Israel says Hamas holding up deal – DW – 01/16/2025

Skip next section WHO says at least $10 billion needed to rebuild Gaza’s health system

January 16, 2025

WHO says at least $10 billion needed to rebuild Gaza’s health system

At least $10 billion will be needed to rebuild Gaza’s health system over the next five to seven years, the World Health Organization (WHO) estimated on Thursday.

“The needs are massive,” the UN health agency’s representative in the Palestinian territories, Rik Peeperkorn, said.

With a ceasefire on the horizon, Peeperkorn said his team’s initial estimate of the cost to rebuild the health sector was “even more than $3 billion for the first 1.5 years and then actually $10 billion for the [next] five to seven years.”

“In Gaza, we all know the destruction is so massive. I have never seen that anywhere else in my life,” he said. 

Meanwhile, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said “less than half of Gaza hospitals are functional.”

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Skip next section Israeli Cabinet set to vote on hostage deal

January 16, 2025

Israeli Cabinet set to vote on hostage deal

The Israeli Cabinet is set to meet on Friday to vote on a hostage release and ceasefire deal in Gaza, according to an Israeli official, as reported on by the AFP news agency.

The vote comes after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his Cabinet had postponed its approval of the ceasefire deal.

The Netanyahu administration accused Hamas of backtracking on certain terms.

Hamas, though, has denied the accusation.

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Skip next section Fragile ceasefire brings mixed emotions

January 16, 2025

Fragile ceasefire brings mixed emotions

The ceasefire agreement and the fragility surrounding it has brought mixed emotions to the streets among Israelis and Palestinians.

Some Israelis said the situation was simply nerve-racking. Walking along Ben Yehuda Street in West Jerusalem, Zimratiya Hazani told DW correspondent Tania Krämer that it might be best to “avoid the news for a few days” while the situation remains uncertain.

“I think everyone walking around has mixed feelings about it,” she said. “I feel there is not one answer.” She said that she believed Hamas would continue to be a threat. “They might just do October 7 again, no one can guarantee otherwise. But, of course, we want the hostages back, all of them, as soon as possible.”

How Israelis feel about the ceasefire deal with Hamas

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Hazani was not alone in her assessment. “I think the agreement is a good agreement, if we get all the hostages back and the bodies that were held there,” Uriel Ben Avraham said. “But I think Hamas will rearm and regroup.”

In Gaza, many Palestinians were celebrating the news that a ceasefire could come into effect on Sunday. Others remained cautious as Israeli bombardment continued across Gaza.

Yasmine Al-Naezi was on the streets of Deir al Balah when news of the deal broke. She and her family were displaced from northern Gaza during the war. 

“Thank God we are safe, and thank God we will return to our home, my children and I,” the 27-year-old told DW. “I hope the truce lasts forever and ends peacefully so we can return to the north.”

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Skip next section EU announces new Gaza aid package worth €120 million

January 16, 2025

EU announces new Gaza aid package worth €120 million

The European Union (EU) says €120 million ($123.5 million) in new humanitarian aid is earmarked for Gaza after Wednesday’s announcement of a ceasefire and hostage release deal.

“The ceasefire and hostage release agreement offers hope the region desperately needed. But the humanitarian situation remains grim in Gaza,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a post on social media platform X.

“Europe will channel €120 million of aid in 2025, alongside tons of in-kind aid, to keep supporting Palestinians,” von der Leyen added.

“The EU will work closely with UN agencies and other humanitarian partner organizations to ensure swift delivery of the assistance,” the European Commission said in a press release.

The package will include food, healthcare and shelter assistance and support to allow access to clean water.

The latest announcement brings the total of humanitarian aid pledged by the commission to Gaza since 2023 to a total of over €450 million.

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Skip next section Hamas has ability to rebuild if circumstances allow, expert Hans-Jakob Schindler tells DW

January 16, 2025

Hamas has ability to rebuild if circumstances allow, expert Hans-Jakob Schindler tells DW

Hans-Jakob Schindler, senior director of the Counter Extremism Project, has told DW that the ceasefire deal is “a victory” for the hostages and Palestinian civilians in Gaza.

