Israeli fire kills 2 Palestinians in Gaza amid impasse over ceasefire, total blockade
1st phase of ceasefire ended Saturday with no deal between Israel, Hamas on what will happen next
Israeli fire has killed at least two people in Rafah and injured three others in Khan Younis in the south of Gaza, raising fear among Palestinians that the ceasefire could collapse altogether after Israel imposed a total blockade on the shattered enclave.
A first phase of a ceasefire between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas that began in January ended over the weekend with no agreement on what will happen next.
Hamas says an agreed second phase must now begin, leading to a permanent Israeli withdrawal and an end to the war. Israel has instead offered a temporary extension into April, with Hamas to release more hostages in return for Palestinian detainees, without immediate talks on Gaza's future.
Hamas official Osama Hamdan on Monday said Israel's demand to extend the first phase of the ceasefire was pushing things back to "square zero."
"The mediators and guarantors bear full responsibility for preventing [Israeli Prime Minister] Netanyahu from sabotaging all efforts made to reach the agreement and for protecting the agreement from collapsing," said Hamdan at a news conference.
Two Israeli government officials said mediators had asked Israel for a few more days to resolve the standoff.
Israel raised the stakes on Sunday by imposing a total blockade on all supplies, including food and fuel, to sustain the 2.3 million Gazans living among the ruins after the 15-month conflict.
Hundreds of lorries carrying supplies were backed up in Egypt, denied permission to enter. Gaza residents said shops had been swiftly emptied of all supplies and the price of a sack of flour had more than doubled overnight.
"Where will our food come from?" said Salah al-Hajj Hassan, a resident in Jabalia, on Gaza's northern edge where families have returned to destroyed homes to live in the rubble.
"We are dying, and we don't want war or the alarm bells of displacement or the alarm bells of starving our children."
Tanks firing into Gaza
Residents said Israeli tanks stationed near the eastern and southern borders of Gaza intensified gunfire and tank shelling into the outskirts throughout the night, raising fears among the population that fighting could resume.
A Palestinian official with a group allied to Hamas told Reuters a state of alert had been declared among fighters.
At least two people were killed by Israeli drone fire in Rafah, and three people were wounded by a helicopter that fired on Khan Younis, medics said.
Fawzia Qishta — sister of Musa Qishta, one of the two people killed — said her brother had been in Rafah since the beginning of the first phase of the Israel-Hamas ceasefire before he was killed on Monday.
"Enough enough… I swear we're tired," Qishta told CBC News later Monday.
Najah Al Shaer, whose brother Khaled Al Shaer was also killed in Rafah, said he was going to check on his home when Israeli fire killed him.
In a statement, the Israeli military said its forces fired at a motorboat in the coastal area of Khan Younis that was violating security restrictions in the area and posing a threat.
The military said in another incident in southern Gaza, its forces identified two suspects who were moving toward them and posing a threat. Israeli forces "fired at the suspects to eliminate the threat and identified casualties," it said.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said on Sunday it had adopted a proposal by U.S. President Donald Trump's envoy, Steve Witkoff, for a temporary ceasefire for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and Jewish feast of Passover, ending around April 20.
The truce would be conditional on Hamas releasing half of the remaining living and dead hostages on the first day, with the remainder released at the conclusion if an agreement is reached on a permanent ceasefire.
Hamas says it is committed to the originally agreed ceasefire that had been scheduled to move into a second phase, with negotiations aimed at a permanent end to the war, and hostages could be released only under that plan.
Food prices surge amid fears
The Hamas-run Gaza interior ministry called on residents to provide information about merchants raising food prices in the wake of the new blockade.
Tamer al-Burai, a Gaza businessman, said that with shops suddenly empty, the price of a sack of flour had risen to 100 shekels ($40 Cdn) from 40 shekels ($16 Cdn). Prices for cooking oil, fuel and vegetables had also surged.
"It is catastrophic and things might become worse if the ceasefire isn't resumed or there is no intervention by the local authorities against greedy merchants," he told Reuters via a chat app.
Salama Marouf, head of the Gaza government media office, urged Gazans not to panic, saying there was enough food in markets for at least two weeks. The economy ministry had initiated an effort to compel merchants not to increase prices.
An Israeli government spokesperson said in an online briefing that there is enough food in Gaza for months, after the influx of aid in recent weeks.
"There is plenty of food and supplies in Gaza; 4,200 trucks a week have gone in during this ceasefire, enough for many, many months," David Mencer said.
Aid agencies have warned that goods could spoil and that they don't have limitless means to stockpile goods on the Gaza border.
"Aid is arriving at our warehouses every day ... We have warehouse capacity for now, but we cannot be sure how long that will continue," operations co-ordinator for the International Federation of the Red Cross in Egypt Jurgen Hogl, told Reuters.
Israel's onslaught has killed more than 48,000 Palestinians in Gaza, according to local health authorities, and displaced most of the population.
The war began when Hamas-led fighters attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing 1,200 people and capturing more than 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies. Fifty-nine hostages are believed to remain in Gaza.
With files from CBC News and Mohamed El Saife