Netanyahu and Kushner Meet as Gaza Ceasefire’s First Phase Winds Down

Palestinians sit outside their make shift homes along a road near the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, on November 9, 2025, following a US-brokered truce that halted the two-year war. (AFP)
Palestinians sit outside their make shift homes along a road near the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, on November 9, 2025, following a US-brokered truce that halted the two-year war. (AFP)
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Netanyahu and Kushner Meet as Gaza Ceasefire’s First Phase Winds Down

Palestinians sit outside their make shift homes along a road near the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, on November 9, 2025, following a US-brokered truce that halted the two-year war. (AFP)
Palestinians sit outside their make shift homes along a road near the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, on November 9, 2025, following a US-brokered truce that halted the two-year war. (AFP)

US President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, met on Monday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to discuss the next stages of the fragile Gaza ceasefire, while Israel returned the remains of another 15 Palestinians. 

The remains of four hostages are still in Gaza after Palestinian fighters released the remains of another on Sunday. 

The first stage of the ceasefire agreement that took effect on Oct. 10 is nearing its end. The next stage calls for the implementation of a governing body for Gaza and the deployment of an international stabilization force. It is not clear where either stands. 

Israel ended the previous ceasefire agreement earlier this year after a period of exchanging hostages for Palestinian prisoners. At the time, mediators were unable to bring Hamas and Israel to the table to negotiate a troop withdrawal and a plan for the future governance of Gaza. 

The latest exchange of bodies  

For each Israeli hostage returned, Israel has been releasing the remains of 15 Palestinians — an exchange central to the ceasefire's first phase. The Gaza Health Ministry said the total number of remains received is now 315. 

Only 91 have been identified, the ministry said. Forensic work is complicated by a lack of DNA testing kits in Gaza. The ministry posts photos of the remains online in the hope that families will recognize them. 

One mother waited at Nasser Hospital in the southern city of Khan Younis, wondering whether her missing 15-year-old son was among the new remains returned. He disappeared while on the way to school on Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas launched an attack on Israel that started the war. 

“Rayyan has been missing for two years. I don’t know his fate, whether he’s still alive or dead,” Shaima Abu Ouda said. She said he vanished near the wall separating Gaza and southern Israel. Her husband and eldest son were killed during the war. 

On Sunday, Israel confirmed it had received the remains of Hadar Goldin, a soldier killed in the Gaza Strip in 2014, closing a painful chapter for the country. The 23-year-old was killed two hours after a ceasefire took effect in that year’s war between Israel and Hamas. 

His remains had been the only ones left in Gaza predating the current war between Israel and Hamas. A funeral was scheduled for Tuesday. 

Around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, were killed in the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel, and 251 people were kidnapped. 

On Saturday, Gaza’s Health Ministry said the number of Palestinians killed in Gaza has risen to 69,176. Its count does not distinguish between fighters and civilians, but the ministry says more than half of those killed were women and children. 

The ministry, part of the Hamas-run government and staffed by medical professionals, maintains detailed records viewed as generally reliable by independent experts. 

US officials try to push ceasefire forward  

Netanyahu and Kushner discussed the progress and future of the ceasefire, said Israeli government spokesperson Shosh Bedrosian. 

The deal has focused on the first phase of halting the fighting, releasing all hostages and boosting humanitarian aid to Gaza. Details of the second phase haven’t been worked out. 

Kushner also was helping to lead negotiations to secure safe passage for 150-200 trapped Hamas fighters in exchange for surrendering their weapons after the release of Goldin’s remains, according to someone close to the negotiations who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the talks. 

Bedrosian did not say where those negotiations were headed. 

Hamas has made no comment on a possible exchange for its fighters stuck in the so-called yellow zone of territory controlled by Israeli forces, though it has acknowledged that clashes were taking place there. 

West Bank village faces demolition  

Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank village of Umm al-Khair, which was featured in the Oscar-winning documentary “No Other Land,” was bracing Monday for the arrival of Israeli military bulldozers. 

The documentary chronicles villagers’ attempts to survive state-backed demolitions and rampant violence from Israeli settlers. 

Residents say Israel has ordered the demolition of 14 structures, including the community center, greenhouse and family homes. A press release from the community said the demolitions could begin Tuesday. 

