Israel reportedly offers a 40-day ceasefire in exchange for hostages held by Hamas in Gaza
World leaders are urging Hamas to accept Israel's latest offer of a truce, which reportedly includes a 40-day ceasefire.
British Foreign Secretary David Cameron said in addition to a pause in fighting, the "very generous" offer would potentially see thousands of Palestinian prisoners exchanged for the release of Israeli hostages.
"I hope Hamas do take this deal and frankly, all the pressure in the world and all the eyes in the world should be on them today saying, 'Take that deal'," Mr Cameron said in a World Economic Forum special meeting held in Riyadh.
Those sentiments were echoed by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
"Hamas has before it a proposal that is extraordinarily, extraordinarily generous on the part of Israel," Mr Blinken said.
"The only thing standing between the people of Gaza and a ceasefire is Hamas. They have to decide and they have to decide quickly," he said.
"I'm hopeful that they will make the right decision."
A source briefed on the talks said Israel's proposal entailed a deal for the release of fewer than 40 of the roughly 130 hostages believed to be still held in Gaza in exchange for freeing Palestinians jailed in Israel.
A second phase of a truce would consist of a "period of sustained calm" — Israel's compromise response to a Hamas demand for a permanent ceasefire.
Hamas negotiators were expected to meet Qatari and Egyptian mediators in Cairo on Monday local time to deliver a response to the phased truce proposal that Israel presented at the weekend.
A total of 253 hostages were seized in a Hamas attack on southern Israel on October 7 in which about 1,200 Israelis were also killed, according to Israeli counts.
Israel retaliated by imposing a total siege on Gaza and mounting an air and ground assault.
Gaza health authorities have said that about 34,500 Palestinians have been killed in the war so far.
Palestinians have been suffering from severe shortages of food, fuel and medicine in a humanitarian crisis brought on by the offensive that has demolished much of the territory.
Antony Blinken arrived in Saudi Arabia on Monday local time, the first stop in the latest of a series of trips to the Middle East since the Gaza war began.
He reiterated that the United States — Israel's main diplomatic supporter and weapons supplier — could not back an Israeli ground assault on Rafah if there was no plan to ensure that civilians would not be harmed.
More than a million displaced Gaza residents are crammed into Rafah, the enclave's southernmost city, having sought refuge there from Israeli bombardments. Israel says the last Hamas fighters are holed up there and it will open an offensive to root them out soon.
US-Saudi ties in focus
Mr Blinken also said the United States and Saudi Arabia had done "intense work together" over the past few months towards a normalisation accord between the kingdom and Israel — a goal that has been disrupted by the Gaza war.
"To move forward with normalisation, two things will be required: calm in Gaza and a credible pathway to a Palestinian state," he said.
In return for normalisation, Arab states are pushing for Israel to accept a pathway to Palestinian statehood on land it captured in the 1967 Middle East war — something Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly rejected.
Saudi Arabia's foreign minister, Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah, also said on Monday that an accord between Washington and Riyadh over normalisation was "very, very close".
Reuters/ABC