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Tag: Gaza

  • Hamas returns remains of 3 more Israeli hostages, leaving 8 in Gaza, including an Israeli American

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    Jerusalem – Palestinian militants have so far released the remains of 20 hostages that were held in Gaza for the past two years as part of the ceasefire agreement in the Israel-Hamas war. But the process of returning the bodies of the last eight remaining hostages, as called for under the U.S. peace plan, is progressing slowly, with militants releasing just one or two bodies every few days.

    Hamas says it has not been able to reach all of the remains because they are buried under rubble of buildings destroyed by Israel’s two-year offensive in the Gaza Strip. Israel’s government and the families of the hostages have accused Hamas of dragging its feet, however, and officials have threatened to resume military operations or withhold humanitarian aid if all of the remains are not returned.

    In the most recent release, Hamas returned the bodies on Sunday of three troops killed during its Oct. 7, 2023, terrorist attack on southern Israel. Israel’s military confirmed that the remains belonged to hostages Omer Neutra, Oz Daniel and Col. Assaf Hamami.

    An International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) vehicle transports the bodies of three Israeli hostages that were handed over by Hamas’ armed wing in Gaza, under a ceasefire and prisoner exchange agreement between Israel and Hamas, Nov. 2, 2025.

    Stringer/Anadolu/Getty


    In return, Israel has so far released the bodies of 270 Palestinians back to Gaza, including 45 handed over on Monday, according to Palestinian media. Israel has not provided any details on their identities, and it is unclear if they were killed in Israel during the attack on Oct. 7, or if they were Palestinian detainees who died in Israeli custody, or bodies that were taken from Gaza by Israeli troops during the war.

    Health officials in Gaza have struggled to identify the bodies without access to DNA kits.

    Who are the 8 hostages whose remains have not been returned?

    Itay Chen was an Israeli American originally from Netanya, in central Israel, who was abducted along with two other members of his tank battalion: Daniel Peretz, who also died, and Matan Angrest, who survived and was released from captivity on Monday. Chen loved basketball and studying human biology, according to the Israeli Hostages Families Forum.

    Chen was killed on Oct. 7 and his body was taken to Gaza. His father, Ruby Chen, has met frequently with American leaders about bringing all of the hostages back to Israel, including the remains of the dead. Itay Chen is survived by his parents and two brothers.

    ISRAEL-FRANCE-PALESTINIAN-CONFLICT-HOSTAGES-CEREMONY

    Ruby Chen holds up a portrait of his 19-year-old son, American-Israeli IDF soldier Itay Chen, who was then believed to be a hostage in Gaza, as people watch a tribute to victims of the Oct. 7 Hamas attack against Israel, in Tel Aviv, Feb. 7, 2024.

    AHMAD GHARABLI/AFP/Getty


    Meny Godard was a professional soccer player before enlisting in the Israeli military and serving in the 1973 Mideast War, according to Kibbutz Be’eri. He served in a variety of different positions in the kibbutz, including at its printing press.

    On the morning of Oct. 7, Godard and his wife, Ayelet, were forced out of their home after it was set on fire. She hid in the bushes for a number of hours before militants discovered her and killed her. She was able to tell her children that Meny had been killed before she died. The family held a double funeral for the couple. They are survived by four children and six grandchildren.

    Hadar Goldin’s remains are the only ones that have been held in Gaza since before the war. The Israeli soldier was killed on Aug. 1, 2014, two hours after a ceasefire took effect ending that year’s war between Israel and Hamas. The military said it was determined that he had been killed in the Oct. 7 attack.

    Goldin is survived by his parents and three siblings, including a twin. He had proposed to his fiancée before he was killed. Earlier this year, Goldin’s family marked 4,000 days since his body was taken. The military retrieved the body of another soldier who was killed in the 2014 war earlier this year.

    Ran Gvili, who served in an elite police unit, was recovering from a broken shoulder he sustained in a motorcycle accident but rushed to assist fellow officers on Oct. 7. After helping people escape from the Nova music festival, he was killed fighting at another location and his body was taken to Gaza. The military confirmed his death four months later. He is survived by his parents and a sister.

    Joshua Mollel was a Tanzanian agricultural student who arrived at kibbutz Nahal Oz only 19 days before Oct. 7. He had finished agricultural college in Tanzania and hoped to gain experience in Israel he could apply at home. Two smaller Palestinian militant groups posted graphic footage on social media showing their fighters stabbing and shooting Mollel, according to a Human Rights Watch report. He is survived by two parents and four siblings in Tanzania.

    Dror Or was a father of three who managed the dairy farm on Kibbutz Be’eri and was an expert cheesemaker. On Oct. 7, the family was hiding in their safe room when militants set the house on fire. Dror and his wife, Yonat, were killed. Two of their children were abducted and released during the November 2023 ceasefire.

