LIVE UPDATES
This is CNBC’s live blog tracking developments on the Israel-Hamas war.
Israel’s national security adviser Tzachi Hanegbi said in a statement late Wednesday that the hostage release has been delayed until at least Friday.
“The contacts on the release of our hostages are advancing and continuing constantly,” Hanegbi said in a statement translated by NBC News. “The start of the release will take place according to the original agreement between the sides, and not before Friday.”
Israel and Hamas agreed to a humanitarian pause in Gaza that will last for at least four days.
The deal includes the release of 50 civilian women and children hostages who are currently held in the Palestinian enclave, in exchange for the release of a number of Palestinian women and children detained in Israeli prisons.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken hailed the deal as “significant progress.”
“Today’s outcome is the result of tireless diplomacy and relentless effort across the United States government,” Blinken said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Israel’s national security adviser says hostage release will not take place before Friday
Israeli National Security Council Director Tzachi Hanegbi said in a statement on Wednesday that the release of hostages from Gaza will not take place before Friday.
“The contacts on the release of our hostages are advancing and continuing constantly,” the statement said according to a translation by NBC News.
“The start of the release will take place according to the original agreement between the sides, and not before Friday,” Hanegbi said in the statement.
Hanegbi did not provide an explanation for the delay.
Israel and Hamas agreed to exchange 50 of Hamas’ hostages for a number of Israel’s Palestinian prisoners. Officials noted that no releases could begin until at least 24 hours after the deal had been approved by the Israeli government, which happened just after 3 a.m. on Wednesday in Jerusalem. The 24-hour window is to allow for families of the victims of the prisoners to appeal their release to the Israeli Supreme Court.
To ensure the safe passage of the hostages, Israel and Hamas agreed to a four-day pause in fighting. A senior Hamas official told Al Jazeera on Wednesday that temporary cease-fire would begin Thursday morning, although the timing wasn’t immediately clear.
— Rebecca Picciotto
Gaza ‘most dangerous place in the world to be a child,’ UNICEF says
Editor’s note: The following post contains photographs with graphic content.
The Gaza Strip is the “most dangerous place in the world to be a child,” the head of the United Nations children’s agency UNICEF said on Wednesday.
UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell told the U.N. Security Council that more than 5,300 Palestinian children had reportedly been killed since Oct. 7 – when Palestinian militants of Hamas attacked Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking hostages, most of them civilians.
Israel has focused its retaliation against Hamas in Gaza, a territory of 2.3 million people.
“The true cost of this latest war in Palestine and Israel will be measured in children’s lives – those lost to the violence and those forever changed by it. Without an end to the fighting and full humanitarian access, the cost will continue to grow exponentially,” Russell, who last week visited Gaza, said at a council briefing on women and children there.
Israel agreed on Wednesday to a ceasefire with Hamas for four days to let in humanitarian aid and free at least 50 hostages held by militants in exchange for at least 150 Palestinians jailed in Israel.
“Women in Gaza have told us that they pray for peace, but that if peace does not come, they pray for a quick death, in their sleep, with their children in their arms. It should shame us all that any mother, anywhere, has such a prayer,” U.N. Women Executive Director Sima Bahous told the 15-member council.
The Gaza Strip is the “most dangerous place in the world to be a child,” the head of the United Nations children’s agency UNICEF said on Wednesday.
UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell told the U.N. Security Council that more than 5,300 Palestinian children had reportedly been killed since Oct. 7 – when Palestinian militants of Hamas attacked Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking hostages, most of them civilians.
W.H.O. documents 178 attacks on Gaza healthcare facilities
Editor’s note: The following post contains a photograph with graphic content.
The World Health Organization has documented 178 attacks on health-care facilities that killed 553 people, including 22 healthcare workers, since the war started on Oct. 7, the agency’s regional director said Wednesday.
Ahmed Al-Mandhari said in an online briefing that about 800 people, including 48 health-care workers, were injured in the attacks, which damaged 24 hospitals and 32 ambulances.
The war has forced the shutdown of 27 out of 36 hospitals and 47 out of 72 primary health-care clinics across Gaza, he said. The facilities stopping providing services mainly because of a lack of fuel and attacks, he said.
