Shamsuddin explained in a press statement that his country, under the direction of President Prabowo Subianto, has trained 20,000 soldiers to serve in Gaza as part of the peacekeeping plan, adding that "the forces can be deployed quickly in the region once the necessary international approval is obtained," according to the Indonesian news agency Antara.
Shams al-Din stated that a peacekeeping force could only be deployed in two ways: with the approval of the United Nations or through an international mechanism led by the United States.
Last week, US media reported that President Donald Trump’s administration had submitted a draft resolution to members of the UN Security Council outlining the nature and tasks of the international forces that would operate in the Gaza Strip for at least two years.
This international force is one of the components of Trump’s plan, on which the ceasefire agreement between the Israeli occupation army and Hamas, since October 10th, is based.
The draft resolution is expected to be put to a vote in the coming weeks with the aim of bringing it into effect and sending the first units to Gaza by next January.
Meanwhile, Israeli violations of the ceasefire agreement continued, and two Palestinians were killed by the occupation army, allegedly for crossing the so-called "yellow line" separating areas under occupation control from areas from which it withdrew under the agreement that came into effect on October 10.
The Israeli army acknowledged in a statement that it had killed a Palestinian man in southern Gaza, claiming he had crossed the "yellow line" and approached its forces operating there. The statement did not specify whether the Palestinian was armed, nor did it release his identity or the whereabouts of his body. There was no immediate comment from Palestinian authorities regarding the circumstances of his death.
In the northern Gaza Strip, Civil Defense spokesman Mahmoud Basal said in a video statement that "the occupation killed a woman in the Beit Lahia area, and she was transferred to Al-Shifa Hospital in western Gaza City."
Al-Aqsa TV reported that a Palestinian woman was killed by Israeli gunfire in the Al-Atatra area, west of Beit Lahia, which falls within the areas controlled by the occupation army under the agreement.
According to the Government Media Office in Gaza, since the agreement came into effect until November 10, the occupation army committed more than 282 violations of the agreement, resulting in the martyrdom of 242 civilians and the injury of 620 others.
The Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor said in a statement on Monday that the Israeli occupation army continues to carry out the "crime of genocide" using multiple methods, killing about 8 Palestinians daily and injuring more than 20 others since the agreement came into effect.
The agreement ended a genocidal war that Israel started on October 8, 2023, and that lasted for two years, leaving more than 69,000 Palestinian martyrs and more than 170,000 wounded, and causing destruction to 90 percent of the civilian infrastructure in the sector.