    Sudthisak Rinthalak was an agricultural worker from Thailand who had been employed at Kibbutz Be’eri. According to media reports, Rinthalak was divorced and had been working in Israel since 2017. A total of 31 workers from Thailand were kidnapped on Oct. 7, the largest group of foreigners to be held in captivity. Most of them were released in the first and second ceasefires. Rinthalak is the last of three Thai hostages whose bodies were held in Gaza. The Thai Foreign Ministry has said in addition to the hostages, 46 Thais have been killed during the war.

    Lior Rudaeff was born in Argentina and moved to Kibbutz Nir Yitzhak at age 7. He volunteered for more than 40 years as an ambulance driver and was a member of the community’s emergency response team. He was killed while battling militants on the morning of Oct. 7 and his body was brought to Gaza. Rudaeff is survived by four children and three grandchildren.

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  • Hamas hands over three coffins it says contain bodies of Gaza hostages

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    Hamas has handed over three coffins it says contain the bodies of deceased Gaza hostages, according to the Israeli military.

    Israel has received the coffins, via the Red Cross in the Gaza Strip, and transported them to Israel for formal identification.

    If confirmed as deceased hostages, it would mean eight Israeli and foreign deceased hostages remain in Gaza.

    Under the first phase of the US-brokered ceasefire deal with Israel that started last month, Hamas agreed to return the 20 living and 28 dead hostages it was holding.

    Israel has accused Hamas of being too slow to return the deceased hostages, while Hamas has said it is working to recover bodies trapped under rubble in the territory.

    Hamas’s armed wing, Al-Qassam Brigades, said the remains had been found earlier on Sunday “along the route of one of the tunnels in the southern Gaza Strip”.

    Later, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s official X account said: “All of the hostages’ families have been updated accordingly, and our hearts are with them in this difficult hour. The effort to return our hostages is ongoing and will not cease until the last hostage is returned.”

    The Hostages and Missing Families Forum is pressing Netanyahu to act urgently to recover all remaining deceased hostages from Gaza.

    “The Hostage Families demand that the prime minister act with determination and firmness in order… to return all of the deceased hostages to Israel’s hands,” the campaign group said in a statement.

    Hamas and Israel have accused each other of violating the ceasefire.

    On Sunday, an Israeli air strike killed a man in northern Gaza, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.

    The Israeli military said it had struck a militant that was posing a threat to its soldiers.

    Under the first phase of the ceasefire, all the living Israeli hostages were released on 13 October in exchange for 250 Palestinian prisoners and 1,718 detainees from Gaza.

    Israel has handed over the bodies of 225 Palestinians in exchange for the bodies of the 15 Israeli hostages so far returned by Hamas, along with those of two foreign hostages – one of them Thai and the other Nepalese.

    Prior to Sunday, nine of the 11 dead hostages still in Gaza were Israelis, one was Tanzanian, and one was Thai.

    All but one of the dead hostages still in Gaza were among the 251 people abducted during the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, during which about 1,200 other people were killed.

    Israel responded by launching a military campaign in Gaza, during which more than 68,500 people have been killed, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.

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  • Latest remains returned from Gaza were not Israeli hostages, Israel says

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    The remains of three people handed over by Hamas to the Red Cross this week did not belong to any of the hostages, an Israeli source told CBS News on Saturday. It is the latest setback that could undermine the U.S.-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.

    The unidentified remains of the three people were returned late Friday to Israel, where they were examined overnight. At the time, a military official told the Associated Press that Israeli intelligence suggested they did not belong to any of the hostages taken by Hamas terrorists during the Oct. 7, 2023 terror attack in southern Israel that sparked the war. The Israeli official spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office on Saturday confirmed that the remains did not belong to any of the hostages, without giving further details, the Associated Press reported. CBS News has reached out to Netanyahu’s office for additional comment.

    The Israeli army declined to comment to CBS News on Saturday, saying it did not announce it received the bodies.

    “The reports in question were not issued by us, therefore, we won’t confirm their accuracy,” an IDF spokesperson told CBS News.

    Hamas’ armed wing said in a subsequent statement on Saturday that it had offered to hand over samples on Friday of unidentified bodies, but that Israel had refused to receive them and asked for the remains for examination.

    “We handed the bodies over to stop the claims of Israel,” the statement said.

    It’s unclear who the remains belonged to.

    Since the U.S.-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hamas took effect on Oct. 10, Palestinian militants have released the remains of 17 hostages that were held in Gaza for the past two years.

    But the process of returning the bodies of the last 11 remaining hostages, as called for under the truce deal, is progressing slowly, with militants releasing just one or two bodies every few days.

