Israel has refused to reopen Gaza's vital Rafah border crossing, accusing Hamas of dragging its feet on returning deceased hostages' remains – a move that threatens to unravel last week's fragile ceasefire. 🕊️
What’s Happening?
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced Saturday that Rafah – closed since May 2024 – will remain shut until Hamas hands over more bodies. This came hours after Palestinian officials claimed the crossing would reopen Monday. Talk about mixed signals! 🤯
Why It Matters
Hamas fired back, calling Israel's decision a "blatant violation" of their U.S.-brokered deal. The group claims rubble-clearing equipment can't enter Gaza with Rafah closed, slowing their search for more remains. Meanwhile, Israel says only 12 of 28 promised bodies have been returned. 💔
By the Numbers
- 🔢 20 living hostages freed by Hamas
- 🔢 2,000 Palestinian prisoners released by Israel
- 🔢 15 Palestinian militant bodies exchanged per Israeli body
The stalemate highlights how easily this ceasefire could collapse – especially with both sides accusing each other of bad-faith moves. Hamas claims Israel is "manipulating" body identification lists, while Israel insists recovery efforts are moving too slow. 🕵️♂️
As tensions simmer, all eyes remain on whether this deal can hold long enough to address bigger issues in Trump’s 20-point peace plan. Stay tuned! 📡
Reference(s):
Israel keeps Rafah closed, blaming Hamas for body handover delays
cgtn.com