Israel and Hamas Trade Blame After Gaza Airstrikes, Yet Keep Truce
Despite fresh airstrikes and mutual blame, Israel and Hamas both reaffirm their commitment to a fragile truce in Gaza.
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Despite fresh airstrikes and mutual blame, Israel and Hamas both reaffirm their commitment to a fragile truce in Gaza.
Hamas handed over another Israeli hostage’s remains, the 10th this week under the ceasefire deal, and pledged to return all bodies still under Gaza’s rubble.
Hamas delegation arrived in Cairo to discuss Gaza’s post-war security, from deploying PA-trained forces to a phased arms handover and reopening Rafah crossing under EU supervision.
Israel threatens to resume fighting in Gaza if Hamas doesn’t fully honor the U.S.-brokered truce deal.
Hamas returns more hostages’ remains as Gaza aid is cut in half, while Trump’s peace plan faces fresh uncertainty.
In a dramatic morning exchange, Hamas released seven Israeli hostages to the ICRC as part of a two-wave swap with Israel at 8 a.m. and 10 a.m.
Hamas representative Khaled Qaddoumi outlines a new technocratic committee to rebuild Gaza and prepare elections, raising questions on the peace deal’s longevity and future governance.
Hamas will start releasing Israeli hostages on Monday before a Gaza peace summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, paving the way for a prisoner exchange under the U.S. plan.
A new ceasefire between Israel and Hamas holds as displaced Palestinians return home and Israel prepares a 72-hour countdown for a planned hostage release.
Gaza’s new ceasefire kicks in as Hamas security forces deploy where Israeli troops pull back, aiming to restore order and start rebuilding.