“Hospitals must be allowed to replenish the resources they need to continue functioning,” he said. “We cannot keep providing drops of aid in an ocean of needs.”
Mass grave for over 100 Palestinians dug in southern Gaza
More than 100 bodies were buried Wednesday in a mass grave in Khan Younis, the corpses wrapped in blue plastic sheets fastened with cable ties.
Medical workers placed dozens of bodies brought from various areas in northern Gaza, including Shifa Hospital, into a huge trench that was dug using a bulldozer.
Workers wearing surgical masks and gloves carried the bodies to the grave and performed funeral prayers.
— Associated Press
Israel’s PM and Defense Minister vow to ‘obliterate Hamas’
Prime Minister Netanyahu and Defense Minister Gallant vowed to bring all the hostages home and eradicate Hamas during a press briefing late today.
“Citizens of Israel, I want to be clear: the war continues,” Netanyahu said. “The war continues. We will continue until we meet all our objectives.”
Netanyahu said in the presser that the country has historically fought to bring hostages home in every case, even mentioning the 1976 Entebbe raid during which his own brother died while serving in the IDF. He offered condolences to all hostage families and said that he believes the hostage deal was the right decision to set the tone for future releases.
Gallant said he was torn over the idea of leaving some people behind, but echoed Netanyahu’s sentiments about the it being the right decision and that Israel’s commitment to bringing people home remains strong.
“I can tell you that I, the IDF, the ISA, and the entire security establishment are very much determined to follow through with this war until we achieve all the goals: to obliterate Hamas as a government and as a military organization and to free all the hostages,” Gallant said.
— NBC News
White House sends more aid to Gaza ahead of humanitarian pause
The White House announced on Wednesday that more humanitarian aid from the U.S. is in Egypt, waiting to cross into Gaza following Israel’s approval of a hostage release deal with Hamas and a humanitarian pause in Gaza.
“Access to humanitarian aid is critical, and our Administration welcomes yesterday’s deal that’ll allow for additional humanitarian aid to alleviate the suffering of innocent Palestinian families in Gaza,” the White House wrote in a Wednesday post on X, formerly Twitter.
Though the four-day cease-fire that is a part of the Israel-Hamas deal has not officially begun, U.S. officials have said the pause in fighting would make it easier to deliver aid to civilians in Gaza.
The USAID agency, which facilitates the delivery of humanitarian assistance, said that this is the fifth flight of aid sent by the U.S. government. The organization noted that the U.S. has provided 197 metric tons of food to date.
— Rebecca Picciotto
GOP Speaker Mike Johnson supports hostage deal, makes no mention of aid package
Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson said in a Wednesday statement that he is encouraged by the news of an Israel-Hamas hostage release deal, though he did not address the looming question of when or if the U.S. will send additional financial aid to Israel.
“We are committed to standing alongside Israel and the right of our cherished ally to defend their nation and work to eradicate the Iranian backed Hamas terror threats, end the conflict, and reunite these victims with their families,” Johnson said in a post on X, formerly Twitter.
His statement comes as President Joe Biden’s $105 billion aid package proposal to fund Ukraine and Israel in their respective wars remains at a stalemate in Congress. That aid was not included in Johnson’s most recent spending bill, which was pushed through Congress and signed by Biden to avoid a government shutdown.
— Rebecca Picciotto
Most of the Palestinian prisoners up for release are teenagers
A majority of the 300 Palestinian prisoners held in Israel who are up for release as part of the hostage release deal are under the age of 20.
Many of the prisoners range between the ages of 14 and 19, according to a list of prisoners slated to be freed that was published by the Israeli government on Wednesday. Just over a dozen of the prisoners are in their twenties and roughly a dozen others are older than that, according to the list.
Hamas said in a statement that in exchange for 50 hostages, Israel agreed to release 150 of its Palestinian prisoners. A senior Israeli official told NBC on Tuesday before the Israeli cabinet had voted on the deal that the prisoners who might be freed have not directly killed Israelis but played supporting roles such as driving vehicles and transporting weapons.
