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Hamas response to Trump plan wins hardline support as hope for peace in Gaza grows | CBC News

Palestinian Islamic Jihad, a hardline ally of Hamas that also holds hostages, on Saturday endorsed the group’s response to a U.S. plan to end the war in Gaza — a move that could help pave the way for the release of Israelis still held by both parties.

Hamas, the Palestinian militant group that controls Gaza, on Friday accepted certain key parts of U.S. President Donald Trump’s plan, including ending the war, Israel’s withdrawal and the release of Israeli hostages and Palestinian captives.

Hamas’s response triggered a chorus of optimistic statements by world leaders urging an immediate cessation of the deadliest conflict involving Israel since its creation in 1948, and demanding freedom for the Israelis still held in the enclave.

A further possible boost to hopes for peace came with a supportive statement from Iran-backed Islamic Jihad, which is smaller than Hamas but seen as more hardline.

“Hamas’s [reaction] to Trump’s plan represents the position of the Palestinian resistance factions, and the Islamic Jihad participated responsibly in the consultations that led to this decision,” the group said.

Palestinians hope deal will go through

Asked when talks on implementing the U.S. plan would begin, a Hamas official told Reuters that “things have yet to be arranged.”

Hamas’s stance, and its backing by Islamic Jihad, may raise the spirit of Palestinians, who had watched one ceasefire effort after another fail as Israeli strikes hit the strip over the past two years, creating a humanitarian crisis and displacing millions.

WATCH | Donald Trump reacts to Hamas’s response:

Trump tells Israel to stop bombing Gaza after Hamas accepts some of peace plan | Hanomansing Tonight

U.S. President Donald Trump urged Israel to stop bombing Gaza after Hamas said on Friday it would agree to some aspects of Trump’s peace plan to end the war. Kamran Bokhari, senior director at the New Lines Institute for Strategy and Policy in Washington, D.C., discusses the latest developments.

“May the suffering lift off the people of Gaza, the people of Gaza are among the oppressed of the Earth, and any ray of hope for the oppressed people is a victory,” said Sharif al-Fakhouri, who lives in the Israeli-occupied West Bank city of Hebron.

Amid the optimism, several issues remain unresolved, such as whether Hamas will agree to disarm — one of Israel’s top demands.

Some Palestinians expressed fear that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who heads Israel’s most far-right government ever, will ultimately withdraw from any plan to end the war.

“What is important is that Netanyahu does not sabotage this, because now that Hamas agreed, Netanyahu will disagree, as he usually does,” Jerusalem resident Jamal Shihada said.

Israeli airstrikes persisted early on Saturday but they were less intense, after Trump had called for a halt to the bombing, saying Hamas was ready for peace.

In its daily update, the Gaza Health Ministry said Israeli fire killed at least 66 Palestinians across the enclave in the past 24 hours.

Global support to end war

Netanyahu’s office said Israel was preparing for “immediate implementation” of the first stage of Trump’s Gaza plan for the release of Israeli hostages following Hamas’s response.

Shortly after, Israeli media reported that the country’s political echelon had instructed the military to reduce offensive activity in Gaza.

Trump’s plan and Hamas’s reaction won support around the world, from Australia and India to Canada and European capitals.

“An end to this terrible war is within reach,” Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof said.

WATCH | Hamas signals readiness to immediately enter mediated negotiations:

Hamas agrees to some of Trump’s Gaza peace plan, including release of Israeli hostages

A statement from Hamas said the militant group agrees to release all Israeli hostages, alive or dead, under the terms of U.S. President Donald Trump’s Gaza proposal and signalled readiness to immediately enter mediated negotiations to discuss the details.

Hamas responded to Trump’s 20-point plan after the U.S. president gave the group until Sunday to accept it or face grave consequences.

Trump, who has cast himself as the only person capable of achieving peace in Gaza, has invested significant political capital in efforts to end the war that has left U.S. ally Israel increasingly isolated on the world stage.

The president said on Friday he believed Hamas had shown it was “ready for a lasting PEACE,” and he put the onus on Netanyahu’s government. “Israel must immediately stop the bombing of Gaza, so that we can get the Hostages out safely and quickly!” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.

Domestically, the prime minister is caught between growing pressure to end the war — from hostage families and a war-weary public — and demands from hardline members of his coalition who insist there must be no let-up in Israel’s campaign in Gaza.

Israel began attacking Gaza after the Oct.7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on southern Israel in which some 1,200 people were killed and 251 taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies. Israel says 48 hostages remain, 20 of whom are alive.

Israel’s campaign has killed more than 67,000 people in Gaza, most of them civilians, according to Gaza health authorities, resulted in a humanitarian crisis and led to the destruction of much of the enclave.

“It’s time to end this horrific war and bring every single hostage back home. We are for rebuilding and the rehabilitation,” said Efrat Machikawa, an active member of Israel’s hostage families forum and the niece of Gadi Moses, a hostage who was released in January.

“We’re fed up with the war. We don’t want any revenge. We want to concentrate on life.”

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