However, Schindler said the Hamas command and control structure, and its tunnel network, had been severely degraded. 

Every month or week Hamas leaders wait for a ceasefire will only make them weaker, he said.

“For Hamas, this deal really is the recognition that they have nothing more to gain by prolonging this conflict,” he said.

However, he said that Hamas was in a position to rebuild itself. 

“Outside Gaza and outside the Palestinian territories, the Hamas infrastructure is pretty much untouched,” Schindler said, mentioning the organization’s leadership and money.

He added that Hamas will get some credit for getting Palestinian prisoners back, so it was not in a bad position to rebuild.

“Hamas as an organization, as an ideology still exists. What is gone is its power infrastructure in the Gaza Strip. It has the ability to rebuild this if the circumstances allow it to do so,” Schindler said.

 

Schindler: ‘Hamas is broken, but not beyond repair’

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Skip next section At least 72 killed in Gaza since deal announced, Gaza health authorities say

January 16, 2025

At least 72 killed in Gaza since deal announced, Gaza health authorities say

Health officials in Gaza say at least 72 people have been killed since the potential ceasefire deal was announced on Wednesday.

Officials added that this includes only the number of people brought to Gaza’s few remaining hospitals and that the real number may be much higher.

“Yesterday was a bloody day, and today is bloodier,” said Zaher al- Wahedi, head of the health ministry’s registration department.

Gaza’s health ministry is run by Hamas, but the United Nations considers their death toll reporting to be accurate.

UN condemns targeting of Gaza medical facilities

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Skip next section Russia hopes for stability after ceasefire

January 16, 2025

Russia hopes for stability after ceasefire

Russia became the latest international power to comment on the ceasefire, saying it hopes the deal will stabilize the region.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said the ceasefire was an “important practical step toward the long-term stabilization in the zone of the Palestinian-Israeli confrontation” and could be the basis for “the establishment of a process of comprehensive political settlement of the Palestinian problem.”

However, the Kremlin later expressed that the optimism was a cautious one amid statements from Israel that it wasn’t ready to approve the deal over what it called Hamas’ “reneging” on key points.

“Any settlement that leads to a ceasefire, an end to the suffering of the people of Gaza and increases Israel’s security can only be welcomed,” President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

“But let’s wait for the finalization of the process,” he said.

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Skip next section Lufthansa to resume Israel flights

January 16, 2025

Lufthansa to resume Israel flights

Germany’s Lufthansa Group has announced that it will resume flights to Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion Airport on February 1.

The airline had suspended flights because of the ongoing conflict in Gaza. 

Lufthansa is Europe’s biggest aviation group by revenue, and its 15 weekly flights from Frankfurt to Tel Aviv are a key part of commercial travel between the EU and Israel.

Lufthansa said flights to Iran and Lebanon would remain suspended until at least February 14.

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Skip next section Hamas rejects Netanyahu’s accusations

January 16, 2025

Hamas rejects Netanyahu’s accusations

In response to accusations that Hamas is stalling the deal, senior official Izzat al-Rishq said the group “is committed to the ceasefire agreement, which was announced by the mediators.”

Earlier, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu had said Hamas was trying to hold up the deal in order to secure last-minute concessions.

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Skip next section Israel says Hamas holding up deal in ‘last-minute crisis’

January 16, 2025

Israel says Hamas holding up deal in ‘last-minute crisis’

The office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has accused Hamas of backtracking on details of the ceasefire agreement and said his Cabinet would not sign off on the deal yet.

According to the prime minister’s office, the “last-minute crisis” was holding up the ceasefire’s approval.

“Hamas reneges on parts of the agreement reached with the mediators and Israel in an effort to extort last minute concessions,” read a statement from Netanyahu. “The Israeli cabinet will not convene until the mediators notify Israel that Hamas has accepted all elements of the agreement.”