    The total number of Palestinian bodies returned by Israel since the ceasefire began stands at 225. Only 75 of those have been identified by families, according to Gaza’s Hamas-run Health Ministry. It is unclear if those returned were killed in Israel during the Oct. 7, 2023 attack, whether they died in Israeli custody as detainees or were recovered from Gaza by troops during the war.

    Under the ceasefire deal, Hamas released all living Israeli hostages in return for nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and wartime detainees. Israel pulled back its troops to a designated line within Gaza, halted its military offensive and increased aid into the territory.  

    The fragile truce faced its biggest challenge earlier this week when Israel carried out strikes across Gaza that killed more than 100 people, following the killing of an Israeli soldier in Rafah, Gaza’s southernmost city, and the incomplete return of hostages.

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  • Israel says Gaza ceasefire back on after dozens of Palestinians killed in airstrikes

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    The Israeli military said it had “begun the renewed enforcement of the ceasefire” in Gaza after carrying out airstrikes that it said hit “dozens of terror targets and terrorists” in the Palestinian territory. The flare-up of violence on Tuesday sparked fears that the U.S.-brokered peace deal between Israel and Hamas could crumble. 

    At least 104 Palestinians were killed in Israel’s strikes, according to Gaza’s Hamas-run Ministry of Health.

    The Israel Defense Forces said Wednesday that it would “continue to uphold the ceasefire agreement and will respond firmly to any violation of it.”

    An Israeli military source said Tuesday that IDF forces had been operating in Rafah, southern Gaza, to dismantle tunnels when enemy fire was directed at a structure and an engineering vehicle, killing Master Sergeant (Res.) Yona Efraim Feldbaum.

    Shortly after, anti-tank missiles were fired at a separate armored vehicle and troops in the area, the Israeli military source said.

    Hamas denied any involvement in the shooting.

    Relatives of Palestinians, including children, said to have been killed in Israeli strikes on central Gaza, mourn as they carry the bodies from the al-Shifa Hospital for burial in Gaza City, Oct. 29, 2025.

    Saeed M. M. T. Jaras/Anadolu/Getty


    Later Tuesday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he had ordered Israel’s military to conduct “powerful strikes” in Gaza in response to ceasefire violations by Hamas. 

    In response, Hamas said it would delay the return of the remains of another hostage that had been expected to take place on Tuesday.

    President Trump, who is on a trip to Asia, said Israel was justified in carrying out the strikes against Hamas, telling reporters on Wednesday: “As I understand it, they [Hamas] took out an Israeli soldier, so the Israelis hit back and they should hit back. When that happens, they should hit back.”

    “Nothing is going to jeopardize” the ceasefire, Mr. Trump added. “You have to understand Hamas is a very small part of peace in the Middle East, and they have to behave.”

    On Wednesday, Hamas accused the Israeli military of committing “a large-scale massacre” overnight, “despite the agreement to halt the war.”

    Israel’s strikes “reflect a clear lack of respect by the occupation government toward the mediators and guarantor states, which have failed to stop the occupation from continuing its genocidal war on the Gaza Strip,” Hamas spokesperson Hazem Qassem said in a statement.

    Mohammed Hasan Abu Daqa, a Palestinian in Khan Younis, told CBS News’ team in Gaza that he believed Israel had breached the truce.

    “We call on the Arab nations, on world leaders, on the International community to stand with the people of Gaza,” Abu Daqa said. “The people of Gaza are searching for food. They are searching for water. They are searching for freedom. They are asking for the crossings to be opened and for a decent life like everyone else.”

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  • Netanyahu orders Israeli army to carry out

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    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday he has ordered the army to immediately carry out “powerful strikes” in Gaza, and Hamas responded by saying it would delay handing over the body of a hostage, putting new pressure on the tenuous U.S.-brokered ceasefire.  

    Associated Press reporters and witnesses heard tank fire and saw explosions in various parts of Gaza, including in Gaza City and Deir al-Balah.  

    The order from Netanyahu follows heightened tensions, as Israel reported Hamas firing on its forces in southern Gaza and after Hamas returned a set of remains that Israel said belonged to a hostage recovered earlier in the war.

    “This constitutes a clear violation of the [Gaza peace] agreement” by Hamas, Netanyahu’s office said, adding that the prime minister would meet with the heads of Israel’s defense establishment, “during which Israel’s steps in response to the violations will be discussed.”

    In a sign of the fragility of the ceasefire, Israeli troops were shot at in the southern city of Rafah on Tuesday and returned fire, according to an Israeli military official who spoke on condition of anonymity because there hasn’t been an official announcement yet.

    Speaking with reporters aboard Air Force One on his way to South Korea, President Trump addressed the clashes, saying “nothing’s going to jeopardize” the ceasefire. 

    Mr. Trump said Hamas is a “very small part of peace in the Middle East” and that “if they’re not good, they’re going to be terminated. Their lives will be terminated. and they understand that.”

