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Las amenazas de Hamas y de Donald Trump ponen en riesgo la tregua en Gaza y crece la angustia por los rehenes

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El cese el fuego entre Israel y Hamas en Gaza pende de un hilo después de que el movimiento ultraislámico palestino advirtió el martes que las amenazas del presidente estadounidense Donald Trump complican «aún más las cosas» para la tregua en el territorio.

El mandatario republicano amenazó el lunes con desatar un «infierno» en Gaza si no son liberados los rehenes israelíes de aquí al sábado, como marca el acuerdo de tregua que rige desde el 19 de enero.

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«Trump debe recordar que hay un acuerdo (de tregua) que ambas partes deben respetar, y que esa es la única forma de hacer regresar a los prisioneros», reaccionó en declaraciones a la AFP Sami Abu Zuhri, uno de los líderes de Hamas.


«El lenguaje de las amenazas no tiene ningún valor y no hace más que complicar aún más las cosas», enfatizó.

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Trump amenaza a Hamas y dice que si no liberan a los rehenes “se desatará el infierno”

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Hamas, en el poder en Gaza desde 2007, anunció el lunes que aplazaba de manera indefinida la próxima liberación de rehenes tras acusar a Israel de vulnerar el alto el fuego, mediado por Qatar con la ayuda de Estados Unidos y Egipto.

El movimiento extremista aseguró sin embargo que la puerta seguía «abierta» para liberarlos si Israel cumplía efectivamente con sus obligaciones.

Soldados israelíes, cerca de la frontera con Gaza, este martes. Foto: REUTERS

El secretario general de la ONU, Antonio Guterres, instó el martes a Hamas a liberar a los rehenes, cautivos desde el ataque terrorista del 7 de octubre de 2023.

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«Debemos evitar a toda costa que se reanuden las hostilidades en Gaza, lo que conduciría una inmensa tragedia», escribió Guterres en la red social X.

La tregua detuvo más de quince meses de conflicto en la Franja de Gaza y permitió cinco intercambios de rehenes en manos der Hamas por presos palestinos encarcelados en Israel.

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La guerra estalló el 7 de octubre de 2023 el salvaje ataque de Hamas en el sur de Israel, que provocó la muerte de 1.210 personas, en su mayoría civiles, según un recuento de AFP basado en datos oficiales israelíes.

Los milicianos ultraislámicos también secuestraron a 251 personas, de las cuales 73 siguen en Gaza, incluidas 35 que habrían muerto, según el ejército israelí.


La ofensiva lanzada en respuesta por Israel mató al menos a 48.209 personas en Gaza, también civiles en su mayoría, según datos del Ministerio de Salud del territorio, considerados fiables por la ONU.

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Tras el anuncio de Hamas de aplazar la próxima liberación de rehenes, el gobierno del primer ministro israelí, Benjamin Netanyahu, ordenó al ejército prepararse «para cualquier escenario».

Los escombros rodean un campo para desplazados palestinos en Jabalia, en el norte de la Franja de Gaza. Foto: REUTERS  Los escombros rodean un campo para desplazados palestinos en Jabalia, en el norte de la Franja de Gaza. Foto: REUTERS

El acuerdo de tregua quedó también trastocado por la propuesta de Trump de tomar el control del enclave palestino y desplazar a sus más de dos millones de habitantes a países como Jordania y Egipto.

El presidente egipcio, Abdel Fatah al Sisi, instó el martes a reconstruir Gaza «sin desplazar a los palestinos», después de que el presidente de Estados Unidos amenazara el lunes con interrumpir la ayuda a Egipto y Jordania si se negaban a recibir a los gazatíes.


La tregua permitió hasta ahora la liberación de 21 rehenes, entre ellos 16 israelíes, a cambio de más de 700 prisioneros palestinos encarcelados en Israel.

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En total, 33 rehenes israelíes tienen que ser liberados en la primera fase de esta tregua, que concluye el 1 de marzo.


El ejército israelí y el kibutz Kissufim anunciaron el martes la muerte en Gaza del rehén Shlomo Mansour, de 86 años.


La segunda fase de la tregua debe conducir a la liberación de todos los rehenes y al fin definitivo de la guerra, antes de una etapa final dedicada a la reconstrucción de Gaza. Pero las negociaciones sobre la segunda fase aún no han comenzado.

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Trump endurece su política migratoria: los 43 países que tiene en la mira para prohibirles el ingreso a Estados Unidos

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Donald Trump está considerando una nueva prohibición de ingresos a los Estados Unidos, mucho más amplia que la que el republicano impuso en su primer mandato presidencial. Abarcaría a más de 40 países, en tres niveles diferentes.

