Officials say food sites run by controversial US-Israeli-backed group in Gaza are being shut down

Palestinians transport men either killed or wounded while seeking food at a distribution point run by the US and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) group, on Salah al-Din road near the Nusseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on August 2, 2025. (AFP)
Palestinians transport men either killed or wounded while seeking food at a distribution point run by the US and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) group, on Salah al-Din road near the Nusseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on August 2, 2025. (AFP)
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Officials say food sites run by controversial US-Israeli-backed group in Gaza are being shut down

Officials say food sites run by controversial US-Israeli-backed group in Gaza are being shut down
  • The Gaza Health Ministry says more than 2,500 people were killed and hundreds more wounded seeking aid, either on route to GHF sites or when Israeli troops fired as crowds massed waiting for UN aid trucks entering Gaza
  • Israeli troops pulled out of part of Netzarim on Friday under the terms of the ceasefire deal and are due to withdraw from parts of Rafah later

JERUSALEM: Food distribution sites run by the controversial US and Israel backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation are being shut down under the terms of the ceasefire deal, an Egyptian official and another official in the region told The Associated Press on Sunday.
Multiple Palestinian witnesses said three of GHF’s distribution sites had been abandoned, in the southern area of Rafah and in the Netzarim area of central Gaza. Palestinians, aid workers and health officials have said the system forced aid-seekers to risk their lives to reach the sites by passing Israeli troops who opened fire to control crowds, killing hundreds. The Israeli military says it only fired warning shots.
Hoda Goda, a Palestinian woman, said the site she often went to in Rafah was vacant and Palestinians tore down structures, taking wood and metal fences. Video circulating online showed people walking away with scrap metal from the site in the Netzarim area of central Gaza. Israeli troops pulled out of part of Netzarim on Friday under the terms of the ceasefire deal and are due to withdraw from parts of Rafah later.
A third official, with knowledge of the situation, said the current plan was to rely on other aid agencies to supply Gaza. All three officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the deal’s provisions.
A GHF spokesperson said there will be “tactical changes” to its operations and “temporary closures” of some sites over the next few days during the transfer of the hostages to Israel.
“There is no change to our long-term plan,” the official said on condition of anonymity in accordance with the organization’s rules.
UN aid ramping up
The United Nations, which had opposed the GHF distribution, was gearing up to bring increased aid into the devastated territory after the ceasefire came into effect Friday. It said it has about 170,000 metric tons of food, medicine and other humanitarian aid ready to enter once Israel gives the green light.
The Israeli military body in charge of humanitarian aid in Gaza, COGAT, said the amount of aid entering the Palestinian territory was expected to increase to around 600 trucks per day, as stipulated in the agreement.
The UN humanitarian chief Fletcher told the AP that trucks of aid began going into Gaza on Sunday, including cooking gas for the first time in months, but not yet at the scale they hope for in the days and weeks ahead.
He said the UN has a plan for the next two months to restore basic medical and other services, bring in thousands of tons of food and nutritional supplies, fuel and remove rubble.
“Much of Gaza is a wasteland,” Fletcher said. “But I’m absolutely determined that we will not fail. ... We will strain every sinew to deliver for the people of Gaza.” He said the UN has the networks, the expertise and the experience to beat the famine that has taken hold in Gaza City.
US officials have not said they expect GHF to halt all its operations in Gaza, but they have also said there are no current plans to continue funding for it. These officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because the situation is still in flux, said there could still be a role for GHF, or an organization like it, if and when a ceasefire is solidified and if UN and other agencies are not able to handle the demand for assistance or prevent it from reaching Hamas.
COGAT said it was unclear on GHF’s future in Gaza. It had no immediate comment on whether its role was coming to an end.
A controversial system
GHF began operating in late May, after Israel had shut off all food to Gaza for months, pushing the population toward famine. Israel intended for the private contractor group to replace the UN food distribution system, claiming Hamas was diverting large amounts of aid. The UN denied the claims.
The UN had opposed the creation of GHF, saying the system gave Israel control over food distribution and could force the displacement of Palestinians. Throughout the war, the UN led a massive humanitarian effort with other aid groups, distributing food, medicine, fuel and other supplies at hundreds of centers around Gaza.
The four GHF distribution sites were located in Israeli military-controlled zones. Palestinians desperate for food had to walk for miles daily to reach the site past Israeli troop positions. Witnesses said Israeli troops fired heavy barrages to keep crowds from moving before the sites’ opening or from leaving designated roads. Once at the sites, thousands of aid-seekers scrambled in a mad rush to get to food boxes,.
The Gaza Health Ministry says more than 2,500 people were killed and hundreds more wounded seeking aid, either on route to GHF sites or when Israeli troops fired as crowds massed waiting for UN aid trucks entering Gaza. In either case, Israel said it fired warning shots.
GHF says there has been no violence in the aid sites themselves but acknowledged the potential dangers people face when traveling to them on foot. It said last week it had distributed the equivalent of 185 million meals in Gaza since it began operations.


