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Gaza ceasefire [January 2025]: Will it hold, and what does it mean for the people of Palestine?

So where was Hamas hiding then? :genius
Right in the camps where women and children took shelter. One cannot fight Hamas without killing and hurting innocents. Its all part of their plan. More innocents die, more sympathy and narrative builds for Hamas.
Hamas never cared for Gazans. They want the destruction of Israel even if means loss of lives of Gazans in thousands. They do not care.

The Hamas suggested fighting it out in India, but the IDF declined since most of them don’t follow Hinduism. Then, the Hamas proposed fighting in China, but they were too scared of catching Covid. Next, they suggested Switzerland, but the IDF argued it was too beautiful, and their soldiers might fall in love with the region instead of fighting.

With no other options, the Hamas had to fight for their freedom within the confines of the most concentrated open air prison, spanning just 140 square miles.

Meanwhile, all the so called geniuses seem to be concentrated in one place on earth, India.
 
What did it truly achieve?. The land has been decimated, thousands killed, millions displaced.

Hamas are no liberators for me
 
Nine Palestinians killed as Israeli forces launch major operation in Jenin

Nine Palestinians have been killed and 35 injured by Israeli forces during a major operation in Jenin in the occupied West Bank, the Palestinian health ministry says.

Palestinian media reported that there were a series of air strikes as a large number of troops moved in to the city and its refugee camp, backed by drones, helicopters and armoured bulldozers.

Israel's prime minister said it launched an "extensive and significant" operation to "defeat terrorism" in Jenin, long seen as a stronghold of Palestinian armed groups.

It comes three days after the start of a ceasefire in Gaza and highlights the threat of more violence in the West Bank, where suspected Israeli settlers also went on the rampage overnight.

Jenin's governor, Kamal Abu al-Rub, told AFP news agency that "what is happening is an invasion of the camp", adding: "It came quickly, Apache [helicopters] in the sky and Israeli military vehicles everywhere."

The official Palestinian news agency, Wafa, cited local sources as saying that Israeli forces were "completely besieging" Jenin camp, and that armoured bulldozers had dug up several streets.

It also cited the director of Jenin's Government hospital, Wissam Bakr, as saying that three doctors and two nurses were among those wounded by Israeli gunfire.

Palestinian security personnel reportedly withdrew from some of their positions around Jenin refugee camp before the Israeli forces moved in on Tuesday morning.

Brig-Gen Anwar Rajab, a spokesman of the Palestinian security forces, told AFP that Israeli forces had "opened fire on civilians and security forces", resulting in a number of injuries.

On Tuesday evening, the Palestinian health ministry reported that eight men and a 16-year-old boy, whom it named as Mutaz Abu Tbeikh, had been killed by Israeli forces in Jenin.

Another man was shot and killed by Israeli troops in the village of Tianik, about 8km (5 miles) to the north-west, it added.

A statement from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the Jenin operation - dubbed "Iron Wall" - was an "additional step in achieving the objective we have set: bolstering security" in the West Bank.

"We are acting methodically and with determination against the Iranian axis wherever it reaches: in Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, and [the West Bank] - and we are still active."

Israel accuses Iran of smuggling weapons and funds to Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and other armed groups in the West Bank to foment unrest.

Israeli media cited a military source as saying that the goals of the operation were to preserve its "freedom of action" in the West Bank, dismantle armed groups' infrastructure, and eliminate imminent threats. The source also said the operation would continue for "as long as necessary".

The prime minister of the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority, Mohammed Mustafa, condemned the raid, saying it was the latest in a series of "aggressive Israeli measures" against Palestinians in the West Bank, according to Wafa.

Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad both called on Palestinians in the West Bank to escalate attacks against Israel in response to the Jenin operation.

There have been a number of previous Israeli military operations Jenin.

And recently, the PA's security forces carried out a controversial, weeks-long operation against armed groups there, including Hamas and PIJ, trying to reassert their control.

There has been a spike in violence in the West Bank since Hamas's deadly attack on Israel on 7 October 2023 and the ensuing war in Gaza.

Hundreds of Palestinians have been killed as Israeli forces have intensified their raids, saying they are trying to stem deadly Palestinian attacks on Israelis in the West Bank and Israel.

In another development in the West Bank overnight, dozens of masked Israeli extremists attacked Palestinians in two villages east of Qalqilya, Jinsafut and al-Funduq, setting fire to Palestinian homes and cars and smashing property.

At least 21 Palestinians were injured, the Palestinian Red Crescent said. Two Israelis were also shot, apparently when an Israeli police officer opened fire while responding to the violence.

"If you were there last night, you would not hear anything more than screaming of women and children," said Mohammed, whose family home in al-Funduq was metres away from a garden centre that was torched.

"In the end, we have don't have anything to protect ourselves. But they have everything to attack us."

The Israeli military said it was investigating the incidents, during which it said Israeli civilians "instigated riots, set property on fire, and caused damage". It also said they hurled rocks and attacked Israeli security forces.

It happened just as new US President Donald Trump announced he was lifting sanctions on Israeli settlers accused of carrying out attacks in the West Bank.

The reversal of the Biden administration's sanctions targeting radical Israelis, could indicate the direction for the new White House that is expected to be more tolerant of Jewish settlement expansion.

The far-right, pro-settler Israeli Finance Minister, Bezalel Smotrich, welcomed the US move. In a post on X, he praised Trump's "unwavering and uncompromising support for the state of Israel".

Meanwhile, Palestinian officials condemned the change in policy. "Lifting sanctions on extremist settlers encourages them to commit more crimes against our people", the Palestinian foreign ministry said in a statement.

The mayor of al-Funduq, Luay Tayyam, told the BBC: "It is like a green light for the settlers, saying: 'Just go ahead, do whatever you want. You will not be persecuted.'"

"So they are happy with this news. And I think this was a big push for them last night. They feel encouraged by it."

There are also rising tensions over the large-scale release of Palestinian prisoners in the West Bank this week, as part of the Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal between Israel and Hamas.

The attack in al-Funduq was in an area where three Israelis were killed in a shooting earlier this month. It was the latest in a long series of settler attacks that have accelerated markedly since the start of the Gaza war.

According to the Israeli anti-settlement group, Peace Now, in 2024 settlers also established 59 new outposts, without authorisation from the Israeli government. That was more than double the number from the previous year – which was also a record year for settlement outpost establishment.

Israel has built about 160 settlements housing some 700,000 Jews since it occupied the West Bank in the 1967 Middle East war. The settlements are considered illegal under international law, although Israel disputes this - as did the previous Trump administration.

BBC
 
So where was Hamas hiding then? :genius
Right in the camps where women and children took shelter. One cannot fight Hamas without killing and hurting innocents. Its all part of their plan. More innocents die, more sympathy and narrative builds for Hamas.
Hamas never cared for Gazans. They want the destruction of Israel even if means loss of lives of Gazans in thousands. They do not care.

Foreign Doctors, Aid workers, have all stated theres no HAMAS in GAZA or the Refugee camps. Yet you continue to spouts rubbish to back the extremists IDFS Agenda.

Ceasefire was announced more than 24 hours ago, yet the zionests terrorists are still killing innocent people.
 
These zionests Extremists are conning the world regarding the ceasefire. Continues killing of innocent civilians shows the level of hypocrisy amongst these leaches
 
So where was Hamas hiding then? :genius
Right in the camps where women and children took shelter. One cannot fight Hamas without killing and hurting innocents. Its all part of their plan. More innocents die, more sympathy and narrative builds for Hamas.
Hamas never cared for Gazans. They want the destruction of Israel even if means loss of lives of Gazans in thousands. They do not care.


They don't want the destruction of israel, the Palestinians just want their homes back. I really don't understand why Indians feel they need to support European colonisers. Even a huge number of Europeans don't support the genocide.
 
These zionests Extremists are conning the world regarding the ceasefire. Continues killing of innocent civilians shows the level of hypocrisy amongst these leaches

Evil doesnt stop becoming evil, they have a bigger agenda to take over not just the holy land , middle east but eventually cause the planet to be destroyed so their Messiah can return to rule the chosen people. The ceasefire took place not because of Trump but because of Arab pressure who know if this doesnt stop their wealthy cities will see no tourists and will eventually fall to bombs too in the future .

They stop bombing Gaza but the same day start killing others in the occupied West bank.

Imo the resistance should have also targeted settler outposts in the West Bank, they have little air defence and could have wiped out dozens of illegal squatter outposts.
 
About 200 bodies recovered from Gaza debris as search goes on

As Gaza Palestinians return to their destroyed homes, the grisly search for dead family members continues.

The civil defence agency and medical staff have recovered about 200 bodies since the ceasefire between Hamas and Israel came into effect on Sunday.

Mahmoud Basal, head of the service, said extraction operations have been challenged by the lack of earth-moving and heavy machinery, adding Israel has destroyed several of their vehicles and killed at least 100 of their staff.

Basal estimates the bodies of about 10,000 Palestinians killed in the war are yet to be found and buried.

A UN damage assessment released this month showed clearing more than 50 million tonnes of rubble left in the aftermath of Israel’s bombardment could take 21 years and cost up to
$1.2bn.

Source: Al Jazeera
 
Israeli forces surround Palestinian hospital and refugee camp in West Bank

Israeli forces have besieged a Palestinian government hospital in Jenin and a nearby refugee camp in the heart of the city, as the Israeli defence minister, Israel Katz, said the assault marked “a shift in … security strategy” in the West Bank.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said on Wednesday they had carried out airstrikes in Jenin as well as detonating roadside explosive devices. The Palestinian health ministry said at least 10 people had been killed in Jenin, and more than 40 wounded.

The Palestinian Red Crescent said its ambulances had been prevented from reaching many of the dead and wounded who lay in the streets of neighbourhoods around the Jenin refugee camp.

“No one can break the siege on the refugee camp and the surrounding area,” said Nebal Farsakh, a spokesperson for the Palestinian Red Crescent. Their medics had treated seven fatalities and 17 wounded people, all injured with live ammunition, she added.

The escalating Israeli raid on Jenin continued despite the recent ceasefire in Gaza, pausing an Israeli assault on the territory that had continued for 15 months after the 7 October Hamas attacks on Israeli towns and kibbutzim around Gaza.

With the ceasefire in Gaza coming into effect less than a week ago, Israeli forces indicated the start of a renewed military operation across the West Bank.

Wissam Bakr, the head of Khalil Suleiman governmental hospital in Jenin, said: “The current situation is awful. Israeli forces destroyed the roads in front of the hospital. They put the rubble from the destroyed streets in front of hospital exits to prevent ambulances from entering or leaving.”

He estimated that 600 medical staff and patients were sheltering inside the hospital, fearfully crammed on any beds, chairs or spaces they could find. Supplies of food and water in the hospital would only last a few days. An Israeli drone had been audible, he said, terrifying the people huddled in the hospital.

Two nurses and three doctors had been shot on the main road leading to the hospital on Tuesday, he added.

“Until now Israeli forces are outside,” Bakr said, sending an image of an Israeli military bulldozer appearing to clear some of the rubble at the entrance to the hospital complex. The sound of gunfire was intermittently audible over the phone as he spoke.

The escalation in Jenin came as Israeli forces choked off entrances and exits to Palestinian cities across the West Bank using checkpoints. In the early hours of Wednesday, Israeli soldiers also launched a raid on the Aida refugee camp located north of Bethlehem and in Tulkarm. The Palestinian news agency Wafa said at least 29 people were arrested across the West Bank on Wednesday morning, most of them young men.

A committee within the Palestinian Liberation Organisation tracking Israeli activity in the territory reported that the IDF had increased the number of military checkpoints and iron gates, reaching almost 900. The IDF did not comment on the precise number of new checkpoints.

Its international spokesperson, Lt Col Nadav Shoshani, told a press briefing on Wednesday: “Our method of combating terror, ensuring that terrorists cannot escape while still allowing civilians to move freely, relies heavily on checkpoints.

Checkpoints are a tool we use in the fight against terror, enabling civilian movement while providing a layer of screening to prevent terrorists from escaping and undermining the operation.

‘‘This approach is far better than either closing off an area entirely or allowing terrorists unrestricted movement. During operations, specific checkpoints are usually established to prevent terrorist escape. This method is essential for balancing freedom of movement with security.”

Aseel Baidoun from Medical Aid for Palestinians, speaking from Ramallah, said: “For two days we have been experiencing an extensive military lockdown. The Israeli army has placed hundreds of new checkpoints that are making the movement between towns and cities almost impossible. People have reported delays at checkpoints averaging between six and eight hours.

“People are stuck in their towns and cities, unable to go to work,” she said. “It’s an open-air prison; we feel we cannot move around. If you want to go from Ramallah to Jericho it’s impossible, and it’s almost impossible to even reach nearby villages. There’s not only restrictions on movement but insane attacks from settlers.”

Shoshani called the military operations across the West Bank “precise operations to target and fight terrorists while enabling the civilian population to go on with their lives”.

Despite Jenin’s mayor, Mohammad Jarar, telling Wafa that Israeli forces had called on people from some Jenin neighbourhoods to evacuate using a loudspeaker, Shoshani labelled any reports of forced evacuations “fake news”.

Shoshani said: “We have to learn from 7 October, and not let terror groups regroup and rearm, and plan attacks a few hundred metres from us.”

Wafa reported that the Israeli army had also stormed several towns around Ramallah and El-Bireh, but no arrests or clashes were mentioned.

On Tuesday Israel’s far-right finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, said: “After Gaza and Lebanon, today, with God’s help, we have begun to change the security concept in Judea and Samaria and in the campaign to eradicate terrorism in the region,” using the biblical name by which Israelis refer to the West Bank.

But Prof Yagil Levy of the Open University of Israel said: “There is no operational justification for action in the West Bank.”

A recent operation by the Palestinian Authority targeting Hamas in Jenin, while controversial for its perceived support to Israeli aims in the territory, showed that the authority was capable of retaining control in Jenin and in Gaza, he said.

Israel’s decision to launch a military operation in Jenin, Levy said, was intended to undermine the Palestinian Authority and its potential return in Gaza, to destabilise the West Bank and continue to covertly annexe the territory, and “to appease Smotrich and his party”.

Smotrich, he said, “demanded that the fighting in the West Bank be added to Israel’s war objectives in Gaza. In return, he accepted the first phase of the hostage deal and refrained from toppling the government.”

