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Gaza ceasefire outlook darkens as Israel delays aid and Hamas tightens grip

Update Gaza ceasefire outlook darkens as Israel delays aid and Hamas tightens grip
A man rides a donkey cart past destroyed buildings as displaced Palestinians return to their homes in the in Al-Zahra area, north of the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, on Oct. 14, 2025, a day after a ceasefire came into effect. (AFP)
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Gaza ceasefire outlook darkens as Israel delays aid and Hamas tightens grip

Gaza ceasefire outlook darkens as Israel delays aid and Hamas tightens grip
  • Israel delayed aid into Gaza and kept the enclave’s border shut on Tuesday
  • Hamas units conducting operations against armed clans and gangs, some alleged to have Israeli backing

GAZA/JERUSALEM: Israel delayed aid into Gaza and kept the enclave’s border shut on Tuesday, while re-emergent Hamas fighters demonstrated their grip by executing men in the street, darkening the outlook for US President Donald Trump’s plan to end the war.

Three Israeli officials said Israel had decided to restrict aid into the shattered Gaza Strip and delay plans to open the border crossing to Egypt at least through Wednesday, because Hamas had been too slow to turn over bodies of dead hostages. The militant group has said locating the bodies is difficult.

Meanwhile, Hamas has swiftly reclaimed the streets of Gaza’s urban areas, following the partial withdrawal of Israeli troops last week.

In a video circulated late on Monday, Hamas fighters dragged seven men with hands tied behind their backs into a Gaza City square, forced them to their knees and shot them from behind, as dozens of onlookers watched from nearby shopfronts.

A Hamas source confirmed that the video was filmed on Monday and that Hamas fighters participated in the executions. Reuters was able to confirm the location by visible geographic features.

DELAY IN HANDING OVER BODIES

Trump has given his blessing to Hamas to reassert some control of Gaza, at least temporarily. Israeli officials, who say any final settlement must permanently disarm Hamas, have so far refrained from commenting publicly on the reemergence of the group’s fighters.

On Monday the US president proclaimed the “historic dawn of a new Middle East” to Israel’s parliament, as Israel and Hamas were exchanging the last 20 living Israeli hostages in Gaza for nearly 2,000 Palestinian detainees and prisoners.

But so far, Hamas has handed over only four coffins of dead hostages, leaving at least 23 presumed dead and one unaccounted for, still in Gaza.

Aid trucks have yet to be permitted to enter Gaza at the full anticipated rate of hundreds per day, and plans have yet to be implemented to open the crossing to Egypt to let some Gazans out, initially to evacuate the wounded for medical treatment.

HAMAS RETURN DEMONSTRATES HURDLES TO SETTLEMENT

The highly public return of Hamas to control of Gaza’s streets demonstrates the hurdles to progressing from the initial ceasefire — phase one of Trump’s plan — to a permanent settlement that would prevent a new eruption of fighting.

Gaza residents said Hamas fighters were increasingly visible on Tuesday, deploying along routes needed for aid deliveries.

Palestinian security sources said dozens of people had been killed in clashes between Hamas fighters and rivals in recent days.

Meanwhile, Israeli drone fire killed five people as they went to check on houses in a suburb east of Gaza City and an airstrike killed one person and injured another near Khan Younis, Gaza health authorities said.

Hamas accused Israel of violating the ceasefire. The Israeli military said it had fired on people who crossed truce lines and approached its forces after ignoring calls to turn back.

A summit co-hosted by Trump in Egypt on Monday ended with no public announcement of major progress toward establishing an international military force for Gaza, or a new governing body.

HAMAS ASSERTS CONTROL

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has consistently maintained that the war cannot end until Hamas gives up its weapons and ceases to control Gaza, a demand that the fighters have rejected, torpedoing all previous peace efforts.

But Trump, having announced that the war is now over, said on Monday Hamas still had a temporary green light to keep order.

“They do want to stop the problems, and they’ve been open about it, and we gave them approval for a period of time,” he said.

Hamas sources told Reuters on Tuesday the group would tolerate no more violations of order in Gaza and would target collaborators, armed looters and drug dealers.

The group, though greatly weakened after two years of pummelling Israeli bombardment and ground incursions, has been gradually reasserting itself since the ceasefire took hold.

It has deployed hundreds of workers to start rubble clearing on key routes needed to access damaged or destroyed housing and to repair broken water pipes. Road clearance and security provision will also be needed for increased aid delivery.

AID AND HOSTAGES

The ceasefire has stopped two years of devastating warfare in Gaza triggered by the October 7, 2023 attack in which Hamas-led gunmen killed around 1,200 people and seized 251 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.

Israel’s military campaign in Gaza killed nearly 68,000 people according to local health authorities, with thousands more feared dead under the rubble. Gaza’s Civil Defense Service said 250 bodies had been recovered since the truce began.

Swathes of Gaza are in ruins and the global hunger monitor said in August there was famine in the territory. Thousands of Gazans have been returning to homes since the ceasefire, many finding whole streets bombed into dust.

