Countdown to hostage release as Trump to host Gaza peace summit

Countdown to hostage release as Trump to host Gaza peace summit
Relatives of hostages still being held by Hamas militants stage a rally at "Hostages square" in Tel Aviv, Israel, on Saturday, after a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza went into effect. (REUTERS)
Short Url
Updated 12 October 2025
Follow

Countdown to hostage release as Trump to host Gaza peace summit

Countdown to hostage release as Trump to host Gaza peace summit
  • As part of the deal’s first phase, Hamas will free the captives, 20 of whom Israel believes are still alive, in exchange for nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners
  • “According to the signed agreement, the prisoner exchange is set to begin on Monday morning as agreed,” Hamas official Osama Hamdan 

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories: Hamas will release its remaining hostages on Monday and will play no role in Gaza’s future government, the group told AFP, as US President Donald Trump and other world leaders prepared to convene in Egypt for a major peace summit.
Trump will first pass through Israel, addressing parliament and meeting with hostage families Monday before heading to Egypt’s Sharm El-Sheikh for the summit, where a “document ending the war in the Gaza Strip” is expected to be signed, according to Cairo’s foreign ministry.
As anxious but relieved Israeli families counted down the hours until their loved ones’ return, desperate Palestinians picked through the ruins of their homes in Gaza City and aid trucks queued to deliver badly needed supplies.
The third day of the ceasefire saw some aid trucks cross into Gaza, but residents in Khan Yunis, in the south of the Strip, said some shipments were being ransacked by starving residents in chaotic scenes.
“We don’t want to live in a jungle. We demand aid be secured and respectfully distributed,” said Mohammed Zarab. “Look at how the food is lying on the ground. Look! People and cars are trampling it.”
For Mahmud Al-Muzain, another bystander, the seizure of the aid parcels showed that Gaza did not trust that the US-led negotiations would lead to a long-term peace.
“Everyone fears the war will return. People steal the aid and store it in their homes,” he told AFP. “We stockpile food out of fear and worry that the war will come back.”

“Nothing looked the same”

Any optimism that 38-year-old Fatima Salem might have felt when Israeli forces withdrew from her neighborhood in Gaza City was shattered when she returned home to find it gone.
“I returned to Sheikh Radwan with my heart trembling,” she told AFP. “My eyes kept searching for landmarks I had lost — nothing looked the same, even the neighbors’ houses were gone.
“Despite the exhaustion and fear, I felt like I was coming back to my safe place. I missed the smell of my home, even if it’s now just rubble. We will pitch a tent next to it and wait for reconstruction.”
Israelis were looking forward keenly to Monday, when Hamas is expected to release its remaining 48 hostages, living and dead.
Late Saturday, massive crowds gathered in Tel Aviv to support hostage families and cheer Trump’s peace envoy, Steve Witkoff.
Thousands packed “Hostage Square” — the scene of many protests and vigils during the two years since Hamas’s unprecedented October 7, 2023 attacks triggered the latest war — chanting “Thank you Trump!.”
“My emotions are immense, there are no words to describe them — for me, for us, for all of Israel, which wants the hostages home and waits to see them all return,” said Einav Zangauker, mother of 25-year-old hostage Matan Zangauker.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday that Israel was “prepared and ready for the immediate reception of all our hostages.”
Militants seized 251 hostages during the October 7 attack on Israel, which led to the deaths of 1,219 people, most of them civilians.