The UN Human Rights Office in the occupied Palestinian Territories (OHCHR) said: “Public statements by Israeli military officials raise concern about Israel’s plans to expand and increase operations in the occupied West Bank.”

The Israeli assault on Jenin has also been accompanied by a rise in settler violence across the West Bank, amid indications that settlers are targeting villages where Palestinian prisoners were released as part of the ceasefire deal and hostage exchange.

Israeli settlers set vehicles and properties on fire in villages around Qalqilya in the northern West Bank as well as Turmus Aya near Ramallah.

More than 21 Palestinians across the occupied West Bank have been injured as a result of the Israeli settlers’ attacks, including three children.

Late on Wednesday, the Israeli military said that it had killed an Islamic Jihad militant in Gaza, the first such reported death since the start of a ceasefire in the territory.

The Gaza health ministry confirmed that one person was killed and said four other people were wounded.

As Palestinians in Gaza returned to their homes, medical staff in the territory said about 200 bodies had been recovered from under debris since the ceasefire between Hamas and Israel came into effect on Sunday.

Gaza’s head of civil defence, Mahmoud Basal, estimates that the bodies of about 10,000 Palestinians killed during the conflict are yet to be found and buried.

Israeli attacks have killed more than 46,700 Palestinians in Gaza, according to the territory’s health ministry. The war began after a cross-border attack by Hamas on Israel, when militants killed about 1,200 people and took 250 hostage.

SOURCE: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...d-palestinian-hospital-refugee-camp-west-bank
 
What did it truly achieve?. The land has been decimated, thousands killed, millions displaced.

Hamas are no liberators for me
Don't expect Hamas or their supporters to learn any lesson from this. They'll do it again, and then cry crocodile tears when retaliation comes to bite them back.
 
Don't expect Hamas or their supporters to learn any lesson from this. They'll do it again, and then cry crocodile tears when retaliation comes to bite them back.
I find their very existence dubious for me. Their foundation was pure, the subsequent evolution not so.

The true liberators and defenders are the Al Aqsa MB.


Hamas is a cartel serving its own with potentially dubious intentions
 
Israeli forces surround Palestinian hospital and refugee camp in West Bank

Israeli forces have besieged a Palestinian government hospital in Jenin and a nearby refugee camp in the heart of the city, as the Israeli defence minister, Israel Katz, said the assault marked “a shift in … security strategy” in the West Bank.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said on Wednesday they had carried out airstrikes in Jenin as well as detonating roadside explosive devices. The Palestinian health ministry said at least 10 people had been killed in Jenin, and more than 40 wounded.

The Palestinian Red Crescent said its ambulances had been prevented from reaching many of the dead and wounded who lay in the streets of neighbourhoods around the Jenin refugee camp.

“No one can break the siege on the refugee camp and the surrounding area,” said Nebal Farsakh, a spokesperson for the Palestinian Red Crescent. Their medics had treated seven fatalities and 17 wounded people, all injured with live ammunition, she added.

The escalating Israeli raid on Jenin continued despite the recent ceasefire in Gaza, pausing an Israeli assault on the territory that had continued for 15 months after the 7 October Hamas attacks on Israeli towns and kibbutzim around Gaza.

With the ceasefire in Gaza coming into effect less than a week ago, Israeli forces indicated the start of a renewed military operation across the West Bank.

Wissam Bakr, the head of Khalil Suleiman governmental hospital in Jenin, said: “The current situation is awful. Israeli forces destroyed the roads in front of the hospital. They put the rubble from the destroyed streets in front of hospital exits to prevent ambulances from entering or leaving.”

He estimated that 600 medical staff and patients were sheltering inside the hospital, fearfully crammed on any beds, chairs or spaces they could find. Supplies of food and water in the hospital would only last a few days. An Israeli drone had been audible, he said, terrifying the people huddled in the hospital.

Two nurses and three doctors had been shot on the main road leading to the hospital on Tuesday, he added.

“Until now Israeli forces are outside,” Bakr said, sending an image of an Israeli military bulldozer appearing to clear some of the rubble at the entrance to the hospital complex. The sound of gunfire was intermittently audible over the phone as he spoke.

The escalation in Jenin came as Israeli forces choked off entrances and exits to Palestinian cities across the West Bank using checkpoints. In the early hours of Wednesday, Israeli soldiers also launched a raid on the Aida refugee camp located north of Bethlehem and in Tulkarm. The Palestinian news agency Wafa said at least 29 people were arrested across the West Bank on Wednesday morning, most of them young men.

A committee within the Palestinian Liberation Organisation tracking Israeli activity in the territory reported that the IDF had increased the number of military checkpoints and iron gates, reaching almost 900. The IDF did not comment on the precise number of new checkpoints.

Its international spokesperson, Lt Col Nadav Shoshani, told a press briefing on Wednesday: “Our method of combating terror, ensuring that terrorists cannot escape while still allowing civilians to move freely, relies heavily on checkpoints.

Checkpoints are a tool we use in the fight against terror, enabling civilian movement while providing a layer of screening to prevent terrorists from escaping and undermining the operation.

‘‘This approach is far better than either closing off an area entirely or allowing terrorists unrestricted movement. During operations, specific checkpoints are usually established to prevent terrorist escape. This method is essential for balancing freedom of movement with security.”

Aseel Baidoun from Medical Aid for Palestinians, speaking from Ramallah, said: “For two days we have been experiencing an extensive military lockdown. The Israeli army has placed hundreds of new checkpoints that are making the movement between towns and cities almost impossible. People have reported delays at checkpoints averaging between six and eight hours.

“People are stuck in their towns and cities, unable to go to work,” she said. “It’s an open-air prison; we feel we cannot move around. If you want to go from Ramallah to Jericho it’s impossible, and it’s almost impossible to even reach nearby villages. There’s not only restrictions on movement but insane attacks from settlers.”

Shoshani called the military operations across the West Bank “precise operations to target and fight terrorists while enabling the civilian population to go on with their lives”.

Despite Jenin’s mayor, Mohammad Jarar, telling Wafa that Israeli forces had called on people from some Jenin neighbourhoods to evacuate using a loudspeaker, Shoshani labelled any reports of forced evacuations “fake news”.

Shoshani said: “We have to learn from 7 October, and not let terror groups regroup and rearm, and plan attacks a few hundred metres from us.”

Wafa reported that the Israeli army had also stormed several towns around Ramallah and El-Bireh, but no arrests or clashes were mentioned.

On Tuesday Israel’s far-right finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, said: “After Gaza and Lebanon, today, with God’s help, we have begun to change the security concept in Judea and Samaria and in the campaign to eradicate terrorism in the region,” using the biblical name by which Israelis refer to the West Bank.

But Prof Yagil Levy of the Open University of Israel said: “There is no operational justification for action in the West Bank.”

A recent operation by the Palestinian Authority targeting Hamas in Jenin, while controversial for its perceived support to Israeli aims in the territory, showed that the authority was capable of retaining control in Jenin and in Gaza, he said.

Israel’s decision to launch a military operation in Jenin, Levy said, was intended to undermine the Palestinian Authority and its potential return in Gaza, to destabilise the West Bank and continue to covertly annexe the territory, and “to appease Smotrich and his party”.

Smotrich, he said, “demanded that the fighting in the West Bank be added to Israel’s war objectives in Gaza. In return, he accepted the first phase of the hostage deal and refrained from toppling the government.”

The UN Human Rights Office in the occupied Palestinian Territories (OHCHR) said: “Public statements by Israeli military officials raise concern about Israel’s plans to expand and increase operations in the occupied West Bank.”

The Israeli assault on Jenin has also been accompanied by a rise in settler violence across the West Bank, amid indications that settlers are targeting villages where Palestinian prisoners were released as part of the ceasefire deal and hostage exchange.

Israeli settlers set vehicles and properties on fire in villages around Qalqilya in the northern West Bank as well as Turmus Aya near Ramallah.

More than 21 Palestinians across the occupied West Bank have been injured as a result of the Israeli settlers’ attacks, including three children.

Late on Wednesday, the Israeli military said that it had killed an Islamic Jihad militant in Gaza, the first such reported death since the start of a ceasefire in the territory.

The Gaza health ministry confirmed that one person was killed and said four other people were wounded.

As Palestinians in Gaza returned to their homes, medical staff in the territory said about 200 bodies had been recovered from under debris since the ceasefire between Hamas and Israel came into effect on Sunday.

Gaza’s head of civil defence, Mahmoud Basal, estimates that the bodies of about 10,000 Palestinians killed during the conflict are yet to be found and buried.

Israeli attacks have killed more than 46,700 Palestinians in Gaza, according to the territory’s health ministry. The war began after a cross-border attack by Hamas on Israel, when militants killed about 1,200 people and took 250 hostage.

SOURCE: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...d-palestinian-hospital-refugee-camp-west-bank
This is blatant ethnic cleansing!

Oh Ummah, words only will now suffice.

How much has Qatar sent to the relief fund in Gaza??
 

Two Palestinians killed by Israeli tank fire in southern Gaza​


At least two Palestinians have been killed by Israeli tank fire in the Tal as-Sultan neighbourhood, west of Rafah in southern Gaza, the enclave’s Civil Defence officials tell Al Jazeera.

The Israeli military said it was looking into the report of the attack, the Reuters news agency said on Thursday.

The attack comes after Israel and Hamas agreed to a ceasefire that took effect on Sunday.

The initial phase is scheduled to last six weeks and involves a limited prisoner-captive exchange, the partial withdrawal of Israeli troops in Gaza and a surge of aid into the enclave.

Reporting from Deir-el Balah in central Gaza, Al Jazeera’s Tareq Abu Azzoum noted that more than 3,200 aid trucks have entered Gaza during the first four days of the ceasefire.

“The arrival of aid has brought partial relief to the population. Humanitarian organisations have started to distribute the aid from centres throughout Gaza. Civilians are lined up at the gates of these aid centres waiting desperately to access these
supplies,” he said.

Source: Al Jazeera
 

Two Palestinians killed by Israeli tank fire in southern Gaza​


At least two Palestinians have been killed by Israeli tank fire in the Tal as-Sultan neighbourhood, west of Rafah in southern Gaza, the enclave’s Civil Defence officials tell Al Jazeera.

The Israeli military said it was looking into the report of the attack, the Reuters news agency said on Thursday.

The attack comes after Israel and Hamas agreed to a ceasefire that took effect on Sunday.

The initial phase is scheduled to last six weeks and involves a limited prisoner-captive exchange, the partial withdrawal of Israeli troops in Gaza and a surge of aid into the enclave.

Reporting from Deir-el Balah in central Gaza, Al Jazeera’s Tareq Abu Azzoum noted that more than 3,200 aid trucks have entered Gaza during the first four days of the ceasefire.

“The arrival of aid has brought partial relief to the population. Humanitarian organisations have started to distribute the aid from centres throughout Gaza. Civilians are lined up at the gates of these aid centres waiting desperately to access these
supplies,” he said.

Source: Al Jazeera

Another shameful act from Israel.

It seems like they want the ceasefire to collapse.
 
Residents leave homes in Jenin as Israeli West Bank raid continues

Hundreds of Jenin residents left their homes on Thursday, prompted by messages from drones fitted with loudspeakers, witnesses said, as the military demolished a number of houses on the third day of a major operation in the West Bank city.

The operation, involving large columns of vehicles backed by helicopters and drones, was launched in the first week of a ceasefire in Gaza that saw the first exchange of Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails since a brief truce in November 2023.

Israeli officials said the Jenin operation was aimed at what the military said were Iranian-backed militant groups in the refugee camp adjacent to the city, a major hub for armed Palestinian groups for years.

"We need to be prepared to continue in the Jenin camp that will bring it to a different place," Lieutenant General Herzi Halevi, the head of the Israeli military, said in a statement.

Armoured bulldozers have dug up roads, making movement in the city difficult, but hundreds of people left their homes in the camp, dragging suitcases or carrying plastic bags of their belongings after they said they heard messages to evacuate.

"Yesterday, we did not want to leave, we were at home," said 16-year-old Hussam Saadi. "Today, they sent down a drone to our neighbourhood, telling us to leave the camp and that they will blow it up."

The Israeli military denied that it had told residents to leave their homes. It said it was "enabling any resident who chooses to exit from the area to do so via secure and organised routes with the protection of Israeli security forces."

Syria's new authorities are training a fledgling police force - with a focus on Islamic teachings.00:0103:16

As the operation continued, the sound of gunfire and the constant buzz of drones flying overhead could be heard over the refugee camp. In the city, there was little movement on the streets.

Footage released by the Israeli military showed troops detonating what appeared to be roadside explosives.

Overnight on Wednesday, Israeli troops killed two armed men barricaded inside a building in Burqin, outside Jenin, after a gunfight. The two were suspected of carrying out an attack near the Palestinian village of al-Funduq earlier this month, in which three Israelis were killed.

Both were claimed by the armed wing of Hamas, which has a strong presence in the refugee camp, a crowded township for descendants of Palestinians who fled, or were forced, from their homes in the 1948 Middle East war.

Overall since the start of the operation, 12 Palestinians have been killed and 40 more wounded, Palestinian health officials said.

The raid, the third major operation by the Israeli military in Jenin in under two years, drew warnings from France and Jordan against an escalation in the West Bank, which has seen a surge in violence since the start of the war in Gaza.

SOURCE: https://www.reuters.com/world/middl...-israeli-west-bank-raid-continues-2025-01-23/
 
Residents leave homes in Jenin as Israeli West Bank raid continues

Hundreds of Jenin residents left their homes on Thursday, prompted by messages from drones fitted with loudspeakers, witnesses said, as the military demolished a number of houses on the third day of a major operation in the West Bank city.

The operation, involving large columns of vehicles backed by helicopters and drones, was launched in the first week of a ceasefire in Gaza that saw the first exchange of Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails since a brief truce in November 2023.

Israeli officials said the Jenin operation was aimed at what the military said were Iranian-backed militant groups in the refugee camp adjacent to the city, a major hub for armed Palestinian groups for years.

"We need to be prepared to continue in the Jenin camp that will bring it to a different place," Lieutenant General Herzi Halevi, the head of the Israeli military, said in a statement.

Armoured bulldozers have dug up roads, making movement in the city difficult, but hundreds of people left their homes in the camp, dragging suitcases or carrying plastic bags of their belongings after they said they heard messages to evacuate.

"Yesterday, we did not want to leave, we were at home," said 16-year-old Hussam Saadi. "Today, they sent down a drone to our neighbourhood, telling us to leave the camp and that they will blow it up."

