Special report:
Palestine-Israel
Relations
GAZA, June 23 (Xinhua) -- Hamas on Monday said it was
too early to judge Israel's commitment to an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire which
took hold in the Gaza Strip since Thursday.
Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said it was also early
to "judge Israel's commitment on lifting the siege on the Gaza Strip."
Abu Zuhri said Hamas wants Israel to "allow the goods
that were banned during the blockade like construction and industrial materials
and fuel."
Israel eased its restrictions on the Gaza Strip on
Sunday, allowing more trucks carrying food products and cloths into Gaza.
Abu Zuhri's remarks came as four days of lull in the
coastal enclave passed while the Gazans feel almost nothing has changed in the
operations of commercial crossing points into Gaza.
The six-month ceasefire deal stipulates that Israel
has to reopen the commercial crossings closed down after Hamas took over Gaza
last June, three days after the ceasefire takes effects.
Meanwhile, the deposed Hamas government which rules
Gaza said that Israel was committed to the deal and increased the number of
truckloads flowing into the coastal enclave.
"According to the deal, the goods have to increase by
30 percent," said Taher al-Nounou, a spokesman for the Hamas unity government.
"Yesterday, the number of trucks increased to 80
trucks a day, compared to 60 truckloads in the past."
The truce has been holding since it went into effect
on Thursday morning following months of clashes between the Israeli military
staging military operations against Gaza and Gaza militants firing rockets at
Israeli towns and attacking Israeli troops along the border.