Según el diario The New York Times, que publicó la información citando a varios funcionarios que hablaron bajo condición de anonimato, el borrador con la lista de países incluye a 43 naciones, con tres categorías de restricciones de viajes. Pero esa lista fue redactada hace semanas por el Departamento de Estado, y podría cambiar cuando llegue a la Casa Blanca.

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La categoría roja es la que sufriría una restricción total e incluye a los países cuyos ciudadanos no podrán ingresar a Estados Unidos. Ahí están Afganistán, Bután, Cuba, Irán, Libia, Corea del Norte, Somalia, Sudán, Siria, Venezuela y Yemen.

La segunda categoría es la naranja y ahí aparecen otros 10 países: Bielorrusia, Eritrea, Haití, Laos, Birmania, Pakistán, Rusia, Sierra Leona, Sudán del Sur y Turkmenistán. Los ciudadanos de estos países tendrían los viajes restringidos, pero no suspendidos.

En estos casos, se podría permitir la entrada a viajeros de negocios adinerados, pero no a quienes viajen con visas de inmigrante o turista. Los ciudadanos incluidos en esta lista también estarían sujetos a entrevistas personales obligatorias para obtener una visa.

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Otros 22 países en la categoría amarilla tendrán 60 días para presentar descargos o podrían pasar a las otros dos niveles. La lista la completan Angola, Antigua y Barbuda, Benín, Burkina Faso, Camboya, Camerún, Cabo Verde, Chad, Congo, Dominica, Guinea Ecuatorial, Gambia, Liberia, Malaui, Mali, Mauritania, República Democrática del Congo, San Cristóbal y Nieves, Santa Lucia, Santo Tomé y Príncipe, Vanuatu, y Zimbabue.

Los motivos que los colocaron en esta lista incluyen la falta de intercambio con Estados Unidos de información sobre los viajeros, prácticas de seguridad supuestamente inadecuadas para la emisión de pasaportes o la venta de ciudadanía a personas de países prohibidos.

Algunos de los países incluidos en las listas preliminares roja y naranja ya fueron sancionados por Trump durante las prohibiciones de viaje impuestas durante su primer mandato, pero muchos son nuevos. Algunos comparten características con las listas anteriores: generalmente son de mayoría musulmana o no blancos, pobres, y tienen gobiernos considerados débiles o corruptos.

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Pero algunos no presentan un motivo claro para su inclusión. Un ejemplo es Bután, un país pequeño budista e hindú que se encuentra entre China e India, países que no figuran en las listas preliminares.

La propuesta de restringir drásticamente, o incluso prohibir por completo, la entrada de visitantes procedentes de Rusia plantea un problema diferente. Si bien el gobierno ruso tiene fama de corrupto, Trump ha estado intentando reorientar la política exterior estadounidense hacia una dirección más favorable a Rusia.

En una situación similar se encuentra la decisión de incluir a Venezuela, lo que también podría interrumpir una incipiente distensión en las relaciones que ha sido útil para los esfuerzos de Trump por deportar a migrantes indocumentados.

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En uno de sus primeros actos como presidente tras asumir el cargo el 20 de enero, Trump emitió una orden ejecutiva exigiendo al Departamento de Estado identificar los países «cuya información sobre verificación y selección sea tan deficiente que justifique una suspensión parcial o total de la admisión de ciudadanos de dichos países«.

En esa orden se otorgaba al departamento 60 días para elaborar un informe para la Casa Blanca con esa lista, lo que significa que la lista definitiva debe presentarse la próxima semana.

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Canada’s new PM and Trump critic Mark Carney accused of being out of touch with the ‘common man’

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OTTAWA-Canada’s self-described ‘globalist’ new Prime Minister Mark Carney immediately took aim at President Donald Trump upon winning his party’s leadership contest last week. 

Carney criticized President Trump during his acceptance speech when he won the Liberal leadership last Sunday, saying that Canada’s tariffs against the United States will remain until the Americans «show us respect» and added that Canadians «are always ready when someone else drops the gloves.»

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He also tried to tie Trump to his main challenger. «Donald Trump thinks he can weaken us with his plan to divide and conquer,» while «Pierre Poilievre’s plan will leave us divided and ready to be conquered.»

«Because a person who worships at the altar of Donald Trump will kneel before him, not stand up to him.» 