    “Nobody knows what happened to the Israeli soldier, but they say it was sniper fire, and [the Israeli response] was retribution for that, and I think they have a right to do that,” Mr. Trump said.

    There are still 13 bodies of hostages in Gaza. Hamas said Tuesday it had recovered the body of a hostage, but after Netanyahu announced the plans to strike Gaza, Hamas said in a statement it would delay the handover.

    An Associated Press videographer in Khan Younis witnessed what appeared to be a white body bag being carried out from a tunnel by several men, including some masked militants, and then transported into an ambulance. It was not immediately clear what was in the bag.

    The slow return of hostages’ bodies is posing a challenge to implementing the next stages of the ceasefire, which will address even knottier issues, such as the disarmament of Hamas, the deployment of an international security force in Gaza and deciding who will govern the territory.

    The Israel Defense Forces accused Hamas Tuesday of “attempting to create a false impression of efforts to locate the bodies, while in fact holding deceased hostages whose remains it refuses to release as required by the agreement.” 

    The IDF said its drones had recorded Hamas operatives “removing body remains from a structure that had been prepared in advance and burying them nearby” on Monday, and then staging “a false display of discovering a deceased hostage’s body.”

    Hamas has said it is struggling to locate the bodies amid the vast destruction in Gaza, while Israel has accused the militant group of purposely delaying their return. Over the weekend, Egypt deployed a team of experts and heavy equipment to help search for the bodies of the remaining hostages. That work continued Tuesday in Khan Younis and Nuseirat.

    Israeli hostage negotiator and peace campaigner Gershon Baskin told CBS News earlier this month that it was “very likely that there might be Israeli bodies underneath the rubble” in Gaza, where the Hamas-run government estimates that at least 90% of the buildings have been damaged or destroyed.

    This is the second time since the ceasefire began on Oct. 10 that remains turned over by Hamas have been problematic. Israel said one of the bodies Hamas released in the first week of the ceasefire belonged to an unidentified Palestinian.

    During a previous ceasefire in February 2025, Hamas said it handed over the bodies of three hostages, Shiri Bibas and her two sons, but testing showed that one of the bodies returned was identified as a Palestinian woman. Shiri Bibas’ body was returned a day later.

    The remains returned overnight have been identified as belonging to Ofir Tzarfati, Netanyahu’s office said.

    Tzarfati was kidnapped from the Nova music festival in the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel that started the war. In all, the militants killed some 1,200 people that day, mostly civilians, and took 251 hostages.

    Tzarfati was killed in captivity and his body was retrieved by Israeli troops in November 2023. In March 2024, his family received additional remains for burial.

    Tzarfati’s family said in a statement that this is the third time “we have been forced to open Ofir’s grave and rebury our son.”

    In exchange for 15 dead hostages returned from Gaza since the ceasefire began, Israel has handed back to Gaza 195 Palestinian bodies. The last 20 living hostages were returned to Israel at the start of the ceasefire, and in exchange, Israel freed roughly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees.

    Earlier Tuesday, Israeli authorities said they had killed three Palestinian militants during an operation in the northern part of the occupied West Bank, the latest action in Israel’s stepped-up military activity in the territory since the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack.

    Israeli police said the three men were shot as they came out of a cave near Jenin, a town in the northern West Bank known as a militant stronghold. The Israeli military said in a statement that the militants “took part in terror activity in Jenin,” but gave no further details.

    Two militants were shot and killed in the initial volley of gunfire. The third, who was wounded, was killed shortly after, according to the Israeli military.

    An earlier statement said the Israeli military carried out an airstrike shortly afterward to destroy the cave. The army confirmed an airstrike in the area but gave no further details.

    Hamas condemned the Jenin strike and later identified two of the three men as militants with Hamas’ Qassam Brigades. The third man was referred to as a “comrade,” but no additional details about him were given.

    Israel says its operations have cracked down on militants in the West Bank. But Palestinians and human rights groups say scores of uninvolved civilians have also been among the dead, while tens of thousands of people have been displaced from their homes.

    Over 68,500 Palestinians have died in the two-year war in Gaza, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which doesn’t distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count. The ministry maintains detailed casualty records that are seen as generally reliable by U.N. agencies and independent experts. Israel has disputed them without providing its own toll.

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  • Israel calls Hamas’ return of partial remains of previously recovered hostage “clear violation” of peace deal

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    Israel’s government said Tuesday that a set of partial hostage remains returned by Hamas the previous day belonged to a deceased captive recovered by the military around two years ago.

    “After completing the identification process this morning, it was found that last night remains belonging to the fallen hostage Ofir Tzarfati, who had been returned from the Gaza Strip in a military operation about two years ago, were returned,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said.

