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Trump says first phase of Gaza peace deal agreed, paving way for hostage and prisoner releases – BBC

Trump: Ceasefire Deal Has Been Reached
BBC News
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US President Donald Trump has announced that "Israel and Hamas have both signed off on the first Phase of our Peace Plan"
"This means that ALL of the Hostages will be released very soon, and Israel will withdraw their Troops to an agreed upon line", Trump says on Truth Social
Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu calls the agreement "a great day for Israel" and will convene the government on Thursday to approve it
Hamas has confirmed the deal and is calling on Trump and the involved countries to compel Israel to fully follow the deal
Despite hopes that this could lead to the end of the war after two years, crucial details still need to be discussed, writes our Middle East correspondent
The negotiations in Egypt come two years and two days after Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to the 7 October 2023 attack, in which Hamas-led gunmen killed about 1,200 people and took 251 others as hostages
At least 67,183 have been killed by Israeli military operations in Gaza since then, including 20,179 children, the Hamas-run health ministry says
Edited by Helen Sullivan and Chris Graham
The Israel Defense Forces have released a statement saying it welcomes "the signing of the agreement for the return of the hostages, which was signed overnight".It also said, in a social media post:
"During a situational assessment held overnight, the Chief of the General Staff instructed all forces, both on the front lines and in the rear areas, to prepare strong defenses and be ready for any scenario.
Force deployments will be carried out in accordance with the directives of the political echelon and the stages of the agreement, with responsibility and a focus on the safety of our soldiers. At the same time, the Chief of the General Staff instructed to prepare to lead the operation for the hostages’ return, which is expected to be conducted with sensitivity and professionalism.
The IDF will continue to act to achieve the objectives of the war and to defend the citizens of the State of Israel on all fronts."
Australia has welcomed the first phase of a Gaza peace deal between Israel and Hamas.
"After more than two years of conflict, hostages held and a devastating loss of civilian life, this is a much needed step towards peace," Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says in a statement. "We urge all parties to respect the terms of the plan."
He thanks Trump for his "diplomatic efforts" and the role of Egypt, Qatar and Turkey in the negotiations.
Australia also supports the peace plan's commitment to deny Hamas any role in the future of Gaza, he says, adding it will be a "very long road to recovery in Gaza, securing long term peace and building the Palestinian state".
Rushdi Abualouf
Gaza correspondent

A Palestinian source has told the BBC that Hamas has not yet received the final list of Palestinian prisoners that Israel plans to release in exchange for the Israeli hostages in Gaza.
The source said the delay was linked to pressure inside Israel over the identities of some of those whose release Hamas is seeking. However, they added, efforts were under way to resolve the issue within hours.
The ceasefire agreement stipulates that 250 Palestinian prisoners and 1,700 Gazans detained by Israeli forces since the war began will be released, according to the source.
Israel’s Haaretz newspaper also cited Israeli sources as saying that the deal did not specify the names of the Palestinian prisoners.
On Wednesday morning, a Hamas official told the BBC that the list of prisoners it had submitted to mediators in Sharm el-Sheikh included high-profile figures serving multiple life sentences for deadly attacks on Israelis. One of them was Marwan Barghouti, seen by many Palestinians as a potential future president. It is unclear if his release has been agreed to.
Trump tells Hannity that now, "People are going to be taken care of. It's going to be a different world. I think really, the Middle East came together."
"Gaza, we believe is going to be a much safer place and it's going to be a place that reconstructs and other countries in the area will help it reconstruct because they have tremendous amounts of wealth, and they want to see that happen."
"I'm very confident there'll be peace in the Middle East."
Speaking to Sean Hannity on the phone on Fox News, Trump says that what comes after part one of the peace plan, is that: "You'll see people getting along and Gaza will be rebuilt." He says it's going to be a "different world" and that there will be "wealth spent in Gaza".
Trump is now talking to Hannity about Iran. He says Iran was maybe a month away from getting nuclear weapons and that would have hurt the Gaza peace plan.
"If I allowed that to happen, this deal would not have been possible. Or if it was, it would have a tremendous cloud over it, because you'd have a country with a nuclear weapon that was not obviously very friendly."
"As you saw they bless the deal," he says.
"By the way, I believe Iran is going to be involved in the peace situation."
When Netanyahu called Trump, he said that people liked him (Netanyahu) again, Trump said. And Trump responded that people, "like Israel again".
There was a certain degree of luck in all of this, Trump says.
US President Donald Trump is speaking to Fox News host Sean Hannity on the phone.
Trump tells Hannity, "We had tremendous help from [Special Envoy Steve] Witkoff, [Trump's son in law Jared] Kushner, [Secretary of State] Marco [Rubio] and [US Vice President] JD [Vance]."The whole world came together, to be honest. The world has come together around this deal." Many countries "have wired" their best wishes, he says.
Trump says this is more than Gaza, this is "peace in the Middle East".
"It's been really an amazing period of time. So great for Israel, so great for Muslims and the Arab countries," Trump says.
Hugo Bachega
BBC Middle East correspondent

