Trump says Hamas will be ‘hunted down’ as Gaza ceasefire talks wane

Trump says Hamas will be ‘hunted down’ as Gaza ceasefire talks wane

Donald Trump, the president of the United States, has suggested that Hamas is refusing to accept a truce in Gaza because it fears what will happen after all the Israeli prisoners are free.

Trump’s remarks at the White House on Friday imply that Israel and the US are more than willing to negotiate a temporary truce to release Israeli prisoners from Gaza.

The US president told reporters, “We’re down to the last hostages, and they know what happens after you get the last hostages.” They really didn’t want to make a deal, they said, “principally because of that.”

Trump claimed that the Palestinian organization will be “hunted down” and that it is solely responsible for the ceasefire talks’ apparent collapse.

“Hamas didn’t want to make a deal really,” he said. They “want to die,” he said, “and it’s very, very bad.”

Washington was stifling its participation in the negotiations on Thursday, according to Trump’s Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff, who accused Hamas of showing “a lack of desire to reach a ceasefire.”

Israel also stated that it had withdrew its negotiators from Qatar, where the ceasefire talks were taking place.

Hamas expressed shock at the US position, claiming that it had pledged “sincere support to the success of the mediation’s efforts” to reach a deal.

Additionally, the group claimed that Qatar and Egypt, the mediators, applauded its “constructive and positive” position.

Talks have been going on for a 60-day truce that would allow Israel to stop bombarding Palestinian territory and release 10 of its captives in Gaza.

Hamas has vowed to seek a permanent ceasefire.

According to Witkoff, the truce “will bring about a lasting peace in Gaza.”

However, Israeli officials have repeatedly outlined their intention to return to fighting and to have all Palestinians taken out of Gaza once they have been released.

In order to prepare for their removal from the territory altogether, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz has stated that the nation would use the truce to transport hundreds of thousands of Palestinians to a camp in southern Gaza.

Despite the ceasefire talks, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed earlier this month that Israel “still has to finish the job in Gaza.”

Legal experts claim that Trump’s demand in February amounts to ethnic cleansing and creating a “Riviera of the Middle East” in comparison to the depopulation of Gaza.

In what some claim is an attempt to make Gaza unlivable, Israel has systematically flattened large portions of the country using bombs, explosives, and bulldozers.

However, Netanyahu has argued that Palestinians’ departure will be “voluntary.”

However, human rights experts cautioned against the existence of a real choice for those who are threatened by bombardment and hunger.

Trump made the suggestion on Thursday that Gaza is going to see more violence, claiming that Israel will have to “fight” it.

They will need to “clean it up,” they said. You’ll have to get rid of it, he said.

Trump refutes French recognition of Palestine.

The US president’s remarks come as Gaza continues to suffer from deadly hunger as a result of an Israeli blockade that prevents the flow of essential supplies into the area.

Even close allies of the US and Israel have condemned the Israeli-imposed starvation in Gaza.

The denial of humanitarian assistance to Gaza was described as a “violation of international law,” according to Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney on Thursday.

At the UN General Assembly in September, French President Emmanuel Macron added that his nation would support the recognition of Palestine as a state.

Trump refuted his French counterpart’s statement, saying it “does not carry any weight” before flying to the United Kingdom on Friday.

Source: Aljazeera

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