Tony Blair and Palestinian vice president discuss ceasefire, Gaza reconstruction

Tony Blair and Palestinian vice president discuss ceasefire, Gaza reconstruction
Updated 15 sec ago

Tony Blair and Palestinian vice president discuss ceasefire, Gaza reconstruction

Tony Blair and Palestinian vice president discuss ceasefire, Gaza reconstruction
  • Hussein al-Sheikh discussed efforts with Blair to make US President Donald Trump’s peace plan for Gaza successful
  • Meeting precedes the release of hundreds of Palestinian prisoners and dozens of Israeli hostages on Monday

LONDON: Tony Blair, the former British prime minister, discussed plans for the day after the war ends in the Gaza Strip with Hussein al-Sheikh, the vice president of the Palestinian Authority, on Sunday.

The meeting in Ramallah, the administrative seat of the PA, came before Israel and Hamas prepared to release hundreds of Palestinian prisoners and tens of Israeli hostages on Monday as part of a deal proposed by the US.

Al-Sheikh discussed efforts with Blair to make US President Donald Trump’s peace plan for Gaza successful, aiming to stop the Israeli war and establish lasting peace in the region, the Wafa news agency reported.

“We have confirmed our readiness to work with President Trump, Mr. Blair and the partners to consolidate the ceasefire, the entry of aid, the release of hostages and prisoners, and then start with the recovery and reconstruction,” Al-Sheikh wrote on X.

He continued: “We stressed the importance of stopping the undermining of the Palestinian Authority, and especially the return of the withheld Palestinian revenues and preventing the undermining of the two-state solution in preparation for a comprehensive and lasting peace in accordance with international legitimacy.”

Blair, who served as the special envoy of the Quartet on the Middle East from 2007 to 2015, is included in Trump’s 20-point Gaza plan. He will be part of an international transitional body responsible for overseeing and supervising the funding and redevelopment of the Palestinian coastal territory.


Frankly Speaking: What comes next in Gaza?

Frankly Speaking: What comes next in Gaza?
Updated 2 min 6 sec ago

Frankly Speaking: What comes next in Gaza?

Frankly Speaking: What comes next in Gaza?
  • Omar Awadallah says the Trump peace plan could revive Palestinian statehood — something the PA is working toward “relentlessly”
  • Deputy minister for foreign affairs insists PA reform is underway, says Hamas disarmament and reconciliation with Fatah is possible

RIYADH: For two years, the world has watched Gaza burn. Tens of thousands have been killed, and yet amid the rubble, talk of peace has returned in the form of a new US-led plan that promises not only reconstruction but perhaps even a renewed path toward Palestinian statehood.

The 20-point peace plan outlined by US President Donald Trump, endorsed by several Arab and Western governments and accepted at least in part by Israel and Hamas, outlines a roadmap for ending the conflict and reviving the moribund peace process.

But with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejecting the two-state solution outright — and Israeli strikes killing dozens in Gaza even after the plan’s announcement — many question whether the deal has any real chance of success.

Appearing on the Arab News current affairs program “Frankly Speaking,” Omar Awadallah, the Palestinian Authority’s deputy minister foreign of foreign affairs, discussed the prospects for statehood, the future of Hamas, and the struggle to restore governance in Gaza.

Asked whether Palestinian statehood was still achievable under the terms of the new Gaza peace plan — despite Netanyahu’s rejection of a two-state solution — Awadallah was emphatic: “Definitely, for sure. And we’re working every day relentlessly toward this goal.”

Omar Awadallah (right), the Palestinian Authority’s deputy minister foreign of foreign affairs, speaks with Katie Jensen on Frankly Speaking. (AN photo)

Israel began bombarding Gaza after a Hamas-led attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, by Palestinian militants in which about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, were killed and 251 taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies.