After intense negotiations, Israel and Hamas have reached agreement on the first phase of a peace plan for Gaza.
The breakthrough was first announced by US President Donald Trump, who called it a great day for the world.
Trump said all the hostages would be released soon and Israel would withdraw its troops to an agreed line.
He said all parties would be treated fairly and that these were the first steps towards a strong and everlasting peace.
This is the first phase of a twenty-point plan announced by Trump last week.
Once the deal is approved by the Israeli government, a ceasefire will go into effect.
That will be followed by the release of the remaining hostages and the withdrawal of Israel troops from parts of Gaza.
The negotiations have been boosted by the personal involvement of Trump, who has put pressure not only on Hamas but also on Israel for a deal.
Despite the hopes that this could lead to the end of the war after two years, crucial details still need to be discussed, including a plan for who will govern Gaza and the future of Hamas.
Videos are beginning to circulate on social media of Palestinians in Gaza celebrating the news of the ceasefire and hostage release deal.
Night-time footage posted on Instagram by Palestinian journalist Saeed Mohamed showed a large crowd of men and women dancing to music, whistling, clapping and chanting “Allahu Akbar” (“God is greatest”) outside al-Aqsa hospital, in the central city of Deir al-Balah.
Another video by journalist Mohammed al-Haddad showed a smaller group of young men dancing on a street elsewhere in Gaza.
The world is starting to react to the news of an initial peace deal between Hamas and Israel.
And their reactions share one common thread: hopefulness.
Senator Chris Coons, a Democrat of Delaware, tells CNN that Trump's Truth Social post announcing the deal is "encouraging", adding: "I hope that it holds."
Senator John Fetterman, a Pennsylvania Democrat and outspoken supporter of Israel, says, "Those poor souls finally have a chance to maybe go home, and that's the first opportunity for enduring peace" according to CBS News, BBC's US partner.
Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut tells CNN that "the initial reports are hopeful".
And on the other side of the aisle, Republican Senator Kevin Cramer of North Dakota says he's cautiously optimistic about the deal, adding "we'll see how it actually gets implemented", CBS News reports.
Meanwhile, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a US- and Israeli-backed organisation whose stated mission is to deliver aid to Gaza, shares a statement Wednesday calling the deal "welcome news".
"We are hopeful that this will create conditions on the ground that enable the needs of all Gazans to be met," the GHF says.
United Nations Secretary-General, António Guterres, says the UN will support the "full implementation" of the deal as well as increase its delivery of humanitarian aid and advance its reconstruction efforts in Gaza.
Guterres also urges all parties to obey the terms of the deal including releasing Israeli hostages, abiding by a permanent ceasefire, and immediately allowing humanitarian supplies into Gaza.
"The suffering must end," Guterres says.
"I urge all stakeholders to seize this momentous opportunity to establish a credible political path forward towards ending the occupation, recognising the right to self-determination of the Palestinian people, leading to a two-state solution to enable Israelis & Palestinians to live in peace & security."
We've received images from the third day of negotiations over the peace deal from our Gaza correspondent, Rushdi Abualouf.
They show members of the Qatari, Egyptian, Israeli and Palestinian envoys at an undisclosed location in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt earlier.
The Palestinian envoy
Bernd Debusmann Jr
Reporting from the White House

