Hamas accepts proposed deal for ceasefire with Israel and hostage release

Palestinians flee expected Israeli attack on Gaza City   Gaza death toll surpasses  62,000 as 60 more killed in last 24 hours   Ceasefire will include Palestinian prisoner release   Israel has yet to respond officially.

CAIRO  -  Hamas has agreed to a 60-day ceasefire proposal with Israel that includes the release of half the hostages held in Gaza and Israel’s release of some Palestinian prisoners, an Egyptian official source said on Monday. Senior Hamas official Basem Naim confirmed the group’s approval of the proposal, writing on Facebook: “The movement has handed over its approval to the new proposal presented by the mediators.”

Israeli media quoted Israeli sources as saying the Hamas response had been received.

There was no official response from Israel, but in a video from his office Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said: “I, like you, hear the reports in the media, and from them you can get one impression - Hamas is under immense pressure.”

The Egyptian official source stated that the agreement included a suspension of Israeli military operations for 60 days and outlined a framework for a comprehensive deal to end the nearly two-year conflict.

A source familiar with the negotiations said the proposal closely mirrored an earlier plan put forward by U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff, which Israel had accepted.

The mediators met Hamas representatives in Cairo on Sunday, and Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, the Qatari prime minister, joined the discussions on Monday and met both Egyptian President el-Sisi and Hamas representatives, said an official briefed on the meetings.

Israel’s plans to seize control of Gaza City have stirred alarm abroad and at home, where tens of thousands of Israelis on Sunday held some of the largest protests since the war began, urging a deal to end the fighting and free the remaining 50 hostages held in Gaza since the Hamas attack on October 7, 2023. Israeli officials believe 20 are alive.

In an apparent show of force late on Monday, Israeli tanks advanced into the Sabra neighbourhood in the heart of Gaza City, according to witnesses who counted the presence of at least nine tanks and bulldozers.

Israel approved the plan to take control of Gaza City earlier this month, but officials had said it could take weeks to start, leaving the door open for a ceasefire, even though Netanyahu had said it would get under way “fairly quickly” and end the war with Hamas’ defeat.

Meanwhile, the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Gaza has said 60 people were killed and 344 injured in the past 24 hours as a result of ongoing Israeli attacks.

In its daily update, the ministry said “a number of victims remain under the rubble and on the roads, as ambulance and Civil Defence crews are unable to reach them at this time.”

The ministry said the overall death toll since October 7, 2023 has risen to 62,004, with 156,230 people wounded. Since March 18, 2025, when Israel broke the most recent ceasefire, at least 10,460 have been killed and 44,189 injured.

Hospitals recorded that 27 people seeking aid were killed and 281 were injured over the past day, bringing the total number to 1,965 killed and more than 14,701 injured near the aid sites.

The ministry also reported five deaths from famine and malnutrition, including two children, in the last 24 hours. It said at least 263 people, among them 112 children, have now died from hunger-related causes.

In a related development, thousands of Palestinians fearing an imminent Israeli ground offensive have left their homes in eastern areas of Gaza City, now under constant Israeli bombardment, for points to the west and south in the shattered territory.

Netanyahu has described Gaza City as Hamas’ last big urban bastion. But, with Israel already holding 75% of Gaza, the military has warned that expanding the offensive could endanger hostages still alive and draw troops into protracted and deadly guerrilla warfare.

Dani Miran, whose son Omri was taken hostage on October 7, said he feared the consequences of an Israeli ground offensive in Gaza City. “I’m scared that my son would be hurt,” he told a wire service in Tel Aviv on Monday.

In Gaza City, many Palestinians have also been calling for protests to demand an end to a war that has demolished much of the territory and for Hamas to intensify talks to avert the Israeli ground offensive.

An Israeli armoured incursion into Gaza City could displace hundreds of thousands of people, many of whom have been uprooted multiple times during the war.

Ahmed Mheisen, Palestinian shelter manager in Beit Lahiya, a war-devastated suburb abutting eastern Gaza City, said 995 families had departed the area in recent days for the south.

“I am heading south because I need to ease my mental state,” Mousa Obaid, a Gaza City resident, told wire service. “I do not want to keep moving left and right endlessly. There is no life left, and as you can see, living conditions are hard, prices are high, and we have been without work for over a year and a half.”

The last round of indirect ceasefire talks ended in deadlock in late July with the sides trading blame for its collapse.

Israel has said it will agree to cease hostilities if all the hostages are released and Hamas lays down its arms - the latter demand publicly rejected by the Islamist group until a Palestinian state is established.

A Hamas official told a wire service earlier on Monday the group rejected Israeli demands to disarm or expel its leaders from Gaza.

Sharp differences also appeared to remain over the extent of an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza and how humanitarian aid will be delivered around the enclave, where malnutrition is rife and aid groups warn of unfolding famine.

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