Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuâs office says Hamas requests for changes to truce proposal âunacceptableâ.
Israel is sending a negotiating team to Qatar for talks on a Gaza ceasefire proposal, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has confirmed.
In a statement late on Saturday, Netanyahuâs office said the team would travel on Sunday after the Israeli leader instructed negotiators âto accept the invitation for close talksâ.
But the statement said that âthe changes Hamas is requesting to make to the Qatari proposal were delivered to us last night and are unacceptable to Israelâ. It did not elaborate on what changes were being requested.
Hamas said on Friday that it had provided a âpositiveâ response to a United States-brokered proposal that would involve a 60-day truce in Gaza, renewing hopes of a possible end to Israelâs deadly assault on the Palestinian enclave.
More than 57,300 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli attacks across Gaza since the October 2023 start of the war, which has decimated the Strip and spurred a dire humanitarian crisis.
But for months, experts have accused Netanyahu â who faces growing domestic pressure to secure the release of Israeli captives held in Gaza â of blocking attempts to reach a deal that would end Israelâs offensive.
Al Jazeeraâs Hamdah Salhut explained that the captivesâ families have accused the Israeli prime minister of âprioritising politicsâ over the lives of their loved ones.
âHis current right-wing allies â the reason why Netanyahu is in power â donât want a deal,â she said, adding that United States President Donald Trump has also been pushing for an agreement between Israel and Hamas.
Trump will host Netanyahu for talks at the White House in Washington, DC, on Monday.
Earlier on Saturday, Israelâs far-right national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, a key member of Netanyahuâs governing coalition, called on the Israeli prime minister to âabandon the path of surrenderâ.
In a post on X, Ben-Gvir wrote that any ceasefire deal that would include Israelâs withdrawal from âconquered territoriesâ, the release of Palestinian prisoners, or the ârevitalisation of Hamas with humanitarian aidâ would constitute a âreward for terrorismâ.
âThe only way to achieve victory and securely return our hostages is through the complete conquest of the Strip, a total cessation of âhumanitarianâ aid, and the encouragement to emigration,â he said.
âI call on the prime minister to abandon the path of surrender and return to the path of victory.â
Meanwhile, Hamas has insisted that any agreement must include guarantees that Israel will permanently end its war on Gaza.
Reporting from Amman, Jordan, because Al Jazeera is banned in Israel and the occupied West Bank, Salhut explained that Hamas has made requests for three core amendments to the ceasefire proposal.
âThey wanted the talks for ending the war to continue if there was a pause in the fighting, if that 60 days was over,â she said.
The Palestinian group also wants humanitarian aid to be delivered to Gaza through international mechanisms instead of the US- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), Salhut said.
More than 700 Palestinians have been killed and thousands wounded while seeking aid at GHF sites since the group began operating in the Strip in late May.
âThe third [request] was about where Israeli forces could be in the Gaza Strip as part of this deal,â Salhut added.






