- Red Cross on way to collect next batch of hostages
- Trump on way to Israeli parliament for speech
JERUSALEM, Oct 13 — Hamas handed over the first seven of 20 surviving Israeli hostages today, a key step in ending two years of ruinous war in Gaza under a ceasefire deal engineered by US President Donald Trump, who landed in Israel to address its parliament.
As thousands of people cheered, hugged and wept in Tel Aviv’s Hostages Square, Israel’s military said it had received seven living hostages after their transfer out of the Gaza Strip by the Red Cross.
“I am so excited. I am full of happiness. It’s hard to imagine how I feel this moment. I didn’t sleep all night,” said Viki Cohen, mother of hostage Nimrod Cohen, as she travelled to Reim, an Israeli military camp where the hostages will be transferred.
The military said the Red Cross was en route to receive more of the remaining 13 confirmed living hostages, who were all expected to be released today. Bodies of some of the 28 dead hostages, and another two whose fate is unknown, will also be released today, along with nearly 2,000 Palestinian detainees and convicted prisoners held in Israel.
US President Donald Trump disembarks from Air Force One at Ben Gurion International airport, on the day Israeli hostages are released by Hamas and Palestinian prisoners by Israel after a ceasefire went into effect under the first phase of a US-brokered agreement, in Lod, Israel October 13, 2025. — Reuters pic
Leaders meet to discuss lasting peace
In Gaza, about a dozen masked and black-clad gunmen, apparently members of Hamas’ armed wing, arrived at Nasser Hospital where a stage and chairs had been laid out to welcome returning Palestinian prisoners.
“I hope that these images can be the end to this war. We lost friends and relatives, we lost our houses and our city,” said Emad Abu Joudat, 57, a Palestinian father of six from Gaza City as he watched the handover preparations on his phone.
The releases are one of the most important parts of the first phase of the ceasefire agreement concluded last week in the Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, where Trump and more than 20 other world leaders will be convening later today.
The US mediated the agreement along with Egypt, Qatar and Turkey, with the next phase calling for an international body — a “Board of Peace” — led by Trump.
Progress towards a lasting peace now hinges on global commitments that may be taken up at today’s summit, but much could yet go wrong.
Further steps in Trump’s 20-point plan have yet to be agreed by the two sides. Those include how the demolished Gaza Strip will be governed once fighting ends, and the ultimate fate of Hamas, which has rejected Israel’s demands that it disarm.
The group’s appearance today with fighters gathered at Nasser Hospital underscored the likely difficulty of assuaging Israeli concerns about the Islamist militant group’s continued hold over Gaza, which it has ruled since 2007.
Further sticking points may include Israel’s own continued withdrawal from the Gaza Strip beyond the lines to which it pulled back in recent days, and moves towards the creation of a Palestinian state, something rejected by many Israelis.
Trump landed in Israel shortly after the announced release of the first group of hostages to a hero’s welcome.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stood waiting at the airport as Air Force One taxied in, then accompanied Trump by limousine as a band played.
Trump will become only the fourth US president to address the Knesset (parliament), following Jimmy Carter in 1979, Bill Clinton in 1994 and George W. Bush in 2008. He will be awarded Israel’s highest civilian honour later this year, Israeli President Isaac Herzog said.

Palestinians search the rubble of buildings amid widespread destruction due to Israeli bombardment in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip, as a ceasefire holds on October 12, 2025. — AFP pic
Two years of conflict
Two years of war have reduced Gaza to a sea of rubble, with nearly all its 2.2 million people homeless, and caused a humanitarian disaster on a huge scale. It has also reshaped the Middle East through spillover Israeli conflicts with Iran, Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Yemen’s Houthis.
Near Israel’s Reim camp, where the hostages will be brought to be taken to hospitals, people lined the road waving Israeli flags on which a yellow ribbon — the symbol of remembrance for the hostages — was interwoven with the blue Star of David.
At Israeli prisons, some 1,966 Palestinian detainees boarded buses and most were expected to be released at Gaza’s Nasser Hospital today, an official involved in the operation said.
In a statement today, the armed wing of Hamas affirmed its commitment to the terms and timeline of the deal, contingent on Israel’s adherence. It said Israel agreed to a ceasefire and swap deal after it failed to free the hostages through its military offensive.
UN aid chief Tom Fletcher said on X that Israel had approved the delivery of more emergency supplies and the main UN aid agency working in Gaza, UNRWA, urged Israel to let it work unhindered in the territory.
The conflict was sparked by a Hamas attack on October 7, 2023, that killed around 1,200 people in Israel with 251 taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies. Israeli airstrikes and ground assaults have since devastated Gaza, killing more than 67,000 Palestinians, the enclave’s health officials say.
Israeli critics of Netanyahu, including hostages’ families, accused him of deliberately prolonging the war to placate his far-right government coalition partners, whose backing is crucial to his political survival.
The International Criminal Court last year issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity, which Israel denies. — Reuters