off firecrackers to celebrate the prisoners’ release and bolstering Hamas’s political standing.

Speaking at a celebration for the release of one Israeli hostage, Noam Alon, whose girlfriend Inbar Haiman was snatched from the Nova music festival, vowed to keep up pressure for the release of more hostages, “at any price”.

“We are expecting to see everyone freed, we want our government to do everything to continue the deal,” he said.

Netanyahu said on Sunday that he would “welcome” the prospect of additional hostages being freed, but also that Israel was ready to resume hostilities against Hamas.

Israeli officials believe Hamas will seek a greater number of, and higher-ranking, prisoners in exchange for each hostage, over and above the initial agreement.

Israeli forces have captured vast swaths of northern Gaza with an aerial bombardment and ground invasion that has killed at least 14,800 people, according to Palestinian officials, and triggered a humanitarian crisis.

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