Monday, February 10, 2025

Hamas says it’s delaying next hostage release, claiming Israeli truce violations


Hamas says it’s delaying next hostage release, claiming Israeli truce violations



The Hamas terror group announced Monday that it intended to delay the next release of Israeli hostages, slated for Saturday, “until further notice,” in response to what it claimed were Israeli violations of the ongoing hostage-ceasefire deal.

The announcement prompted the prime minister to move up a security cabinet meeting, as the defense minister ordered the military on high alert. 

It came as the deal’s future remains uncertain, with Israel yet to send negotiators to Qatar with a mandate to discuss its potential second stage, despite the passage of a deadline to do so stipulated in the agreement.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has in recent days kept the door open to resuming fighting with Hamas rather than continuing to a second phase of the deal, while US President Donald Trump has insisted that all the hostages must be released and called for an American takeover of the enclave and the relocation of all of its residents once the war is over.

Hamas military wing spokesman Hudhaifa Kahlout — known by the nom de guerre, “Abu Obeida” — said Monday that Israel had not fulfilled its obligations under the agreement over the past three weeks, claiming that the Israel Defense Forces are obstructing the flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza and targeting Palestinians returning to the north of the Strip.

“The release of the prisoners, which was scheduled for next Saturday, February 15, 2025, will be postponed until further notice, pending the occupation’s compliance and retroactive fulfillment of the past weeks’ obligations,” Kahlout said, referring to the hostages Hamas abducted from southern Israel on October 7, 2023. Seventy-three of the 251 hostages are still held in Gaza.

“We reaffirm our commitment to the terms of the agreement as long as the occupation adheres to them,” the spokesman added.

In later comments, the terror group said it was open to fulfilling the release on time if Israel ceases its ostensible violations. It said it had intentionally made the announcement five days ahead of the planned release “to give the mediators sufficient opportunity to pressure the occupation to implement its obligations, and to keep the door open to implement the exchange on time if the occupation adheres to its obligations.”

Channel 12 also quoted an Israeli source who noted that if Hamas had wanted to blow up the deal, it could have announced the delay closer to the scheduled release, rather than with almost a full week left to return to schedule.

Hamas claims Israel obstructing movement, aid

In its statement on Monday, Hamas said it had “closely monitored the enemy’s violations and failure to abide by the terms of the agreement over the past three weeks.”

“These include delaying the return of displaced people to northern Gaza, targeting them with shelling and gunfire across various areas of the Strip, and failing to allow the entry of humanitarian aid in all its forms as agreed upon,” he added, asserting Hamas had “fulfilled all its obligations.”

Israeli forces withdrew from the entire Netzarim Corridor in the central Gaza Strip overnight Saturday-Sunday, in accordance with the hostage release-ceasefire deal, allowing Palestinians to return to areas that had been controlled by the IDF since the early days of the war.

On Sunday, IDF troops opened fire on a group of dozens of Palestinians who approached the Israeli border in the northern Strip, reaching just a few hundred meters from troops who were stationed in a buffer zone. The IDF said the forces moved forward with military vehicles and fired warning shots.

It was not immediately clear what Hamas was referring to in its comments about humanitarian aid, which has been entering the Strip in great quantities. The terror group has in the past claimed that specific items, such as fuel, tents, and heavy machinery, were not being allowed into the enclave, which Israel has denied.

PM moves up security cabinet meeting

Following the announcement, Netanyahu held a consultation with the defense establishment leadership to discuss the matter, an official said.

The official told the media that Netanyahu would also move up a security cabinet meeting scheduled for Tuesday afternoon to the morning, following the terror group’s statement.

Israeli negotiators returned from Doha earlier Monday in advance of the meeting, after some 24 hours in Qatar, Hebrew media reported. The negotiators were in Qatar to discuss matters related to the current phase of the ceasefire, rather than the next one.

Defense Minister Israel Katz on Monday called the terror group’s move to delay the hostage release an “outright violation of the ceasefire,” and said he had ordered the IDF to “prepare at the highest level of alert for any possible scenario in Gaza and to protect the [border] communities.”

“We will not return to the reality of October 7,” he said.


Meanwhile, mediators feared a breakdown of the agreement, two Egyptian security sources told Reuters.

Hamas negotiators said US guarantees for the ceasefire were no longer in place, given a proposal by US President Donald Trump to displace Palestinians from the Gaza Strip, and mediators postponed talks until a clear indication of Washington’s intent to continue the phased deal was received.

Referring to Trump, the United States and the West, he added: “We will bring them down as we brought down the projects before them.”


Hamas has also reportedly indicated that Trump’s plan could jeopardize the deal with Israel.

Netanyahu, meanwhile, told the Knesset on Monday, “We see eye to eye with the US administration on realizing all our war goals, including eliminating Hamas, getting all our hostages home, ensuring that Gaza will never again be a threat to Israel, [and] returning our residents to the north and the south.”

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