Israel’s retaliatory campaign has since killed more than 67,000 people in Gaza, most of them civilians, according to Gaza health authorities, and devastated the enclave.

Awadallah gave credit to the joint efforts of Arab and international partners, particularly and France, for pushing forward a tangible roadmap through the New York Declaration.

“It came up with clear commitment, clear actions toward the implementation of the two-state solution,” he told “Frankly Speaking” host Katie Jensen.

“Because its practical aspects of resolving the question of Palestine and bringing peace and security and stability to the region means that there is a stable, viable state of Palestine.”

Awadallah said that while Netanyahu’s stance is well known, “more than 160 countries already recognize the state of Palestine.” He said that recent recognition by the UK and France signaled a global shift toward formalizing Palestinian sovereignty.

“We believe that the ball moved by the international community, by these countries to recognize the state of Palestine, supporting the Saudi-French initiative toward having the state of Palestine as a prerequisite for peace,” he said.

“It’s a tangible, irreversible step toward the stabilization, peace, and security of the region.”

By contrast, he accused Netanyahu’s government of pursuing “an initiative that is full of blood … by Netanyahu and his fascist government, (Bezalel) Smotrich and (Itamar) Ben-Gvir.”

Trump’s peace plan also makes comprehensive reform of the Palestinian Authority a condition before it can take charge of Gaza’s reconstruction or future governance.

Asked what reforms are being demanded and who decides their legitimacy, Awadallah insisted reform was already underway.

“First of all, the current Palestinian government is about reform,” he said. “At the inception of this government, they were talking about reform, financial stability, and reconstruction of Gaza in one way or another. So reform is a Palestinian priority.”

He said the PA had already implemented several measures welcomed by the international community. “We have our progress report, which is public, actually,” he said.

“We are engaging on a daily basis with so many international players … because we are looking at reform as upgrade, update, develop, renewing and consolidating the Palestinian institutions. We don’t look at it from the perspective that this government … is a corrupted PA.”

Pressed on whether the leadership could claim legitimacy after nearly two decades without elections, Awadallah rejected the premise that the Palestinian Authority was at fault.

“We are not the ones who prevented the elections in East Jerusalem,” he said. “Israel did that at the critical juncture of time when Mr. Trump recognized Jerusalem as a unified capital for Israel. We cannot, as Palestinians, accept any elections without East Jerusalem.”

He confirmed that once the war in Gaza ends, “after one year, we will be having elections … and having the democratization and the renewal of the Palestinian system.”

Asked about succession planning should PA President Mahmoud Abbas step down, Awadallah said the people would decide through the ballot box.

“The election will decide what kind of a new leadership in Palestine will be,” he said. “We have our leadership now in control, and we will continue up until we have elections to change the system toward what the people are going to choose.”

On the question of intra-Palestinian unity, Awadallah said Fatah is committed to reconciliation with Hamas — but only under clear terms.

“We wish to have a Palestinian reconciliation process where all the Palestinians are under the PLO umbrella,” he said. “Accepting its obligations, its programs, its signed agreements with the international community, and the status of the state of Palestine all over the international community.”

He said unity was essential to prevent “anyone … from undermining our Palestinian national project.”

As part of the Trump peace plan, Hamas would be required to lay down its arms in exchange for an end to Israeli military operations. Yet with no guarantees of a full Israeli withdrawal, Hamas seems reluctant to disarm entirely.

“So, if you ask me, I’m talking about the issue of decommissioning of the weapons in Gaza first,” Awadallah said. “It was clear in that declaration that if we want to talk about demilitarization, we need also to talk about the demilitarization of the Israeli settlers in the West Bank.”

Pressed further on Hamas disarmament, he reaffirmed the PA’s guiding principle: “We are one state, one government, one rule of law and one gun.

“Any gun in Palestine, including Gaza … should be only with the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people, which is the Palestinian government,” he said.

Awadallah expressed confidence that Hamas would accept this principle. “We think that Hamas will go in that direction, but it should not be taken as the way Israel wants to announce its victory over Hamas and over the Palestinian people.”

He said demilitarization must form part of a comprehensive project addressing Gaza’s future, including the withdrawal of Israeli forces and protection of civilians.

“It’s not only about demilitarization without protecting the Palestinian people in Gaza that Israel is still bombing,” he said.

On postwar security, Awadallah said the PA supports deploying an international or Arab stabilization mission to Gaza — but only under Palestinian invitation and UN mandate.