Since returning here to the White House in January, Trump has repeatedly said that peace between Israel and Hamas is around the corner.
Month after month, that peace eluded him. Gaza, along with Ukraine, continued to be a thorn in his side, even when he proudly claimed to have ended wars around the world, from Thailand to the Democratic Republic of Congo.
If the deal that Trump posted about earlier holds, and the fighting stops, the administration will almost certainly point to this as the crowning foreign policy achievement of his second term so far – perhaps even more than the airstrikes which they say ended Iran's nuclear programme.
We still don't have many contours of the deal so far, other than that the hostages will be released and Israel will pull troops back to an "agreed upon line".
This announcement has become, by far, the biggest news story in Washington, and in the next hours and days we are likely to hear more details from Trump and his team.
Rushdi Abualouf
Gaza correspondent

A senior Palestinian official told the BBC that the ceasefire will go into effect immediately after approval by the Israeli government around 14:00 Jerusalem time, adding that Israel will allow 400 aid trucks to enter Gaza daily during the first five days, with the number to increase gradually in later stages.
The official said the “yellow line” on the Trump plan map has been adjusted to reflect Israel’s security requirements and Hamas’s need to secure the release of Israeli hostages.
He added that Israel rejected the inclusion of senior Palestinian prisoner Marwan Barghouti in the exchange deal, despite Hamas’s insistence on his release.
We can now bring you more details on how the implementation of this peace deal might unfold.
According to a senior White House official speaking to the BBC's US partner, CBS news, the deal goes to the Israeli cabinet on Thursday.
If they formally approve the deal, Israel must then withdraw its troops from Gaza to the agreed-upon line, which the official says will likely take less than 24 hours.
Hostages held by Hamas will likely begin being released from Gaza on Monday, the senior White House official explains.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has just spoken by phone with Trump, according to a new statement from his office.
"The two held a very moving and warm conversation, and congratulated each other on the historic achievement of signing the agreement to release all the hostages," Netanyahu's office said.
The Israeli leader also thanked Trump "all his efforts and his global leadership", while Trump in turn thanked Netanyahu "for his determined leadership and the actions he led".
"The two agreed to continue their close co-operation," the statement says, adding that Trump has now been invited to speak to the Israeli parliament.
Lucy Manning
Special correspondent

Relatives of hostages and former hostages have been reacting on social media to the news of a deal and the return of the hostages.
Eli Sharabi, whose wife and children were killed, and whose brother Yossi’s body is being held by Hamas, posted: “Great joy, can’t wait to see everyone home.”
The mother of hostage Matan Zangauker said on X: “Matan returns home to me..to you, to the country. For these tears, I prayed.”
The mother of hostage Nimrod Cohen posted: “My child, you are coming home.”
Former British-Israeli hostage Emily Damari celebrated with former hostage Romi Gonen, reciting prayers of gratitude, then toasting “L’chaim”, meaning “to life”. She has been campaigning for the release of her friends, twins Gali and Ziv Berman.
Their brother Liran Berman posted: "My Gali and Ziv, I love you so much. You're coming home."
Israel's cabinet is due to vote tomorrow on the deal, and if they approve Israel must retreat to an agreed upon line.
The withdrawal should take under 24 hours, a senior official at the White House has told our partners at CBS News.
After Israel leaves, then the 72 hour clock to release the Israeli hostages begins.
"Our assessment is that hostages will begin getting released on Monday," the official said.
But they also said that "Hamas will try to go earlier if possible".
Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu has just released another statement, calling Hamas and Israel's agreement to the first phase of a Gaza peace deal "a great day for Israel".
He says he will convene Israel's government tomorrow to approve the agreement and "bring all our dear hostages home".
He goes on to thank Israeli troops and US President Donald Trump and his team "for their mobilization for this sacred mission of releasing our hostages".
We can bring you more now from Hamas's statement on the peace deal.
According to the BBC's US news partner, CBS, Hamas says the agreement will "end the war on Gaza, ensure the complete withdrawal of the occupation forces, allow the entry of humanitarian aid, and implement a prisoner exchange".
It thanks Qatar, Egypt, Turkey and US President Donald Trump for their mediation efforts. Hamas also calls on Trump and other parties to "ensure that the Israeli occupation government fully complies with the terms of the agreement".
The people of Gaza "have demonstrated unmatched courage, honour, and heroism", Hamas adds.
"We will never abandon our people’s national rights until freedom, independence, and self-determination are achieved."
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