TEL AVIV, Israel — The Cabinet of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was meeting late Tuesday to decide whether to approve a cease-fire deal with Hamas to facilitate the release of some of the approximately 240 hostages seized by the Gaza-based militant group during last month's cross-border attack that killed some 1,200 Israelis.
At the beginning of the meeting, Netanyahu stressed that even if a temporary truce is approved, "We will continue the war until we achieve all our goals: to destroy Hamas, to return all our captives and missing, and ensure that in Gaza there will be no party that can threaten Israel."
Speaking with families of the hostages on Monday, the prime minister said that returning their loved ones is a "holy and supreme mission."
Netanyahu called the hostage/prisoner exchange deal a "hard decision but right decision."
He added that all of Israel's security institutions, such as the Israeli military and Mossad spy agency support the deal.
Netanyahu's comments came hours after the Doha-based Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh said the two sides were "close to reaching a truce agreement" with Israel.
What the deal might include
Details of the possible deal have yet to be officially released. However, Arab and Israeli media have cited unnamed sources suggesting it would involve a pause in Israel's strikes in Gaza and the release of dozens of Palestinian prisoners in exchange for Hamas freeing some of the hostages it seized during its Oct. 7 attack on Israel.
President Biden, asked by reporters at the White House on Monday whether a deal was near, responded "I believe so."
Israel's Channel 12 on Tuesday quoted an unnamed senior Israeli government official as saying "we are very close to a deal" for at least 50 hostages, but said there are still technical issues to be resolved before such an agreement could be implemented. The television report said the hostages to be released would include children, their mothers and other women.
Some 13,000 people in Gaza, which is run by Hamas, have been killed since the war began, according to Palestinian officials.
Pressure is growing for Israel to act on hostages
Public support for a deal in Israel has been building and there have been large demonstrations in support of the hostages, increasing pressure on Netanyahu's government to win their release.
The International Committee of the Red Cross said in a statement late Monday that its president, Mirjana Spoljaric, had met with Haniyeh in Qatar, calling for "the immediate release of hostages."
"The ICRC is insisting that our teams be allowed to visit the hostages to check on their welfare and deliver medications, and for the hostages to be able to communicate with their families," the aid group said, adding that as a humanitarian intermediary, it "does not take part in negotiations leading to the release of hostages."
Israeli strikes on Gaza continues
Meanwhile, fighting continued around a hospital in northern Gaza that was hit by shelling on Monday, killing at least 12 people, according to Gaza's health ministry. NPR was unable to independently verify the casualties at the Indonesian Hospital. Israel's military says its forces were fired on from within the hospital and that it returned fire, but that "no shells were fired toward the hospital."
Displaced civilians and medical staff are trapped in the hospital, as Israeli troops battle Hamas fighters in the area.
Israel, which insists that Hamas is using hospitals in Gaza as covert command posts, has received international criticism for attacks that have hit the medical facilities.
Speaking to NPR, Medhat Abbas, a doctor at the Indonesian Hospital, said about 120 people were evacuated from the facility to Nasser Hospital in the south of Gaza. Gaza's health ministry says at least 500 wounded people and more than 2,000 displaced Gaza residents remain stranded inside.
"Anyone who does not die from Israeli bombing dies from bleeding because he does not reach the hospital," the Gaza health ministry said. A spokesman said the occupancy at hospitals in Gaza has reached 190%.
In a status report on Tuesday, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said Monday's attack on the Indonesian Hospital marked the fifth time the facility had been hit since the start of hostilities.
"This health facility is under an electrical power (blackout) due to lack of fuel and it also faces severe shortages of water, essential medicines and supplies."
Earlier this week, Israel's military released video it said proved that Hamas had used Gaza's largest hospital, Al-Shifa, as a covert base. Al-Shifa was badly damaged and its electricity cut off during Israeli operations to capture the facility. On Monday, 28 premature newborn babies were evacuated from Al-Shifa and transported to hospitals in Egypt for treatment.
Aid groups renew calls for food assistance, fuel
In a post on X, formerly Twitter, on Tuesday, the U.N. World Food Program said Gaza's 2.2 million people are in urgent need of food assistance.
"Existing food systems are collapsing, and to reach those in need, WFP and our partners need increased access and resource like fuel, gas, and connectivity. To make a real impact, we need hostilities to halt."
Last week, the U.N. World Food Program warned that Gaza was facing widespread hunger as a result of the conflict. "[N]early the entire population is in desperate need of food assistance," it said in a statement.
"With winter fast approaching, unsafe and overcrowded shelters, and the lack of clean water, civilians are facing the immediate possibility of starvation," WFP Executive Director Cindy McCain said, adding that the needs of Gazans could not be properly met with a single border crossing at Rafah, Egypt.
"The only hope is opening another [crossing], safe passage for humanitarian access to bring life-saving food into Gaza," McCain said.
NPR's Ruth Sherlock in Rome contributed to this report.
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