The Board of Peace’s lead envoy for Gaza tells Reuters that he was “fairly optimistic” a plan for disarmament of Hamas and other militant groups in Gaza can be reached, but cautioned that it will still take time.
“We’ve had some very serious discussions with Hamas over the last few weeks. They’re not easy,” Nickolay Mladenov says in an interview during a visit to Brussels.
“I’m fairly optimistic that we will be able to come up with an arrangement that works for all sides and, most importantly, works for the people in Gaza,” he says.
Mladenov says work is underway on an implementation plan that would include disarmament, new governance in Gaza, and provisions for an Israeli withdrawal.
“It obviously will take time, but we’re trying to make sure that the arrangements for the implementation of the plan are agreed to as quickly as possible,” Mladenov, a former UN Middle East envoy and Bulgarian politician, says.
Asked about when an agreement could be reached on implementation, Mladenov said: “We have a matter of days, maximum, a couple of weeks. That is my assessment, because otherwise we will lose the momentum of what we have, and then every decision will become even more difficult.”
While declining to comment on the details of ongoing negotiations, the envoy says he believes there is “a good way forward that is being discussed with both sides.”
One of the issues under discussion was the “yellow line” demarcating the territory Israel has occupied since the October ceasefire, Mladenov said. Reuters has reported that Israel has moved the “yellow line” deeper into Gaza.
“There’s a whole set of issues that need to be handled on the ground, including the yellow line,” Mladenov says, adding that matters such as access for aid and medicine are also under discussion with Israel.
He also points to some changes on the ground.
“We’ve been able to, over the last few days, gradually and very carefully increase the number of people that are allowed to cross through the Rafah Crossing. We’re looking at increasing the number of trucks of goods that are going into Gaza,” he says. The Rafah Crossing connects Gaza to Egypt.
There is also a need to build trust, Mladenov says.
“It’s a very complicated process,” he says. “But it is a process that is taking a lot of small steps to get us ultimately to an agreement on the full implementation of the plan”.