Israel Expects Gaza Hostages Freed Early Monday

 Volunteers prepare Israeli flags as people gather at a plaza known as hostages square, in Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, Oct. 12, 2025. (AP)
Volunteers prepare Israeli flags as people gather at a plaza known as hostages square, in Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, Oct. 12, 2025. (AP)
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Israel Expects Gaza Hostages Freed Early Monday

 Volunteers prepare Israeli flags as people gather at a plaza known as hostages square, in Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, Oct. 12, 2025. (AP)
Volunteers prepare Israeli flags as people gather at a plaza known as hostages square, in Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, Oct. 12, 2025. (AP)

Palestinian Prisoners to Be Freed After All Gaza Hostages Confirmed to Be in Israel

Israel will begin releasing Palestinian prisoners once it has confirmation that all hostages held in Gaza have arrived in the country, a spokeswoman for the prime minister said Sunday.

"Palestinian prisoners will be released once Israel has confirmation that all of our hostages set to be released tomorrow are across the border into Israel," Shosh Bedrosian told journalists.

During previous ceasefires, the remains of some hostages were identified by forensic experts after their return to Israel.

Bedrosian said that pending the identification, the Palestinian prisoners would be on buses ready to depart.

"As soon as we have confirmation that they (hostages) have entered Israeli territory, those buses will depart and begin their journey," she said.

She said the release of all hostages held in the Gaza Strip for more than two years was expected to begin early Monday morning.

Israel and Hamas have approved the first phase of a plan proposed by US President Donald Trump, aimed at ending the war in Gaza sparked by Hamas's attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.

Under the terms of the plan, Hamas is to release by Monday noon the remaining 47 hostages (living and dead) who were abducted on October 7.

It is also expected to hand over the remains of a soldier killed in 2014 during a previous Gaza war.

During the last truce, the identification of deceased hostages was only confirmed after autopsies at Israel's Abu Kabir Forensic Institute.

"We are expecting all 20 of our living hostages to be released together at one time to the Red Cross and transported among six to eight vehicles," Bedrosian said.

"The hostages will then be driven to forces inside of Israeli-controlled parts of Gaza and then transferred to the Reim base in southern Israel, where they will then reunite with their families."

They will then be taken to "one of three main hospitals".

"Ten hostages will be sent to Sheba Medical Center, five hostages at Beilinson, and five hostages will receive treatment at Ichilov," Bedrosian said, referring to three hospitals in central Israel that have been equipped to receive the released captives.

As for the Palestinian prisoners to be released, 250 are security detainees, including many convicted of killing Israelis, while about 1,700 were detained by the Israeli military in Gaza after the war broke out.

Hamas insists that the list of prisoners Israel is set to release under a Gaza ceasefire deal includes seven senior Palestinian leaders, sources close to negotiators told AFP Sunday.

"Hamas insists that the final list include seven senior leaders, most notably Marwan Barghouti, Ahmad Saadat, Ibrahim Hamed, and Abbas Al-Sayyed," a source said. The detail was confirmed by a second source.

The first source also said that Hamas and its allied groups had "completed all preparations" for handing over to Israel all the living hostages and some of the deceased ones held in Gaza.



Israeli Forces Kill Two West Bank Teenagers

Israeli soldiers ride in the Merkava main battle tank at a position in northern Israel along the border with southern Lebanon on November 6, 2025. (Photo by Jalaa MAREY / AFP)
Israeli soldiers ride in the Merkava main battle tank at a position in northern Israel along the border with southern Lebanon on November 6, 2025. (Photo by Jalaa MAREY / AFP)
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Israeli Forces Kill Two West Bank Teenagers

Israeli soldiers ride in the Merkava main battle tank at a position in northern Israel along the border with southern Lebanon on November 6, 2025. (Photo by Jalaa MAREY / AFP)
Israeli soldiers ride in the Merkava main battle tank at a position in northern Israel along the border with southern Lebanon on November 6, 2025. (Photo by Jalaa MAREY / AFP)

The Israeli military said Friday it had killed two suspects it said threw Molotov cocktails in the occupied West Bank village of Judeira overnight.

The Palestinian health ministry identified the dead as two 16-year-old boys.

The military said in a statement that a unit deployed in the area "eliminated" the individuals, a word Israeli officials generally use when suspects are killed.

The army published a surveillance camera video in which two individuals are seen throwing a burning object over a wall matching the appearance of the one separating the area near Judeira from a road used by Israelis.

Though located in the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967, Judeira is surrounded by roads and lands that are effectively annexed by Israel.

The Ramallah-based Palestinian health ministry identified the two individuals as Mohammed Ateem and Mohammed Qasim, both 16.

In a statement, the ministry added that the Israeli army had retrieved the two teenagers' bodies.

On Wednesday, the military killed another teenager who it said had thrown an explosive device at Israeli troops.

In a statement Friday, the military said it had killed three militants and arrested 60 "wanted individuals" this week in the occupied West Bank.

