The Israeli army announced the death of eight new soldiers on Saturday in the Gaza Strip, where the war between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas has raged for more than eight months.

On the diplomatic front, hopes for a ceasefire seem to be fading away due to the contradictory demands of Israel and Hamas which leave little chance of seeing the plan announced at the end of May by the American president, Joe, come to fruition. Biden.

While residents reported Saturday bombings and fighting between Israeli forces and Palestinian fighters in Rafah, a large southern city and its surroundings, the Israeli army indicated that eight soldiers had died “during an operational activity in the south” of the Palestinian territory.  

Asked about the circumstances of their death, the army specified that their armored vehicle had exploded in the Rafah region.

The Israeli army launched a ground operation on the city of Rafah on May 7, sparking strong condemnation from the international community, which feared for the fate of the civilian population, massed in the city after being largely displaced by fighting elsewhere.

Since the start of the ground operation in the rest of the Gaza Strip on October 27, 306 Israeli soldiers have been killed – including the eight soldiers who died this Saturday, one of the worst tolls for the Israeli army during just one day.  

While elsewhere in the world, Muslims are preparing to celebrate Eid al-Adha, the major Muslim holiday, from Sunday, Palestinians in Gaza deplore the multiple shortages of basic necessities in the besieged territory.  

“In previous years [for Eid], we prepared sweets, new clothes for the children, or we bought […] meat, fish and other delicious foods,” recalls bitterly Asmaa al -Masri, a resident of Jabaliya (north) who was displaced to Beit Hanoun, a nearby town.

The war was sparked on October 7 by the attack launched by Hamas from Gaza in southern Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,194 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP count compiled from official Israeli data. Of 251 people kidnapped, 116 are still held hostage in Gaza, of whom 41 are dead, according to the army.

In retaliation, the Israeli army launched a large-scale offensive in Gaza that left 37,296 people dead, mostly civilians, according to data Saturday from the Health Ministry of the Hamas-led Gaza government.

On the sidelines of the G7 Summit which ends on Saturday in Italy, Mr. Biden criticized Hamas for blocking the ceasefire offer on the table.  

“I submitted a proposal approved by the Security Council, by the G7, by the Israelis, and the main obstacle at this point is Hamas refusing to sign, even though they proposed something similar,” he said. Biden said on Thursday.

The truce plan announced on May 31 by the President of the United States, Israel’s main ally, provides in a first phase for a six-week ceasefire accompanied by an Israeli withdrawal from the densely populated areas of Gaza, the release of certain hostages held in Gaza and the release of Palestinians imprisoned by Israel.

The only truce concluded so far, at the end of November, lasted a week and allowed the release of 105 hostages, including 80 Israelis and binationals, exchanged for 240 Palestinians detained by Israel.

Hamas sent the mediating countries – Qatar, Egypt and the United States – a first response, which according to a source close to the discussions, contains “amendments” to the plan, including “a timetable for a permanent ceasefire and the total withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza”. Demands that Israel has always rejected.  

Fears of an extension of the conflict beyond the Gaza Strip have increased in recent days. The Lebanese Islamist movement Hezbollah, an ally of Hamas, indicated that its intense strikes since Wednesday on Israeli territory were a response to the assassination by Israel of one of its commanders.  

Again on Saturday, the belligerents exchanged new shots at the border, with a Palestinian movement reporting a death in its ranks in an Israeli strike.

During a new tour of the Middle East this week to promote the ceasefire plan, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that “the best way” to help resolve violence between Hezbollah and Israel was “to resolve the conflict in Gaza and achieve a cease-fire.”