NEW CANADIAN PM BLASTS TRUMP’S 51ST STATE IDEA: ‘CRAZY’

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FILE – Mark Carney, who has served as the governor of the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England, speaks at the Sustainable Finance conference, Nov. 28, 2024.  (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press via AP, File)

Having served as governor of two central banks – of Canada and the United Kingdom – he was also a senior executive at Goldman Sachs and served as the United Nations Special Envoy for Climate Action and Finance. Never elected to any office before, Carney was sworn in on Friday to become Canada’s 24th prime minister. 

He is expected to call an election this week in a bid to keep the Liberals in power, and for him, to win a seat in the House of Commons.

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Count on the official opposition Conservatives, in a dead heat with the Liberals at 37% according to a recent Leger poll, to portray Carney as someone «not connected to the common man» and who has spent a fair amount of time outside Canada, Laura Kurkimaki told Fox News Digital. Kurkimaki served as deputy national campaign manager for the Conservative Party during the last federal election in 2021.

«Over the last five years, while Canadians have been lining up at foodbanks and experiencing a significant cost-of-living increase, he has not been in Canada,» Kurkimaki said.

Seen by detractors as out of touch, Carney, during a recent leadership debate, did not provide an answer when the moderator asked the candidates whether they knew the average cost of a week’s worth of groceries. 

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In an appearance on «The Rest is Politics» podcast last month featuring Alastair Campbell, former British prime minister Tony Blair’s press secretary, and past Goldman Sachs executive Anthony Scaramucci, Carney said that his «weakness is people will charge me as being elitist or globalist.»

MARK CARNEY WINS LIBERAL PARTY NOMINATION TO REPLACE TRUDEAU AS CANADA’S NEXT PM

Mark Carney, then the vice chair and head of transition investing for Brookfield Asset Management Inc., speaks during the United Nations Climate Action: Race to Zero and Resilience Forum in New York, US, on Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2022. 

Mark Carney, then the vice chair and head of transition investing for Brookfield Asset Management Inc., speaks during the United Nations Climate Action: Race to Zero and Resilience Forum in New York, US, on Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2022.  (Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

«Well, that happens to be exactly what we need,» he said, adding that he’s also «a pragmatist» and «a leader in crisis.»

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When Scaramucci asked Carney how he would respond to attacks that he is «out of touch with the mainstream, common citizen in Canada,» the new prime minister said that most of his life in Canada «has been in service of Canadians.»

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre also targeted Carney, who played hockey at Harvard and Oxford, after he was photographed playing goalie reportedly wearing high-end sneakers.

Leader of Canada's Conservative Party, Pierre Poilievre, speaks during a 'Spike the Hike - Axe the Tax' rally in Edmonton, on March 27, 2024, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. On April 1st, fuel prices will rise due to the Federal Carbon Tax increase. Canadians anticipate paying more for gasoline, diesel, and propane starting April 1st. All provincial premiers are concerned about the impact on those already grappling with the cost of living. 

Leader of Canada’s Conservative Party, Pierre Poilievre, speaks during a ‘Spike the Hike – Axe the Tax’ rally in Edmonton, on March 27, 2024, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. On April 1st, fuel prices will rise due to the Federal Carbon Tax increase. Canadians anticipate paying more for gasoline, diesel, and propane starting April 1st. All provincial premiers are concerned about the impact on those already grappling with the cost of living.  (Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

«Trying to be a normal guy playing hockey in $2000 shoes,» Poilievre posted on X.

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Kurkimaki said the upcoming federal election campaign with Carney at the Liberal helm could be a replay of the one in 2011 when another «out-of-touch» Liberal leader – historian Michael Ignatieff, who came from the world of academia – lost his House seat, and his party recorded its worst-ever result in a general election that the Conservatives won.

Canada’s new prime minister earned a bachelor’s degree in economics at Harvard University and went on to receive master’s and doctoral degrees in economics at the University of Oxford.

WHO IS PIERRE POILIEVRE? CANADA’S CONSERVATIVE LEADER SEEKING TO BECOME NEXT PRIME MINISTER AFTER TRUDEAU EXIT

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Mark Carney Launches Campaign For Federal Liberal Leadership

Mark Carney, the former governor of the Bank of Canada, officially announced his bid for the federal Liberal Party leadership at Laurier Heights Community League in Edmonton, Canada, on January 16, 2025.  (Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Carney, who lived in the tony Ottawa neighborhood of Rockcliffe Park before becoming prime minister, also holds British and Irish citizenship. Earlier this month, he said that he had begun the process of renouncing both.