Violence in the West Bank has soared since the war in Gaza broke out in October 2023.


Piles of Garbage and Seeping Sewage Pollute Devastated Gaza

Displaced Palestinians sit next to their destroyed homes in Khan Yunis camp in the southern Gaza Strip, 05 November 2025. EPA/HAITHAM IMAD
Displaced Palestinians sit next to their destroyed homes in Khan Yunis camp in the southern Gaza Strip, 05 November 2025. EPA/HAITHAM IMAD
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Piles of Garbage and Seeping Sewage Pollute Devastated Gaza

Displaced Palestinians sit next to their destroyed homes in Khan Yunis camp in the southern Gaza Strip, 05 November 2025. EPA/HAITHAM IMAD
Displaced Palestinians sit next to their destroyed homes in Khan Yunis camp in the southern Gaza Strip, 05 November 2025. EPA/HAITHAM IMAD

Stinking mounds of fly-covered garbage lie strewn throughout Gaza amid the rubble from Israel's devastating military campaign, spilling out along roadsides and between the tents where most of the shattered enclave's people live. Government services such as rubbish collection ceased as soon as the war began and although they are partially returning since the truce last month, the massive extent of destruction means any more thorough cleanup lies far in the future, said Reuters.

"I don't smell any fresh air. I smell a foul odor in my tent. I can't sleep. My children wake up in the morning coughing," said Mahmoud Abu Reida, gesturing at the dumpster by the tent he shares with his wife and four children in Khan Younis.

Rotting garbage, sewage-filled pools, hazardous waste from bomb sites and noxious smoke from burning cloth and plastic have birthed a fetid environment for Gazans.

"The scale of the waste problem in Gaza is huge," said Alessandro Mrakic, head of the Gaza office of the UN development agency UNDP.

Waste landfill sites were already full before the start of the war and three major dump sites were located along the border with Israel in areas that are now off limits to Palestinians, he said. "We're talking about 2 million tons of waste - untreated - all across Gaza," Mrakic said, adding that the risks to the environment, to the aquifer that much of Gaza's water comes from, and to the population's health were "immense".

Many people complain of gastric diseases and skin complaints from diarrhea to rashes, sores, lice and scabies, and doctors in the tiny, crowded Palestinian territory say pollution is to blame.

"Skin diseases have spread a lot because of overcrowding in tents and the tents are next to garbage dumps," said Sami Abu Taha, a dermatologist at the Kuwaiti field hospital in Khan Younis, lamenting the lack of medicine to treat such ailments.

One of Abu Reida's children has been repeatedly to the hospital, he said, where doctors had told him the boy was suffering from a bacterial infection that likely came from the rubbish container by the tent.

BOMBARDMENTS SMASH INFRASTRUCTURE

In another part of Khan Younis, Mahmoud Helles was sitting in his tent with his children - a sewage-filled pond standing nearby.

"We find nowhere to stay but in such places," he said, showing a rash of red spots on his arm and hand.

"This place is very, very difficult - it is full of diseases and epidemics because of war remnants, piles of garbage, and the lack of sewage treatment," he said.

Much of Gaza's wastewater and sewage infrastructure was badly damaged by Israel's bombardment and ground operations, leaving people to use open latrines that flood when it rains.

The United Nations is developing plans to deal with the waste problem, including considering options for processing plants that can generate electricity from waste, Mrakic said.

"Immediate action is needed, mainly through access of machinery, equipment, that will allow us to properly perform the job on the ground," he added.


Britain Removes Sanctions on Syria’s President, Interior Minister 

29 March 2025, Syria, Damascus: Syria's President Ahmed al-Sharaa speaks during the ceremony announcing the new Syrian government at the People's Palace. (dpa)
29 March 2025, Syria, Damascus: Syria's President Ahmed al-Sharaa speaks during the ceremony announcing the new Syrian government at the People's Palace. (dpa)
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Britain Removes Sanctions on Syria’s President, Interior Minister 

29 March 2025, Syria, Damascus: Syria's President Ahmed al-Sharaa speaks during the ceremony announcing the new Syrian government at the People's Palace. (dpa)
29 March 2025, Syria, Damascus: Syria's President Ahmed al-Sharaa speaks during the ceremony announcing the new Syrian government at the People's Palace. (dpa)

Britain removed sanctions on Syrian interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa on Friday, after the United Nations Security Council did the same ahead of his meeting with US President Donald Trump on Monday.

Britain said in the same statement that it was also lifting sanctions on Syria's interior minister Anas Khattab.

Both men had formerly been subject to financial sanctions targeted at ISIS and al-Qaeda.

"I think he's doing a very good job," Trump said on Thursday of Sharaa. "It's a tough neighborhood, and he's a tough guy, but I got along with him very well. And a lot of progress has been made with Syria."

"We did take the sanctions off Syria in order to give them a fighting shot," he told reporters in Washington.