Israel says the structures were built illegally. Residents, determined to stay on their land, say it is impossible to secure permits to build in the West Bank, leaving them little choice but to rebuild their homes following demolitions. 

Bimkom, an Israeli rights group that focuses on urban planning, says that between 2016 and 2021 Israel rejected 99% of Palestinian requests for building permits in Area C of the West Bank, where Umm al-Khair is located. 

The village was founded in the 1950s by traditionally nomadic people, known as Bedouin, who settled there after being uprooted from the Negev desert during the 1948 war surrounding Israel’s creation. Two decades later, Umm al-Khair fell under Israeli security control when Israel captured the West Bank. 

Settler attacks, residents say, began in the 1980s, after Israel built the settlement of Carmel close to Umm al-Khair. 

Earlier this year, an internationally sanctioned Israeli settler shot and killed a community leader, Awdah Hathaleen, as he was standing inside the community center slated for demolition. 



Israeli Air and Tank Strikes Kills Six Palestinians in Gaza, Medics Say

 An internally displaced Palestinian boy searches a pile of damaged items at a camp following an overnight Israeli strike in Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip on March 9, 2026. (AFP)
An internally displaced Palestinian boy searches a pile of damaged items at a camp following an overnight Israeli strike in Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip on March 9, 2026. (AFP)
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Israeli Air and Tank Strikes Kills Six Palestinians in Gaza, Medics Say

 An internally displaced Palestinian boy searches a pile of damaged items at a camp following an overnight Israeli strike in Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip on March 9, 2026. (AFP)
An internally displaced Palestinian boy searches a pile of damaged items at a camp following an overnight Israeli strike in Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip on March 9, 2026. (AFP)

An Israeli airstrike and tank shelling killed six Palestinians, including two women and a girl, in separate attacks in Gaza City on Sunday, the deadliest incidents in Gaza since the US-Israeli assault on Iran began a week ago, health officials said.

Mohamed Abu Selmia, the head of the Al Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, said three men were killed in an airstrike near Al-Azhar University in western Gaza City - a paramedic Mohammad Hamduna, and two others named as Mohammad Abu Shedeq and Ahmed Lafi.

The strike hit near crowded tent camps where Gazans were sheltering, and wounded several other people, the medics added.

Such attacks have declined since the ‌start of the US-Israeli ‌campaign against Iran, although Israeli forces have killed several Palestinians over the ‌past ⁠week.

In a statement ⁠on Sunday, the Israeli military said the strike had killed two Hamas members who had been preparing to attack Israeli soldiers, without providing evidence.

No group has claimed any of the men as members.

The Israeli military declined to comment in response to Reuters' request for evidence connecting the men to a potential attack.

A little after midnight in the central Gaza Strip, Israeli tank shelling killed at least three people, two women, including a local journalist, and a girl, and wounded 10 other people, some of ⁠them children, according to health officials at Al-Awda Hospital in Nuseirat camp.

Medics ‌said the tank shells hit a tent encampment, housing displaced ‌families in the western Nuseirat area. Two years of war turned most of the enclave into a wasteland, ‌and uprooted most of the territory's population of over two million.

On Monday, an Israeli security ‌official told Reuters the military wasn't aware of any incident in which a child and a journalist were killed by Israeli shelling.

BLANKETS STAINED WITH BLOOD

Reuters footage showed Palestinians sifting through the tent encampments, checking damage to their shelters, and displaying blankets stained with blood, as some women sat and wept next to a white-shrouded body.

“We ‌were sitting in our tents, sitting, and suddenly we saw something striking like red fire once, twice, and three times. We started running without ⁠knowing (where to go)," ⁠said Nisreen Abu Shalouf, whose daughter-in-law was killed in the strike.

"I found my daughter-in-law in the tent, I found her with her brain exposed...She was still a newlywed, I swear, she was a newlywed,” she told Reuters. Some of her children were also wounded.

Israel and Hamas agreed to a US-brokered Gaza ceasefire deal that kicked off last October, but violence has continued on a near-daily basis. Both sides have blamed the other for the violation of the truce agreement.

The Gaza health ministry said at least 640 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire since October. Israel says four soldiers have been killed by fighters in Gaza over the same period.

