Hamas acting in good faith – senior US negotiator

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Hamas acting in good faith – senior US negotiator

The Palestinian militant group appears to be genuinely seeking to fulfill the ceasefire deal with Israel, Jared Kushner has said

Hamas appears to be acting in good faith and seeking to honor the US-brokered Gaza deal with Israel, President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, has said.

Kushner, one of the key figures behind the ceasefire agreement, made the remarks in an interview with CBS’ 60 Minutes program aired on Sunday. Asked whether he believed the Palestinian militant group has been “acting in good faith” and “seriously looking for the bodies” of Israeli hostages it had agreed to return, Kushner responded affirmatively.

“As far as we’ve seen from what’s being conveyed to us from the mediators, they are so far. That could break down at any minute, but right now, we have seen them looking to honor their agreement,” he said.

Hamas has failed to return all the deceased hostages to Israel, claiming that it is unable to locate them due to widespread destruction inflicted on Gaza by Israeli operations. Israel has alleged that the group is deliberately dragging out the exchange process.

Washington has been actively working to speed up the exchange and “push both sides to be proactive… instead of blaming each other for breakdowns,” Kushner stated.

Kushner and another key figure in the mediation process, Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff, arrived in Israel on Monday to discuss the next phase of the implementation of the Gaza ceasefire deal.

On Sunday, Israel accused Hamas of violating the ceasefire in the southern Gaza city of Rafah, carrying out multiple airstrikes on what it called “terror targets” and killing more than 40 people across Gaza, according to local health authorities. Hamas denied violating the ceasefire, while media reports indicated the Rafah incident was caused by an Israeli engineering vehicle hitting an unexploded munition. Following the strikes, Israel said it returned to “enforcing the ceasefire” in the Palestinian enclave.

On Monday, Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir called for the truce to be broken, arguing that the return of all the surviving hostages was enough. “Now we need to go back to war, we need to take action against [Hamas] immediately,’” the minister said in a televised speech.

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