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Live Blog Update| Israel's genocide in Gaza

Hamas chief says still open to Gaza truce talks

Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh said on Sunday that the Palestinian group was still open to talks with Israel, after mediators so far failed to secure a Ramadan truce in the Gaza conflict.

"I say clearly that the one who bears responsibility for not reaching an agreement is the occupation (Israel)… However, I say that we are open to continuing negotiations," Haniyeh said in a televised speech as several Muslim nations announced the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan would begin on Monday.

Mediators had been pushing for a new truce in the war, now in its sixth month, before Ramadan began.

However, Haniyeh, who is in self-exile in Qatar, on Sunday said Israel was unwilling to meet Hamas's conditions for a deal that would have seen hostages held by militants exchanged for Palestinian prisoners in Israel.

He reiterated that Hamas wanted a durable ceasefire, a withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza, the return of displaced Gazans to their homes and ramped-up access to humanitarian aid in the besieged territory where famine looms.

Haniyeh said he was in contact with mediators "hours before this speech" but to no avail.

"If we receive from the mediator brothers a clear position on the occupation with its commitment to withdrawal, stopping the aggression, and the return of the displaced, then we are ready" to complete a deal, he said.