Gaza truce holds as Israel, Hamas claim ‘victory’

By
AFP
Gaza truce holds as Israel, Hamas claim ‘victory’
GAZA CITY: The skies over Gaza remained calm Wednesday as a long-term ceasefire took hold, ending the deadliest violence in a decade with Israel and Hamas both claiming ´victory´ in the 50-day war.

Millions in and around the war-torn enclave enjoyed a welcome night of peace during which there were no strikes on Gaza, nor Palestinian rockets fired at Israel, the Israeli army said. "Since the truce came into force, there has been no IDF activity in Gaza, and no rocket fire on Israel," a military spokeswoman said 12 hours after the guns on both sides fell silent. The agreement, which went into force at 1600 GMT on Tuesday, was hailed by Washington as well as by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, who said he hoped it would set the stage for a resumption of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. Both Israel and the Islamist Hamas movement, the de facto authority in Gaza, hailed the ceasefire as a victory. But commentators took a more realistic perspective. "A draw" was the headline in Maariv newspaper. And experts said the two sides had agreed to halt their fire out of exhaustion after seven weeks of fighting which has claimed the lives of 2,143 Palestinians and 70 on the Israeli side.

"After 50 days of fighting, the two sides were exhausted so that´s why they reached a ceasefire," Middle East expert Eyal Zisser told. Politically, Hamas had "not achieved anything" but in order to really weaken the movement, Israel would have to resume peace talks with the Western-backed Palestinian Authority. The Palestinians said it was a "permanent" truce, while a senior Israeli official described it as "unconditional and unlimited in time".

Under the deal, Israel will ease restrictions on the entry of goods, humanitarian aid and construction materials into Gaza and will expand the area open to Palestinian fishermen to six nautical miles. But talks on crunch issues such as Hamas´s demands for a port and an airport and the release of prisoners, as well as Israel´s calls to disarm militant groups, will be delayed until the negotiators return to Cairo within the coming month. In Gaza, where celebrations erupted once the truce took hold, the festivities continued late into the night as its 1.8 million residents revelled in the end of seven weeks of bloody violence.

"We slept last night without any raids and we couldn´t hear warplanes," said a resident Mutaz Shalah as he headed to work for the first time since the war began on July 8.