The Israeli military denied that it had told residents to leave their homes. It said it was "enabling any resident who chooses to exit from the area to do so via secure and organised routes with the protection of Israeli security forces."

Syria's new authorities are training a fledgling police force - with a focus on Islamic teachings.00:0103:16

As the operation continued, the sound of gunfire and the constant buzz of drones flying overhead could be heard over the refugee camp. In the city, there was little movement on the streets.

Footage released by the Israeli military showed troops detonating what appeared to be roadside explosives.

Overnight on Wednesday, Israeli troops killed two armed men barricaded inside a building in Burqin, outside Jenin, after a gunfight. The two were suspected of carrying out an attack near the Palestinian village of al-Funduq earlier this month, in which three Israelis were killed.

Both were claimed by the armed wing of Hamas, which has a strong presence in the refugee camp, a crowded township for descendants of Palestinians who fled, or were forced, from their homes in the 1948 Middle East war.

Overall since the start of the operation, 12 Palestinians have been killed and 40 more wounded, Palestinian health officials said.

The raid, the third major operation by the Israeli military in Jenin in under two years, drew warnings from France and Jordan against an escalation in the West Bank, which has seen a surge in violence since the start of the war in Gaza.

SOURCE: https://www.reuters.com/world/middl...-israeli-west-bank-raid-continues-2025-01-23/

Looks like Israel now wants to turn West Bank into Gaza.

They don't want peace to return.
 
Hamas to name next Israeli hostages set to be released

Hamas is expected to hand over to Israel the names of four hostages to be released on Saturday under the Gaza ceasefire deal.

It is thought they will be soldiers and civilians, all female.

They will be freed in exchange for 180 Palestinian prisoners held in Israel.

It will be the second exchange since the ceasefire came into effect last Sunday. Three hostages and 90 prisoners were released in the first swap.

The ceasefire halted the war which began when Hamas attacked Israel on 7 October 2023. About 1,200 people were killed and 251 taken back to Gaza as hostages.

More than 47,200 Palestinians, the majority civilians, have been killed in Israel's offensive, Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry says.

Hamas is also expected to provide information about the remaining 26 hostages due to be released over the next five weeks.

This includes the Bibas family - two parents and two children, one of whom, Kfir, was 10 months old when taken captive and is the youngest hostage. It is unclear if this information will include the names or just the number of living or dead hostages.

The prisoners who will be released are of a more serious category than those freed in the first exchange. They will include those who have killed, some of whom are serving sentences of more than 15 years.

Israel has insisted that no-one who was involved in the 7 October attacks will be freed.

The ceasefire deal was reached after months of indirect negotiations between Israel and Hamas, led by the US, Qatar and Egypt.

It will be implemented in three stages, with the second stage due to begin six weeks into the truce. About 1,900 Palestinian prisoners will be released during the first stage in exchange for 33 hostages. Israeli forces will also begin withdrawing from positions in Gaza and hundreds of thousands of displaced Palestinians will be able to return to areas they had fled or been forced from.

The ceasefire is meant to lead to a permanent end to the war in Gaza.

Ninety-one hostages taken on 7 October 2023 are still held in Gaza. Fifty-seven of them are assumed by Israel to still be alive. Three others - two of whom are alive - have been held for a decade or more.

BBC
 

Hamas announces names of next four hostages to be released on Saturday​


The Hamas militant group on Friday revealed the names of four hostages it claimed it would release the following day as part of a ceasefire agreement with Israel, which has brought a halt to the war in Gaza for at least six weeks.

There was no immediate confirmation from Israel regarding the names of the hostages. The hostages are set to be freed on Saturday in exchange for the release of 180 Palestinians imprisoned or detained by Israel.

Earlier on Friday, relatives of the hostages still being held by Hamas appealed to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to ensure the release of all remaining captives. They also called on US President Donald Trump to continue pushing for their release.

Israel estimates that approximately a third, or potentially as many as half, of the more than 90 hostages still in Gaza have died.

Hamas has not provided definitive numbers on the captives still alive or the names of those who have died, but it is expected to release further information about the remaining 26 hostages expected to be released in the upcoming weeks.

Under the first phase of the ceasefire deal, a total of 33 hostages are expected to be released gradually in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel, with additional humanitarian aid entering Gaza.

In the Palestinian enclave, civilians in the central and southern parts of the Gaza Strip, hoping to return to the remnants of their homes in the heavily damaged north, face an agonising wait.

Israel’s war against Hamas has claimed the lives of more than 47,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health authorities. The ministry does not differentiate between combatants and civilians.

The conflict was triggered by Hamas’ attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, killing approximately 1,200 people.

 

Hamas announces names of next four hostages to be released on Saturday​


The Hamas militant group on Friday revealed the names of four hostages it claimed it would release the following day as part of a ceasefire agreement with Israel, which has brought a halt to the war in Gaza for at least six weeks.

There was no immediate confirmation from Israel regarding the names of the hostages. The hostages are set to be freed on Saturday in exchange for the release of 180 Palestinians imprisoned or detained by Israel.

Earlier on Friday, relatives of the hostages still being held by Hamas appealed to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to ensure the release of all remaining captives. They also called on US President Donald Trump to continue pushing for their release.

Israel estimates that approximately a third, or potentially as many as half, of the more than 90 hostages still in Gaza have died.

Hamas has not provided definitive numbers on the captives still alive or the names of those who have died, but it is expected to release further information about the remaining 26 hostages expected to be released in the upcoming weeks.

Under the first phase of the ceasefire deal, a total of 33 hostages are expected to be released gradually in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel, with additional humanitarian aid entering Gaza.

In the Palestinian enclave, civilians in the central and southern parts of the Gaza Strip, hoping to return to the remnants of their homes in the heavily damaged north, face an agonising wait.

Israel’s war against Hamas has claimed the lives of more than 47,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health authorities. The ministry does not differentiate between combatants and civilians.

The conflict was triggered by Hamas’ attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, killing approximately 1,200 people.


Hamas list of hostages set for Saturday release doesn't comply with agreement, Israel says​


Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Office said that the list Hamas published of the four names of hostages to be released on Saturday did not comply with the agreement in a statement on Friday.

"Israel is preparing to receive the hostages tomorrow. The list of prisoners will be provided this evening," a security source said Friday evening, according to Israeli media.

As part of the hostage deal, it was agreed that the four hostages set for release on Saturday are to be three soldiers and one civilian.

The deal will see 33 hostages released in the first phase in exchange for the release of security prisoners, humanitarian aid, and an IDF withdrawal from some areas in Gaza.

Hamas is also supposed to pass on a list of the status of the remaining 26 hostages held in Gaza who are on the release list for the first phase.

For the first time, Israel will, therefore, receive official information about the fate of the Bibas family: Parents Shiri and Yarden and children, Ariel and Kfir.

Israel has already prepared to put pressure on Hamas if it tries to "play games" with the lists.

 
How many Palestinian prisoners will be freed in the upcoming exchange?

Hamas has said four female Israeli soldiers will be released on Saturday. Israel had wanted all civilians to be released first, as the number of Palestinians set for release changes depending on the type of captives that are being freed.

Here is how the ceasefire deal works:

For one Israeli female civilian captive, 30 Palestinian women and children will be released from Israeli jails.

For one Israeli female military captive, 50 Palestinian women and children will be released from Israeli jails.

With Hamas due to release four female soldiers, Israel is expected to then release 200 Palestinian women and children.

Source: Al Jazeera
 
Hamas frees four Israeli female soldiers as fragile ceasefire holds in Gaza

Israeli hostages Liri Elbag, Naama Levy, Karina Ariev and Daniella Gilboa were released by Hamas on Saturday, and transferred to Red Cross vans in Gaza City.

TEL AVIV — Four Israeli female soldiers were released by Hamas in Gaza City on Saturday morning, marking the start of a second week of a protracted ceasefire and hostage release deal that has halted 15 months of fighting and delivered Hamas a new platform to project optics of power.

The highly choreographed event showed the women, dressed in army-green outfits, being forced by their captors to take the stage, smile and raise their arms for a gaggle of cameras before being transferred to the Red Cross vans that would bring them home to Israel. Shortly afterward, the Israel Defense Forces said the women had been transferred to them in the Gaza Strip.

The event in Gaza City occurred several hours earlier than expected. The women’s parents, siblings and friends could be seen crying, overjoyed to see the women walking on their own feet, and waiting to embrace them in Israel.

Later Saturday, Israel was scheduled to release 200 Palestinian prisoners. Among those expected to be released was the iconic Palestinian militant, Zakaria Zubeidi, a former child actor turned Palestinian al-Aqsa Brigade commander from Jenin, where Israel has been carrying out intensive counterterrorism raids, according to al-Mayadeen, a media outlet aligned with Hezbollah, the militant group and Hamas ally.

The four hostages released — Liri Elbag, 19; Naama Levy, 20; Karina Ariev, 20; and Daniella Gilboa, 20 — were among the first to be abducted on Oct. 7, when Hamas-led forces killed some 1,200 and dragged another 250 into the enclave. Hamas filmed the first hours of the assault on their base, showing the women handcuffed against the wall, in their pajamas and covered in blood. Since the video was rereleased by the families in May in attempts to increase pressure on the sides to agree to a hostage release deal, it has remained among the most powerful symbols of Israel’s failure before and during Oct. 7, including the delusions it upheld about its own military and intelligence capabilities, and those of Hamas.

Elbag, Levy, Ariev and Gilboa were taken hostage with three others: Agam Berger, who is presumed alive and still in captivity in Gaza; Noa Marciano, who was killed by her captors near al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, according to IDF assessments, and whose body has since been repatriated to Israel; and Ori Megidish, who was rescued, alive, by the Israeli military in late October 2023.

The hostage release on Saturday followed a similar, though more chaotic, hostage transfer on Sunday, in which Emily Damari, Doron Steinbrecher and Romi Gonen were freed.

But the national euphoria has been accompanied by dread over the fate of the dozens of hostages who remain behind, most of whom are not slated for release during the first, six-week phase of the agreement that will conclude in early March.

Last week, Hamas delayed the start of the ceasefire by several hours after refusing to hand over the list of the three women it intended to release. On Saturday, it informed Israel that it would release the four female soldiers.

Israel has, throughout negotiations, demanded that Hamas be responsible for the handover of all agreed-upon hostages, including those held by other groups or by private families. On Saturday, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad released a video on social media saying it would also, in coordination with Hamas, release Israeli hostages.

Middle East conflict

Israeli forces will remain in southern Lebanon past the 60-day withdrawal deadline set by the ceasefire agreement with the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah in November. Follow live updates on the ceasefire and the hostages remaining in Gaza.

The Israel-Gaza war: On Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas militants launched an unprecedented cross-border attack on Israel, killing about 1,200 people and taking civilian hostages. Israel declared war on Hamas in response, launching a ground invasion that fueled the biggest displacement in the region since Israel’s creation in 1948. In July 2024, Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh was killed in an attack Hamas has blamed on Israel.

Hezbollah: In late 2024, Israel and Lebanon’s Hezbollah agreed to a ceasefire deal, bringing a tenuous halt to more than a year of hostilities that included an Israeli invasion of southern Lebanon. Israel’s airstrikes into Lebanon had been intense and deadly, killing over 1,400 people including Hasan Nasrallah, Hezbollah’s longtime leader. The Israel-Lebanon border has a history of violence that dates back to Israel’s founding.

Gaza crisis: In the Gaza Strip, Israel has waged one of this century’s most destructive wars, killing tens of thousands and plunging at least half of the population into “famine-like conditions.” For months, Israel has resisted pressure from Western allies to allow more humanitarian aid into the enclave.

U.S. involvement: Despite tensions between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and some U.S. politicians, including former President Joe Biden, the United States supports Israel with weapons, funds aid packages, and has vetoed or abstained from the United Nations’ ceasefire resolutions.

SOURCE:https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2025/01/25/israel-gaza-war-hostages-released/
 
How many Palestinian prisoners will be freed in the upcoming exchange?

Hamas has said four female Israeli soldiers will be released on Saturday. Israel had wanted all civilians to be released first, as the number of Palestinians set for release changes depending on the type of captives that are being freed.

Here is how the ceasefire deal works:

For one Israeli female civilian captive, 30 Palestinian women and children will be released from Israeli jails.

For one Israeli female military captive, 50 Palestinian women and children will be released from Israeli jails.

With Hamas due to release four female soldiers, Israel is expected to then release 200 Palestinian women and children.

Source: Al Jazeera
4 jew captives vs. 200 muslim prisoners = 50 per
20 mil jews vs 2 bil muslims = 100 per

This math doesn't add up.

Surely israel is being shortchanged here. So unlike their stereotype.
 

200 Palestinian prisoners released to jubilant scenes in West Bank​


A total of 200 Palestinian prisoners have been released to jubilant scenes in the West Bank after Israel freed them in exchange for four female hostages held by Hamas in Gaza.

More than half of the 200 released had been serving life sentences in Israeli jails - some were convicted of multiple murders, including the killing of Israeli civilians.

Around 70 of the most serious offenders are being deported via Egypt to neighbouring countries, including Qatar and Turkey.

A smaller number will be sent to Gaza and the rest will be allowed to return to their homes in the West Bank.

"After the conclusion of the necessary activities in the prisons and the approval of political authorities, all the terrorists were released from the Ofer and Ktziot prisons," the Israel Prison Service said in a statement.

Some of the released prisoners were hoisted aloft by crowds to loud cheers and fireworks after they stepped off buses.

There was then a scramble as they tried to find their loved ones and family members, before being carried into a sports complex where the celebrations continued.

The youngest Palestinian prisoner released on Saturday was 16 years old, while the oldest was 69. One prisoner has spent 39 years in an Israeli jail, having first been arrested in 1986.

A total of 121 of the prisoners released had been serving a life sentence.

Some of the prisoners had been held for short periods of time, and some were never charged with a crime but were held under something called administrative detention.

The swap on Saturday was the second exchange since a ceasefire came into effect on 19 January. Three hostages and 90 Palestinian prisoners were released in the first swap.

During last week's prisoner release, there was a noticeable show of support for Hamas, but on Saturday, Fatah, the West Bank's ruling party, which dominates the Palestinian Authority (PA), turned out in force to display their backing for the prisoners.

Earlier on Saturday, four female Israeli soldiers taken hostage by Hamas on 7 October 2023 were released from Gaza.

