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Israel, Hamas agree to 12-hour Gaza cease-fire

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Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has told Secretary of State John Kerry that Israel would agree to a 12-hour ceasefire starting Saturday, according to a U.S. official traveling with Kerry.

Palestinian parliament member Mustafa Barghouti said Hamas will comply with the cease-fire.

“Of course, they will,” Barghouti told CNN’s “The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer” Friday. “Not only Hamas but all Palestinians.”

Both Barghouti and the chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat said Hamas was willing to sign on the seven-day ceasefire proposed as well.

Secretary of State John Kerry said Friday that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was willing to go along with a temporary truce “as a good-faith down payment to move forward.”

Earlier, the Israeli Cabinet rejected a proposed one-week humanitarian cease-fire but Kerry said no final proposal was submitted to Israel for a vote.

“Let’s make that clear,” Kerry told reporters in Cairo. “There is always mischief from people who oppose certain things, and I consider this one of those mischievous things.”

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon joined Kerry in efforts to reach a deal.

He called for a 12-hour humanitarian cease-fire, with the hope that it can be extended to seven days.

“Surely now, the parties must realize it is time for them to act,” Ban said.

“My hope is that the 12 hours will be extended, perhaps to 24, and people will draw from that the good will and effort to find a solution,” said Kerry, adding that he will travel to Paris on Saturday and continue to push for a deal.

The United States and Egypt were thought Friday to be moving closer to an agreement with Israel and the Palestinians on a one-week truce, starting Sunday.

Kerry met in Egypt with Ban and Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shukri.

The Americans are taking the lead on drafting the text in consultation with Egyptians, the sources said.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas is the main Palestinian party to the agreement and has been the lead in discussions with the the United States, Egypt and Israel.

Qatar is the main conduit for talks with Hamas, along with Turkey, and sources said the United States is working with those two countries to try and get Hamas to sign on.

Key details of the plan are still under negotiation, the sources said, including an Israeli proposal for its troops to remain in Gaza during the one-week truce.

The temporary humanitarian cease-fire would be used to get medical supplies into Gaza, and the injured and some of the bodies out.

If that can be achieved, the parties hope they can enter formal negotiations on a more permanent truce that addresses economic, political and security concerns about Gaza, with other nations involved.

“The hope is that this could be used as an opening,” another diplomatic source said.