“If that will be taken as we have it in the New York Declaration, yes, we will accept,” he said. “We said that we are ready to invite an international stabilization mission by the invitation of the Palestinian government.”

Palestinian security forces, he added, were already being trained in Egypt and Jordan to take part. “They are ready to take over and help stabilize the situation in the Gaza Strip,” he said.

“The mandate of this mission should not substitute the Palestinian presence, but support and oversee it.”

With parts of the West Bank descending into chaos amid Israeli raids, settlement expansion, and settler violence, Awadallah acknowledged the growing pressure on the PA to maintain control.

“When we are talking about demilitarization, we’re talking about protecting the Palestinian society,” he said. “That’s why we’ve been asking the international community to protect the Palestinian people … to send a peacekeeping mission to Palestine.”

He accused Israel of trying to “undermine the Palestinian government” through blockades, financial pressure, and by carving up Palestinian areas. “Now Israel is isolating our cities and villages and communities with 1,200 checkpoints, barriers, iron gates,” he said.

“Israel is trying to extend its genocide from Gaza to the West Bank by forcibly displacing more than 42,000 Palestinians. And their houses have already been demolished. What they are doing in East Jerusalem is the same.”

Omar Awadallah (right), the Palestinian Authority’s deputy minister foreign of foreign affairs, speaks with Katie Jensen on Frankly Speaking. (AN photo)

He called on the UN Security Council to act, saying: “The international community should take that seriously and find a way to protect the Palestinian people.”

Rejecting claims that Palestinian security forces work with Israel to suppress opposition or combat militants, Awadallah said cooperation exists only at an administrative level.

“There is no coordination between us and the Israeli occupying forces,” he said. “There is an official coordination between the working level … because there are Palestinians that are leaving outside the country via the bridges, via the crossings. We have import and export. So there are a lot of technical issues that need to be discussed.”

He emphasized that such coordination is “not the relationship between the Israeli occupying forces” and Palestinian security, but rather a means “to ease the life of the Palestinian people in administrative issues.”

On Oct. 5 and 6, within hours of Trump’s calls for an end to the bombing, Israeli planes and tanks pounded areas in Gaza, while in Gaza City Israeli forces pressed ahead with attacks and warned residents who left against returning. More than 50 Palestinians reportedly died in those attacks.

The Trump peace plan promises much. Yet as smoke still rises over Gaza and Israel rejects the core premise of two states, the obstacles remain enormous.

For Awadallah, however, the goal is unchanged. “Bringing peace and security and stability to the region means that there is a stable, viable state of Palestine.”


 


Preparations begin to ramp up aid in Gaza

Preparations begin to ramp up aid in Gaza
Updated 12 October 2025

Preparations begin to ramp up aid in Gaza

Preparations begin to ramp up aid in Gaza
  • Egyptian Red Crescent says 400 trucks carrying medical supplies, tents, blankets, food, and fuel to Palestinian enclave

CAIRO: Preparations were underway on Sunday for a ramp-up of aid entering the war-battered Gaza Strip under a new ceasefire deal that many are hoping will signal an end to the devastating 2-year-long war between Israel and Hamas.
The Israeli defense body in charge of humanitarian aid in Gaza, COGAT, said the number of aid trucks entering the Palestinian territory was expected to increase on Sunday to around 600 per day, as stipulated in the agreement.
Egypt said it is sending 400 aid trucks into Gaza on Sunday. 
The trucks will have to be inspected by Israeli forces before being allowed in.

FASTFACT

The UN has said it has about 170,000 metric tons of food, medicine, and other humanitarian aid ready to enter once Israel gives the green light.

