Gaza ceasefire agreed, says citing Egyptian, Islamic Jihad sources

A ceasefire between Islamic Jihad and Israel has
been agreed in Gaza, according to AFP, citing Egyptian and Islamic Jihad
sources.
A Gaza Strip ceasefire agreement has been agreed and
came into effect at 5:30 a.m. (3:30 GMT) on Thursday, an Egyptian source and a
senior Islamic Jihad official told AFP.
The “ceasefire agreement comes as a result of
Egypt’s efforts” and has been endorsed by “Palestinian factions including
Islamic Jihad,” said the top Egyptian official. An Islamic Jihad source
confirmed the agreement to AFP.
Palestinian militant group Islamic Jihad and Israel
have exchanged missile and rocket fire since Israeli forces killed the
organization's senior commander Baha Abu al-Atta.
Islamic Jihad had offered terms on Wednesday for an
Egyptian-mediated Gaza ceasefire with Israel, saying that if these were not met
it could continue cross-border attacks indefinitely.
The Israeli government accuses al-Atta of
masterminding and planning attacks against Israel. Islamic Jihad is backed by
Iran and accused of carrying out past rocket and drone attacks against Israel.
An Israeli missile strike in the Gaza Strip killed
six members of a Palestinian family on Thursday, all of them civilians, medical
officials and residents said, bringing the death toll in the territory from a
48-hour surge in fighting to 32.
No Israelis have been killed in the latest bout of
fighting. The Gaza Strip, where Islamic Jihad and fellow Palestinian militant
group Hamas are based, remains blockaded from air, sea, and land by the Israeli
military.
Hamas and Israel fought three wars in the territory
between 2008-2014. Since March 2018, Palestinians have been gathering for
weekly demonstrations at the border between Gaza and Israel, with at least 309
killed by sniper fire.