UNICEF spokesperson Tess Ingram said that while aid was getting into Gaza with tents, tarpaulin sheets, winter clothes, family hygiene kits and other critical items, she hoped for a significant increase later this week. 


Jordan’s crown prince praises UK recognition of Palestinian state

Jordan’s crown prince praises UK recognition of Palestinian state
Updated 9 sec ago

Jordan’s crown prince praises UK recognition of Palestinian state

Jordan’s crown prince praises UK recognition of Palestinian state
  • During series of meetings, crown prince highlighted deep-rooted partnership between Jordan and UK

LONDON: Jordan’s Crown Prince Hussein bin Abdullah on Tuesday met with the British foreign secretary Yvette Cooper, the Jordan News Agency reported.

He also held talks with the Speaker of the UK House of Commons Lindsay Hoyle and chair of the International Development Committee Sarah Champion, JNA added.

During the meetings in London, the crown prince highlighted the deep-rooted partnership between Jordan and the UK, expressing pride in the strength of bilateral cooperation across political, economic, and educational sectors.

He also reaffirmed Jordan’s readiness to enhance collaboration in technology and innovation.

Discussing regional developments, Prince Hussein commended the UK’s recent recognition of the State of Palestine and called for intensified efforts to achieve a just and lasting peace based on the two-state solution.

He underscored the importance of implementing all stages of the agreement to end the war in Gaza, emphasizing that the immediate priority must be the delivery of humanitarian aid given the critical situation in the region.

The crown prince also stressed the need to support the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees, describing the agency as a vital lifeline for many Palestinians.

Jordan’s ambassador to the UK, Manar Dabbas, also attended the meetings.

Also on Tuesday, Prince Hussein visited South Bank Technical College, where he met representatives of the global education company Pearson, and was accompanied on the trip by his wife Princess Rajwa Al-Hussein.

During the visit, the prince highlighted the importance of the partnership between Jordan’s Ministry of Education and the company Pearson through the implementation of the Business and Technology Education Council (BTEC) program in the kingdom.


Israel identifies hostage bodies, returns 45 Palestinian dead

Israel identifies hostage bodies, returns 45 Palestinian dead
Updated 35 min 30 sec ago

Israel identifies hostage bodies, returns 45 Palestinian dead

Israel identifies hostage bodies, returns 45 Palestinian dead
  • Israeli military named two of the victims as Guy Iluz, an Israeli national, and Bipin Joshi, an agriculture student from Nepal
  • Under the Trump deal, Israel was to turn over the bodies of 15 Palestinians for every deceased Israeli returned

JERUSALEM: The Israeli military said Tuesday that the remains of four deceased hostages returned by Hamas have been identified, including those of a Nepalese student.
Separately, a Gaza hospital said it has received the bodies of 45 Palestinians that had been handed back by Israel, also as part of US President Donald Trump’s plan to end the Gaza war.
In a statement, the Israeli military named two of the victims as Guy Iluz, an Israeli national, and Bipin Joshi, an agriculture student from Nepal.
The names of the other two hostages have not yet been released at the request of their families, the statement added.
Iluz, who was 26 at the time of the attack, had been attending the Nova music festival when Hamas-led militants launched their assault on October 7, 2023.
He reportedly tried to flee and hid in a tree, from where he made his last contact with his parents before being captured.
The military said Iluz was wounded and abducted alive, but later died of his injuries due to a lack of medical treatment while in captivity.
It did not specify when he died, though his death was announced in December 2023.
The military said the final causes of death for the four hostages will be determined following the completion of forensic examinations.
Joshi, who was 22 at the time of the attack, was part of a Nepalese agricultural training group that had arrived in Israel three weeks before the Hamas assault.
He was abducted from Kibbutz Alumim.
“It is assessed that he was murdered in captivity during the first months of the war,” the military said.

‘Courageous’ Joshi

Joshi’s Nepalese friend Himanchal Kattel, the group’s only survivor, told AFP that the attackers had thrown a grenade into the shelter, which Joshi caught and threw away before it exploded, saving Kattel’s life.
Joshi was a “courageous” student, his teacher Sushil Neupane said.
“We were deeply hoping that Bipin would return home. This news hurts us all... our hope has died,” he said.
Hamas returned the four bodies on Monday, following the release of all 20 surviving captives as part of the ceasefire deal brokered by Trump.
“It’s difficult. You know, we kind of had the rollercoaster on the up yesterday and now we’re on the down,” said Rotem Kuper, son of Amiran Kuper, whose remains are still held in Gaza.
“We need to re-gather and continue strongly. You know, we pretty much have no choice,” Kuper told journalists.
Meanwhile, the bodies of 45 Palestinians that had been in Israeli custody were handed over to the Nasser Medical Center in Gaza, the hospital said.
Under the Trump deal, Israel was to turn over the bodies of 15 Palestinians for every deceased Israeli returned.