    “This constitutes a clear violation of the [Gaza peace] agreement” by Hamas, Netanyahu’s office said, adding that the prime minister would meet with the heads of Israel’s defense establishment, “during which Israel’s steps in response to the violations will be discussed.”

    An Israeli group campaigning for the release of hostages held in Gaza urged authorities to “act decisively” against Hamas, accusing the U.S.- and Israeli-designated terrorist group of violating the peace deal brokered by President Trump by returning only the partial remains of the previously recovered hostage, Ofir Tzarfati, rather than one of the 13 whose bodies remain in Gaza.

    A poster showing Ofir Tzarfati, who was declared killed after being kidnapped during Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023 terrorist attack on Israel, is seen at a memorial display of photos of people killed during the attack on the Nova music festival, Nov. 30, 2023, in Re’im, Israel.

    Alexi J. Rosenfeld/Getty/Alexi Rosenfeld


    “In light of Hamas’ severe breach of the agreement last night … the Israeli government cannot and must not ignore this, and must act decisively against these violations,” the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, which represents many of the hostage families, said in a statement.

    The forum has urged Israel’s leaders to declare Hamas in breach of the peace deal since it started handing over the remains of 28 deceased hostages that had been held in the Gaza Strip.

    Hamas has said it needs more time, assistance and heavy equipment to locate and recover the remaining 13 bodies still in the Palestinian territory, and that work has ramped up in recent days, with Egypt sending a team to assist and the Red Cross confirming to CBS News on Monday that its staff were accompanying recovery teams on the ground.

    President Trump warned on Saturday that he was “watching very closely” to ensure that Hamas returned more bodies within 48 hours.

    “Some of the bodies are hard to reach, but others they can return now and, for some reason, they are not,” he wrote on his Truth Social network.

    Life amid the ruins in Gaza's Al-Nassr neighbourhood after the ceasefire

    A view shows the heavily damaged Al Nassr neighborhood, where Palestinians struggle to rebuild their lives amid the rubble after a ceasefire agreement in Gaza City, Gaza, Oct. 28, 2025, as many buildings were destroyed and civilian homes and belongings suffered extensive damage.

    Ahmed Jihad Ibrahim Al-arini/Anadolu/Getty


    Israeli hostage negotiator and peace campaigner Gershon Baskin told CBS News earlier this month that it was ” very likely that there might be Israeli bodies underneath the rubble” in Gaza, where the Hamas-run government estimates that at least 90% of the buildings have been damaged or destroyed.

    “Some of the deceased hostages may never be found, and that’s part of the reality, but we have to make sure that Hamas is doing everything possible to do it,” Baskin said.

    During negotiations on the Israel-Hamas peace deal, Hamas representatives said they did not know the location of all the remains of deceased hostages, according to Israeli media.

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  • Hamas tortured Gaza hostages over Ben-Gvir’s actions, freed captive Bar Kuperstein reveals

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    In a revealing interview, freed hostage Bar Kuperstein recounts brutal treatment in Gaza, including starvation and physical abuse, linked to National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.

    In a harrowing interview with KAN News following his release from Gaza, freed hostage Bar Kuperstein described the constant psychological warfare and physical abuse he endured in Hamas captivity, including intentional starvation and a violent incident he said Hamas terrorists linked directly to Israeli political figures.

    Kuperstein described torture and deliberate denial of his most basic needs. “I remember there were days when there was food for them, and we had none. They just didn’t bring any for us,” Kuperstein told KAN.

    When asked if he thought they were intentionally denying food, he said yes – “there was another guy we called ‘Shahurzik.’ He told us, ‘I’m here to make sure they don’t treat you too well.’”

    Kuperstein also noted a stark difference in their physical condition compared to their captors, noting that his captors did not necessarily eat in front of them, but one could tell from their weight and bodies. “We were getting smaller, and they were getting bigger,” he said, as the interview showed videos surfaced from Hamas members feasting in tunnels, amidst claims of famine in Gaza.

    Kuperstein recounted a specific period of torture that began around the 270th day of his captivity, which his captors explicitly linked to Israeli politics and the media. When asked why the sudden uptick in abuse, he noted that it had to do with the wealthy population of the country and National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir. “

    I remember when they came to us and bombarded us with sources. They made us stand against the wall and hit us. They explained it was because of Ben-Gvir and what he was doing to the rich people,” he recalled. The abuse quickly escalated.

    Israeli Minister of National Security Itamar Ben Gvir attends a cabinet meeting, at the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem on July 30, 2023. (credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/POOL)

    “After a week, I remember they took me to their room, tied me up, of course. When I entered, I got two hard slaps to the face, real ones. I fell to the floor immediately. They dragged me by my legs across the whole room, stomping on me and humiliating me as much as they could,” he told KAN.

    As they tied his legs, a captor delivered a chilling message in Hebrew.