Along the way, the man whose looks were once compared to those of actor George Clooney made a fortune at England’s central bank alone. Carney earned $1.3 million, including pay, allowances and housing costs – the highest for the head of any federal reserve at the time.

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However, his current net worth might not be revealed any time soon. Before becoming prime minister, Carney divested his assets, «other than his personal real estate, into a blind trust,» a member of his team told CBC News. Under Canadian law, public-office holders need to divest their assets, such as stock options, either by selling them or having a trustee manage or sell them without, in this case, consulting Carney.

Carney’s spokesperson did not return Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

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Hamas says American-Israeli hostage will only be freed if ceasefire is implemented

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The Hamas terrorist group said Saturday that it will only release Israeli-American hostage Edan Alexander if Israel implements the existing ceasefire agreement in the Gaza Strip.

Alexander, 21, is the last living American hostage in captivity in the Gaza Strip.

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A senior Hamas official told the Associated Press that long-delayed talks over the ceasefire’s second phase would need to begin the day of the release and last no longer than 50 days. Israel would also need to stop barring the entry of humanitarian aid and withdraw from a strategic corridor along Gaza’s border with Egypt.

Hamas called it an «exceptional deal» aimed at getting the truce back on track, per the official, who spoke to The AP on condition of anonymity.

A woman holds an image of hostage Edan Alexander during the Global Day of Unity and Prayer with Israel’s Hostages and Missing Families Forum, which represents the relatives of those taken captive by Palestinian Hamas militants during the October 7 attack. (Photo by YURI CORTEZ/AFP via Getty Images)

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AFTER TRUMP THREAT, HAMAS REFUSES TO RELEASE MORE HOSTAGES WITHOUT PHASE 2 CEASEFIRE DEAL

Hamas is also demanding the release of more Palestinian prisoners in exchange for hostages, the official said. 

Hamas on Friday agreed to release Alexander along with the bodies of four other hostages following a deal offered by mediators. He has now been held captive for 526 days as of Saturday, the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said.

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It comes as talks are ongoing in Qatar to establish the next phase of the Israel-Hamas ceasefire, the first phase of which ended on March 1.

The office of Steve Witkoff, special envoy to the Middle East, and the National Security Council said in a joint statement that «President Trump has made it clear that Hamas will either release hostages immediately, or pay a severe price.»

Witkoff and Eric Trager, National Security Council senior director for the Middle East and North Africa, presented a ‘bridge’ proposal to extend the ceasefire beyond Ramadan and Passover and allow time to negotiate a framework for a permanent ceasefire.

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is expected to convene his ministerial team on Saturday to receive a detailed report from negotiators and decide on the next steps for the release of the hostages.

Donald Trump holding photo of Edan Alexander

President Donald Trump is seen posing with a photo of Edan Alexander on Oct. 7, 2024 in New York City. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

Meanwhile, a number of rallies are expected to take place throughout Israel on Saturday to demand that all remaining 59 hostages are released, the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said. The main rallies will take place in Tel Aviv, Sha’ar HaNegev Junction, Carmei Gat and Jerusalem.

Though he spent most of his life in New Jersey, Alexander was born in Israel a few months before his parents moved to the U.S., according to the American Jewish Committee (AJC).

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After graduating from high school, Alexander decided he would enlist in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) rather than enroll in college.

On Oct. 7, Alexander, who was serving in the IDF’s Golani Brigade, an infantry unit, was patrolling near Gaza when Hamas’ attacks on Israel began. The attacks ended with 1,200 Israelis dead and 251 hostages taken, including Alexander.

Hamas terrorists

Hamas terrorists take up positions ahead of a hostage release in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza Strip, Saturday Feb. 8, 2025. (AP)

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Yael Alexander, Edan’s mother, recounted the day he was taken hostage in a recent interview with AJC’s «People of the Pod.» Yael was in Israel in early October 2023, visiting her family and hoping to see Edan. On the morning of Oct. 7, she spoke with Edan, who said that he was seeing «terrible stuff,» but he assured her that he was safe. Then he was taken hostage.

On Nov. 30, 2024, more than a year after Alexander was captured, Hamas released a video of Alexander speaking in Hebrew and Arabic. Alexander, like other hostages forced to make propaganda videos, delivered messages about Netanyahu and then-President-elect Donald Trump.

Fox News’ Yael Rotem-Kuriel, Trey Yingst, Rachel Wolf and Stephen Sorace, as well as The Associated Press, contributed to this report.

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