Slow recovery

Palestinian militants are still holding the bodies of 24 hostages, which are expected to be returned under the terms of the ceasefire agreement.
“We will not rest untill all 24 hostages are brought home,” said the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, the main Israeli group campaigning for the release of all hostages.
As Israelis awaited the return of the remaining bodies, the hostages released on Monday were gradually recovering.
“Being underground affects all the body’s systems,” said Noa Eliakim Raz, director at Beilinson Hospital in Petah Tikva, where some of the surviving hostages are being treated.
“There is no fixed timetable — each person is recovering at their own pace. It’s important that they heal slowly,” she told journalists, adding that many hostages had experienced weight loss.
Twins Ziv and Gali Berman, who were reunited on Monday, said they had been separated throughout their captivity and held in complete isolation, according to Channel 12.
The two, who were 28 when abducted, described enduring long periods of hunger, alternating with short intervals when they were better fed, the report said.


Israel tells UN will only allow half agreed number of aid trucks into Gaza

Israel tells UN will only allow half agreed number of aid trucks into Gaza
Updated 50 min 25 sec ago

Israel tells UN will only allow half agreed number of aid trucks into Gaza

Israel tells UN will only allow half agreed number of aid trucks into Gaza
  • Israel will not allow fuel or gas except for specific needs related to humanitarian infrastructure

Israel has told the United Nations it will only allow 300 aid trucks – half the agreed number – into the Gaza Strip from Wednesday and that no fuel or gas will be allowed into the enclave except for specific needs related to humanitarian infrastructure, according to a note seen by Reuters and confirmed by the UN.
Olga Cherevko, a spokesperson for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Gaza, confirmed the UN had received the note from COGAT, the arm of the Israeli military that oversees aid flows into Gaza.
COGAT had said on Friday that it expected about 600 aid trucks to enter Gaza daily during the ceasefire.
The COGAT note said the restrictions were being taken because “Hamas violated the agreement regarding the release of the bodies of the hostages.”


Syrian president to head to Moscow on Wednesday: officials

Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa. (File/Reuters)
Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa. (File/Reuters)
Updated 9 min 24 sec ago

Syrian president to head to Moscow on Wednesday: officials

Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa. (File/Reuters)
  • Sharaa is set to hold talks on the continued presence of Russia’s naval base in Tartous and its air base in Hmeimim

DAMASCUS: Syria’s President Ahmed Al-Sharaa will head to Moscow on Wednesday, where he is expected to meet with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin, a government official and a foreign ministry official said.
It marks Sharaa’s first visit to Russia since the December overthrow of longtime Syrian ruler and Russian ally Bashar Assad, who sought refuge in Moscow.
The scheduled visit “will include President Ahmed Al-Sharaa, the foreign minister, and military and economic officials,” the official, who asked to remain anonymous as he was not allowed to brief the media, told AFP.
The official source added Sharaa is scheduled to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin, and that the two sides will also discuss “economic issues related to investment, the status of Russian bases in Syria, and the issue of rearming the new Syrian military.”
A foreign ministry official confirmed the visit and Sharaa’s meeting with Putin, noting that “economic and political issues and the status of Russian military bases in Syria are on the agenda.”
Russia’s naval base in Tartus and its air base at Hmeimim, both on Syria’s Mediterranean coast, are Moscow’s only official military outposts outside the former Soviet Union.
Moscow had used the bases extensively during its intervention in the Syrian civil war on Assad’s side in 2015, with heavy air bombardments of opposition-held areas.
Sharaa was supposed to participate in a Russian-Arab summit to be held on Wednesday, but Moscow postponed it as many Arab leaders due to attend were involved in the implementation of the United States’ ceasefire plan for the Gaza Strip, which went into effect on Friday.
Syria’s new rulers have sought peaceful relations with Russia despite the latter’s former alliance with Assad.
In July, Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad Al-Shaibani was the first senior Syrian official of the new administration to visit Russia.
In January, Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov and a delegation made the first trip to Syria by Russian officials after the toppling of Assad.


5 suspects arrested following large captagon seizure in Syria’s Aleppo

5 suspects arrested following large captagon seizure in Syria’s Aleppo
Updated 14 October 2025

5 suspects arrested following large captagon seizure in Syria’s Aleppo

5 suspects arrested following large captagon seizure in Syria’s Aleppo
  • Authorities seize 425,000 pills in 2 separate operations
  • Items confiscated, suspects referred to judiciary

LONDON: Syrian anti-narcotics authorities cracked down on criminal networks involved in drug trafficking in two separate operations on Tuesday following close monitoring.

The Anti-Narcotics Department in Aleppo arrested five people and seized 1 kg of H-Boz and 158,000 captagon pills during the first operation. The department then seized 267,000 captagon pills and 20 kg of hashish.

The authorities from the Syrian Arab Republic said that the seized items were confiscated and those involved in the crimes had been referred to the judiciary, reported the Syrian Arab News Agency.

Authorities in Syria continue to fight against drug trafficking, cooperating with neighboring countries such as Jordan, Turkiye, and Iraq to dismantle criminal networks.

The former regime of Bashar Assad has been accused of helping to turn the country into a hub for manufacturing highly toxic captagon while sponsoring cartels to smuggle drugs to the Arab Gulf and other countries.