UPDATED ON:
Friday, June 20, 2008
13:44 Mecca time, 10:44 GMT
 
News Middle East
Tense Israeli-Hamas truce holds
Palestinian fighters left their positions
as the ceasefire began [AFP]

The Gaza Strip is quiet on the second day of a ceasefire deal between Israel and Palestinian group including the Hamas movement.

The territory remained calm on Friday, a day after the Egyptian-mediated six-month truce took effect.

Israeli tanks remain on the Gazan border, amid scepticism on both sides over whether the truce will last.

Ehud Olmert, Israel's prime minister, has threatened an Israeli invasion of Gaza if Hamas breaks the ceasefire.

Ismail Haniya, the Hamas leader in Gaza, has said that peace would hold as long as cessation of "all Israeli aggression against the Palestinian people" is maintained.

Israel has said it will begin to ease its economic blocakde of Gaza on Sunday, should the truce hold.

Olmert will travel to Egypt on Tuesday to resume talks on a proposed prisoner swap with Hamas.

An Israeli military court has also ordered the release of Hamas politician Bassam al-Zahiri, who was detained two years ago.

'In the balance'

The UN agency for Palestinian refugees said on Thursday that it saw the truce as a "positive step" that could end months of delays to construction of schools, housing and medical centres desperately needed by the people of Gaza.

David Chater, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Israel, said: "The hopes of so many on both sides of the border now hang in the balance.

"Every minute, every hour that is now passing though is feeding the hopes of people that they can have a normal life."

Fighters from the Islamic Jihad organisation, one of the Palestinian factions who have signed up to the deal, were seen dismantling the rocket launchers used to strike Israeli towns across the border.

They removed the weapons from fields surrounding Beit Hanoun where in the past year hundreds, if not thousands, of rockets have been launched into southern Israel.

However, residents of the Gaza Strip and southern Israel were wary of putting too much faith in the deal.

"They make agreements and ceasefires here and there all the time. We will wait until we see real results," Hatem, a 30-year-old baker in Gaza City, said.

Nasser al-Farhan, a 22-year-old guard, said "God willing the period of calm will hold.

"But Israel has never kept to them before. It always continues with its attacks and its arrests."

Israelis sceptical

Micha Hazan, 22, a café worker from the Israeli town of Sderot, close to the Gaza Strip, was just as sceptical: "They won't stop firing rockets until we send the tanks into Gaza, and even then, I'm not sure they would stop."

Ephi Levy, an Israeli farmer, said: "Let's hope it gets better with the tahadiya," he said, using the Arabic term for calm.

Israeli settlers burnt a Palestinian olive tree field in the West bank on Thursday [AFP]
"The snipers kept shooting at us up until yesterday."

The ceasefire follows months of mediation by Egypt and is the first deal since Hamas seized power of the Gaza Strip from Fatah in June 2007.

However, concerns over the long-term risks of the deal remain.

Uzi Baron, a Sderot resident, told Al Jazeera that he feared that Hamas would use the peace "to manufacture more weapons and to smuggle".

While Roni Sofer, chief diplomatic correspondent for Israel's Ynet news service, said; "Israel has lost its ability to deter and remove a threat to its citizens. It allows a group that threatens it strategically to continue to exist.

"This is the agreement's biggest failure from Israel's standpoint."

West Bank settlements

Palestinians fear that the ceasefire will allow Israel to continue to expand illegal Jewish settlement activity in the occupied West Bank.

Jihad Hamad, a Gaza-based analyst, said: "The deal allows [Israel] to keep changing the facts on the ground, to build settlements and absorb more land from the West Bank."

There are additional fears that the peace deal may break down because it has not been extended to the West Bank.

Despite Palestinian calls for this extention, Israel refused. Israel says that its security forces must be able to work within the West Bank to combat Palestinian attacks.

Lamis Andoni, Al Jazeera's Middle East analyst, said: "Hamas was forced to accept the deal in the hope of easing the Israeli siege on Gaza and to alleviate Palestinian people's suffering.

"But the question remains will a truce hold if Israel conducts an operation in the West Bank that leads to Palestinian deaths? That will be a difficult challenge as individual fighters in Gaza could then be provoked into attacking Israeli posts."

The agreement states that if the ceasefire holds for three days Israel is obliged to increase fuel supplies to Gaza on Sunday. Israel has maintained a blockade on goods going into the Gaza Strip since Hamas took power.

Following that Hamas and Israel are expected to renew indirect talks in Cairo next week over a prisoner exchange.

Israel is seeking the release of Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier captured by Gazan fighters in a deadly cross border raid about two years ago, and will send an envoy of the prime minister to the talks.

The possible release of some of the more than 10,000 Palestinians held  in Israeli jails will also be discussed.

 Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
Feedback Number of comments : 14
 
taji
United States
19/06/2008
cease fire
I do not have trust in HAMAS. They will take advantage, re-group and re-arm. I pray for the safety of Isreal form a sneak attack.

Eshfaq
Ukraine
20/06/2008
Proud
The world is seen what type of situtation is in PALESTINE. Every day we see how many childs are killing by ISREAli attacks. so we dont have any trust on the ISREALI GOVERNMENT.

Basil
United States
20/06/2008
Let's hope Israel will keep its word. They have not done so in the past.

Tim
United Kingdom
20/06/2008
Re-arming
Israel will continue to re-arm during the ceasefire. They will spend billions on military research and development. So why is it so wrong that Palestinian facitions will take the opportunity to re-arm?

ijat
Afghanistan
20/06/2008
I do not have trust in Israel. They will take advantage, do some more targetted killing, expand the settlements, etc.. I pray for the safety of Palestine people.

Dynasty
United States
20/06/2008
Cease Fire....
I am gald to see that the warring factions have come to some osrt of agreement. Althought feel like it will not stand long, considering the history of the two.

Dynasty
United States
20/06/2008
Cease Fire
I believe the only true way to estabilsh calm in the region is for the International community (especially the United State) to put as much pressure on Israel as it does on Hamas.

Joe Gemini
South Africa
20/06/2008
Truce
If Hamas do honour the terms of the truce, Israel will conduct rocket attacks on it's own people to motivate a military response from it's armed forces and nullify the truce - this tactic they've adopted from the USA

cindy
United States
20/06/2008
Ceasefire/...
God Bless America & God Bless Israel. Peace will never happen. War is coming. Wakeup!!!

Richard
United States
20/06/2008
peace...?
If Hamas and the Palestinians terrorists put down their weapons against Israel, there will be peace. If Israel puts down its weapons, there will be no more Israel. I pray that both sides will honor their commitment to give peace a chance.

Jimmy
United States
20/06/2008
Hamas=Extremist
We are talking like the Hamas is an organized non radical form of government ,Please people the cowards sacrifice there children with bombs strapped to themselves for there cause.These people are extremist freaks.

Muhammad
South Africa
21/06/2008
We Hope for the best
I do hope that this truce will hold, however, I believe this idea unfortunately seems far fetched. Israelis are synonymous with breaking agreements. At least those innocent children of Gaza would have another week to live ...

Muhammad
South Africa
21/06/2008
No light at the end of this tunnel
I do hope that this truce will hold, however, I believe this idea unfortunately seems far fetched. Israelis are synonymous with breaking agreements. At least those innocent children of Gaza would live another week....

Harrison R.
Afghanistan
26/06/2008
Ceasefire, only way out
The ceasefire is the only way out. Support for Hamas is wavering. Put Israeli troops and tanks in the mix and you will have yourself a full blown war of attrition with Hamas gaining more support than ever. The two state solution is the only answer.

 
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