    “One of them, speaking in Hebrew, said, ‘Until now, we’ve done nothing. Now you’ll feel it firsthand. This is what we do to the rich people at your place.’

    Kuperstein shared the terror of that moment: “As they tied my legs, I thought, ‘What’s happening? Are they going to break my legs now?’ You start thinking, ‘Wow, this could be the end for me.’ Your whole life flashes before your eyes.”

    The torture continued with focused brutality. “They took a stick and started hitting our feet with it. I remember I put my right foot on my left to take the blows on just one leg. At least leave me one leg. That was really luck,” he said, noting that a few of his toes were broken from the abuse, and he was unable to put weight on his leg for about a month.

    ‘Why aren’t you taking care of us?’

    Looking back, Kuperstein expressed strong anger, not just at his captors, but at the situation that allowed his treatment to continue. “How could things like this happen and get broadcast? If they knew what was going on, how could they let us be treated this way?” he said. “You’re a minister in the government — why aren’t you taking care of us?”

    National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir posted a response on X, calling Kuperstein’s interview “propaganda” and feeding Hamas’ narrative.

    He expressed regards toward Bar Kuperstein and the returned captives, though quickly turned the post to discuss prisons in Israel.

    Hamas didn’t need an excuse for them to come in on October 7th, murder, rape, abuse, and burn babies. All of these things happened long before the changes in the prisons – changes that Netanyahu at that time wouldn’t let me make,” his post read. “Today, even the General Security Service admits that the publication of the policy led to a decrease in attacks and a deterrence for Hamas.”

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  • Palestinians: Injuries following incidents in the Gaza Strip

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    Despite the current ceasefire, several people have been injured, some seriously, following incidents in the southern part of the Gaza Strip, Palestinian sources reported on Saturday.

    Four people were injured in an Israeli airstrike on a vehicle in Nuseirat in the centre of the Gaza Strip on Saturday evening, according to medical sources in the coastal area.

    The Israeli army confirmed an attack in the city. This was reportedly aimed at members of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad terrorist organization (PIJ). They had allegedly been planning an attack on Israeli soldiers.

    Earlier, one person was seriously injured by Israeli shelling north-west of the southern city of Rafah, sources at the nearby Nasser Hospital reported.

    The area is under Israeli military control. When asked, the Israeli army said it was investigating the report.

    The Palestinian Red Crescent said two people were also injured in an Israeli air strike on a vehicle in the town of Bani Suhailam near Khan Younis. An Israeli military spokesman said he was aware of the report but could not confirm such an incident in the area.

    The Hamas-controlled health authority said 93 Palestinians have been killed since the ceasefire came into effect on October 10. Many of the deaths occurred about a week ago.

    The Israeli army confirmed that two soldiers were killed in attacks in the south of the Gaza Strip last Sunday. Israel then carried out the heaviest air strikes since the start of the ceasefire. According to hospital reports, 44 Palestinians were killed.

    Since then, the situation has calmed down considerably. However, there are still isolated incidents.

    The Israeli army said it has fired on individuals who entered and approached soldiers beyond the so-called yellow line. The Israeli military has withdrawn to behind this line as part of the ceasefire agreement and controls the territory there.

    The information provided by both sides cannot currently be independently verified.

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  • 10/25: Saturday Morning

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    10/25: Saturday Morning – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    Caribbean officials prepare for Melissa’s impacts; Food writer Anna Ansari releases new cookbook inspired by international travel.

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  • 10/21: CBS Mornings Plus

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    Man in custody after assault rifle found at Atlanta airport. Also, former FBI agent talks about the Louvre heist.

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  • ‘A very dangerous place.’ Franklin Graham on Gaza, as relief flight departs NC.

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    A resident of Gaza carries a box of relief supplies from Samaritan’s Purse after a relief flight by the Boone-based international Christian relief organization.

    A resident of Gaza carries a box of relief supplies from Samaritan’s Purse after a relief flight by the Boone-based international Christian relief organization.

    Courtesy of Samaritan’s Purse

    N.C. evangelist Franklin Graham watched Saturday as a Samaritan’s Purse 767 departed Greensboro for Israel with relief supplies for Gaza. He prayed earlier with the flight crew.

    “It’s a very dangerous place, even though a peace agreement has been signed,” Graham told The Charlotte Observer by phone 15 minutes after the flight departed for Ben Gurion Airport.

    N.C. evangelist Franklin Graham
    N.C. evangelist Franklin Graham Billy Graham Evangelistic Association

    “Hamas has held 2.5 million people hostage for the past 18 years,” he said, referring to the armed Palestinian group and political movement in the Gaza Strip, and the estimated population of Gaza.

    “They are a wicked group of people,” Graham said. “They could care less about Gaza.”