Karina Ariev, Daniella Gilboa, Naama Levy and Liri Albag, all aged between 19 and 20, were released to the Red Cross in Gaza City during a heavily choreographed handover involving dozens of Hamas gunmen.

However, Israel accused Hamas of breaching the terms of the ceasefire because female civilian hostage Arbel Yehud was not included in Saturday's release.

Israel said it would delay the planned return of displaced Palestinians to northern Gaza, while Hamas insisted the hostage would be released next weekend.

The January ceasefire deal halted the war which began when Hamas attacked Israel on 7 October 2023. About 1,200 people were killed and 251 taken back to Gaza as hostages.

More than 47,200 Palestinians, the majority civilians, have been killed in Israel's offensive, Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry says.

 

Israel is ‘procrastinating in implementing what was agreed upon’: Hamas​


Hamas spokesperson Hazem Kassem has spoken to our colleagues at Al Jazeera Arabic over the phone from Gaza.

He says that Israel is “still procrastinating in implementing what was agreed upon” and that the group sent a message through mediators that the Israeli captive Arbel Yehud is alive.

Israel had earlier stated that under the terms of the agreement, 29-year-old Yehud should have been released before the four soldiers today. Netanyahu also said Palestinians in Gaza would not be allowed to cross back to the northern part of the territory until the issue is resolved.

One killed as Israel opens fire in central Gaza

One person has been confirmed killed in al-Rasheed Street as Israeli forces opened fire against Palestinians waiting to cross into northern Gaza.

Our colleagues at Al Jazeera Arabic are reporting that at least other three people were injured.

Source: Al Jazeera
 
Israel says eight hostages due to be freed in first phase are dead

Israel says eight of the remaining 26 hostages due to be released by Hamas during the first phase of the Gaza ceasefire deal are dead.

Government spokesman David Mencer told reporters that Israel had received a list from the Palestinian armed group overnight that provided information on the status of the hostages.

"The list from Hamas matches Israel's intelligence, so I can share with you that... eight have been killed by Hamas," he said, without naming them. "The families have been informed of the situation of their relatives."

Seven women have already been freed alive in exchange for more than 290 Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails since the ceasefire began on 19 January.

On Sunday night, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office announced Hamas had agreed to release female civilian Arbel Yehud, female soldier Agam Berger and one other hostage on Thursday.

Three additional hostages would be released by the group on Saturday, he said.

The Israeli military launched a campaign to destroy Hamas in response to an unprecedented cross-border attack on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 were taken hostage.

More than 47,310 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.

Israel says 87 of the hostages remain in captivity, 34 of whom are presumed dead. In addition, there are three Israelis who were abducted before the war, one of whom is dead.


 
Has HAMAS existed during the 76 years brutal occupation ?

You will never get a response to that from the brain dead islamophobes. They sound so stupid and are so out of touch with the politics and issues of the region.

Only if those boats filled with Europeans were sent to various British colonies in India instead of Palestine, things would have worked out much better. Kicking out Indians out of Mumbai and Delhi would have been a much better and peaceful option, since entire ghulam India was under British rule
 
You will never get a response to that from the brain dead islamophobes. They sound so stupid and are so out of touch with the politics and issues of the region.

Only if those boats filled with Europeans were sent to various British colonies in India instead of Palestine, things would have worked out much better. Kicking out Indians out of Mumbai and Delhi would have been a much better and peaceful option, since entire ghulam India was under British rule

One Indian user wrote Israelis were annexing Palestinian lands legally. I was shocked to see such ignorance.

It is difficult to discuss something with someone who doesn't have basic knowledge.
 
4 jew captives vs. 200 muslim prisoners = 50 per
20 mil jews vs 2 bil muslims = 100 per

This math doesn't add up.

Surely israel is being shortchanged here. So unlike their stereotype.
My math is so bad.

The jews effectively shortchanged muslims by half. They should've released 100 per, but expended just 50 per.

They did live up to the stereotype.
 
Trump wants neighbours to take in Palestinians to 'clean out' Gaza

US President Donald Trump has said he wants Egypt and Jordan to take in Palestinians from Gaza.

Trump said he had made the request to Jordan's King Abdullah and planned to ask Egypt's president on Sunday, too.

Describing Gaza as a "demolition site", Trump said: "You're talking about probably a million and a half people, and we just clean out that whole thing". He added that the move "could be temporary" or "could be long-term".

Both Hamas and the Palestinian Authority condemned the proposal. Jordan and Egypt have also rejected the idea.

A ceasefire is being observed in Gaza after a deal between Israel and Hamas to halt the war which began when Hamas attacked Israel on 7 October 2023. About 1,200 people were killed and 251 taken back to Gaza as hostages.

More than 47,200 Palestinians, the majority civilians, have been killed in Israel's offensive, Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry says.

Most of Gaza's two million residents have been displaced in the past 15 months of the war, which has flattened much of Gaza's infrastructure.

The United Nations has previously estimated that 60% of structures across Gaza have been damaged or destroyed, and it could take decades to rebuild.

Trump made his comments while speaking to reporters on board the Air Force One.

"Almost everything is demolished and people are dying there.

"So I'd rather get involved with some of the Arab nations and build housing at a different location where maybe they can live in peace for a change."

Trump did not give further details of the proposal, and the subject was not referenced in the White House's official read-out of the call.

It is not clear whether the US president has formally made the request to Egypt, but its foreign ministry has rejected any such effort "whether through settlement or annexation of land, or by evicting Palestinians from their land through displacement or encouraging the relocation or uprooting of Palestinians from their land, whether temporarily or long-term".

Jordan's foreign minister said the kingdom said it was "firm and unwavering" in its rejection of displacing Palestinians.

In Gaza itself, Bassem Naim, a member of the Hamas political bureau, told the BBC: "Our Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip endured death and destruction for 15 months… without leaving their land. Therefore, they will not accept any offers or solutions, even if they appear to be good intentions under the title of reconstruction, as announced by US President Trump's proposals.

"Our people, just as they have thwarted all plans for displacement and an alternative homeland over the decades, will also thwart such projects," he added.

In the West Bank, Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas "expressed strong rejection and condemnation of any projects aimed at displacing our people from the Gaza Strip".

Asked about Trump's comments, Abu Yahya Rashid, a man displaced in the southern city of Khan Younis said:

"We are the ones who decide our fate and what we want. This land is ours and the property of our ancestors throughout history. We will not leave it except as corpses."

Decades of US foreign policy has committed to the creation of a Palestinian state, with Gaza as a key part. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejects this.

Donald Trump has a long history of seemingly speaking off the cuff and floating ideas that never end up taking fruition.

However, the idea of encouraging Gazans to relocate to neighbouring countries has long been pushed by hardline right-wing members of Netanyahu's government.

The former national security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir from the Jewish Power party said he commended Trump "for the initiative to transfer residents from Gaza to Jordan and Egypt".

"One of our demands from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is to promote voluntary emigration," he wrote on X.

The current Israeli finance minister, the far-right settler Bezelal Smotrich, has also said Palestinians should emigrate to neighbouring countries to allow Jewish settlements to be re-established in Gaza.

Such comments outrage Palestinians and will dismay proponents of a "two-state solution" - the establishment of an independent Palestinian State alongside Israel.

There are fears amongst Palestinians that those around President Trump are pushing him in a more extreme direction when it comes to policy in the Middle East.

This month, Trump's nominee to be the next US ambassador to Israel, the evangelical Christian Mike Huckabee, rejected the idea of there ever being a Palestinian state outright.

"The Palestinians had their chance in Gaza," he said in a US television interview.

"And look what happened there."

Gaza came under Israeli occupation in 1967. In 2005 Israel withdrew troops and settlers from the strip but it retains control of Gaza's airspace, seafront and vehicle access.

Huckabee's comments contradict six decades of US policy in the Middle East during which Washington has long pushed the concept of a "two-state solution".

The US has previously said that it opposes any forcible displacement of Palestinians from Gaza or the occupied West Bank.

More than two million Palestinian refugees, most of whom have been granted citizenship, live in Jordan, according to the UN.

They are descendants of some of the approximately 750,000 Palestinians who fled or were forced from their homes in the conflicts surrounding the formation of Israel in 1948.

Thousands of Palestinians have fled to Egypt since the war with Israel began, but they are not recognised there as refugees.

Some on Israel's far-right want to return to Gaza and establish settlements there. Israel ordered a unilateral pull out in 2005, with 21 settlements dismantled and about 9,000 settlers evacuated by the army.

Trump's comments came as displaced people were delayed from returning to their homes in northern Gaza after Israel accused Hamas of breaching the terms of a ceasefire deal.

"There is nothing there - there is no life, everything is demolished. But still to return to your land, to your home is a big joy," one man anxiously waiting told the BBC.

In separate comments on Air Force One, Trump said he had ended former President Joe Biden's hold on the supply of 2,000-pound bombs to Israel.

"They paid for them and they've been waiting for them for a long time," he told reporters on Air Force One.

The US is by far the biggest supplier of arms to Israel, having helped it build one of the most technologically sophisticated militaries in the world.

But the war in Gaza led to renewed calls for the US to reduce or end arms shipments to Israel, because of the level of destruction caused by US weapons in the territory.

BBC
 

Israeli gunfire hits ambulance near Rafah: Red Crescent​


The Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) says one of its ambulances has been hit by Israeli sniper fire in the Tal as-Sultan area, west of Rafah in southern Gaza.

Footage posted online by the organisation shows what appears to be a bullet hole in the side of a marked ambulance.

Over the past 15 months of Israeli attacks on Gaza, Israeli forces have repeatedly fired at PRCS medics and other medical staff.

Israeli snipers shot at an ambulance belonging to the Palestine Red Crescent while it was carrying out an urgent mission in the Tel Sultan area, west of #Rafah. pic.twitter.com/LGIYSYIbZO

— PRCS (@PalestineRCS) January 28, 2025

Source: Al Jazeera
 
Once an idiot always an idiot, true for apartheid regime
====

Israeli army says 18 killed, 60 arrested in Jenin and Tulkarm

Eighteen Palestinians have been killed and 60 arrested in the occupied West Bank cities of Jenin and Tulkarm, the Israeli army has said in a statement, amid continuing military raids in both locations.

The statement, issued in English, referred to the victims as “terrorists” and said they had been “eliminated”.

It added that weapons and explosives had been seized during the raids.

Source: Al Jazeera
 
Three Israelis and five Thai hostages expected to be freed next by Hamas

Three Israeli hostages and five Thai nationals are expected to be freed from Gaza by Hamas on Thursday, Israel has said.

Two women, civilian Arbel Yehud, 29, and military observer Agam Berger, 20, have been named along with an 80-year-old man, Gadi Moses, as the Israelis set for release.

If completed, it will be the third hostage release of the latest Gaza ceasefire deal. In exchange for the Israeli hostages, 110 Palestinians are being freed from Israeli jails.

The Thai hostages' names have not yet been made public. Their release would be a unilateral move by Hamas, and would not constitute part of the deal.

They are reportedly agricultural workers who were abducted from Israel where they worked.

Thailand's government has said six of its citizens are still being held hostage in Gaza.

Their names are Watchara Sriuan, Bannawat Seatho, Sathian Suwannakham, Nattapong Pinta, Pongsak Tanna and Surasak Lamnau.

Thailand said two other Thai hostages - Sudthisak Rinthalak and Sonthaya Oakkharasri - are believed to be dead.

The names of the 110 Palestinian prisoners set to be freed by Israel have not been released either, but it's thought they include at least 30 women and children, as well as prisoners sentenced to life terms.

Their release is part of the third such exchange since the ceasefire came into effect on 19 January. Seven women have already been freed alive in exchange for more than 290 Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails.

A fourth hostage release involving three men is expected to take place on Saturday, the Israeli government said.

The Israeli military launched a campaign to destroy Hamas in response to an unprecedented cross-border attack on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 were taken hostage.

More than 47,310 people in Gaza have been killed since then in Israel's offensive, the majority of them civilians, the territory's Hamas-run health ministry says.

Arbel Yehud

She was abducted along with her partner, Ariel Cunio. He and his brother, David Cunio, remain in captivity according to The Hostages and Missing Families Forum.

Arbel's brother, Dolev Yehud, was initially believed to have been taken hostage, but was later declared dead by Israeli authorities after his remains were identified.

Arbel worked at the Center for Technology, Science and Space at the Eshkol Regional Council.

Gadi Moses

Gadi Moses, aged 80, was also abducted from Nir Oz where he worked as an agricultural expert.

His partner, Efrat Katz, was killed in the attack.

In September, his family told the Times of Israel that they had not heard any information about him since December 2023, when he appeared in a Hamas propaganda video.

The Hostages and Missing Families Forum said he was a founding member of his kibbutz's vineyard, and helped look after its community vegetable garden.

Agam Berger

Soldier Agam Berger, 20, was kidnapped from the Nahal Oz military base on the border with Gaza. She was seen being taken away in videos released by Hamas.

According to the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, she was serving as an observer at the base, having arrived just two days before the 7 October attack.

Hostages already freed in January ceasefire

Agam was taken captive alongside her fellow observers Liri Albag, Karina Ariev, Daniella Gilboa, and Naama Levy.

The other four Israeli soldiers were released by Hamas on 25 January, in a swap that saw Israel free 200 Palestinian prisoners.

They were handed to the Red Cross in Gaza City in the second such exchange since the ceasefire came into effect.

The first release saw three women hostages and 90 Palestinian prisoners freed on 19 January.

Karina Ariev

Her sister Alexandra told the BBC she heard shooting as Karina called her during the attack, and later saw a video showing Karina being taken away in a vehicle.

Alexandra then saw the video circulating on Telegram of Karina's kidnapping. "We identified her, she had blood on her face, she was screaming.

"I would never wish anyone to feel this feeling," she told the BBC. "Time has stopped."

After her release, her family described her as a "symbol of courage, heart, and determination, and we are proud of her beyond words".

"After 477 tumultuous days of pain, worry, and endless anxiety – we finally got to embrace our beloved Karina, hear her voice, and see her smile that once again fills us with light," the statement read.

Naama Levy

But she had previously been part of an Israeli-Palestinian peace initiative, and her family called her "a peace seeker".

In a video of her kidnapping from the Nahal Oz army base, she was heard to tell her captors in English: "I have friends in Palestine."

In May 2024 her brother, Amit, said her family released the footage to "encourage all sides to get back to the table" to solve "an unbearable humanitarian issue".

"We feel like she's handling the situation like the true superhero she is, like a hero fighting for her life."

