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Al Jazeera
Al Jazeera
Politics

Fears for ceasefire after Hamas suspends release of Israeli captives

Qassam Brigades spokesperson Abu Obeida delivers a speech following the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, on January 19, 2025 [Hamas Armed Wing Media/Handout via Reuters]

Hamas has said that it will delay the release of more Israeli captives planned for Saturday “until further notice”, due to Israeli violations of the ceasefire in Gaza.

The captives will “remain in place until the occupying entity complies with past obligations and compensates retroactively,” Abu Obeida, spokesperson for the Qassam Brigades, Hamas’s armed wing, said in a statement issued on Monday.

The announcement has raised fears that the ceasefire agreement between Hamas and Israel will not hold.

Israel has responded by condemning the “violation” of the ceasefire deal and putting the military “on alert”. United States President Donald Trump suggested the agreement should be ripped up unless all the Israeli captives are released by the weekend.

Israel and Hamas are in the middle of a six-week ceasefire during which Hamas is releasing dozens of the captives taken during its October 7, 2023 attack on Israel in exchange for nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners.

However, Abu Obeida said that Israel had violated multiple parts of the truce, which was brokered between the two sides over many months.

“Over the past three weeks, the resistance leadership monitored the enemy’s violations and their non-compliance with the terms of the agreement,” he said.

“These violations include delaying the return of displaced persons to northern Gaza, targeting them with shelling and gunfire in various areas of the Gaza Strip, and failing to allow the entry of relief materials in all forms as agreed upon. Meanwhile, the resistance has fulfilled all its obligations.”

The Qassam Brigades spokesperson reaffirmed the group’s “commitment to the terms of the agreement as long as the occupation adheres to them”.


Israel’s Defence Minister Israel Katz swiftly responded to the Hamas move, saying that the decision was in “complete violation of the ceasefire agreement”.

“I have instructed [the military] to prepare at the highest level of alert for any possible scenario in Gaza,” Katz said.

The two sides have carried out five swaps since the truce went into effect last month, freeing 21 Israelis and more than 730 Palestinians.

The next exchange was scheduled for Saturday, releasing three Israeli captives in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners.

Several Palestinian civilians have been shot and killed by Israeli forces as they returned to their homes.

Meanwhile, the number of wounded Palestinian patients who were evacuated out of the Strip, as well as the humanitarian aid trucks that have entered Gaza, were fewer than what had been promised in the ceasefire agreement.

The Qassam Brigades’ announcement also comes in light of the latest statements made by Trump, who has raised concerns about the sustainability of the ceasefire deal.

Trump has repeatedly called for ethnically cleansing Gaza, saying that the United States would take “ownership” of the territory.

Trump responded to the Hamas announcement by saying the ceasefire deal should be cancelled if all the Israeli captives are now not released by Saturday.

Under the ceasefire deal, the captives are set to be released in phases.

Speaking in a wide-ranging session with reporters, Trump said: “If all of the hostages aren’t returned by Saturday 12 o’clock – I think it’s an appropriate time – I would say cancel it and all bets are off and let hell break out.”

The US president noted that he was expressing a personal opinion and that Israel must decide for itself what it will now do.

The first stage of the deal expires on March 1. The second phase, which would see the release of all captives and a permanent ceasefire, has not been finalised. The third part of the agreement is supposed to usher in a multiyear plan to reconstruct the territory.


Palestinian activist and politician Mustafa Barghouti said Israel has violated the agreement in three ways: obstructing temporary housing and humanitarian aid, shooting at people in Gaza and backing Trump’s plan to ethnically cleanse Gaza.

“More than that, now Netanyahu is threatening to go back to the war, and he’s declaring that he will never stop the war,” Barghouti told Al Jazeera.

“So what do they want – to get back all Israeli prisoners and then continue the massacres in Gaza? This is exactly the message that Palestinians were getting.”

Netanyahu reiterated last week that he is committed to fulfilling the aims of the war, including destroying Hamas’s military and governing capabilities.

Before Abu Obeida’s statement on Monday, Senior Hamas official Basem Naim told Al Jazeera that Israel has not been fulfilling its obligations under the agreement.

“In the last three weeks after signing the deal we have been in very serious talks and negotiations with the mediators – the Egyptians, the Qataris, and the United States – about the daily violations by the Israelis, of the deal,” Naim said.

He noted that 25 Palestinians had been killed and dozens wounded by Israeli forces after the ceasefire went into effect.

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