Associated Press footage showed dozens of trucks crossing the Egyptian side of the Rafah crossing. 
The Egyptian Red Crescent said they carried medical supplies, tents, blankets, food, and fuel. 
The trucks will head to the inspection area in the Kerem Shalom crossing for screening by Israeli troops.
Expanding Israeli offensives and restrictions on humanitarian aid have triggered a hunger crisis, including famine in parts of the territory.
The UN has said it has about 170,000 metric tons of food, medicine, and other humanitarian aid ready to enter once Israel gives the green light.
Abeer Etifa, a spokeswoman for the World Food Program, said workers were clearing roads inside Gaza on Sunday to facilitate delivery.
The fate of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, an Israeli- and US-backed contractor that replaced the UN aid operation in May as the primary food supplier in Gaza, remains unclear.
Food distribution sites operated by the group in the southernmost city of Rafah and central Gaza were dismantled following the ceasefire deal, several Palestinians said on Sunday.
Israel and the US had touted GHF as an alternative system to prevent Hamas from taking over aid. 
However, its operations were mired in chaos, and hundreds of Palestinians were killed by Israeli gunfire while heading to its four sites. 
The Israeli military has said its troops fired warning shots to control crowds.
A GHF representative said in a statement that there might be “tactical changes in GHF operations and temporary closures of some distribution sites” during the transfer of hostages to Israel, but “there is no change to our long-term plan.”
Palestinians continued to move back to areas vacated by Israeli forces on Sunday, although many were returning to homes reduced to rubble.
Satellite photos analyzed by The Associated Press showed a line of vehicles traveling north to Gaza City. 
The photos taken on Saturday showed a line of vehicles on Al Rashid Street, which runs north-south along the Gaza Strip’s coastline on the Mediterranean Sea.
Tents along the coast also could be seen near Gaza City’s marina. 
Many people have been living along the sea to avoid being targeted in the Israeli bombardment of the city.
Armed police were seen in Gaza City and southern Gaza patrolling the streets and securing aid trucks driving through areas from which the Israeli military had withdrawn, according to residents. The police force is part of the Interior Ministry.
The war has destroyed large swaths of Gaza and displaced about 90 percent of its 2 million residents. It has also triggered other conflicts in the region, sparked worldwide protests, and led to allegations of genocide that Israel denies.
While both Israelis and Palestinians in Gaza welcomed the initial halt to the fighting and plans to release the hostages and prisoners, the longer-term fate of the ceasefire remains murky. 
Amjad Al Shawa, who heads a Palestinian organisation coordinating with aid groups, estimated that 300,000 tents would be needed to house 1.5 million displaced Gazans temporarily.
"We couldn't believe the destruction we have seen," Rami Mohammad-Ali, 37, said by phone after walking 15 km with his son from Deir Al-Balah to Gaza City.
"We are joyful to return to Gaza City but at the same time we have bitter feelings about the destruction," he said, describing seeing human remains scattered along roads.
Key questions about the governance of Gaza and the post-war fate of Hamas have yet to be resolved.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said in a post on X that he had instructed the Israeli military to prepare to begin destroying the network of tunnels built by Hamas under Gaza “through the international mechanism that will be established under the leadership and supervision of the US” once the hostages are released.

 


Australian Gaza flotilla captain ‘removed from Israeli prison’

Australian Gaza flotilla captain ‘removed from Israeli prison’
Updated 12 October 2025

Australian Gaza flotilla captain ‘removed from Israeli prison’

Australian Gaza flotilla captain ‘removed from Israeli prison’
  • Madeleine Habib was arrested along with other activists when Israel intercepted her ship on Wednesday
  • The captain of the ship Conscience was held in Ketziot prison where she reportedly refused to sign a waiver

LONDON: The Australian captain of a Gaza aid flotilla ship has been moved from an Israeli prison four days after her vessel was intercepted in international waters.

Madeleine Habib was taken Sunday morning to the border with Jordan along with other activists from the flotilla, The Guardian reported.

Habib, who captained the ship Conscience, was detained on Wednesday along with more than 140 activists when their nine ships were intercepted by the Israeli military.

Known as the Freedom Flotilla Coalition and Thousand Madleens to Gaza, the vessels were attempting to break Israel’s blockade of the territory.

Habib, from Tasmania, was taken along with other activists to Israel’s high-security Ketziot prison in the Negev desert.

Reports said she had refused to sign a waiver that acknowledged she had sought to illegally break Israel’s naval blockade.

Australian consular officials who visited her were told she would stay in Israel “indefinitely” unless she signed the document.

Habib previously told Australian officials that she had experienced “degradation but no physical abuse” in custody.

An Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said it had raised the treatment of Australians detained in Israel with Israeli officials.

A spokesperson said: “For some time, we have warned against attempts to breach the naval blockade and strongly advised Australians not to do so because of the risks to their safety. We repeat our call on Israel to enable the sustained, unimpeded flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza.”

Another flotilla of more than 40 ships was intercepted by Israel as it tried to reach Gaza earlier this month.

At least 470 people were arrested, including the Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg. Most were released in the days that followed, with many claiming they were mistreated.