Daniella Gilboa

She has been seen in several videos, and in one last year asked Israel's government why she had been "abandoned" and "discarded" while war raged around her.

Ms Gilboa's mother, Orly, told the Jerusalem Post the video showed her daughter was "strong and determined". However, she said she was concerned about her "poor mental state".

After her release, her family said she had "survived 477 days in the hell of Gaza and has finally returned to our family's embrace".

"How we've prayed for this moment!" the statement said.

The family went on to thank Israelis for their "prayers and support during this time", adding "we couldn't have made it through without you".

Liri Albag

Her cousin Aya Albag, a corporal in the army, said she had told her she was "proud" of her passing her observation course before she went to the base

"She was motivated and so happy that she was assigned to Nahal Oz," she told the Jerusalem Post. "She began her role on Thursday, and a day and a half later, on Saturday morning, she was kidnapped."

Her family say that she has managed to pass messages back to them through released hostages.

In January 2024, footage of Albag was released by Hamas and she could be heard saying her "entire life had been put on pause".

"The world is starting to forget about us. No one cares about us. We're living in a nightmare."

First hostage release

The hostages freed on 19 January - the first under this latest ceasefire deal - were Romi Gonen, Doron Steinbrecher and Emily Damari.

All three arrived back in Israel this month after being released by Hamas in Gaza, and were reunited with their families.

Romi Gonen

Romi Gonen, 24, was captured as she tried to escape the Nova music festival when it was targeted by the militant group as part of the 7 October 2023 attack.

More than 360 people were killed at the festival when Hamas fighters crossed over the border, 2km (1.3 miles) to the west. The desert landscape offered partygoers limited cover and exit routes were blocked by gunmen.

When sirens sounded as the attack unfolded, Romi called her family. Her mother, Meirav, recalled hearing shots and shouting in Arabic in the final call with her daughter.

Romi was ambushed by Hamas militants as she tried to flee.

The Hostages and Missing Families Forum said Romi had gone to the festival "to do what she loved, to dance" - something she had studied for 12 years, starring in solo performances and becoming an "amazing choreographer".

In a video clip shared by the Israeli military, Romi's father was seen jumping in the air before breaking down in tears as he watched footage of his daughter's release.

Doron Steinbrecher

Doron, 31, was abducted from her apartment in Kibbutz Kfar Aza - near Gaza's north-western border - when Hamas attacked.

The community, one of many Israeli villages along the border, was heavily targeted by armed militants during the 7 October attacks.

Israeli officials said Hamas burned homes and killed civilians, including whole families, as well as taking hostages.

When the assault began, Doron contacted her family and friends via WhatsApp to say she was hiding under the bed as militants advanced, the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said.

In her last voice message, she was heard screaming "they've caught me" as shouting and gunfire sounded in the background.

Doron's family received no information about her whereabouts for nearly four months.

"After an unbearable 471 days, our beloved Dodo has finally returned to our arms," her family said in a statement released by the missing families forum.

Emily Damari

Emily, 28, was shot in the hand and taken into Gaza from her home during the attack, and also saw her dog shot and killed. Photographs after her release showed Emily with a bandaged hand and two missing fingers from that attack.

Her mother, Mandy Damari, was also in the kibbutz in her separate home on 7 October. Mrs Damari hid in the safe room and was saved by a bullet hitting the door handle, making it impossible for attackers to get in.

As the assault unfolded, Emily sent her mother a text message containing a single heart emoji - that was the last contact they had.

Emotional images showed Emily reunited with her mother in Israel, hugging while on a video call with her brother.

"I want to thank everyone who never stopped fighting for Emily throughout this horrendous ordeal, and who never stopped saying her name," Mrs Damari said.

Mrs Damari was born and raised in the UK, and met her husband on a holiday in Israel aged 20.

Emily, the youngest of four children, has strong connections with the UK - she is a Tottenham Hotspur fan and would often visit to see relatives.

Before the ceasefire, Israel said 94 hostages remained unaccounted for, but it believed only 60 to still be alive.

There are 26 Israeli hostages due to be handed over in the first phase of the ceasefire deal. Israel has said eight of them are dead, citing a list provided by Hamas that gave information on the status of the hostages.

BBC
 
Israeli strike kills 10 Palestinians in West Bank, health ministry says

An Israeli air strike killed 10 Palestinians in the north of the occupied West Bank on Wednesday night, the Palestinian health ministry says.

Video footage reportedly from the town of Tamun showed chaotic scenes, badly damaged buildings and bloodstained streets.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it targeted a squad of "armed terrorists" on guidance from the Shin Bet security service.

In contrast to Gaza, where there is an ongoing but fragile ceasefire, Israel has increased its military operations in the West Bank in the past week, particularly in and around the city of Jenin, just to the north of Tamun.

Hundreds of Israeli security forces backed by helicopters, drones and armoured vehicles have been deployed to Jenin and its refugee camp, long seen as a stronghold of Palestinian armed groups, including Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

More than 20,000 people have reportedly fled their homes in the camp, where many homes have been demolished and roads have been dug up by Israeli bulldozers.

"It's terrifying, the explosions, the fires, the houses which were demolished," Intisar Amalka, a displaced camp resident, told Reuters news agency on Wednesday.

The Palestinian health ministry says 16 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces and dozens more wounded in the Jenin area since Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced the start of a large-scale operation to "defeat terrorism" on 21 January.

They have included a two-year-old girl, who died on Saturday after being shot in the head, and at least six members of armed groups, according to Reuters news agency.

The health ministry says another 14 Palestinians have been killed elsewhere in the northern West Bank over the same period, including the 10 who died in Wednesday's strike in Tamun.

On Wednesday afternoon, the IDF said Israeli security forces had killed 18 "terrorists" and detained 60 "wanted individuals" in recent days in Jenin and the Tulkarm area, where they began a separate operation on Monday. Numerous weapons had also been located and dozens of explosive devices dismantled, it added.

Hamas urged Palestinians in the West Bank "to engage by all means in resisting the occupation, its soldiers and settler militias".

During a visit to Jenin refugee camp on Tuesday, Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said the IDF would remain there once the operation was over.

"The Jenin refugee camp will not be what it was," he said. "After the operation is completed, IDF forces will remain in the camp to ensure that terrorism does not return."

The Palestinian foreign ministry condemned what it called Katz's "provocative raid on Jenin and his inciting statements". It also called on the US to intervene urgently to "stop the transfer of scenes of destruction from Gaza to the West Bank".

There have been a number of previous Israeli military operations in Jenin.

And recently, the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority's security forces carried out a controversial, weeks-long operation against armed groups there, trying to reassert their control.

There has been a spike in violence in the West Bank since Hamas's deadly attack on Israel on 7 October 2023 and the ensuing war in Gaza.

Hundreds of Palestinians have been killed as Israeli forces have intensified their raids, saying they are trying to stem deadly Palestinian attacks on Israelis in the West Bank and Israel.

Israel has built about 160 settlements housing some 700,000 Jews since it occupied the West Bank in the 1967 Middle East war. The settlements are considered illegal under international law, although Israel disputes this.

BBC
 
Israel delaying return of Palestinian prisoners, says official

Israel has instructed buses carrying Palestinian detainees who were due to be released today to return to prison, according to an official involved in the operation.

Israeli media is reporting that the decision has been made due to the scenes of chaos surrounding the earlier release of Israeli hostages in Gaza.

Footage of the release showed Arbel Yehoud and 80-year-old Gadi Mozes in distress as they were mobbed by crowds whilst being handed over to the Red Cross.

Earlier, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned the scenes as "shocking" and "horrific" (see 11.31am post).

Sky News
 
More than 100 Palestinian prisoners were due to be freed before Israel halted release

Israel agreed to release 110 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for three Israeli hostages today.

But after the hostages returned to Israel, its forces have turned back the buses transporting the detainees.

Here are the details of the initial agreement.

Israeli soldier Agam Berger was to be exchanged for 50 prisoners, including 30 sentenced to life in jail.

In exchange for civilian Arbel Yehoud, 30 Palestinian minors and female prisoners were to be released.

And in exchange for civilian Gadi Mozes, Israel agreed to release 30 prisoners, including three serving life sentences.

Sky News
 
Israel delays prisoner release after chaotic hostage handover

Hamas handed over three Israelis and five Thai hostages in Gaza on Thursday, but Israel delayed the expected release of Palestinian prisoners after chaotic scenes at one of the handover points, where large crowds swarmed around the captives.

Arbel Yehud, 29, abducted from Kibbutz Nir Oz in the Hamas-led assault on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, looked fearful and struggled to walk through a surging crowd as armed militants handed her to the Red Cross in a tense scene in the southern city of Khan Younis.

Another Israeli hostage, Gadi Moses, 80, was also released along with five Thai nationals working on Israeli farms near Gaza when the militants burst through the border fence, the Israeli military said.

The mother of one of the Thais watched a livestream of the scene anxiously from her home in the northeastern Udon Thani province.

“Please, let my son walk out now, I want to see his face,” Wiwwaro Sriaoun, 53, said as the footage on her phone showed a vehicle moving slowly through the crowd.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the sight of their handover amid the swarming crowds was shocking and threatened death to anyone hurting hostages. He urged mediators to ensure the scene would not be repeated.

A total of 110 Palestinian prisoners were expected to be freed on Thursday as part of the phased agreement that halted fighting in the shattered coastal territory earlier this month.

An Israeli official involved in the operation said buses carrying the detainees had been instructed to return to prisons in an apparent response to the chaotic handover.

Netanyahu and the Defence Minister Israel Katz said they had ordered the delay in releases “until the safe exit of our hostages in the next phases is assured”.

An Israeli official said later that understandings had been reached, and Palestinian prisoners would be released at 1700 (1500 GMT). A Palestinian source said the Red Cross had told Hamas the Palestinian prisoners would be released on Thursday.

Earlier, in Jabalia in northern Gaza, an Israeli soldier, Agam Berger, wearing an olive green uniform, was led through a narrow alley between heavily damaged buildings and over piles of rubble before being handed to the Red Cross.

“Our daughter is strong, faithful, and brave,” a statement from her family said. “Now Agam and our family can begin the healing process, but the recovery will not be complete until all the hostages return home.”

A video released by Netanyahu’s office showed a pale Berger crying and smiling while sitting on her mother’s lap.

Netanyahu has faced criticism in Israel for not having sealed a hostage deal earlier after the security failure that enabled the Oct. 7 Hamas assault.


 

Mohammad Deif seen as a symbol of Palestinian armed struggle (reported to have embraced martyrdom)

Deif’s evasiveness and leadership of the Qassam Brigades made him emblematic of Palestinian armed struggle even before the October 7 attack.

While Israel was able to kill dozens of Palestinian military leaders over the decades – including many Qassam Brigades commanders like Salah Shehada, Imad Aqel and Yahya Ayash – Deif managed to survive and continue fighting.

Under his guidance, Hamas’s military wing grew from small bands of ill-equipped fighters into the army-like force that launched the deadliest attack in Israel’s history.

While Deif was based in Gaza, in recent years, Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem would chant his name in calling for help against Israel.

A rhyming Arabic chant that began in East Jerusalem became especially popular during the war on Gaza: “Put the sword next to the sword, we are Mohammad Deif’s men.

Source: Al Jazeera
 
UN chief urges evacuation of 2,500 children from Gaza as doctors warn of ‘imminent risk’ of death

UN secretary-general António Guterres has called for 2,500 children to be immediately evacuated from Gaza for medical treatment after meeting with US doctors who said the children were at imminent risk of death in the coming weeks.

The four doctors had all volunteered in Gaza during the 15-month-long war between Israel and Palestinian militants Hamas that has devastated the territory of more than 2 million people and its healthcare system.

Guterres said he was “deeply moved” by his meeting with the American doctors on Thursday. “2,500 children must be immediately evacuated with the guarantee that they will be able to return to their families and communities,” Guterres posted on social media after the meeting.

Just days before a ceasefire began on 19 January, the World Health Organization said more than 12,000 patients were waiting for medical evacuations and it had hoped they could be ramped up during the truce.

Among those patients urgently needing treatment are 2,500 children, said Feroze Sidhwa, a California trauma surgeon who worked in Gaza from 25 March to 8 April last year.

“There’s about 2,500 children who are at imminent risk of death in the next few weeks. Some are dying right now. Some will die tomorrow. Some will die the next day,” Sidhwa told reporters after meeting with Guterres.

“Of those 2,500 kids, the vast majority need very simple things done,” he said, citing the case of a 3-year-old boy who suffered burns to his arm. The burns had healed, but the scar tissue was slowly cutting off blood flow, leaving him at risk of amputation, said Sidhwa.

Ayesha Khan, an emergency doctor at Stanford university hospital, worked in Gaza from the end of November until 1 January. She spoke about many children with amputations, who had no prosthetics or rehabilitation.

She held up a photo of two young sisters with amputations, who were sharing a wheelchair. They were orphaned in the attack that injured them and Khan said: “Their only chance for survival is to be medically evacuated.”

“Unfortunately, the current security restrictions don’t allow for children to travel with more than one caregiver,” she said. “Their caregiver is their aunt, who has a baby that she is breastfeeding.”

“So even though we were able to, with great difficulty, get evacuation set up for them, they won’t let the aunt take her baby with her. So the aunt has to choose between the baby she’s breastfeeding and the lives of her two nieces.”

Cogat, the Israeli defence agency that liaises with the Palestinians, did not respond to a request for comment on the demand for medical evacuation of 2,500 children by Guterres and the doctors he met. Israel’s mission to the UN also did not respond to a request for comment.

The doctors said they are advocating for a centralised process for medical evacuations with clear guidelines.

“Under this ceasefire agreement, there is supposed to be a mechanism in place for medical evacuations. We’ve still not seen that process spelled out,” said Thaer Ahmad, an emergency room doctor from Chicago, who worked in Gaza in January 2024.

Khan said there was no process in place to get the children out, adding: “And will they be allowed to return? There is some discussion right now of the Rafah border opening only for exits, but it’s exit without right to return.”

At the start of this month, before the ceasefire, the WHO said 5,383 patients had been evacuated with its support since the war began in October 2023, most of those in the first seven months before the Rafah crossing between Egypt and Gaza was closed.

SOURCE: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...acuation-children-death-risk-israel-war-hamas
 

Hamas releases names of three male hostages to be freed on Saturday​


The Palestinian armed group Hamas has released the names of three hostages it says it will free on Saturday under the ceasefire deal with Israel.

