In a televised address, Jabareen said, "We affirm that the movement is committed to implementing the agreement that guarantees a cessation of war, the protection of our people from aggression, and the commencement of reconstruction. We also reject any form of international guardianship over our people."
He stressed that "it is time to give the Palestinian people their right to self-determination and the establishment of their independent state."
Jabareen added, "The world today faces a real test. Whoever wants peace for the region must begin by implementing the unified international position to establish a Palestinian state and end the prisoners' issue by ensuring the release of those remaining in occupation prisons without war."
He stressed that "keeping the prisoners in prisons will only fuel the conflict."
Jabareen emphasized that the prisoners' issue "is part of the doctrine of the struggle against the criminal occupier, carried by heroes generation after generation as a supreme human and national value."
Earlier Thursday, the government in Gaza declared the Strip an "environmentally and structurally disaster area" as a result of the Israeli genocide, which left behind some 70 million tons of rubble and 20,000 unexploded shells and missiles that pose a constant threat to civilians.
In addition to the massive material destruction, Israel's two-year war of extermination in Gaza killed 67,967 Palestinians and wounded 170,179, most of them children and women, and caused a famine that claimed the lives of 463 people, including 157 children.
Hamas and Israel reached a ceasefire agreement that went into effect last Friday, in accordance with a plan by US President Donald Trump, whose country has supported Israel's genocide in the Gaza Strip since October 8, 2023.
The United Nations estimates the cost of rebuilding Gaza at approximately $70 billion, due to the repercussions of the US-backed Israeli war of extermination.
For nearly 18 years, Israel has besieged the Gaza Strip, where some 2.4 million Palestinians live in conditions made even more catastrophic by the war of extermination.
