Hamas to release US hostage, Israel says no ceasefire

James Mackenzie |

Israel’s offensive has displaced some 90 per cent of the Palestinian population of two million.
Israel’s offensive has displaced some 90 per cent of the Palestinian population of two million.

Hamas will release Israeli-American hostage Edan Alexander from Gaza on Monday, the Palestinian militant group says, although Israel’s prime minister says there will be no ceasefire and plans for an intensified military campaign will continue.

Fighting will pause to allow for Alexander’s safe passage, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, a day after Israel was told of Hamas’ decision to free the last surviving US hostage in Gaza as a goodwill gesture to President Donald Trump.

The release, after four-way talks between Hamas, the United States, Egypt and Qatar, could open the way to freeing the remaining 59 hostages held in the Gaza Strip, 19 months after Hamas’s attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.

But Netanyahu said Israel had agreed only to allow safe passage for Alexander, and its forces would continue recently announced preparations to step up operations there.

“Israel has not committed to a ceasefire of any kind,” his office said, adding that military pressure had forced Hamas into the release.

“The negotiations will continue under fire, during preparations for an intensification of the fighting.”

Israeli jets continued to pound Gaza before the expected release, killing at least 15 people sheltering in a school housing displaced families in Jabalia in the north of the enclave, local health authorities said.

The Israeli military said it was looking into the report.

On Sunday, Hamas said it had been talking to the US and had agreed to release Alexander.

Arab mediators Qatar and Egypt called it an encouraging step towards a return to ceasefire talks.

Israeli strikes hit a school housing displaced Palestinians in Jabalia
Israeli strikes hit a school housing displaced Palestinians in Jabalia, northern Gaza. (AP PHOTO)

Trump is due to visit Gulf states on a trip that does not include a stop in Israel, but special envoy Steve Witkoff, who helped arrange the release, is expected in Israel on Monday.

Alexander’s family thanked Trump and Witkoff, saying in a statement they hoped the decision would open the way for the release of the other hostages – only 21 of whom are thought to still be alive.

“We urge the Israeli government and the negotiating teams: please don’t stop,” they said.

US officials have tried to calm fears in Israel of a growing distance between Israel and Trump, who last week announced an end to US bombing of Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen, who have continued to fire missiles at Israel.

Families of the hostages and their supporters in Israel want a deal to secure the release of those still held in Gaza, have lobbied hard in the US and have met Trump several times.

But Netanyahu, who is due to testify on Monday in the latest session of his trial on corruption charges that he denies, has also faced heavy pressure from hardliners in his cabinet not to end the war.

Families of Israeli hostages protest in Tel Aviv
Families of Israeli hostages want a deal to secure the release of those still held in Gaza. (AP PHOTO)

Last week, he announced plans to step up the operation in Gaza, which officials said could be seized entirely by Israeli forces.

Following a ceasefire agreement that halted fighting in Gaza for two months and allowed the exchange of 38 hostages for Palestinian prisoners and detainees in Israeli jails, Israel resumed its operation in the enclave in March.

Since then, it has extended its control of the territory, clearing around a third as what it has described as a “security zone” and blocked off the entry of aid into Gaza, leaving the 2 million population increasingly short of food.

Israeli forces invaded Gaza in retaliation for the Hamas-led assault on Israel in October 2023 that killed 1200 people and saw 251 taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies.

Since then, more than 52,000 Palestinians have been killed, according to Gaza’s health ministry, and the conflict has destroyed large swathes of the enclave.

Reuters