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Medicines for hostages, aid arrives in Gaza — Qatar

By AFP - Jan 19,2024 - Last updated at Jan 19,2024

A Palestinian man gestures as he sits on rubble of a building following Israeli bombardment, on Thursday in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip (AFP photo)

DOHA — Medicines for hostages in Gaza and humanitarian aid for civilians entered the war-torn Palestinian territory on Wednesday under a deal mediated by Doha and Paris, Qatar announced.

"Over the past few hours, medicine and aid entered the Gaza Strip, in implementation of the agreement announced yesterday for the benefit of civilians in the Strip, including hostages," Qatar's foreign ministry spokesman Majed Al Ansari wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

Under the agreement thrashed out on Tuesday, medicines along with humanitarian aid are to be supplied to civilians in Gaza in exchange for delivering drugs needed by hostages held there.

Forty-five hostages are expected to receive medication according to the agreement between Israel and Hamas.

Earlier, two Qatari planes carrying medicines arrived on Wednesday in the Egyptian city of El Arish, near the Rafah border crossing, Qatar's foreign ministry said.

On Wednesday a senior member of Hamas's political bureau, Musa Abu Marzuk, revealed new conditions for the delivery of medicines to hostages.

"For every box of medicine that goes in for them, 1,000 boxes will go in for residents of Gaza," he said on X, formerly Twitter.

Marzuk said the medicines would be supplied through a country that Hamas trusts and not France, and would go to different hospitals.

"The pharmaceutical trucks will enter without Israeli inspection."

But the Israeli military body responsible for civilian affairs in the Palestinian territories, COGAT, told AFP on Wednesday that five trucks carrying medicines would undergo security inspection at the Kerem Salem crossing.

All aid deliveries entering the Gaza Strip are subject to Israeli scrutiny.

Later Wednesday, Israeli forces spokesman Daniel Hagari told reporters Israel would "do our utmost to check with Qatar that the medicines will reach the hostages who need them".

Qatar's foreign ministry said the planes were carrying 61 tonnes of aid, including medicines.

France said the drugs would be sent to a hospital in Rafah where they would be handed over to the Red Cross and divided into batches before being transferred to the hostages.

Hamas released dozens of hostages in exchange for Palestinian prisoners held by Israel during a November truce mediated by Qatar, which hosts the group’s political office.

Some 250 people were taken to Gaza by Palestinian fighters during the October 7 sudden attack by Hamas on southern Israeli communities.

Israeli officials say 132 of them are still being held captive in the territory, including 27 who are believed to have been killed, according to an AFP tally.

Since then, Israel has launched a blistering assault in Gaza that has killed at least 24,448 people, more than 70 per cent of them women and children, according to the Hamas government’s health ministry.

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