Habib’s ship Conscience left from Italy in early October carrying 100 volunteers and aid supplies for Gaza, where Israel’s two-year military campaign has killed nearly 68,000 people and led to famine.

A ceasefire pushed through by US President Donald Trump took effect on Friday, with the release of Israeli and Palestinian prisoners expected on Sunday.


Gaza hostage swap brings hope to Palestinian prisoners’ family

Gaza hostage swap brings hope to Palestinian prisoners’ family
Updated 39 min 18 sec ago

Gaza hostage swap brings hope to Palestinian prisoners’ family

Gaza hostage swap brings hope to Palestinian prisoners’ family
  • Israel has drawn up a list of 250 names of Palestinian prisoners expected to be released on Monday
  • The Shamasneh family in Qatanna village is ready to welcome home two sons jailed for the past 34 years

QATANNA: A stone’s throw from the wall separating Israel and the occupied West Bank, the Shamasneh family is ready to welcome home two sons jailed for the past 34 years.
Abdel Jawad and Mohammed are expected to be among the Palestinians freed from Israeli detention under the terms of the ceasefire agreement approved last week.
“Today I’m so happy the world feels too small for my joy,” declared their elated mother, 83-year-old Halima Shamasneh.
“People called us and said: ‘Their names are on the list — they’re out, they’re registered’,” she said.
Israel has drawn up a list of 250 names of Palestinian prisoners expected to be released on Monday in exchange for the remaining Israeli hostages held in Gaza.
Halima and her husband Yusef gathered their children and grandchildren in the family home in the West Bank village of Qatanna just north of Jerusalem, to celebrate the news.
On the house’s walls, the many photos of the brothers before their arrest have faded in color.
Their clothes reflect the 1980s, the decade in which the two men were arrested. Abdel Jawad is now 62 and Mohammed in his late 50s.
For the celebration, Halima wore her tabriz dress with a traditional Palestinian embroidery.
Yusef wore a suit, his head adorned with a Palestinian keffiyeh scarf secured with an agal ring.

Pushback in Israel

In the living room, two large posters printed in the 1990s by the Palestinian Authority-linked “Prisoners Club,” show the two brothers and urge their release.
“I was nine when my father was imprisoned — now I’m 44, with four children of my own. To be deprived of your father is a tragedy,” Ajwad Shamasneh, Abdel Jawad’s son, told AFP as his son played nearby.
Like all of Abdel Jawad’s 17 grandchildren, he has never seen his grandfather.
“To hug your father after 34 years... it’s indescribable,” he said, while his brothers around him fought back tears.
Ajwad, who works as a day laborer in Israel, said he had not been able to see his father for the past eight years after prison authorities stopped allowing visits.
No one at the celebration evoked the reasons for Abdel Jawad and Mohammed’s imprisonment.
Abdel Jawad’s file shared by Israel in the list of prisoners to be released reads that he was committed to a life sentence for murder, attempted murder and conspiracy.
Prisoner release deals between Palestinians and Israelis are often decried by families of murder victims who challenge the deals in the country’s supreme court.
The court rejected such a petition on Friday, ruling that “matters of war and peace, including the government’s agreements with the enemy regarding a ceasefire and its conditions, are not judicial.”

‘Real hope’

In January 2025, a six-week truce saw hundreds of Palestinians released in exchange for hostages, but not the Shamasneh brothers.
“I had hope, but it didn’t come true back then. Today, though, it’s real hope,” said Yusef of his sons.
“People have been calling me non-stop,” Yusef said with emotion, before being called by relatives congratulating him.
There is one cloud of doubt over the celebration. If his sons are freed, they could be exiled abroad, as sometimes happens to high-profile prisoners.
“I hope they come here. I really hope so. If they go abroad, I won’t be able to see them — neither I nor their mother,” Yusef said.
Israel and Hamas have agreed on the first phase of a Gaza ceasefire and hostage-prisoner exchange deal, based on a 20-point plan proposed by US President Donald Trump.
According to the plan, Israel will release 250 prisoners and around 1,700 Gazans detained since the war began following Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel.
Asked what she’ll cook her sons upon their return home, Halima answers without hesitation that it will be a typical lamb and yoghurt Palestinian dish.
“Mansaf! We’ll slaughter a sheep and cook a feast — for them and for the people who will visit,” she said.
“Tonight, we won’t sleep — we’ll stay up celebrating, welcoming everyone who comes, one after another,” she added, before breaking off into song.