Israeli cabinet members approved the deal early Wednesday morning in Jerusalem, but it will not take effect and is therefore not final until at least Thursday morning.
That 24-hour window is to allow for the families of the victims of the convicted prisoners to get the chance to appeal their release in Israeli Supreme Court, per an Israeli policy.
— Rebecca Picciotto
U.S. Democrats react to hostage deal with Israeli aid package still in limbo
Several Democratic U.S. congressmembers expressed their support for the Israel-Hamas hostage release deal as pressure heats up stateside to pass an aid package to jointly fund Ukraine and Israel in their respective wars.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said in a Tuesday statement that he was glad Hamas had agreed to release at least 50 of its approximately 240 hostages, though he emphasized it is imperative to free all of them. He also acknowledged President Joe Biden‘s aid package that is struggling to pass through Congress.
“The Senate will continue working to pass additional humanitarian assistance for innocent Palestinians, and make sure that Israel has the aid it needs to defend itself to ensure Hamas can never again pose such a threat to Israel,” Schumer said.
Biden proposed the $105 billion package in October to finance security efforts for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan and the U.S. southern border. Biden’s request had been at a standstill in Congress as the House of Representatives struggled to elect a new speaker and scrambled to put together a spending bill to avert a government shutdown. Some Republican representatives have been staunchly against the aid package and want to split it up to fund the wars separately.
Schumer has been particularly committed to getting the aid passed and said on the Senate floor earlier this week that “after Thanksgiving,” he plans to ramp up congressional negotiations to get the package approved before the end of the year.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., also doubled down on his support for Biden’s package after the hostage deal was approved. In his statement, he acknowledged Biden’s diplomatic work in facilitating the Israel-Hamas agreement.
He also called on Congress to pass the aid: “Congress must act in a bipartisan fashion on the supplemental national security and humanitarian funding request made by the Biden administration as soon as possible.”
— Rebecca Picciotto
Fuel trucks prepare to cross into Gaza on news of a humanitarian pause
A convoy of fuel trucks with the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) arrive at the Egyptian side of the Rafah border crossing with the Gaza Strip on Wednesday.
— Getty Images
Aid prepared near Egypt-Gaza border after news of temporary ceasefire
Aid organized by the Egyptian Red Crescent is prepared on Wednesday in Arish, Egypt.
Early this morning, Israel and Hamas announced a four-day truce that would pause fighting in the war that’s raged since Oct. 7.
Media reports indicate that, as part of the deal, 200 aid trucks, four fuel tankers, and four trucks carrying gas, will be able to enter Gaza via Egypt’s Rafah crossing on each of the four days.
— Getty Images
U.S. against displacement of Gazans to another country, special envoy says
The U.S. opposes the displacement of Palestinians from Gaza to another country, its special envoy for humanitarian affairs in the Middle East, told Lebanese broadcaster al-Jadeed Wednesday, according to Reuters.
David Satterfield said Gazans displaced to the strip’s south by Israel’s ongoing military operation “must be allowed to return to homes in the north as soon as possible.”
— Karen Gilchrist
Further Israel-Hamas prisoner swap reportedly expected this month
A second Israel-Hamas prisoner swap could be reached this month, Reuters reported a Palestinian official as saying on Thursday, a day after a deal was agreed on the release of 50 hostages held in the Gaza Strip.
The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said that the agreement could see the number freed double to around 100 — approximately two fifths of the around 240 people seized by Hamas during its Oct. 7 attacks.
A total of 300 Palestinian prisoners would be free under the agreement, the source added.
“The second batch will follow the first batch. They would need four or five days to organize it will involve 50 Israeli [hostages] in return for 150 Palestinian [prisoners],” the source said, noting that the prisoners in both deals would include elderly, women and children.
Israel and Hamas on Wednesday agreed to the prisoner exchange and a four-day humanitarian pause in the Gaza Strip following weeks of negotiations brokered by the U.S., Qatar and Egypt. On both sides, the prisoners will be women and children.
Israeli officials did not immediately confirm this. However, the government said in a statement that they would extend the pause by a day for every additional 10 hostages handed over by Hamas.