    Graham is president and CEO of Samaritan’s Purse, the Boone-based international Christian relief organization.

    Residents of Gaza receive supplies from Samaritan’s Purse from a previous flight by the Boone-based international Christian relief organization.
    Residents of Gaza receive supplies from Samaritan’s Purse from a previous flight by the Boone-based international Christian relief organization. Courtesy of Samaritan’s Purse

    Saturday’s flight was the 13th with supplies for Gaza by Samaritan’s Purse and its disaster response specialists. Because of its size, the plane held as many supplies as the organization’s 757 and DC-8 cargo planes combined, Graham said.

    767 packed with supplies

    The flight included more than 290,000 packets of vitamin-rich, peanut-based supplementary food for women and children, 12,000 blankets, 12,000 solar lights and other relief items.

    A Samaritan’s Purse worker makes sure that relief supplies are secure on one of the organization’s planes.
    A Samaritan’s Purse worker makes sure that relief supplies are secure on one of the organization’s planes. Ron Nickel Courtesy of Samaritan’s Purse

    “Gaza has no electricity,” Graham said, explaining the importance of the hand-held solar lanterns for families.

    The blankets are because colder temperatures arrive in Gaza, too, in winter, he said.

    The supplies will be taken to a Samaritan’s Purse warehouse in Israel before being distributed to families in Gaza, Graham said.

    Samaritan’s Purse flies relief supplies to more than 100 countries to help victims of war, disease, disaster, poverty, famine and persecution, according to the organization.
    Samaritan’s Purse flies relief supplies to more than 100 countries to help victims of war, disease, disaster, poverty, famine and persecution, according to the organization. Grace Carson Courtesy of Samaritan’s Purse

    “We have to work very carefully,” Graham said when asked about the specter of violence in Gaza.

    In a statement announcing Saturday’s flight, Graham said Hamas also “held 251 innocent people hostage from Israel.”

    “They executed anyone who spoke out against them, as we witnessed on the streets of Gaza last week,” Graham said in the statement. “We pray this flight will bring relief to people who are suffering.”

    Armored ambulances, 223 tons of food

    Samaritan’s Purse disaster response specialists have worked in Israel and Gaza since immediately after the conflict began two years ago, he said.

    The organization has delivered more than 223 tons of supplemental food and a million food rations, and its medical teams have treated more than 1,700 patients, according to the statement.

    In Israel, Samaritan’s Purse has given 42 ambulances — 28 armored — to Magen David Adom, the country’s emergency services provider.

    Samaritan’s Purse also has 11 major construction projects in Israel, including two ambulance response stations, nine community centers with bomb shelters, and an equine therapy center for youth.

    Despite the risk of violence, his organization will continue reaching Gazans and others in need, Graham told the Observer.

    “You still have 2.5 million people who need help,” with food and other supplies, he said.

    “We’re just one of a number of organizations working there,” he said. “We’re going to do all we can to help as much as we can in Jesus’ name, to show that God hasn’t abandoned them. I ask people to pray for them.”

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    Joe Marusak

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    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
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  • Rubio calls for international mission to enforce Gaza ceasefire

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    On a visit to Israel, Secretary of State Marco Rubio called for an international mission to enforce the Gaza ceasefire. He said up to a dozen nations and organizations would take part, and made clear there’s no role for Hamas. Holly Williams reports.

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  • Graveyards are now last option shelters in Gaza for Palestinians amid ruins

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    Tens of thousands of displaced Palestinians who lack shelter or a home to return to after Israel destroyed their residences across Gaza are pitching tents in graveyards as a last resort, as the humanitarian catastrophe in the enclave remains acute despite a fragile ceasefire deal.

    “This graveyard wasn’t meant for the living,” Al Jazeera’s Hind Khoudary said, reporting from the southern city of Khan Younis. “But today, it’s home to dozens of families who have nowhere else to go.”

    Khoudary said Palestinians were camping at the site “not because they want to, but because it’s the last free space available.”

    “Graveyards have become shelters not out of choice, but out of desperation,” she added.

    Rami Musleh, a father of 12 who was displaced from the northern Gaza town of Beit Hanoon could not find any viable option other than the graveyard.

    “For parents, the emotional toll is heavy. The psychological trauma of war is made worse by having to raise children among tombstones,” Musleh told Al Jazeera.

    With no safe shelter left and no land to return to, many families in Gaza are now pitching tents inside graveyards [Screen grab/Al Jazeera]

    Another resident, Sabah Muhammed, said the cemeteries have now lost all their sacredness.

    “Graveyards, once sacred spaces for the dead, are now silent witnesses to a living crisis. No water, no electricity, and no privacy … only the bare minimum to survive,” she told Al Jazeera.

    “In Gaza, even the land for the dead is now the only refuge for the living.”