They are Israelis Ofer Kalderon, 53, and Yarden Bibas, 34, and American-Israeli Keith Siegel, 65.

Mr Bibas is the father of Kfir, the youngest hostage who was 10 months old when he was kidnapped by Hamas. His wife Shiri and their other son Ariel were also captured.

The Israeli prime minister's office said Israel had received the list of hostages.

Israel will release another batch of Palestinian prisoners in return.

It will mark the fourth such exchange of hostages for prisoners since the ceasefire came into effect on 19 January.

Some 251 hostages were taken by Hamas when it attacked Israel on 7 October 2023, killing about 1,200 people.

The attack triggered a war which has devastated Gaza. Israel's 15-month military offensive killed 47,460 Palestinians in the territory, according to Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry.

 

France, Spain and Italy send personnel to monitor Rafah crossing​

France says it deployed three policemen specialised in border security as part of the EU mission at the Rafah land crossing, which is expected to open on Saturday.

Italy said it sent seven paramilitary officers to join two Italians already at the Rafah mission.

Meanwhile, a Spanish contingent comprises 10 agents assigned to the management team, joining two Spanish members of the mission already deployed there.

Source: Al Jazeera
 
Preparations for hostage release under way in southern Gaza

This is the fourth release of Israeli hostages from Hamas captivity in Gaza since the ceasefire deal came into effect on 19 January.

We can see preparations under way in Khan Younis, southern Gaza.

Previous releases have taken place across Gaza - including in Gaza City and Jabalia in the north.

Hostages have previously been paraded in front of crowds in Gaza - this has ranged from highly choreographed appearances, as we saw in last Saturday’s release in Gaza City, to chaotic escorts through surging crowds such as the release on Thursday in Khan Younis.

What is consistent is that the hostages are transported out of Gaza by the Red Cross and taken to Israel where they are reunited with family and checked over by medical staff.

Once the hostages are safely back in Israel, the Palestinian prisoners are loaded onto buses and released into Palestinian territories.

BBC
 
Freed Palestinian prisoners arrive in the West Bank

Palestinian prisoners are now getting off a bus in the West Bank.

Large crowds have surrounded the vehicle, as officials are battling their way off the bus amongst the crowds.

A man is shouting in the doorway of the bus, and prisoners are climbing out and being held up by the crowd.

BBC
 
25 Palestinian prisoners arrive in West Bank - Hamas-affiliated news agency

Hamas-affiliated Safa news agency says 25 freed Palestinian prisoners were on the bus that arrived in the town of Beitunia, west of Ramallah, in the occupied West Bank.

BBC
 
Israeli hostages, Palestinian prisoners released in latest Gaza exchange

Palestinian militant group Hamas handed over three Israeli hostages on Saturday, and dozens of Palestinian prisoners and detainees were released in exchange, in the latest stage of a truce aimed at ending the 15-month war in Gaza.

Ofer Kalderon, a French-Israeli dual national, and Yarden Bibas were handed over to Red Cross officials in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis before being transferred to Israel. Israeli-American Keith Siegel was separately handed over at the Gaza City seaport.

Hours later, 183 Palestinian prisoners and detainees were released in the exchange. Among them, 150 arrived in Gaza while 32 got off a bus in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, where they were greeted by large crowds. One freed prisoner will be exiled to Egypt, according to the Hamas prisoners' media office.

"I feel joy despite the journey of pain and hardship that we lived," said Ali Al-Barghouti, who was serving two life sentences in an Israeli jail.

"The life sentence was broken and the occupation will one day be broken," added Barghouti, as the crowd around him in Ramallah chanted "Allah Akbar (God is the most great)."

At the newly reopened Rafah crossing on the southern border, children suffering from cancer and heart conditions were among the first Palestinian patients to be allowed to leave Gaza for medical treatment in Egypt.

Mohammad Zaqout, a senior official in Gaza's health ministry, however, criticised the limited number of patients allowed to travel for treatment, saying that around 18,000 people needed better healthcare.

In Israel, crowds gathered at the location in Tel Aviv known as Hostage Square to watch the release in the morning of the Israeli hostages on giant outdoor screens, mixing cheers and applause with tears as the three men appeared.

Kalderon, whose two children Erez and Sahar were released in the first hostage exchange in November 2023, and Bibas both briefly mounted a stage in Khan Younis, in front of a poster of Hamas figures including Mohammad Deif, the former military commander whose death was confirmed by Hamas this week, before being handed over to the Red Cross officials.

"Ofer Kalderon is free! We share the immense relief and joy of his loved ones after 483 days of unimaginable hell," French President Emmanuel Macron said in a statement.

Saturday's handover saw none of the chaotic scenes that overshadowed an earlier transfer on Thursday, when Hamas guards struggled to shield hostages from a surging crowd in Gaza.

But it was once again an occasion for a show of force by uniformed Hamas fighters who paraded in the area where the handovers took place in a sign of their re-established dominance in Gaza despite the heavy losses suffered in the war.

NEGOTIATIONS ON RELEASE OF REMAINING HOSTAGES

The total number of hostages freed so far is 18, including five Thais who were part of an unscheduled release on Thursday.

After Saturday's exchange, Israel will have released 583 Palestinian prisoners and detainees, including militants serving life sentences for deadly attacks as well as some detained during the war but not charged.

As the fighting has abated, diplomatic efforts to build a wider settlement have stepped up.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is expected to meet U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday with the ceasefire in Gaza, and a possible normalisation of relations with Saudi Arabia as part of a postwar deal likely to be a focus.

During the first phase of the ceasefire, 33 children, women and older male hostages as well as sick and injured, were due to be released, with more than 60 men of military age left for a second phase which must still be worked out.

Negotiations are due to start by Tuesday on agreements for the release of the remaining hostages and the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza in a second phase of the deal, which is intended to lead to a final end of the war in Gaza.

The initial six-week truce, agreed with Egyptian and Qatari mediators and backed by the United States, has mostly remained intact despite incidents that have led both sides to accuse the other of violating the deal.

Netanyahu's government, which has hardliners who opposed the ceasefire deal, and Hamas say they are committed to reaching an agreement in the second phase.

But prospects for a durable settlement remain unclear. The war started with a Hamas-led attack on Israel that killed 1,200 people, and saw more than 250 taken as hostages. The Israeli military campaign has killed more than 47,000 Palestinians. Gaza is in ruins and a deep legacy of bitterness and mistrust remains.

Israeli leaders continue to insist that Hamas cannot remain in Gaza, but the movement has taken every opportunity to demonstrate the control it continues to exert despite the loss of much of its former leadership and thousands of fighters during the war.

SOURCE:https://www.reuters.com/world/middl...-be-released-latest-gaza-exchange-2025-02-01/
 

Benjamin Netanyahu arrives in US for talks with Donald Trump​


Benjamin Netanyahu has said he will discuss "victory over Hamas", Iran and expanding diplomatic relations with Arab countries in his meeting with Donald Trump.

The meeting at the White House on Tuesday will be Mr Trump's first with a foreign leader since returning to office.

It comes as US and Arab mediators begin brokering the next phase of an agreement to wind down the war in the Gaza Strip and release dozens of militant-held hostages.

In a statement released ahead of his departure for Washington, the Israeli prime minister said the two men will discuss "victory over Hamas, achieving the release of all our hostages, and dealing with the Iranian terror axis in all its components".

He said by working together, they can "strengthen security, broaden the circle of peace and achieve a remarkable era of peace through strength".

Hamas, which has quickly reasserted its control over Gaza since the ceasefire took hold last month, has said it will not release the hostages due to go free in the second phase without an end to the war and the full withdrawal of Israeli forces.

Mr Netanyahu is under mounting pressure from some of his governing partners to resume the war after the first phase ends in early March.

He insists Israel is still committed to victory over Hamas and the return of all the hostages captured in the militants' 7 October 2023 attack that triggered the war.

On Sunday morning, an Israeli air strike on a vehicle in central Gaza injured five people, including a child.

The Israeli military said it fired on the vehicle because it was bypassing a checkpoint while heading north in violation of the ceasefire agreement.

 
Gaza authorities plead for tents, accuse Israel of obstructing aid

Local authorities in the Gaza Strip have called on donors and aid groups to prioritise sending tents and temporary shelters to help house people whose homes have been destroyed by Israel.

The Gaza Government Media Office said on Monday that thousands of Palestinian families across the enclave are sleeping out in the open amid the frigid temperatures.

“Securing shelters has become an urgent humanitarian need that cannot be delayed. It is the most pressing need at this moment,” the office said in a statement.

It urged the Jordan Hashemite Charity Organisation, which has been helping coordinate aid to Palestinians, to include tents alongside food and other humanitarian supplies in the coming assistance shipments.

Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have returned to the north of the territory after the truce reached between Israel and Hamas last month.

But many found that their homes have been turned to rubble as Israel levelled entire neighbourhoods in Gaza City and northern towns like Jabalia and Beit Hanoon.


 

Hamas says talks on second phase of Gaza ceasefire deal have started​

Talks on the second phase of the Gaza ceasefire deal have started, a spokesperson for Hamas has said.

It comes as Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu gets ready to meet US President Donald Trump in Washington later today.

The meeting comes at a critical juncture as the Israeli military’s deadly raids in the West Bank, particularly in Jenin, are undermining the fragile ceasefire agreement between Hamas and Israel, according to the UN.

Netanyahu has said the existing deal is for a temporary ceasefire and that Israel has reserved “the right to return to fighting” against Hamas at a future date. We are currently in stage one of the three-part deal, which began on 19 January 2025.

The schedule is going to plan as it was hoped that sixteen days after the start of stage one, negotiations would begin on the second stage, during which time it is hoped a permanent ceasefire will be established and Israeli forces will make a complete withdrawal as remaining living hostages are freed.

Source: The Guardian
 
Are you sure? I thought it was a glorious act of resistance.

@KingKhanWC said so.

@The Bald Eagle, what happened to the thread created on Oct 7 2023? remember all the cheerleading and glorification and how Israel was finished.
Yea, I was looking for that bombastic thread as well.

It started off with a chest thumping bang, religious utterings with proclamation of god-given victory, which then gave way to anguish and calls for ceasefire, and when that failed to transpire, it was met with deafening silence.

A handful proceeded to dump news articles every now and then. Eventually that too tapered off into oblivion.
 
Resistance from the Palestinians has been ongoing for 76 years and counting. Bet you dont remember what damage the zionests caused on October the 6th, and before that!
Happy to discuss formation and dissolution of nation states in a separate thread. My focus is on two things here

why did that thread from Oct 7 disappear?

where are those who thought Trump was better for Palestinians?
 
Yea, I was looking for that bombastic thread as well.

It started off with a chest thumping bang, religious utterings with proclamation of god-given victory, which then gave way to anguish and calls for ceasefire, and when that failed to transpire, it was met with deafening silence.

A handful proceeded to dump news articles every now and then. Eventually that too tapered off into oblivion.
I think that thread has been removed.
 

If it does happen that's the end of Hamas, Palestinians, wars etc...

Can Pakistan do anything for the ummah here ? Since they are the only muslim nuclear power.
Yea, they can provide lip service which they are champions at.
 
Netanyahu has said the existing deal is for a temporary ceasefire and that Israel has reserved “the right to return to fighting” against Hamas at a future date. We are currently in stage one of the three-part deal, which began on 19 January 2025.

It seems like Netanyahu doesn't want Gaza to return to normalcy. He wants the war to continue.
 
That's all. That's sad 😔.. Muslim world from the river to sea from Kashmir to Palestine all always facing defeat after defeat 😢

Muslim world needs to show patience. There was a time When the Muslim Empire ruled, there will again come a time when Muslim Empire will rule.
 
That's all. That's sad 😔.. Muslim world from the river to sea from Kashmir to Palestine all always facing defeat after defeat 😢

This is actually a good move to end this cycle which doesn't benefit the Muslim world anyway. The gulf countries are going to be big players in the forthcoming century due to BRICS and their geopolitical importance. For them stability is a key to this, so if they can get some sort of peace deal in place, they will be big winners. As an Indian, you will know this. You don't bring a knife to a gun fight, you need to acquire your own guns first.
 
Hamas set to release three more Israeli hostages

Hamas is expected to release three more Israeli hostages on Saturday in the Gaza Strip in exchange for Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.

They have been named by Hamas as male civilians Eli Sharabi, Ohad Ben Ami and Or Levy.

So far, 18 hostages have been freed since the ceasefire began on 19 January with Israel in return releasing 383 prisoners. Hamas says another 183 are to be returned on Saturday.

Some 33 hostages and 1,900 prisoners are due to be freed by the end of the first stage of the ceasefire in three weeks' time. Israel says eight of the 33 are dead.

In line with the ceasefire deal, Israel is set to release the183 Palestinian prisoners – more than 70 are serving life or long sentences; others are Gazans detained during the war.

Hamas seized 251 hostages and killed about 1,200 people when it attacked Israel on 7 October 2023, triggering the war.

At least 47,500 Palestinians have been killed in Israel's offensive, according to Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry. About two-thirds of Gaza's buildings have been damaged or destroyed by Israel's attacks, the UN says.

Eli Sharabi, 52, was taken from Kibbutz Beeri with his brother, Yossi, whose death has since been confirmed. Eli's British-born wife, Lianne, and two daughters, Noiya and Yahel, were murdered in the attack.

Mr Sharabi's brother-in-law, Stephen Brisley, from Wales, said his safe return "has always been that one crumb of comfort".

"Eli coming home alive would be perhaps the greatest memorial to Lianne and the girls and we're so close to achieving that now," he told the BBC.

Ohad Ben Ami, 56, was also taken from Kibbutz Beeri, along with his wife, Raz. She was later released by Hamas.

Mr Ben Ami, an accountant, is "known for his good judgment and sense of humour", according to the Hostages Families Forum.

Or Levy, 34, a computer programmer from Rishon LeZion, a city south of Tel Aviv, fled the Nova festival with his wife Eynav, when gunmen attacked the event.

Mr Levy was taken hostage and Eynav's body was found in a bomb shelter where the couple had been hiding.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office confirmed authorities had received the list of abductees scheduled for release on Saturday, and their families had been informed.

Earlier on Friday, the Hostages and Missing Families Forum Headquarters had welcomed "news about the expected release" of the three hostages.

"We will not give up or stop at any stage until all hostages return home under the current agreement - down to the very last one - the living for rehabilitation and the deceased for proper burial," the statement said.

