The truce was due to come into effect at 1900 GMT.
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he had accepted a US
recommendation to give the Egyptian ceasefire proposal a chance.
US
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, who held talks in both
Jerusalem and Cairo, welcomed the ceasefire, saying “the US and Egypt
will work together to support the next step.”
US
President Barack Obama commended Netanyahu for agreeing to the Egyptian
ceasefire proposal and expressed his appreciation for his efforts to
work with the new Egyptian government to achieve a sustainable ceasefire
and a more durable solution to end the conflict.
Netanyahu had some hours before the truce announcement convened a forum of nine senior ministers to discuss the truce.
The
meeting took place just hours after an attack on a public bus in Tel
Aviv injured at least 17 people. It was the first Palestinian bombing
attack in the city in more than six years.
Israel’s Operation Pillar of Defence was launched one week ago, after days of incessant rocket fire on Israel.
By
the time the ceasefire was announced, Israel had bombed some 1,500
targets in the Strip, while more than 900 missiles launched by Hamas
militants had hit Israel.
Some
154 Palestinians have been killed in the Israeli attacks, Gaza Health
Ministry officials said, with over half of them civilians. Four Israeli
civilians and a soldier have been killed by Palestinian rockets.
The
ceasefire announcement came amid intensifying international efforts to
broker a truce following concerns that Israel might launch a ground
invasion if rocket attacks continued. Israel has amassed troops and
tanks on the border with Gaza.
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