'Deal to release the hostages' agreed in Doha, Netanyahu's office says
The office of Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said that a “deal to release the hostages” has been reached in Doha and that he has ordered the security cabinet to convene later on Friday, a day after originally intended.
“Prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu was informed by the negotiating team that agreements have been reached on a deal to release the hostages,” his office said in a statement in the early hours of Friday.
His office had accused Hamas on Thursday of reneging on key parts of the agreement to extort last-minute concessions. No evidence was provided for the allegation and Hamas denied it. Netanyahu has been accused of deliberately sabotaging previous deals for his own political benefit.
Friday’s statement said the security cabinet would meet on Friday before a full meeting of the cabinet later to approve the deal, it said.
It was not immediately clear whether the full cabinet would meet on Friday or Saturday or whether there would be any delay to the start of the ceasefire on Sunday.
The Times of Israel reported that the full cabinet meeting would not take place until Saturday night, citing a Netanyahu spokesperson. According to the paper that’s because
Opponents of the deal must be given 24 hours to petition the High Court of Justice and a Friday afternoon meeting would not provide them enough time to do so because many of them are religious and observe the Sabbath.
That could mean that the ceasefire does not come into effect until Monday, a day later than originally planned, the paper wrote further:
Holding the full cabinet meeting on Saturday means the 24-hour grace period for petition filing won’t conclude until late Sunday, meaning the deal won’t come into place until Monday — a day after originally slated.
It was not immediately possible to confirm the report. We’ll bring you more details as soon as we have them.