Hours before they released the hostage names, Hamas accused Israel of failing to abide by its commitment to boost the amount of humanitarian aid allowed into Gaza as part of the ceasefire deal.

The head of Hamas's media office in Gaza, Salama Marouf, told a news conference in Gaza City: "The humanitarian situation remains catastrophic due to Israeli obstruction".

He said only 8,500 out of an expected 12,000 aid lorries had entered Gaza since the ceasefire came into effect, and medical equipment and shelter supplies had been deliberately delayed, according to media reports.

The allegation contradicts UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher, who on Thursday said 10,000 lorries with food, medicine and tents had crossed into Gaza since the start of the ceasefire in what he called "a massive surge".

Meanwhile, Yarden Bibas, 34, an Israeli hostage who was freed on Saturday, made a direct plea to Netanyahu to bring back his wife and children, who are still in captivity.

"Prime Minister Netanyahu, I'm now addressing you with my own words... bring my family back, bring my friends back, bring everyone home," Mr Bibas said in his first public statement since his release.

Hamas claimed in November 2023 that Mr Bibas's wife, Shiri, and two young sons, Ariel and Kfir, had been killed in an Israeli air strike, without providing evidence. Israel has not confirmed the report.

In a separate development in central Gaza on Friday, hundreds of people - including armed Hamas fighters - attended a funeral held for senior Hamas military commander Marwan Issa.

Issa is seen as one of the masterminds of Hamas's 7 October attack. The Israeli military had said he was killed in an air strike last March, but his death was only confirmed by Hamas last week.

Details of Saturday's exchange were released as President Donald Trump continued to push his widely criticised proposal to move all Palestinians from Gaza and redevelop it as an international travel destination.

His announcement - for the US to "take over" the Gaza Strip, resettle its Palestinian population and turn the territory into the "Riviera of the Middle East" - has complicated talks on the planned next stage of the ceasefire.

But Israeli negotiators are still expected to meet mediators in Qatar later on Saturday.

Trump's idea was strongly condemned by Arab countries and the UN.

BBC
 
This is actually a good move to end this cycle which doesn't benefit the Muslim world anyway. The gulf countries are going to be big players in the forthcoming century due to BRICS and their geopolitical importance. For them stability is a key to this, so if they can get some sort of peace deal in place, they will be big winners. As an Indian, you will know this. You don't bring a knife to a gun fight, you need to acquire your own guns first.

I have no doubt in my mind Arabs from the gulf will figure it out in the end but for converts I don't have much hope, always felt they were a lost cause..
 
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I have no doubt in my mind Arabs from the gulf will figure it out in the end but for converts I don't have much hope, always felt they were a lost cause..

If you took your own words to their logical conclusion that would make whatever religion they converted from the real lost cause.:genius
 

Israel troops withdraw from corridor that split Gaza in two​


Israeli troops have withdrawn from the Netzarim Corridor - a military zone cutting off the north of the Gaza Strip from the south.

Hundreds of Palestinians in cars and on carts laden with mattresses and other goods began returning to northern Gaza following the pull-out - often to scenes of utter destruction.

The Israeli withdrawal is in line with the Israel-Hamas ceasefire agreement of 19 January under which 21 Israeli hostages and 566 Palestinian prisoners have so far been freed.

By the end of the first stage of the ceasefire in three weeks' time, 33 hostages and 1,900 prisoners are expected to have been freed. Israel says eight of the 33 are dead.

Hamas seized 251 hostages and killed about 1,200 people when it attacked Israel on 7 October 2023, triggering the Gaza war.

At least 48,189 Palestinians have been killed in Israel's offensive, according to Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry. About two-thirds of Gaza's buildings have been damaged or destroyed by Israel's attacks, the UN says.

About 700,000 residents of northern Gaza fled to southern areas at the start of the war, when the Israeli military issued mass evacuation orders before launching a ground invasion of the Palestinian territory.

Many of those displaced were subsequently forced to move multiple times after Israeli forces pushed into southern Gaza, too.

They were also prevented from returning to their homes through the Netzarim Corridor, stretching from the Gaza-Israel border to the Mediterranean Sea.

Israeli forces partially withdrew from the west of the corridor last month and the first Palestinians - pedestrians - were allowed to walk along the coastal Rashid Street as they crossed into northern Gaza.

Those on vehicles have to use Salah al-Din Street and undergo screening for weapons by US and Egyptian security contractors.

The Israel Defense Forces have not officially commented on Sunday's withdrawal from the eastern part of the corridor, which will leave it in control of Gaza's borders, but not the road that had cut it in half.

The Haaretz newspaper says the Hamas-run Gaza interior ministry has been urging people to "exercise caution and adhere to the existing movement guidelines for their safety".

The troop withdrawal comes as an Israeli delegation is expected to fly to Qatar which has been moderating talks between the two sides in the Gaza war.

The Israeli government has previously said the delegation will initially discuss "technical matters" regarding the first phase of the ceasefire deal, rather than the more challenging second phase which is meant to lead to a permanent ceasefire, the exchange of all remaining living hostages in Gaza for more Palestinian prisoners and a complete withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza.

That will require further direction from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is currently on his way back from the US.

Netanyahu became the first foreign leader to meet US President Donald Trump since his return to the White House on 20 January.

During the trip, in the most dramatic shift in US policy regarding Gaza in decades, Trump called for the removal of the territory's entire civilian population and the development of what he called "The Riviera of the Middle East".

That suggestion, which would be a crime under international law, has been almost universally rejected, including by Arab states.

The Saudi foreign ministry said on Saturday that it would not accept "any infringement on the Palestinians' unalienable rights, and any attempts at displacement," accusing Israel of "ethnic cleansing".

Egypt has also rejected any idea of the removal of the Palestinian population and has said it is calling an emergency summit of the Arab League on 27 February to discuss what it called "serious" Palestinian developments.

Asked about Trump's plan, Israel's President Isaac Herzog told the BBC that it was time for new ideas from the US and Israel's neighbours Egypt and Jordan - which the American leader wants to take in Gaza's Palestinians.

"We'll have to find the right way to make sure that what happened [7 October] will not recur again, meaning that Hamas will not rule Gaza any more," Herzog told the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme.

 
Hamas says it will postpone hostage release, blaming Israel

A spokesperson for the armed wing of Hamas says the group is postponing the next scheduled release of Israeli hostages, blaming what he said were Israeli violations of the ceasefire deal.

Three hostages held in Gaza are due to be freed on Saturday in exchange for more Palestinian prisoners held in Israel.

Abu Obeida said the releases would not go ahead until Israel complied with its obligations. He said violations included delaying the return of displaced Palestinians to the north, firing on people, and failing to allow into Gaza humanitarian aid "in all its agreed-upon forms".

Israel's defence minister called the announcement "a complete violation of the ceasefire agreement".

Defence Minister Israel Katz said he had ordered the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) "to prepare at the highest level of alert for any possible scenario in Gaza and to protect the communities.

"We will not allow a return to the reality of 7 October [2023]," when Hamas attacked Israel, triggering the war.

Hamas's announcement came shortly before people gathered in Tel Aviv to mark the 24th birthday of Israeli hostage Alon Ohel, his second in captivity.

He was taken hostage from the Nova festival on 7 October 2023.

Mia Goldstein, an attendee of the rally for Ohel, told the BBC there should "immense pressure" to get the rest of hostages out, adding Hamas's delay is "horrifying".

Michal Neeman, who took part in a protest in Tel Aviv following the announcement from Hamas, said the hostages "should have been out a few months ago. You see the situation, they are dying there, and their blood is on this government's hands".

United Nations spokesperson Farhan Haq said "any delays" to the fragile ceasefire deal would be an issue, and said all parties involved should adhere to their previously stated agreements and timelines.

But Hamas has said the "door remains open" to the exchange going ahead on Saturday - if Israel "complies", according to news agency AFP.

The allegations made by Hamas on Monday include that Israel is "delaying the return of displaced persons to northern Gaza", "targeting them with shelling and gunfire in various areas of the Strip", and of breaching the agreement on aid supplies.

But the announcement did not reference Donald Trump or US policy, but it comes after strong remarks made last week by the US president about the US taking ownership of Gaza and redeveloping it.

His proposal included the resettlement of Palestinians outside of the territory, and has been praised as "revolutionary and creative" by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The militant group's statement is the latest in a series of recriminatory actions between the two sides.

Israel delayed by two days allowing displaced Palestinians to return to the north of the Gaza Strip, accusing Hamas of reneging on a commitment to free a female Israeli civilian hostage.

Israel also recently briefly delayed buses taking Palestinian prisoners to be released into the occupied West Bank, after expressing anger over the way in which hostages were released through crowds of spectators in Gaza hours earlier.

On Friday, Hamas exceeded by a short time a deadline to release the names of hostages to be freed on Saturday - as required under the ceasefire - prompting concern in Israel. This came after it accused Israel of failing to abide by its commitment to boost the amount of humanitarian aid allowed into Gaza –contradicting what had been described by the UN's humanitarian chief as a "massive surge".

Since the ceasefire began on 19 January, 16 Israeli and five Thai hostages have been released in exchange for 566 prisoners.

By the end of the first stage of the ceasefire in three weeks' time, 33 hostages and 1,900 prisoners are expected to have been freed. Israel says eight of the 33 are dead.

Hamas took 251 hostages and killed about 1,200 people when it attacked in October 2023. Israel launched a military campaign in response, killing at least 48,000 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.

Seventy-three hostages taken on 7 October, and three others taken a decade earlier, are still being held in Gaza.


BBC
 
Trump says Gaza ceasefire should be cancelled if all Israeli hostages not freed

Donald Trump has warned that if all the Israeli hostages held in Gaza are not returned by Saturday at noon he would propose canceling the Israel-Hamas ceasefire and letting “all hell break loose”.

Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office late on Monday, the US president also said he might withhold aid to Jordan and Egypt if those countries do not take Palestinian refugees being relocated from Gaza.

Trump’s comments came after Hamas said it was delaying the release of hostages indefinitely over “violations” of the ceasefire deal, prompting Israel’s defence minister to put the country’s military on alert with orders to prepare for “any scenario in Gaza”.

Trump called the statement by Hamas “terrible” and said he would “let that be Israel’s decision” on what should ultimately happen to the ceasefire.

“But as far as I’m concerned, if all of the hostages aren’t returned by Saturday 12 o’clock – I think it’s an appropriate time – I would say cancel it and all bets are off and let hell break out,” Trump said.

The ultimatum could end a three-week-old ceasefire which dictates a strict schedule for the release of the Israeli hostages in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners being held in Israeli jails.

Trump said the hostages should be released “not in dribs and drabs, not two and one and three and four and two”.

“We want them all back. I’m speaking for myself. Israel can override it, but for myself, Saturday at 12 o’clock – and if they’re not here, all hell is going to break out,” he said.

Trump indicated he had not spoken to Benjamin Netanyahu about the timeline he suggested. Asked about any concrete measures he was threatening to take to enforce his demand, Trump said: “You’ll find out. And they’ll find out too. Hamas will find out what I mean. These are sick people.”

He did not directly respond to a question on whether or not that would entail US military action.

Hamas, Israeli and Arab officials have already warned that the ceasefire is at a breaking point, and Trump’s radical intervention could stoke fears that Washington does not have any intent to continue with the phased deal.

A Hamas spokesperson cited past Israeli violations for halting the exchanges, but the militant group’s threat to suspend hostage releases comes against a backdrop of increasingly hardline US and Israeli positions about the long-term future of the strip.

Trump also said that he could “conceivably” withhold aid to Jordan and Egypt – some of the US’s closest allies in the region – unless they agreed to his plan for the US to “take over” Gaza and to relocate millions of Palestinians to the neighbouring states in what would amount to an effective ethnic cleansing.

“If they don’t agree, I would conceivably withhold it,” Trump said.

That threat came after Egypt rejected earlier Monday “any compromise” that would infringe on Palestinians’ rights, in a statement issued after foreign minister Badr Abdelatty met with his US counterpart in Washington.

Egyptian security sources separately told Reuters that mediators fear the ceasefire could collapse and have postponed talks until they receive a clear indication of Washington’s intent to continue with the phased deal.

Israel’s security cabinet has moved forward a meeting to discuss negotiations on the second phase, which had been scheduled for Tuesday evening.

The army has cancelled all leave for soldiers in the Gaza division, the Kan news outlet reported, in another sign that Israeli authorities are preparing for the resumption of war.

Before Trump’s comments, Hamas said the “door remains open” for the next hostage-prisoner exchange on Saturday.

In a statement, the group said it had “intentionally made this announcement five days before the scheduled prisoner handover, allowing mediators ample time to pressure [Israel] towards fulfilling its obligations”.

It added: “The door remains open for the prisoner exchange batch to proceed as planned, once the occupation complies.”

Trump’s comments on the ceasefire were his second apparently unscripted intervention in the crisis on Monday.

Earlier, he said that his plan to “take over Gaza” would not include a right of return for the more than 2 million Palestinians that he has said have “no alternative” but to leave because of the destruction left by Israel’s military campaign.

Asked about Palestinians who refused to leave, Trump said: “They’re all gonna leave.”

Arab states have denounced the plan and the UN’s top investigator told Politico that Trump’s plan for the “forcible displacement of an occupied group is an international crime, and amounts to ethnic cleansing”.

In the interview with Fox’s Bret Baier, Trump said that he would “own” the Gaza Strip and declared it would be a “real estate development for the future”.

Asked if Palestinians would have the right to return to Gaza, Trump told Baier: “No, they wouldn’t, because they’re going to have much better housing.

“Could be five, six, could be two,” he said. “But we’ll build safe communities, a little bit away from where they are, where all of this danger is.

“In other words, I’m talking about building a permanent place for them because if they have to return now, it’ll be years before you could ever – it’s not habitable,” he said.

Qatar had warned Israeli officials at the weekend that even the first stage of the ceasefire deal was being put in jeopardy by provocative statements from Netanyahu and by his government’s approach to talks on a second stage, Haaretz reported. Qatari diplomats sent angry messages to Israeli counterparts, reminding them that as hosts, key mediators and guarantors of the deal’s implementation, they too have a stake in its survival, an Israeli source said.

The next exchange of Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners and detainees had been scheduled for this Saturday and would have been the sixth under the six-week-long first stage of the ceasefire deal.

The skeletal appearance of three hostages released on Saturday shocked many Israelis, and increased pressure on the government to reach a deal to bring home those still trapped. Several recently returned hostages have said they fear those still inside Gaza will struggle to survive much longer.