— Karen Gilchrist
Jordan’s king to visit Cairo for talks on Gaza Strip
Jordan’s King Abdullah II has departed for a visit to meet Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi in Cairo and discuss the “deteriorating situation” in the Gaza Strip, the Jordanian royal house said on social media.
The two leaders will also exchange views on how to end the Israeli offensive in the enclave.
Earlier in the day, Jordan’s foreign ministry welcomed the announcement of a four-day humanitarian pause in fighting in the Gaza Strip, as part of a broader deal between Israel and Hamas involving the release of captives. Egypt was one of meditators of the agreement.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Six Palestinians killed in Israeli drone attack in West Bank, health authorities say
EDITORS NOTE-Graphic Content: This post contains an image depicting death in the West Bank
Six Palestinian men were killed in an Israeli drone attack in the occupied West Bank, official Palestinian news agency Wafa and local health authorities said.
Israeli drones “bombed a house and gatherings of civilians in the refugee camp of Tulkarm,” which is in the north of the territory, the news agency wrote.
Wafa reported that another Palestinian man was killed by Israeli forces near the West Bank city of Qalqilia, bringing the total killed in the territory on Wednesday to seven.
CNBC could not independently verify the information.
The deaths bring the tally of Palestinian people killed in the West Bank by Israeli forces or settlers since Oct. 7 to 219, according to the Palestinian Authority Health Ministry.
— Natasha Turak
Arab leaders welcome temporary truce, say it should be extended
The foreign ministers of Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt said they welcomed the temporary truce agreed between Israel and Hamas but called for it to be the first step toward a full end to the fighting.
They said that the agreement between Israel and Hamas, which was brokered by the U.S., Qatar and Egypt, should also go further to ultimately pave the way for talks for a two-state solution, Reuters reported.
The temporary deal will see 50 of the hostages held by Hamas — women and children — released in exchange for 150 Palestinian women and children being held in Israeli prisons. It will also halt fighting for four days and allow increased humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip.
The foreign ministers are convening what they have called a “contact group” of predominantly Muslim leaders that aim to lobby Israel’s allies to put an end to the war in Gaza.
— Natasha Turak
Four-day humanitarian pause to begin on Thursday morning, Hamas official says
A four-day humanitarian pause in fighting, agreed under the recently brokered hostage release deal, will begin Thursday at 10 a.m. local time, senior Hamas official Mousa Abu Marzouk told Al Jazeera.
He added that most of the hostages released will be foreign nationals.
CNBC could not independently verify the report.
Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen had earlier said that his country expects to receive the first captives under the deal terms on Thursday. He did not specify the time.
Following mediation by Egypt, Qatar and the U.S., Israel and Hamas struck an agreement involving a limited four-day humanitarian truce, along with the release of 50 hostages abducted by Hamas on Oct. 7 in exchange for the same number of Palestinian prisoners.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Palestinian leader welcomes hostage release deal
President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority has welcomed a humanitarian pause and hostage release agreement brokered between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas, thanking mediators Qatar and Egypt, an official said.
“We renew the call for a comprehensive cessation of the Israeli aggression against the Palestinian people, the introduction of humanitarian aid, and the implementation of a political solution based on international legitimacy, leading to an end to the occupation and the Palestinian people gaining their freedom, independence, and sovereignty,” Palestinian Authority aide Hussein al-Sheikh said on social media, in a statement attributed to the leadership and Abbas.
Abbas’ administration, based in Ramallah in the West Bank, has received the visits and support of several top international officials since the start of the conflict, amid efforts to build longer-standing peace.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Israeli military says it uncovered 400 tunnel shafts in Gaza Strip
The Israel Defense Forces said they uncovered and destroyed approximately 400 tunnel shafts in the Gaza Strip, according to a Telegram update.
“Hamas have embedded its network of terrorist tunnels below population centers across the Gaza Strip,” the IDF said. “Many of the shafts leading to its tunnel network are located within civilian hospitals, schools and homes.”
CNBC could not independently confirm the report.
