Israeli intelligence shared with US claims Hamas has access to more bodies, Axios reports

Israeli intelligence shared with US claims Hamas has access to more bodies, Axios reports
Adina and Shira Perez attend the funeral of their brother, Israeli soldier Daniel Shimon Perez, who was killed during the deadly Oct. 7, 2023 attack by Hamas and whose body was abducted and later returned to Israel as part of a prisoner-hostage swap and ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas, in Jerusalem, Oct. 15, 2025. (Reuters)
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Israeli intelligence shared with US claims Hamas has access to more bodies, Axios reports

Israeli intelligence shared with US claims Hamas has access to more bodies, Axios reports
  • Israel told the US Hamas was not doing enough to recover the bodies of dead Israeli hostages

WASHINGTON: Israeli intelligence shared with the US claimed that Hamas had access to more bodies than claimed by the Palestinian militant group, Axios reported on Wednesday.
Axios reported that Israel told the US Hamas was not doing enough to recover the bodies of dead Israeli hostages, and that the Gaza deal cannot move into the next phase until that changes. It cited two Israeli officials and one US official.


Red Cross has received remains of 2 more Hamas hostages to be given to Israel

Red Cross has received remains of 2 more Hamas hostages to be given to Israel
Updated 2 sec ago

Red Cross has received remains of 2 more Hamas hostages to be given to Israel

Red Cross has received remains of 2 more Hamas hostages to be given to Israel
The Israeli military said the International Committee of the Red Cross received the remains, which were to be transferred to Israeli forces in Gaza
The Gaza Health Ministry said it received 45 more bodies of Palestinians from Israel

JERUSALEM: The Red Cross received the remains of two more Hamas hostages on Wednesday, hours after the Israeli military said that one of the bodies previously turned over was not that of a hostage. The confusion added to tensions over the fragile truce that has paused the two-year war.
The Israeli military said the International Committee of the Red Cross received the remains, which were to be transferred to Israeli forces in Gaza.
Earlier Wednesday, military officials said one of the bodies previously handed over by Hamas was not that of a hostage who was held in Gaza.
Meanwhile, the Gaza Health Ministry said it received 45 more bodies of Palestinians from Israel, another step in implementation of the ceasefire agreement. That brings to 90 the total number of bodies returned to Gaza for burial. The forensics team examining the remains said they showed signs of mistreatment.
As part of the deal, four bodies of hostages were handed over by Hamas on Tuesday, following four on Monday that were returned hours after the last 20 living hostages were released from Gaza. In all, Israel has been awaiting the return of the bodies of 28 hostages.
The Israeli military said forensic testing showed that “the fourth body handed over to Israel by Hamas does not match any of the hostages.” There was no immediate word on whose body it was.
In exchange for the release of the hostages, Israel freed around 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees Monday.
Unidentified bodies returned to Gaza show signs of abuse
Israel is expected to turn over more bodies, though officials have not said how many are in its custody or how many will be returned. It is unclear whether the remains belong to Palestinians who died in Israeli custody or were taken from Gaza by Israeli troops. Throughout the war, Israel’s military has exhumed bodies as part of its search for the remains of hostages.
As forensic teams examined the first remains returned, the Health Ministry on Wednesday released images of 32 unidentified bodies to help families recognize missing relatives.
Many appeared decomposed or burned. Some were missing limbs or teeth, while others were coated in sand and dust. Health officials have said Israeli restrictions on allowing DNA testing equipment into Gaza have often forced morgues to rely on physical features and clothing for identification.
The forensics team that received the bodies said some arrived still shackled or bearing signs of physical abuse.
Sameh Hamad, a member of a commission tasked with receiving the bodies at Khan Younis’ Nasser Hospital, said some arrived with their hands and legs cuffed.
“There are signs of torture and executions,” he told The Associated Press.
The bodies, he said, belonged to men ages 25 to 70. Most had bands on their necks, including one that had a rope around the neck.
Most of the bodies wore civilian clothing, but some were in uniforms, suggesting they were militants.
Hamad said the Red Cross provided names for only three of the dead, leaving many families uncertain of their relatives’ fate. The fighting has killed nearly 68,000 Palestinians, according to the Health Ministry, which is part of the Hamas-run government in Gaza. The ministry maintains detailed casualty records that are seen as generally reliable by UN agencies and independent experts.
Thousands more people are missing, according to the Red Cross and Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics.
Rasmiya Qudeih, 52, waited outside Nasser Hospital, hoping her son would be among the 45 bodies transferred from Israel on Wednesday.
He vanished on Oct. 7, 2023, the day of the Hamas-led attack that triggered the war. She was told he was killed by an Israeli strike.
“God willing, he will be with the bodies,” she said.
Netanyahu says Israel won’t compromise
The ceasefire plan introduced by US President Donald Trump had called for all hostages — living and dead — to be handed over by a deadline that expired Monday. But under the deal, if that didn’t happen, Hamas was to share information about deceased hostages and try to hand them over as soon as possible.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Wednesday that Israel “will not compromise” and demanded that Hamas fulfill the requirements laid out in the ceasefire deal about the return of hostages’ bodies.
Trump, in an interview with CNN, warned that Israel could resume the war if he feels Hamas isn’t upholding its end of the agreement.
“Israel will return to those streets as soon as I say the word,” Trump said.
Hamas’ armed wing said in a statement Wednesday that the group honored the ceasefire’s terms and handed over the remains of the hostages it had access to.
Hamas and the Red Cross have said that recovering the remains of dead hostages was a challenge because of Gaza’s vast destruction, and Hamas has told mediators that some are in areas controlled by Israeli troops.
Two hostages whose bodies were released from Gaza were being buried Wednesday.

