World

Hamas says it's given 'positive' response to U.S. ceasefire proposal, but more talks needed

Hamas says it has given a “positive” response to the latest proposal for a ceasefire in Gaza but said further talks were needed on implementation.

Statement did not say whether its response meant it had accepted potential deal

Palestinians mourn relatives as Hamas considers ceasefire proposal

14 hours ago
Duration 0:33
Palestinians gathered at the busy Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza on Friday to mourn loved ones, as the world waited on whether Hamas would accept a recent ceasefire proposal. Relatives said some were killed in overnight Israeli strikes, while others died after being fired at while seeking aid.

Hamas said Friday it has given a "positive" response to the latest proposal for a ceasefire in Gaza but said further talks were needed on implementation.

It wasn't clear if Hamas's statement meant it had accepted the proposal from U.S. President Donald Trump for a 60-day ceasefire. The militant group has been seeking guarantees that the initial truce with Israel would lead to a total end to the war, now nearly 21 months old.

Trump has been pushing hard for a deal to be reached, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is due to visit the White House next week to discuss a deal.

The Hamas statement came as Israeli airstrikes killed 15 Palestinians in Gaza early Friday, while a hospital said another 20 people died in shootings while seeking aid.

The United Nations human rights office said it has recorded 613 Palestinians killed within the span of a month in Gaza while trying to obtain aid. Most were killed while trying to reach food distribution points run by an Israeli-backed American organization, while others were massed waiting for aid trucks connected to the UN or other humanitarian organizations, it said.

WATCH | Aid organizations call for immediate change in Gaza:

Palestinians caught between starvation and danger at aid sites

3 days ago
Duration 2:07
WARNING: This video contains distressing images | Dozens of aid organizations are calling for an immediate change to how aid is delivered in Gaza. They say Palestinians are left with an impossible choice: starve or risk being shot.

Efforts ongoing to halt the war

Trump said Tuesday that Israel had agreed on terms for a 60-day ceasefire in Gaza, during which the U.S. would "work with all parties to end the war." He urged Hamas to accept the deal before conditions worsen.

In its statement late Friday, Hamas said it "has submitted its positive response" to Egyptian and Qatari mediators.

It said it is "fully prepared to immediately enter into a round of negotiations regarding the mechanism for implementing this framework." It did not elaborate on what needed to be worked out in implementation.

An official close to the talks said Hamas had several issues it was requesting — that Israeli troops in Gaza pull back to positions they held on March 2 before it broke the previous ceasefire; that aid flow into Gaza in sufficient quantities through the UN and other international humanitarian agencies; and that negotiations continue beyond 60 days if needed to reach a deal for a permanent end to the war and the release of all remaining hostages being held in Gaza.

Smoke rises from Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip.
Smoke is seen after an Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip on Thursday. (Leo Correa/The Associated Press)

Previous rounds of negotiations have run aground over Hamas demands of guarantees that further negotiations would lead to the war's end, while Netanyahu has insisted Israel would resume fighting to ensure the destruction of the militant group.

"We'll see what happens. We're going to know over the next 24 hours," Trump told reporters on Air Force One late Thursday when asked if Hamas had agreed to the latest framework for a ceasefire.

20 killed Friday while seeking aid

Officials at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis said at least three Palestinians were killed on Friday while on the roads heading to food distribution sites run by the U.S.- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) in southern Gaza.

Since the GHF began distributions in late May, witnesses have said almost daily that Israeli troops have opened fire toward crowds of Palestinians on the roads leading to the food centres. To reach the sites, people must walk several kilometres through an Israeli military zone where troops control the road.

The Israeli military has said previously it fires warning shots to control crowds or at Palestinians who approach its troops. The GHF has denied any serious injuries or deaths on its sites and says shootings outside its immediate vicinity are under the purview of Israel's military.