Israel has repeatedly said that a spiderweb of Hamas tunnels spans the subterranean territory of the Gaza Strip and invoked the presence of such infrastructure and other command posts as justification for attacking civilian facilities. The country has come under significant international pressure to prove the existence of such tunnels since the Israeli military stormed the Al-Shifa hospital.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Israel expects to recover first hostages on Thursday, foreign minister says
Israel expects to recover the first hostages freed by Palestinian militant group Hamas on Thursday, Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen said on Army Radio, according to Reuters.
The transfer will take place as part of a broader deal setting out hostage releases and a humanitarian pause. The agreement was brokered on Tuesday.
Under the deal terms, 50 civilian hostages abducted into the Gaza Strip by Hamas during the terror attacks of Oct. 7 will be released in exchange for Palestinian prisoners, according to the government of Qatar, which was involved in the negotiations.
More people could be recovered in the later stages of the agreement, the ministry added.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Erdogan says Ankara ‘cannot and will not tolerate’ Israeli policies in Gaza Strip
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has once more criticized Israel, saying Ankara “cannot and will not tolerate” its policies of “depopulating” the Gaza Strip.
Erdogan, who previously called Israel as a “terror state,” was giving a speech at the Turkey-Algeria business forum, according to Google-translated comments carried by Turkish state news outlet Anadolu.
“We cannot and will not tolerate the policy of the State of Israel … to render Gaza uninhabited,” he said, pledging that Israel “will not commit similar brutality again.”
Israel has repeatedly stated the aim of its campaign in the Gaza Strip is to demilitarize Hamas, rather than harm civilians.
“I would like to express once again the importance of us, as the Islamic world, supporting the Palestinian cause,” Erdogan said. Turkey has contributed convoys of humanitarian aid in support of the Gaza Strip.
— Ruxandra Iordache
EU’s Borrell says de-escalating Israel-Hamas conflict is a “race against the clock”
In an extensive blog post, the EU’s top diplomat Josep Borrell laid out the findings of his trips to Israel, the Palestinian territories, Bahrain, Qatar and Jordan, stressing there is a “race against the clock is obviously on to bring about a de-escalation of the military operations in Gaza and of the violence in the West Bank.”
Borrell said he walked away with “a sense of absolute urgency, particularly due to the dramatic situation in Gaza,” as well as entertained a “very moving moment” of meeting the families of Israeli hostages who are concerned about the health and welfare of captives.
“For many of them the memory of the Holocaust resurfaced again: ‘they did it to us just because we are Jews,'” Borrell said.
Simultaneously condemning the “crimes” committed by Hamas on Oct. 7, the envoy emphasized that “one horror cannot justify another” and urged further humanitarian aid for the greatly embattled Gaza Strip, adding, “It is of course necessary to provide food, water and medicines but it is even more important to reduce the risk of being killed the next morning.”
He also drew attention to the “dramatic increase in violence against Palestinians by settlers” in the occupied West Bank, characterized by armed incursions, village evictions and the steep cuts in the Palestinian Authority’s budget decided by the Israeli government.
Altogether, this is “creating tremendous tension, which probably cannot be contained for long,” but the desire to avoid an escalation of the Israel-Hamas war is “also strong and widely shared” by the leaders of the Gulf region, Borrell said.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Jordanian government welcomes hostage deal
Jordan has welcomed the hostage release and humanitarian pause agreement struck by Israel and Hamas and brokered by Qatar, Egypt and the U.S.
In a Google-translated statement, the country’s foreign ministry praised the deal and expressed hopes of it stopping the escalation of the Israel-Hamas conflict and the targeting and displacement of Palestinian people. The statement also stressed the importance of the deal contributing to allowing humanitarian access to aid supplies.
Jordan has previously doled out bruising criticism of Israel, alleging the country was committing “war crimes” in the Gaza Strip. Israel maintains its war campaign in the enclave does not target civilians.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Saudi Arabia’s Mohammed bin Salman calls for no more weapons to Israel
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman urged countries to cease weapon provisions for Israel in an extraordinary session of the BRICS economic coalition of emerging markets, which includes heavyweights Russia and China.