Netanyahu back in court for hearing in corruption trial

Netanyahu back in court for hearing in corruption trial
Updated 26 min 3 sec ago

Netanyahu back in court for hearing in corruption trial

Netanyahu back in court for hearing in corruption trial
  • PM, wife accepted $260,000 worth of gifts from billionaires in exchange for political favors
  • He also faces charges of war crimes at the ICC over Israel’s attacks against Gaza civilians

TEL AVIV: Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was back in a Tel Aviv court on Wednesday for the latest hearing in his long-running corruption trial, which opened in May 2020.
The prime minister kept a smiling face as he and his entourage of several ministers from his conservative Likud party were heckled by protesters en route to the tribunal.
It comes after US President Donald Trump suggested on Monday that the Israeli premier should be pardoned in his three separate corruption cases.
His latest appearance at the Tel Aviv court also follows the return of the hostages taken by Hamas as part of Trump’s US-brokered plan to end the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.
In one case, Netanyahu and his wife, Sara, are accused of accepting more than $260,000 worth of luxury goods, including champagne, cigars and jewelry, from billionaires in exchange for political favors.
In two other instances, Netanyahu is also charged with attempting to negotiate better press coverage from two Israeli media outlets. He has denied any wrongdoing, claiming to be the victim of a political plot.
During his current term, which started in late 2022, Netanyahu has proposed far-reaching judicial reforms that critics say sought to weaken the courts.
Those prompted massive protests that only abated after the onset of the Gaza war, sparked by Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel.
In an address on Monday to the Israeli parliament, the Knesset, Trump told the chamber that Netanyahu should receive a pardon in the graft cases.
“Cigars and champagne, who the hell cares about that?” Trump joked, before asking his Israeli counterpart Isaac Herzog: “Why don’t you give him a pardon?“
The Israeli premier is also subject to an arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court (ICC) on suspicion of ordering war crimes in his government’s assault on Hamas militants in Gaza.
Netanyahu holds the record for the most years spent at the head of Israel’s government, having served 18 years in several stints as premier since 1996.
 


Maronite leader says Pope Leo will carry message of ‘peace’ to Lebanon

Maronite leader says Pope Leo will carry message of ‘peace’ to Lebanon
Updated 15 October 2025

Maronite leader says Pope Leo will carry message of ‘peace’ to Lebanon

Maronite leader says Pope Leo will carry message of ‘peace’ to Lebanon
  • Rai said that the US-born pope “will bring peace and hope to Lebanon during his visit“
  • “He comes at a time when the war in Gaza has ceased... and we are living in Lebanon under a ceasefire, despite violations occurring“

BKERKE, Lebanon: Pope Leo XIV will carry a message of peace to Lebanon and the Christians of the Middle East when he visits next month, Maronite Patriarch Bechara Al-Rai told AFP on Wednesday.
The Vatican said last week that Pope Leo will travel to Turkiye and Lebanon in a six-day trip beginning late November, his first since becoming head of the Catholic Church.
Rai, who heads the Maronite Church, religiously diverse Lebanon’s most influential Christian sect, hailed the pontiff’s visit at a time of truce in the conflict between Israel and Lebanon, as well as the war in Gaza.
In an interview with AFP from the Maronite Patriarchate headquarters in Bkerke, north of Beirut, Rai said that the US-born pope “will bring peace and hope to Lebanon during his visit.”
“He comes at a time when the war in Gaza has ceased... and we are living in Lebanon under a ceasefire, despite violations occurring,” he added.
After more than a year of hostilities between Israel and the Iran-backed Hezbollah Islamist group, a ceasefire agreement was signed in November.
The truce remains in effect despite Israel carrying out near-daily strikes on Lebanon, claiming to target Hezbollah members and infrastructure.
A few days ago, a ceasefire also came into effect in the Gaza Strip after a devastating two-year war between the Palestinian militant group Hamas and Israel.
“I believe that during this visit, he will focus on peace, and he will ask Lebanon to continue on its path toward peace,” said Rai, whose Church is in full communion with Rome.