Israel and Hamas agree to Gaza ceasefire

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Skip next section Austrian president hopes deal is an ‘end to suffering’

January 16, 2025

Austrian president hopes deal is an ‘end to suffering’

Austrian President Alexander van der Bellen wrote on social media site X that the ceasefire is a welcome end to over a year of violence.

“After 15 months of despair and destruction, the announcement of a ceasefire in Gaza and an agreement to release hostages brings hope and relief that the suffering on all sides can now come to an end,” he wrote.

Van der Bellen also mentioned the Israeli-Austrian Tal Shoham, one of the Israeli hostages taken on October 7, 2023, whose whereabouts remain unknown.

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Skip next section China welcomes Gaza truce, pledges efforts to promote regional peace

January 16, 2025

China welcomes Gaza truce, pledges efforts to promote regional peace

The Chinese government has said the ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas militants in Gaza was a welcome development.

Beijing promised to make “unremitting efforts to promote peace and stability in the Middle East.”

“We also sincerely hope that relevant parties will take the ceasefire in Gaza as an opportunity to promote the easing of regional tensions,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun told a press briefing.

China would “continue to provide humanitarian assistance to Gaza and make positive efforts to resume postwar reconstruction,” Guo said.

Gaza ceasefire deal reached amid pressure from Trump

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Skip next section Iran hails ceasefire ‘victory’ for Palestinians

January 16, 2025

Iran hails ceasefire ‘victory’ for Palestinians

In a statement, Iran’s Revolutionary Guards called the ceasefire a “clear victory and great victory for Palestine” and a “bigger defeat” for Israel.

Iranian parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf also welcomed the news, then called for “action to punish the criminal regime and heal the wounds of the Palestinian nation.”

Today, the world realised that the patience of the people of Gaza and the steadfastness of the Palestinian resistance forced the Zionist regime to retreat,” a post on his account on X said, adding that Israel was “defeated”.

Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei praised the news as well, writing on X: “Today, the world realized that the patience of the people of Gaza and the steadfastness of the Palestinian resistance,” adding that Israel had been “defeated.”

As the conflict spiraled outside of Israel and the Palestinian territories in 2024, Iran and Israel exchanged airstrikes. At the end of July, Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh was killed in Tehran in an attack largely believed to have been carried out by Israel.

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Skip next section Israel continues airstrikes, Palestinian civil defense agency says

January 16, 2025

Israel continues airstrikes, Palestinian civil defense agency says

The Palestinian Civil Defense Agency has reported deadly Israeli strikes  on Gaza despite a ceasefire deal set to go into effect on Sunday, after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s cabinet votes on it later on Thursday.

“Our crew retrieved five dead and more than 10 injured from under the rubble of a house … that was bombed by the Israeli army in the Al-Rimal area west of Gaza City,” the agency said in a statement in the early hours of Thursday, adding that two more people were killed at an intersection.

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Skip next section Aid agencies plan major deployment once ceasefire comes into effect

January 16, 2025

Aid agencies plan major deployment once ceasefire comes into effect

Several international NGOs are planning major operations for Sunday in anticipation of the ceasefire.

Aid agencies have routinely criticized Israel for not allowing the necessary amounts of food and medical supplies into Gaza, and for airstrikes in humanitarian zones.

International Rescue Committee chief David Miliband said his group would increase the “scale and impact” of its work “as conditions allow.”

“The scars of this war will be long-lasting, but a surge of aid is desperately needed to provide immediate relief to civilians,” Miliband said.

UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) head Catherine Russell called the scale of humanitarian need in Gaza “enormous.”

“UNICEF and partners are ready to scale up our response,” Russell said. “The ceasefire must, finally, afford humanitarian actors the opportunity to safely roll out the massive response inside the Gaza Strip that is so desperately needed.”

UNICEF estimates that 17,000 children have lost their parents or been separated from them. About 1 million have had to flee their homes.

Israel’s president defends Gaza ceasefire deal

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