Egypt awaiting responses on plan to free hostages, end war in Gaza

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Egypt has put forward a framework proposal to end the war in Gaza including a three-stage plan for a ceasefire, Report informs referring to The Times of Israel.

 

Egypt is yet to get responses on the proposal from the parties involved, and will give details about the plan once those responses are received, says Diaa Rashwan, head of Egypt’s State Information Service.

 

The proposal is an attempt “to bring viewpoints between all concerned parties closer, in an effort to stop Palestinian bloodshed and the aggression against the Gaza Strip and restore peace and stability to the region,” he says.

 

The reported Egyptian initiative is a plan to end hostilities and release all the remaining hostages, in three stages.

 

The first stage of the Egyptian plan would be a two-week halt to the fighting, extendable to three or four, in exchange for the release of 40 hostages — women, minors, and elderly men, especially sick ones.

 

In return, Israel would release 120 Palestinian security prisoners of the same categories. During this time, hostilities would stop, Israeli tanks would withdraw, and humanitarian aid would enter Gaza.

 

The second phase would see an Egypt-sponsored “Palestinian national talk” aimed at ending the division between Palestinian factions — mainly the Fatah party-dominated Palestinian Authority and Hamas — and leading to the formation of a technocratic government in the West Bank and Gaza that would oversee the reconstruction of the Strip and pave the way for Palestinian parliamentary and presidential elections.

 

The third stage would include a comprehensive ceasefire, the release of the remaining Israeli hostages, including soldiers, in return for a to-be-determined number of Palestinian security prisoners in Israeli jails affiliated with Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad terror group — including those arrested after October 7 and some convicted of serious terror offenses. In this phase, Israel would withdraw its forces from cities in the Gaza Strip and allow displaced Gazans from the enclave’s north to return to their homes.

 

Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad are said to have rejected the plan.

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