The meeting of the alliance, to which Saudi Arabia was invited earlier this year, followed an extraordinary Nov. 11 Arab and Islamic summit in Riyadh to discuss the Israel-Hamas conflict.
Condemning the “brutal crimes against and the destruction of infrastructure, including health facilities and places of worship, in Gaza,” Mohammed bin Salman said, according to the state-run Saudi Press Agency, that the summit denounced “Israeli aggression on the Gaza Strip,” called for humanitarian food, fuel and medicine deliveries to the enclave and rejected the “forcible displacement of the Palestinian people.”
It also urged “all countries to stop exporting weapons and ammunition to Israel, and embark on an effort, in the name of all members of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) and Arab League, to reach an international stance regarding the aggression on Gaza, and make a pressure for the launch of a serious political process to realize a permanent, comprehensive peace, based on international legitimacy.”
This is so far one of the strongest stances taken by Saudi Arabia against Israel in the latest conflict, after Riyadh broadly denounced harm against civilians caught in the crossfire in the Gaza Strip. In late October, a speech by the kingdom’s prominent Prince Turki al-Faisal — which condemned both Hamas and Israeli violence in the war — was widely seen as reflective of Riyadh’s position.
This comes amid a recent U.S. push to normalize relations between Saudi Arabia and Israel, its closest allies in the Middle East.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Ambulances arrive at Al-Shifa hospital for more evacuations
The Palestine Red Crescent Society said 14 ambulances are present at the Al-Shifa hospital in the Gaza Strip to facilitate more evacuations.
“14 PRCS ambulances arrived Al-Shifa Hospital to evacuate the wounded and patients,” it said on social media.
The PRCS, in collaboration with the World Health Organization and a U.N. humanitarian branch, on Sunday carried out the evacuation of 31 premature babies from Al-Shifa, after Israeli military raided the hospital premises. The infants had to be prioritized, as the life support equipment that sustained them had collapsed because of fuel shortages.
The WHO said earlier this week that plans were being made to evacuate more patients.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Lebanese prime minister criticizes Israel for airstrike that killed Lebanese journalists
Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati strongly condemned an attack that killed two journalists and several civilians, which he attributed to Israel.
“This attack proves once again that there are no limits to Israeli crime, and that its goal is to silence the media that exposes its crimes and attacks,” he said, according to a Google-translated statement.
On Tuesday, Lebanese state media outlet Al Mayadeen said that two of its journalists — correspondent Farah Omar and cameraman Rabih Al-Me’mari — were killed in an Israeli airstrike.
Israel has been exchanging frequent fire with Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, which backs Mikati, since the start of the war against Hamas.
Reuters reported that the Israeli military said it was “aware of a claim regarding journalists … who were killed as a result of an Israeli offensive.”
“This is an area with active hostilities, where exchange of fire occur. Presence in the area is dangerous,” it said.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Israeli military says will continue with aim of dismantling Hamas outside of humanitarian pause
A spokesperson for the Israeli Defense Forces stressed that the Israeli military will continue its mission of dismantling Palestinian militant group Hamas outside of the recently agreed humanitarian pause between the two war parties.
“The aim of our war against Hamas is to dismantle Hamas and that what we’re seeing now is just one milestone in the bigger scheme of things, to get an opportunity to get hostages back and then we will continue fighting Hamas until we eradicate them,” Jonathan Conricus told MSNBC.
Dubbing Hamas a “corrupt and hateful organization,” he added, “They’re only using our hostages for political leverage, we keep that in mind.”
The IDF is continuing its ground incursion and airstrikes into the Gaza Strip, Conricus noted, signaling that “fighting is not done in northern Gaza” and that the military will proceed with its operation “until anything changes, until there is any type of agreement.”
Israel has faced a wave of international scrutiny over its activity in the Gaza Strip, particularly its advances against civilian sites — such as the enclave’s largest hospital, Al-Shifa — that it says are weaponized by Hamas for military purposes. The Israeli military maintains it does not set out to target Palestinian civilians as part of its campaign.
“When we took the Shifa compound, not a single Palestinian civilian was wounded or killed. And that is not by chance,” Conricus said.
