Shaky ceasefire begins in Gaza Strip
Five people killed in Rafah hours after 72-hour humanitarian truce between Hamas and Israel began
Five people have been killed just hours into a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, after Israel and Hamas agreed to a 72-hour pause in fighting.
There was an immediate lull in fighting as the truce began at 8am local time (05:00 GMT) on Friday.
However, less than three hours later, medics reported deaths in the south of the Palestinian territory. Five people were killed and more than a dozen wounded in Rafah as a result of Israeli tank shelling, they said.
There were also reports of sniper fire in the east of Gaza City.
Al Jazeera's Imtiaz Tyab, reporting from Shujayea district, said "a few minutes ago, about a kilometre from where I'm standing, we heard a bang and saw a large plume of smoke. We can only assume that it was either an Israeli air strike or a drone strike."
Earlier on Friday, the Israeli army said five of its soldiers had died in mortar fire near the Gaza border, underlining the need for a negotiated truce.
Hopes of an end to the bloodshed rose early on Friday after US Secretary of State John Kerry announced that Israel and Hamas had agreed to a joint UN-US ceasefire proposal. Both sides swiftly confirmed their commitment to the truce, after 25 days of bloody confrontation.
While the proposal was accepted by Hamas, a spokesman stressed it was dependent on Israel reciprocating.
"Hamas and all the resistance movements have accepted a 72-hour humanitarian ceasefire from 8:00am on Friday which will be respected by all these movements if the other party also observes the ceasefire," Fawzi Barhum was quoted as saying by the AFP news agency.
At least 1,459 Palestinians, most of them civilians, have been killed since Israel launched its offensive. About 60 Israeli soldiers have been killed, in addition to three civilians killed by rockets fired from Gaza.
Ceasefire talks
Hours before the ceasefire was announced, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, facing international alarm over a rising civilian death toll in Gaza, said he would not accept any truce that stopped Israel from completing the destruction of tunnels dug under the border by Palestinian fighters.
According to a statement by Kerry and UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, forces on the ground would remain in place during the ceasefire.
Israel and Palestinian delegations in the meantime will travel to Cairo for separate negotiations to reach a more durable ceasefire, the statement said.
A senior US State Department official said talks could start as early as Friday, depending on how long it takes the parties to reach Cairo.
"Our understanding is that the Israelis will make clear to the UN where their lines are, roughly, and they will continue to do operations to destroy tunnels that pose a threat to Israeli territory that lead from the Gaza strip into Israel proper as long as those tunnels exist on the Israel side of their lines," the official added.
Hamas has already said it would not accept such a condition.
"The ceasefire is conditioned with Israeli forces stopping all military operations and activities on the ground," said Hamas spokesman Ghazi Hamad told Al Jazeera from Beirut. “It's our right to defend ourselves and to take measures...to stop any aggression."
Israeli and Palestinian negotiators heading to Cairo for formal talks will do so at different times: the Palestinians are expected to leave Friday mid-day, and the Israeli side after the Jewish Sabbath, on Saturday evening.
Twelve Palestinians form the delegation heading to the Egyptian capital. Three of them will travel from Gaza, and the rest from the occupied West Bank and elsewhere in the region.
The delegation will include five Hamas members and two representatives of the Palestinian Authority and Fatah.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas will not be heading to Cairo, but he was involved in picking the delegation members.
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