On Friday, in reaction to the UN rights agency's report, it said in a statement that it was investigating reports of people killed and wounded while seeking aid and that it had given instructions to troops in the field based on "lessons learned" from reviewing the incidents. It said it was working at "minimizing possible friction between the population" and Israeli forces, including by installing fences and placing signs on the routes.

Children survey the destruction at a school.
Palestinians survey the destruction at a school used as a shelter after it was hit by an Israeli airstrike in Gaza City on Thursday. (Jehad Alshrafi/The Associated Press)

Separately, witnesses have said Israeli troops have opened fire on crowds of Palestinians who gather in military-controlled zones to wait for aid trucks entering Gaza for the UN or other aid organizations not associated with the GHF. The crowds are usually made up of people desperate for food who grab supplies off the passing trucks, and armed gangs have also looted trucks.

On Friday, 17 people were killed waiting for trucks in eastern Khan Younis, in the Tahliya area, officials at Nasser Hospital said.

Three survivors told the AP they had gone to wait for the trucks in a military "red zone" in Khan Younis and that troops opened fire from a tank and drones.

It was a "crowd of people, may God help them, who want to eat and live," said Seddiq Abu Farhana, who was shot in the leg, forcing him to drop a bag of flour he had grabbed. "There was direct firing."

Airstrikes also hit the Muwasi area on the southern end of Gaza's Mediterranean coast, where hundreds of thousands of Palestinians driven from their homes are sheltering in tent camps. Of the 15 people killed in the strikes, eight were women and one was a child, according to the hospital.

Israel's military said it was looking into Friday's reported airstrikes. It had no immediate comment on the reported shootings surrounding the aid trucks.

UN investigates shootings near aid sites

Ravina Shamdasani, a spokesperson for the UN human rights office, said the agency was not able to attribute responsibility for the killings. But she said "it is clear that the Israeli military has shelled and shot at Palestinians trying to reach the distribution points" operated by GHF.

In a message to The Associated Press, Shamdasani said that of the total tallied, 509 killings were "GHF-related," meaning at or near its distribution sites.

In a statement on Friday, the GHF cast doubt on the casualty figures, accusing the UN of taking its casualty figures "directly from the Hamas-controlled Gaza Health Ministry" and of trying "to falsely smear our effort."

Shamdasani told the AP that the data "is based on our own information gathering through various reliable sources, including medical, human rights and humanitarian organizations."

A crowd of people run on a dusty sandy road
Palestinians walk to collect aid supplies from the U.S.-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation in Khan Younis on May 29. (Hatem Khaled/Reuters)

Rik Peeperkorn, the World Health Organization representative for the Palestinian territories, said Nasser Hospital, the biggest hospital operating in southern Gaza, receives dozens or hundreds of casualties every day, most coming from the vicinity of the food distribution sites. The overwhelmed hospital has become "one massive trauma ward," he said. WHO supports Nasser Hospital and other health facilities.

The International Committee of the Red Cross also said in late June that its field hospital near one of the GHF sites has been overwhelmed more than 20 times in the previous months by mass casualties. It said people had been on their way to the food distribution sites, and "the vast majority of patients suffered gunshot injuries."

Also on Friday, Israel's military said it was investigating after two soldiers were killed in combat in the north of Gaza. More than 860 Israeli soldiers have been killed since the war began, including more than 400 during the fighting in Gaza.

The Israeli military also issued new evacuation orders on Friday in northeast Khan Younis, in southern Gaza, and urged Palestinians to move west ahead of planned military operations against Hamas in the area. The new evacuation zones pushed Palestinians into increasingly smaller spaces by the coast.

The Health Ministry in Gaza said the number of Palestinians killed in the territory has passed 57,000. The ministry does not differentiate between civilians and combatants in its count, but says more than half of the dead are women and children. The ministry is run by medical professionals employed by the Hamas government, and its numbers are widely cited by the UN and international organizations.

The war began when Hamas-led militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing about 1,200 people and taking roughly 250 hostages.