Gaza has been devastated by more than two years of an Israeli onslaught that killed over 72,000 Palestinians, according to local health authorities.

The war was sparked by Hamas' October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, where the gunmen killed 1,200 people and took more than 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.


Lebanon Postpones Parliamentary Elections by Two Years

Lebanon's parliament Speaker Nabih Berri heads a parliamentary session at the headquarters in Beirut on March 9, 2026. (AFP)
Lebanon's parliament Speaker Nabih Berri heads a parliamentary session at the headquarters in Beirut on March 9, 2026. (AFP)
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Lebanon Postpones Parliamentary Elections by Two Years

Lebanon's parliament Speaker Nabih Berri heads a parliamentary session at the headquarters in Beirut on March 9, 2026. (AFP)
Lebanon's parliament Speaker Nabih Berri heads a parliamentary session at the headquarters in Beirut on March 9, 2026. (AFP)

Lebanon's parliament on Monday postponed legislative elections by two years, according to a statement from the parliament speaker, due to the war between Israel and Iran-backed group Hezbollah. 

Lebanon was drawn into the Middle East war last week when Hezbollah attacked Israel in response to the killing of Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei during US-Israeli strikes. 

"Parliament approved the extension of its term for two years," a statement from parliament speaker and key Hezbollah ally Nabih Berri read, after the polls were initially due to be held in May. 

MPs convened even as Israeli warplanes flew above the nearby southern suburbs of Beirut. 

Several lawmakers of Hezbollah's 13-member bloc were present, including its head Mohammed Raad, an AFP photographer saw. 

Lebanon has postponed elections on several occasions in the past. 

It did so twice between 2013 and 2014, citing political divisions in Lebanon stemming from the war in neighboring Syria, and a third time in 2017 due to a dispute over the electoral law. 

During the last election in 2022, Hezbollah and its allies lost their parliamentary majority against traditional opponents and independent candidates born out of Lebanon's 2019 protest movement. 

Parliament remains heavily divided between the two camps. 

The move to delay the polls came as the Lebanese government also committed to disarming Hezbollah. 

It was opposed by the group as it sought to reassert its political presence after the major losses it suffered against Israel. 


Israel Strikes Beirut's Southern Suburbs after Warning

Smoke plumes rise from the site of an Israeli airstrike on Beirut's southern suburbs on March 9, 2026. (Photo by FADEL itani / AFP)
Smoke plumes rise from the site of an Israeli airstrike on Beirut's southern suburbs on March 9, 2026. (Photo by FADEL itani / AFP)
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Israel Strikes Beirut's Southern Suburbs after Warning

Smoke plumes rise from the site of an Israeli airstrike on Beirut's southern suburbs on March 9, 2026. (Photo by FADEL itani / AFP)
Smoke plumes rise from the site of an Israeli airstrike on Beirut's southern suburbs on March 9, 2026. (Photo by FADEL itani / AFP)

Israel on Monday renewed its strikes on Beirut's southern suburbs, Lebanese state media reported, after Israel warned it would target branches of a financial firm linked to Hezbollah. 

Footage on AFPTV's live broadcast showed large plumes of smoke rising from the area, where the Iran-backed group holds sway. 

Earlier on Monday, the Israeli military warned it would strike branches of Al-Qard al-Hassan, a financial firm mainly operating in Hezbollah strongholds across Lebanon's south, east and Beirut's southern suburbs. 

Israel launched at least three strikes Monday on Beirut's south, according to the state-run National News Agency and AFP correspondents. 

Lebanon was drawn into the Middle East war last week when Iran-backed group Hezbollah attacked Israel in response to the killing of Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei during US-Israeli strikes. 

Israel, which had kept up strikes targeting Hezbollah even before the war despite a 2024 ceasefire, launched multiple attacks last week across Lebanon and sent ground troops into border areas. 

Roads leading to one of Al-Qard al-Hassan's branches in Beirut were closed on Monday, according to witnesses. 

In Lebanon's southern city of Sidon, an area outside of Hezbollah's traditional strongholds, an AFP correspondent saw ambulances and civil defense vehicles gather around another branch. 

Israel also bombed the firm's branches during its last war with Hezbollah in 2024, including the one in Sidon. The company is under US sanctions.