Prisoner deal

Hamas will free the captives, 20 of whom Israel believes are still alive, in exchange for nearly 2,000 prisoners held in Israeli jails.
“According to the signed agreement, the prisoner exchange is set to begin on Monday morning,” Hamas official Osama Hamdan told AFP in an interview.
After Trump’s visit to Israel on Monday, he and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi will chair a summit of leaders from more than 20 countries in the Red Sea resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh, the Egyptian presidency announced.
The meeting will aim “to end the war in the Gaza Strip, enhance efforts to achieve peace and stability in the Middle East, and usher in a new era of regional security,” it said.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has said he will attend, as has Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer, his counterparts from Italy and Spain, Giorgia Meloni and Pedro Sanchez, and French President Emmanuel Macron.
Hamas and Israel are not expected to take part.
Despite the apparent breakthrough, mediators still have the tricky task of securing a longer-term political solution that will see Hamas hand over its weapons and step aside from running Gaza.
A Hamas source close to the group’s negotiating committee told AFP on Sunday that it would not participate in post-war Gaza governance.
“Hamas will not participate at all in the transitional phase, which means it has relinquished control of the Strip, but it remains a fundamental part of the Palestinian fabric,” the source said, requesting anonymity to discuss sensitive matters.
But the official pushed back on calls for Hamas to lay down its weapons.
“Hamas agrees to a long-term truce, and for its weapons not to be used at all during this period, except in the event of an Israeli attack on Gaza,” the source said.
Under the Trump plan, as Israel conducts a phased withdrawal from Gaza’s cities, it will be replaced by a multi-national force from Egypt, Qatar, Turkiye and the United Arab Emirates, coordinated by a US-led command center in Israel.
Israel’s campaign in Gaza has killed at least 67,682 people, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory, figures the United Nations considers credible.
The data does not distinguish between civilians and combatants but indicates that more than half of the dead are women and children.


Israel army chief urges ‘systemic’ probe into Oct 7 attack

Israel army chief urges ‘systemic’ probe into Oct 7 attack
Updated 59 min 4 sec ago
Follow

Israel army chief urges ‘systemic’ probe into Oct 7 attack

Israel army chief urges ‘systemic’ probe into Oct 7 attack
  • According to polls, a large number of Israelis across the political spectrum support the establishment of an inquiry to determine who is responsible for the authorities’ failure to prevent the attack

JERUSALEM: Israel’s military chief called on Monday for a “systemic investigation” into the failures that led to Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack, as the government dragged its feet on establishing a state commission of inquiry on the matter.
Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir made the call following the publication of a report by an expert committee he himself had appointed, which, according to him, marks the conclusion of the military’s internal investigations into the October 7 attacks.
“The expert committee’s report presented today is a significant step toward achieving the comprehensive understanding that we, as a society and as an organization, require,” Zamir was quoted as saying in the report.
“However, to ensure that such failures never recur, a broader understanding is needed — one that encompasses the inter-organizational and inter-hierarchical interfaces that have not yet been examined,” he added.
“To that end, a broad and comprehensive systemic investigation is now necessary.”
According to polls, a large number of Israelis across the political spectrum support the establishment of an inquiry to determine who is responsible for the authorities’ failure to prevent the attack, the deadliest in the country’s history.
But the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has so far refused to set one up, arguing it cannot be established before the end of the war in Gaza.
Under Israeli law, the decision to create a national commission rests with the government, but its members must be appointed by the supreme court.
Netanyahu’s right-wing government, however, accuses the court of political bias and of leaning toward the left.
The effort to curb the supreme court’s powers lay at the heart of the government’s judicial reform plan — a project that deeply divided Israeli society before the war broke out.

‘Political tool’

On Monday, when pressed in parliament by the opposition to clarify his position on the creation of a national commission, Netanyahu accused the opposition of seeking to turn it into a “political tool.”
Instead, he suggested establishing an inquiry commission “based on broad national consensus,” modelled, he said, on what the United States did after the September 11 attacks — a proposal immediately rejected by the opposition.
Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,221 people on the Israeli side, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
It triggered a two-year retaliatory campaign by the Israeli military in Gaza, which has killed at least 69,179 Palestinians, according to the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza.
The expert committee’s report acknowledged that Hamas’s attack “occurred against the backdrop of high-quality and exceptional intelligence that was already in the possession of various IDF (military) units.”
“From an internal military perspective, it is evident that despite the warning, the necessary military actions were not taken to improve the IDF’s alertness or readiness, nor to adjust the deployment of forces across the different arenas,” the report added.
The committee determined that most of the factors explaining the failure spanned several years and multiple branches of the military.
It said this indicated a “long-standing systemic and organizational failure.”
In February, an internal Israeli military investigation into Hamas’s attack acknowledged the armed forces’ “complete failure” to prevent the assault, saying that for years it had underestimated the group’s capabilities.