- ‘Preserve Lebanon’ -

The latest conflict killed more than 4,000 people in Lebanon and devastated Beirut’s southern suburbs and the country’s south and east, areas where Hezbollah holds sway.
Last week, Pope Leo said that his trip to Lebanon from November 30 to December 2 presents “the opportunity to announce once again the message of peace... in a country that has also suffered so much.”
Rai, who has long called for Lebanon to be kept out of regional conflicts, stated that he believes the visit “will remind all Lebanese, Christians and Muslims alike, of their responsibility to preserve Lebanon.”
“The value of Lebanon lies in the fact that each of its groups maintains its role and identity. Coexistence means that Christians have their identity and Muslims have theirs. The pope does not come to say, ‘abandon your identity’, but rather, ‘Live your identity’,” he added.
“This is how the Vatican understands Lebanon, with its cultural and religious pluralism.”
Pope Leo XIV is the third pontiff to visit Lebanon, after John Paul II in 1997 and Benedict XVI in 2012, who received a tremendous popular reception.
His trip comes in the wake of a series of crises that have ravaged Lebanon, from a crushing economic crisis that began in 2019, to the horrific port explosion the following summer, to the recent war.
“The visit is a great relief for Christians in Lebanon,” Rai said, as well as for “Christians in Syria, Iraq, Iran, and the Holy Land,” who have gone through wars, conflicts, and waves of displacement.


Egypt sends 400 shipments of aid to Gaza as ceasefire holds

Egypt sends 400 shipments of aid to Gaza as ceasefire holds
Updated 15 October 2025

Egypt sends 400 shipments of aid to Gaza as ceasefire holds

Egypt sends 400 shipments of aid to Gaza as ceasefire holds
  • Convoy carried about 5,700 tonnes of food and flour, 1,400 tonnes of medical supplies, and 2,500 tonnes of petroleum products
  • Zad El-Ezza: From Egypt to Gaza scheme is part of Cairo’s efforts to provide relief to Palestinians

LONDON: The Egyptian Red Crescent sent more than 400 shipments containing about 9,700 tonnes of humanitarian and petroleum aid to Gaza on Wednesday.

The convoy carried about 5,700 tonnes of food and flour, 1,400 tonnes of medical supplies, and 2,500 tonnes of petroleum products to support Palestinians in the enclave.

The initiative, “Zad El-Ezza: From Egypt to Gaza,” is now in its 50th day and is part of Cairo’s efforts to provide relief to Palestinians. It has delivered thousands of tonnes of aid, including flour, baby formula, medical supplies, therapeutic drugs, personal care items and fuel.

Egypt has collaborated with several countries, including Kuwait and the UAE, to deliver aid to Gaza. Aid shipments transit from the Egyptian side of the Rafah crossing to Karm Abu Salem, located at the southeasternmost point of Gaza.

Last week, Egypt, along with Qatar, Turkiye and the US, signed on as guarantors of the Gaza ceasefire declaration in the Sinai city of Sharm El-Sheikh. The deal led to Israel and Hamas exchanging hostages and prisoners.


Israeli military to seize Palestinian lands near Qalqilia for settlement expansion

Israeli military to seize Palestinian lands near Qalqilia for settlement expansion
Updated 15 October 2025

Israeli military to seize Palestinian lands near Qalqilia for settlement expansion

Israeli military to seize Palestinian lands near Qalqilia for settlement expansion
  • Both Alfei Menashe and Tzufim settlements were built on land that belongs to the towns of Azzun, Jayyous and Kafr Thulth
  • Israel will build a settler road, security wall on the confiscated plots

LONDON: Israeli authorities issued two military orders on Wednesday to seize about 25 dunums (2.5 hectares) of Palestinian land for settlement expansion and development near the Qalqilia governorate in the occupied West Bank.

Muneef Nazzal, who monitors settlement activity in Qalqilia, reported to Wafa that the Israeli army has issued an order to confiscate three dunums and 712 sq. meters of land in the town of Azzun, located east of Qalqilia. The seized plot will be used to construct a road that will connect the settlement of Alfei Menashe with the Qalqilia–Nablus road, also known as Road 55.

Nazzal said that the second Israeli order approved the seizure of about 21 dunums and 307 sq. meters of land in Azzun and Jayyous for a “security wall” around the settlement of Tzufim.

Both Alfei Menashe and Tzufim were built on land that belongs to residents from the towns of Azzun, Jayyous, and Kafr Thulth.

Israeli settlements continue to expand in the area, taking over agricultural grounds, which directly threatens the livelihoods of Palestinian families who depend on farming as their primary source of income, according to Wafa.

Israeli settlements in territories occupied in 1967 are considered illegal under international law and hinder the establishment of a viable Palestinian state.

Last week, French President Emmanuel Macron warned that the expansion of Israeli settlements in the West Bank “fuels tensions, violence and instability” in the region, while threatening US efforts that led to a Gaza ceasefire and posing an “existential threat” to the establishment of a Palestinian state.