In Tel Aviv, protesters blocked streets on Monday night, demanding the return of all hostages, as some relatives accused their government of sabotaging the deal and endangering their loved ones.

“Abu Obeida’s statement is a direct result of Netanyahu’s irresponsible behaviour,” said Einav Zangauker, the mother of Matan Zangauker, who is a hostage in Gaza and not listed for release under the first stage of the deal. “[Netanyahu’s] deliberate procrastination and unnecessary provocative statements disrupted the implementation of the agreement.”

Hamas is due to release 33 hostages during the first stage of the deal, although eight of them are dead. The list of those who will be released includes women – civilians and soldiers – children, the sick and older men. Israel has agreed to release about 1,900 Palestinian prisoners and detainees.

Sixteen Israelis have been released so far, all alive, and Hamas also released five Thai citizens last week. They had not been included in the negotiations.

The second stage of the ceasefire deal is intended to bring the return of all living hostages and the complete withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza, under a framework agreed days before Trump’s inauguration in January. Negotiations on the details of that stage were always expected to be even more challenging than agreeing the initial ceasefire.

SOURCE:https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/feb/10/trump-gaza-ceasefire-hamas-hostages
 
Israel says Gaza ceasefire will end if Hamas does not free hostages by Saturday

Israel's prime minister has warned Hamas it will end the ceasefire in Gaza and resume intense fighting if the Palestinian group "does not return our hostages by Saturday noon".

Benjamin Netanyahu said he had ordered Israeli forces to amass inside and around Gaza in response to Hamas's announcement that it was postponing freeing more hostages until further notice.

Netanyahu did not specify whether he was demanding the release of all 76 remaining hostages, or just the three due to be freed this Saturday - but a minister said he meant "everyone".

Hamas has accused Israel of violating the three-week-old ceasefire deal, including by blocking vital humanitarian aid - a claim Israel has denied.


 
Joy in Israel, restrictions in Palestine for released captives, prisoners

In Israel, the release of captives from Gaza has been celebrated, each welcomed home to scenes of joy on the streets of the country.

Palestinians, on the other hand, were told that no such thing was to be allowed for their prisoners released by Israel. In fact, any attempt at welcoming home the prisoners was explicitly banned by Israel.

In an incident highlighting the tensions, Israeli army launched a retaliatory operation just one day after the release of Ashraf Zghair, a 46-year-old Palestinian who had been imprisoned since the age of 23 and was serving six life sentences.

When neighbours and family members openly celebrated Zghair’s release on Saturday, January 25, authorities arrested his brother Amir, a father of four.

Mounir Zghair, the official spokesperson for the Jerusalem Prisoners of War Association and Ashraf’s father, condemned the arrest in an interview.

“The arrest of my son has no legal basis,” he said. “We were not officially informed about what rules we were supposedly violating.”


 
Joy in Israel, restrictions in Palestine for released captives, prisoners

In Israel, the release of captives from Gaza has been celebrated, each welcomed home to scenes of joy on the streets of the country.

Palestinians, on the other hand, were told that no such thing was to be allowed for their prisoners released by Israel. In fact, any attempt at welcoming home the prisoners was explicitly banned by Israel.

In an incident highlighting the tensions, Israeli army launched a retaliatory operation just one day after the release of Ashraf Zghair, a 46-year-old Palestinian who had been imprisoned since the age of 23 and was serving six life sentences.

When neighbours and family members openly celebrated Zghair’s release on Saturday, January 25, authorities arrested his brother Amir, a father of four.

Mounir Zghair, the official spokesperson for the Jerusalem Prisoners of War Association and Ashraf’s father, condemned the arrest in an interview.

“The arrest of my son has no legal basis,” he said. “We were not officially informed about what rules we were supposedly violating.”



What kind of demand is this from Israel? People should be able to celebrate anything they want.
 
Confusion clouds efforts to save Gaza ceasefire

The Gaza ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas has looked shaky since it came into force on 19 January but now looks the closest yet to totally falling apart.

A senior Egyptian source told the BBC that regional mediators Egypt and Qatar were "intensifying their diplomatic efforts in an attempt to salvage the ceasefire agreement".

A top-level Hamas delegation has now arrived in Cairo for talks "to contain the current crisis", a Hamas official told the BBC. He reiterated his group's "full commitment" to the terms of the deal.

On Tuesday, Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said: "If Hamas does not return our hostages by Saturday noon, the ceasefire will end and the [Israeli military] will resume intense fighting."

However, there has been mixed messaging on whether he means all 76 hostages still in Gaza - in line with the high-stakes ultimatum recommended by US President Donald Trump.

Trump was reacting to a Hamas threat to derail the agreement on Monday.

It complained of Israeli ceasefire violations, in particular relating to aid, and warned that it would delay the release of hostages on Saturday.

In the past week, the president's new radical plan for a US takeover of Gaza - without its two million Palestinian residents - has also changed the context for the ceasefire which his administration helped to broker.

On Wednesday, the White House restated Trump's plan, while admitting that Jordan's King Abdullah II had rejected the idea during talks in Washington a day earlier.

"The king would much prefer that the Palestinians stay in place," White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said. "But the president feels it would be much better and more majestic if these Palestinians could be moved to safer areas."

So, what more do we know about what has been happening behind the scenes?

When it comes to the outcome of the four-hour Israeli security cabinet meeting on Tuesday, Israeli journalists admitted puzzlement over contradictory and confusing briefings.

After the Israeli prime minister's video message demanded the release of "our" hostages, the first reports - quoting an unnamed senior Israeli official - said this referred to the original three male hostages scheduled to be freed.

It was then said that Israel expected the final nine living hostages slated for release in the six-week first phase of the ceasefire to be freed, which is supposed to see a total of 33 captives handed over.

Key ministers then began to weigh in. Miri Regev - a close ally of Netanyahu - said on X the decision was "very clear" and echoed the Trump demand. She said: "By Saturday, everyone will be released!"

The far-right Israeli finance minister Bezalel Smotrich - who has threatened to leave Netanyahu's coalition if there is not a return to fighting at the end of the six-week ceasefire deal - went further still.

On social media, he proposed telling Hamas to release all the hostages or else have "the gates of hell" opened, with no fuel, water or humanitarian aid entering Gaza.

He said there should be "only fire and brimstone" from Israeli warplanes and tanks, with the strip completely occupied and its population expelled.

"We have all the international backing for this matter," he stated.

His comments indicate how Trump's post-war vision for Gaza has strengthened the far-right in Israel.

That is said to worry the Israeli security chiefs who negotiated the current ceasefire deal and believe its collapse will endanger hostages' lives.

Israeli media report that they are pushing for a way to bring back the next three captives held by Hamas on schedule at the weekend.

Hostages' families and their supporters have been alarmed by the latest developments, as have war-weary Gazans.

The fact that the Hamas leader for Gaza, Khalil al-Hayya, is leading a delegation to follow up on implementation in Cairo, shows that the armed group is also trying to get the ceasefire agreement back on track.

Since 19 January, the deal has seen a total of 16 Israeli hostages brought home in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel. Five Thai farm workers were also released.

At the same time, Israeli troops have withdrawn to just inside the perimeter of Gaza, including along the Egypt border.

The relative calm has allowed hundreds of thousands of displaced Palestinians to return to their own neighbourhoods and brought in a surge of humanitarian aid.

However, the current impasse stems from Hamas's claim that Israel has not upheld its promises for the first phase of the truce.

It says that this required Israeli authorities to allow about 300,000 tents and 60,000 caravans into Gaza.

With so many people returning to the ruins of their homes - during cold, wet wintry weather - such shelters have been desperately needed.

Fuel and generators are also said to be in short supply - especially in the north of Gaza - where they are urgently required, especially for water pumps and bakeries.

It is hard to verify exactly what has gone into the strip.

According to figures quoted by the UN, "since the ceasefire came into effect, 644,000 people across Gaza have received shelter assistance including tents, sealing-off materials and tarpaulins".

The Israeli military body Cogat said that Israel was "committed to and is fulfilling its obligation to facilitate the entry of 600 humanitarian aid trucks into the Gaza Strip each day".

It added: "According to the data available to us, since the agreement came into effect, hundreds of thousands of tents have entered the Gaza Strip."

Despite the conflicting accounts, it can be assumed that issues over aid that Israel allows into Gaza could be resolved by mediators.

"Cairo and Doha are urging all parties to adhere to the terms of the agreement amid political and field complexities that make the task more challenging," the senior Egyptian source told the BBC.

"The continuation of the ceasefire is in everyone's interest, and we warn that the collapse of the agreement will lead to a new wave of violence with serious regional repercussions."

Even if the immediate crisis can be overcome by this weekend, then it will still leave the next stage of ceasefire talks unresolved.

The first phase of the deal is supposed to end in March, unless Hamas and Israel agree an extension. So far, negotiations on that have been put off.

The Israeli prime minister delayed discussions on the next phase amid pressure from within his governing coalition and growing evidence during the ceasefire that - in contradiction to his war goals - Hamas remains a significant political and military force in Gaza.

During hostage handovers and aid distribution, Hamas has sought to project an image of its own power.

Though it has previously signalled willingness to share power with other Palestinian factions, it still appears unlikely to disarm.

On top of this, Trump doubling down on his idea of turning Gaza into a Mediterranean travel destination - after relocating those living there to Jordan and Egypt - has caused shock and outrage across the Arab world.

Egypt says it has formulated its own comprehensive Gaza reconstruction plan - which will not involve Palestinians leaving their land.

The leaders of Egypt, Qatar, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia are expected to meet ahead of a conference in Cairo on 27 February.

The ongoing dispute about the future of Gaza adds to the confusion and sense of deep mistrust amid efforts to solve the present issues.

BBC
 

Hamas says it will continue releasing Israeli hostages under Gaza deal​


Hamas has said it is committed to implementing the Gaza ceasefire deal with Israel and will continue releasing hostages as scheduled, raising hopes that a resumption of the war can be averted.

Following talks in Cairo, the Palestinian armed group said mediators from Egypt and Qatar had confirmed they would "remove obstacles".

There was no response from Israel. But Egyptian and Qatari reports also said mediators had bridged the gaps between the two sides and both were committed to continue implementation.

On Tuesday, Israel said the ceasefire would end if Hamas did not return hostages by Saturday. Hamas had earlier said it was postponing releases over what it claimed were Israeli violations.

Hamas said these included a failure to allow in the agreed amounts of vital humanitarian aid, including tents and shelters, which Israel denied.

The group's threat to derail the deal prompted US President Donald Trump to propose Israel cancel the agreement altogether and "let hell break out" unless "all of the hostages" were returned by Saturday.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he welcomed Trump's demand and warned: "If Hamas does not return our hostages by Saturday noon [10:00 GMT], the ceasefire will end and the [Israeli military] will resume intense fighting until the final defeat of Hamas."

However, there were conflicting messages from Israeli officials about whether he was demanding the release of all 76 hostages still in Gaza - in line with Trump's ultimatum - or just the three due to be freed this weekend.

 
Then: Hamas took 251 hostages and killed about 1,200 people when it attacked in October 2023. Israel launched a military campaign in response, killing at least 48,000 Palestinians.

Now: Hamas has said it is committed to implementing the Gaza ceasefire deal with Israel and will continue releasing hostages.
What was the objective of this war again?

Perhaps to lose more land. Great.
 
Hamas releases names of hostages due for release on Saturday

Hamas has released the names of three hostages due to be freed on Saturday in exchange for Palestinian prisoners in Israel, after days of fears over the future of the ceasefire.

They are Russian-Israeli Alexander Troufanov, Argentine-Israeli Yair Horn, and US-Israeli Sagui Dekel-Chen.

Israel has said it will resume bombing if the three are not released on time. The warning came after Hamas said it was postponing the releases in response to alleged Israeli violations of the ceasefire.

President Trump said the ceasefire should be scrapped if Hamas did not release all the hostages held in Gaza by midday on Saturday.

Since the ceasefire began on 19 January, 16 Israeli and five Thai hostages have been released in exchange for 766 prisoners.

During the first six-week phase of the ceasefire, a total of 33 hostages should be freed in exchange for around 1,900 Palestinian prisoners and detainees in Israel.

The war was triggered by Hamas's attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, when gunmen killed about 1,200 people and took 251 hostages.

More than 48,230 people have been killed by the Israel offensive in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.

There are 73 hostages taken on 7 October who are still being held in Gaza. There are also three other Israeli hostages - one of whom is dead - who have been held in Gaza for a decade or more.

Alexander Troufanov, 29, Yair Horn, 46, and Sagui Dekel-Chen, 36, were all seized from Kibbutz Nir Oz on the edge of Gaza.

The ceasefire has been under strain since it began, with each side taking reciprocal action over alleged violations. Intense efforts by mediators US, Egypt and Qatar have managed to stop it from collapsing.

Israel has been especially infuriated by the staged way hostages have been released - publicly displayed on platforms alongside gunmen and in front of crowds of spectators, before being handed over to the Red Cross in chaotic scenes.

For its part, Hamas has accused Israel of preventing what the group says are the amount of tents and aid lorries required to be let into Gaza under the terms of the ceasefire. Israel denies this.

Meanwhile the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) published video of what it said was a rocket fired at Israel from Gaza on Thursday. It said the rocket failed and landed inside Gaza. A source in the Hamas-run police said the rocket was an unexploded Israeli ordinance that had fired into the air while it was being moved away, Reuters news agency reported.

West Bank-based Palestinian news agency Wafa said a 14-year-old boy, Hammoudeh Alaa Saud, was killed the same day by what it said was Israeli ordnance which blew up in Gaza's Nuseirat refugee camp.

BBC
 
What was the objective of this war again?

Perhaps to lose more land. Great.
First poke a bully on his eye. Then cry hoarse when they bully breaks your bones.

'Oh, woe is me!'.

Don't start a war neither you nor your 100 upcoming generations can dominate. And then cry like a little girl when retaliation come to bite you back after your provocation.

But then again, these are the Palestinians. You don't expect them to have brains.​
 
First poke a bully on his eye. Then cry hoarse when they bully breaks your bones.

'Oh, woe is me!'.

Don't start a war neither you nor your 100 upcoming generations can dominate. And then cry like a little girl when retaliation come to bite you back after your provocation.

But then again, these are the Palestinians. You don't expect them to have brains.​

76 years of brutal occupation.
 
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