— Ruxandra Iordache
France hopes for release of its hostages after Israel, Hamas truce
France hopes its eight citizens believed held as hostages will be released as a result of a truce deal between Israel and Hamas, Foreign Affairs Minister Catherine Colonna said on Wednesday.
“We hope that there will be French people among the first batch of hostages to be released,” Colonna told France Inter radio.
Israel’s government and Hamas agreed on Wednesday to a four-day pause infighting to allow the release of 50 hostages held in Gaza in exchange for 150 Palestinians imprisoned in Israel, and the entry of humanitarian aid into the besieged enclave.
— Reuters
Blinken hails hostage release deal as ‘significant progress’
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken hailed the deal to release hostages as “significant progress.”
“Today’s outcome is the result of tireless diplomacy and relentless effort across the United States government,” Blinken said in a post on X, formerly Twitter.
He said the fight to release the rest of the hostages held by Hamas militants will continue.
“While this deal marks significant progress, we will not rest as long as Hamas continues to hold hostages in Gaza.”
— Joanna Tan
Biden says its important for Israel-Hamas deal to be ‘fully implemented’
President Joe Biden has thanked the leaders of Qatar and Egypt for their “critical leadership and partnership” in helping to strike the temporary cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas.
The humanitarian pause will allow 50 civilian women and children to be released in exchange for Palestinian women and children detained in Israeli prisons, according to Qatar, which was part of the negotiation effort.
“I appreciate the commitment that [Israeli] Prime Minister Netanyahu and his government have made in supporting an extended pause to ensure this deal can be fully carried out and to ensure the provision of additional humanitarian assistance to alleviate the suffering of innocent Palestinian families in Gaza,” Biden said in a statement.
The President said that his highest priority is to ensure the safety of Americans held hostage around the world.
“It is important that all aspects of this deal be fully implemented,” he added.
— Joanna Tan
Qatar says there will be a humanitarian pause in Gaza, 50 hostages held by Hamas to be released
Israel and Hamas have agreed to a humanitarian pause in the Gaza Strip that will last for at least four days, Qatar announced Wednesday.
In a post on X, previously Twitter, Qatar said: “The agreement includes the release of 50 civilian women and children hostages currently held in the Gaza Strip in exchange for the release of a number of Palestinian women and children detained in Israeli prisons.”
The number of those released will increase in the later stages of the agreement, according to the ministry of foreign affairs in Qatar.
The time of the temporary cease-fire will be announced within 24 hours, and will “last for four days, subject to extension.”
Read the full story here.
— Joanna Tan
Israeli cabinet votes to approve hostage deal
The Israeli government voted Tuesday night to accept a deal that would release some hostages being held by Hamas in Gaza.
The vote came just after 3 a.m. on Wednesday morning in Israel following more than six hours of discussion between Israeli cabinet members.
In a statement, the Israeli government said it approved “the first stage” of hostage release, which will free 50 of the roughly 240 hostages that Hamas currently holds. It said that the first tranche of hostages would be women and children, who will be released over the course of four days. During that four-day time period, Israel agreed to halt its bombardments to ensure their safe passage.
The statement also said that the war will continue.
“The Government of Israel, the IDF and the security services will continue the war in order to return home all of the hostages, complete the elimination of Hamas and ensure that there will be no new threat to the State of Israel from Gaza,” the Israeli government said.
The Israeli government noted that as part of the deal, it will agree to extend the temporary cease-fire one additional day for every additional ten hostages that Hamas releases.
A statement from Hamas said that in exchange for the 50 freed hostages, Israel will release 150 Palestinian women and children prisoners. A senior Israeli official told NBC earlier on Tuesday that the Palestinian prisoners did not directly kill Israelis themselves but rather played supporting roles in the crimes. Israel did not address this part of the deal in its statement.
Per Israeli policy, families of the victims of the Palestinian prisoners would have 24 hours to appeal their release to the Israeli Supreme Court. That means that no deal signed tonight will be able to take effect and is therefore not final until at least that 24-hour window is over.
— Rebecca Picciotto
Read CNBC’s previous live coverage:
This post was originally published on this site be sure to check out more of their content.