Israel ceases fire and Gazans start returning home

Palestinians in Gaza celebrate following the announcement that Israel and Hamas have agreed to the first phase of a peace plan on October 9, 2025. © Abdel Kareem Hana, AP

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Israel declared a
ceasefire and started pulling back troops in Gaza on Friday, as thousands of
displaced Palestinians began to make their way back to their wrecked homes.
After two years of
brutal war, the families of Israel's remaining hostages in the territory were
also hoping the truce -- pushed by US President Donald Trump -- would hold.
The Israeli military
said its troops had ceased fire at noon (0900 GMT) "in preparation for the
ceasefire agreement and the return of hostages".
Three hours later,
the US Pentagon confirmed Israel had completed the first phase of a pullback
laid out in Trump's peace plan. Israeli forces still hold around 53 percent of
the Palestinian territory.
The withdrawal set
the clock running on a 72-hour deadline for Hamas to release the remaining
hostages held in Gaza.
Israel, meanwhile,
published the list of the 250 Palestinian prisoners it plans to release --
along with 1,700 Gazans detained since Hamas triggered the latest conflict with
its attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.
As the ceasefire
began, long columns of Palestinians, exhausted by two years of intense
bombardment and what the UN has warned were famine conditions, began a trek
from the southern city of Khan Yunis towards their shattered homes further
north.
The EU mission at
the Rafah border between Gaza and Egypt will be reopening a pedestrian crossing
on October 14, Italy said.
Under the ceasefire
deal, Hamas will hand over 47 hostages -- living and dead -- still held from
the 251 abducted during the attack two years ago. The remains of one more
hostage, held in Gaza since 2014, are also expected to be returned.
Gaza's civil defence
agency confirmed that Israeli troops and armoured vehicles were pulling back
from forward positions in both Gaza City and Khan Yunis.
But Israel warned
some areas were still off-limits and that Palestinians should steer clear of
its forces while they were "in the midst of adjusting operational
positions in the Gaza Strip".
"We're going
back to our areas, full of wounds and sorrow, but we thank God for this
situation," 32-year-old Ameer Abu Iyadeh told AFP in Khan Yunis.
Before dawn on
Friday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said the government
had approved a framework of the hostage-release deal.
"Citizens of
Israel, two years ago, the Simhat Torah holiday became a day of national
mourning," Netanyahu said, referring to a Jewish festival that begins at
nightfall on Monday.
"This Simhat
Torah, with God's help, will be a day of national joy, celebrating the return
of all our brothers and sisters held hostage," he said.
The family of Alon
Ohel, who is among the 20 living hostages due to be released, said they were
"overwhelmed with emotion" and eagerly awaiting his return.
"With tears of
joy, we received the news that an agreement has been reached," the family
said in a statement.
Israel had
previously said all parties had signed the first phase of a ceasefire agreement
at talks this week in Egypt, adding that Hamas freeing the remaining Israeli
captives would "bring the end to this war".
Despite celebrations
in Israel and Gaza and a flood of congratulatory messages from world leaders,
many issues remain unresolved, including Hamas's disarmament and a
proposed transitional authority for Gaza led by Trump.
Senior Hamas
official Osama Hamdan told Qatar-based broadcaster Al Araby the Palestinian
Islamist movement rejects the transitional authority.
Trump said the issue
of Hamas surrendering its weapons would be addressed in the second phase of the
peace plan.
Mohammed
al-Mughayyir, an official from Gaza's civil defence agency, said the areas
Israeli troops were withdrawing from were Tal al-Hawa and Al-Shati camps in
Gaza City, both of which had seen intense Israeli air and ground operations in
recent weeks, and parts of Khan Yunis.
Residents of several
areas of the Gaza Strip also told AFP the Israeli military appeared to have
withdrawn from positions it held on Thursday.
Areej Abu Saadaeh,
53, who was displaced early in the conflict, was heading home between smashed
piles of rubble and twisted steel, under a flat blue sky and clouds of cement
dust.
"I'm happy
about the truce and peace, even though I'm a mother of a son and a daughter who
were killed and I grieve for them deeply. Yet, the truce also brings joy: returning
to our homes," she said.
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