Israel and Hamas agree to Gaza ceasefire - Action News
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Israel and Hamas agree to Gaza ceasefire

A ceasefire has been reached between Hamas and Israel, aimed at ending the most intense fighting the Gaza Strip area has seen in four years.

'The task is not to fight. The target is to gain our rights back,' Islamist group says

Fragile Gaza ceasefire

12 years ago
Duration 8:12
A bomb rips through a bus in Tel Aviv shortly before Hamas and Israel agree to a ceasefire aimed at ending Gaza hostilities

A ceasefire has been reached between Hamas and Israel, aimed at ending the most intense fighting the Gaza Strip area has seen in four years.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohammed Kamel Amr announced the truce in Cairo hours before it came into effect at 9 p.m. local time (2 p.m. ET.)

Minutes after the deadline, celebratory gunfire, honking and cheering could be heard on some streets in Gaza City.

The truce seemed to be holding overnight, CBC's Susan Ormiston said from Jerusalem.

In Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he agreed to the ceasefire after consulting with U.S. President Barack Obama to allow Israeli civilians to get back to their lives. He said the two leaders also agreed to work together against weapon smuggling into Gaza, a statement confirmed by the White House.

"I realize that there are citizens who expect a harsher military action, and we may very well need to do that. But at present, the right thing for the state of Israel is to exhaust this possibility of reaching a long-term ceasefire," Netanyahu said in a statement.

Hamas spokesperson Osama Hamdan told CBC Newshis groupbelieves the truce deal "will be good for both sides."

He addedthat Hamas would respect the terms of the ceasefire, which brings an end to eight days of fighting. "The task is not to fight. The target is to gain our rights back."

The UN Security Council also welcomed the ceasefire, sayingin a statement Wednesday afternoon that it hoped theagreement would bring about "a sustainable and durable cessation of hostilities in Gaza and Israel" and lauding the efforts ofEgyptian President Mohammed Morsi and others.

Egyptian officialshelped mediate the truce,and will continue to play a key role by receiving "assurances from each party" that they are committed to the ceasefire. "Each party shall commit itself not to perform any acts that would break this understanding," the agreement says. "In case of any observations, Egyptas the sponsor of this understanding shall be informed to follow-up."

Foreign Minister John Baird said in a statement that Canada welcomes the ceasefire and "hopes that terrorist cells based in Gaza will abide by the terms of this agreement."

"We are deeply concerned about the loss of innocent lives on both sides," Baird said. He repeated Canada's support for Israel's"right to defend itself against terrorism, which, in all its forms, must be wholly rejected by all peace-loving people around the world."

Fighting until deadline

There was a last-minute burst of fire before the truce took effect, according to Israeli authorities,as Palestinian militants fired several rockets. One rocket hit a house in the southern Israeli city of Beersheba, police said. No injuries were reported.

Homes and government offices were reduced to rubble in Gaza overnight. (Derek Stoffel/CBC)

Meanwhile, Israeli shelling was reported in Gaza in the lead-up to the ceasefire deadline. There was at least one death and 25 injuries from thelastIsraeli attack before the deadline, Petricic said.

Earlier Wednesday, abomb ripped through a publiccity busin Tel Aviv, wounding 27Israelis. A police spokesman said somebody threw the bomb onto the bus and detonated it from a distance. No arrests have been made, Brig.-Gen Yoram Ohayon said, noting that a number of people were seen running from the scene after the blast.

Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri called the bombing a "natural response to the Israeli massacres... in Gaza," but stopped short of saying Hamas was responsible for the attack.

Deal details vague

The ceasefire between Israel and Hamas calls for an immediate halt to "all hostilities," and after a 24-hour period of calm, talks will open on border arrangements. Gaza's Rafah border crossing with Egypt is expected to assume a central role in the talks. Largely limited to foot traffic, Hamas hopes to turn the crossing into a bustling trade zone.

Israel will be seeking guarantees for a halt in weapons smuggling by Hamas. The Islamists want unrestricted movement and trade in and out of Gaza.

Israel imposeda blockade of the territory five years ago, and while it has gradually been eased, key restrictions remain on exports, the entry of key raw materials, and the movement of people. These restrictions have ground Gaza's economy to a halt, fueling unemployment of more than 30 per cent.

Associated Press

The last time there was a bomb blastin Tel Aviv was in April 2006, when a Palestinian suicide bomber killed 11 people and wounded 70 others at a shawarma stand near the old central bus station.

Israeli aircraft also pounded Gaza with at least 30 strikes overnight, hitting government ministries, smuggling tunnels, a banker's empty villa and a Hamas-linked media office. At least four strikes within seconds of each other pulverized a complex of government ministries the size of a city block, rattling nearby buildings and shattering surrounding windows. Hours later, clouds of acrid dust still hung over the area and smoke still rose from the rubble.

In downtown Gaza City, another strike levelled the empty, two-storey home of a well-known banker and buried a police car parked nearby in rubble.

The last week of fighting has killed 161 Palestinians, including 71 civilians, and forced hundreds of thousands of people on both sides of the border to remain huddled indoors. Five Israelis were killed.

Washington blames Hamas

Washington blames Hamas rocket fire for the outbreak of violence and has backed Israel's right to defend itself, but has cautioned that an Israeli ground invasion could send casualties soaring.

The U.S. considers Hamas, which has killed hundreds of Israelis in suicide and other attacks, to be a terrorist group and does not meet with its officials.Canada also lists Hamas as a terrorist organization.

Life in Gaza City

The CBC's Derek Stoffel visited one of the main market areas in Gaza City and talked to people who were stockpiling goods, in anticipation of more violence.

About 1.6 million Palestinians live in Gaza, one of the densest places on earth. Many say supplies of milk and cooking oil are running out.

Some celebrated the bus explosion in Tel Aviv, but the streets were relatively quiet later in the evening, Stoffel reported.

"Tonight, it appears the ceasefire is holding," Stoffel reported. "For how long is the real challenge for Hamas, the Palestinian faction that controls Gaza. It signed the ceasefire agreement with Israel;several smaller armed militant groups did not. So it will be up to Hamas to try and keep the peace by keeping those groups in line."

Hamas won Palestinian elections in 2006 and the militant group secured its hold on Gaza the following year as it beat back an attempted coup by gunmen from rival Palestinian faction Fatah, at the same time launching rocket attacks upon Israel before agreeing to an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire in 2008.

Israel launchedits most recentoffensivelast Wednesdayfollowing months of rocket salvoes from the territory into southern Israel, which has endured attacks for the past 13 years.

For its opening salvo, it assassinated Hamas's military chief, then followed up by bombarding the militant-run territory with more than 1,500 airstrikes that initially targeted rocket launchers and weapons storage sites, then widened to include wanted militants and symbols of Hamas power.

Defying Israel's claims that they've been badly battered, the militants have so far fired more than 1,400 rockets at Israel, drawing upon newly developed and smuggled weapons to extend the reach of their attacks toward Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, Israel's largest cities. The number of Israelis within rocket range leapt to 3.5 million fromone million.

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With files from The Associated Press