    According to the United Nations, at least 1.9 million people – or about 90 per cent of the population – across the Gaza Strip have been displaced during the war. Many have been displaced repeatedly, some 10 times or more.

    Palestinians in southern Gaza are squeezed into overcrowded shelters as Israel issued forced orders for residents of northern Gaza and Gaza City to evacuate and then bombarded many as they fled south.

    The price of renting even a square meter of land to pitch a tent is prohibitive for many displaced Palestinians, who lack a stable income and are dependent on scarce humanitarian assistance.

    UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestinians, said 61 million tons of debris now cover Gaza and entire neighbourhoods have been erased. It said families were searching the ruins for shelter and water.

    While a fragile ceasefire has been in effect since October 10, Israel is continuing to heavily restrict humanitarian aid into Gaza. The International Court of Justice on Wednesday ruled Israel must allow aid into Gaza, stating it cannot use starvation “as a method of warfare”.

    Aid is mainly being channelled into the central and southern parts of the Gaza Strip through the Karem Abu Salem (Kerem Shalom) crossing, while none of the crossings in the north have been opened.

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  • Opinion | A Mamdani Mayoralty Threatens New York’s Jews

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    By propagating lies about ‘occupation,’ ‘apartheid’ and ‘genocide,’ he helps promote antisemitism.

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    Elisha Wiesel

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  • As Vance arrives to bolster the Gaza ceasefire, how committed are Hamas and Netanyahu to peace?

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    Vice President JD Vance, as well as President Trump’s negotiating team — his son-in-law Jared Kushner and U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff — were all in Israel on Tuesday, trying to shore up the fragile ceasefire in Gaza. Before he left for Israel, Vance said bumps in the road to peace were expected.

    “There are gonna be fits and starts,” Vance told reporters. “Hamas is gonna fire on Israel, Israel’s gonna have to respond, of course.”

    Hamas has denied responsibility for an alleged RPG attack that killed two Israeli soldiers over the weekend. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday that it was a Hamas attack, and that the Israeli military responded to the alleged ceasefire violation by dropping almost 169 tons of bombs in Gaza.

    “One of our hands holds a weapon, the other hand is stretched out for peace,” Netanyahu told lawmakers on Monday. “You make peace with the strong, not the weak. Today Israel is stronger than ever before.”

    The Israeli strikes killed at least 45 Palestinians, according to health officials in the Hamas-ruled territory.

    President Trump warned Hamas on Monday against breaching the deal that took months to negotiate.

    “They’re gonna behave, they’re gonna be nice,” he said. “And if they’re not, we’re gonna go and eradicate them if we have to.”

    Kushner and Witkoff met Monday with Netanyahu, and the Israeli leader’s office said Vance would also meet him this week. The vice president and second lady Usha Vance were greeted upon their arrival Tuesday by U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee, Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Yechiel Leiter and Israel’s Minister of Justice Yariv Levin.

    U.S. Vice President JD Vance arrives at Ben Gurion airport, Oct. 21, 2025, in Tel Aviv, Israel.

    Nathan Howard/Pool/Getty


    Vance was scheduled to have a working lunch with Witkoff and Kushner on Tuesday before his meeting with Netanyahu.

    The peace process has taken incremental steps forward despite the weekend violence, with Israel returning the remains of 15 Palestinians to Gaza on Tuesday following the handover by Hamas on Monday evening of the body of another deceased hostage. As part of the peace deal, a total of 165 Palestinians’ bodies have now been returned to Gaza, many of them former detainees, while all 20 living Israeli hostages have been released by Hamas, along with the remains of 13 deceased captives.

    But despite those steps, the long-term viability of Mr. Trump’s peace plan, which he’s said will end nearly eight decades of fighting between Israel and the Palestinians, remains less certain.

    Ex-Israeli official casts doubt on prospects for Trump’s peace plan

    Some Israelis remain skeptical that the Israeli prime minister is genuinely interested in a lasting peace. Among them is fierce Netanyahu critic Alon Pinkas, who served as an advisor to four Israeli foreign ministers.

    He told CBS News that Netanyahu signed the peace deal brokered by Mr. Trump, but never really backed its core purpose, or Mr. Trump’s stated goal of securing an enduring peace in the heart of the Middle East.

    “This was an agreement he was bullied into,” Pinkas said. “This is an agreement he signed under duress, and now he is developing a new scheme to manipulate Trump.”

    Pinkas credited Mr. Trump for doingsomething that his predecessors were disinclined or hesitant to do, and that is exert real pressure” on Israel’s leader.

    “It worked, but it only worked for the first phase,” Pinkas said, referring to the living Israeli hostages being released and the ceasefire coming into effect.

    He said after the weekend’s violence that the deal had been “ostensibly restored, but when Netanyahu says, ‘I’m restoring the ceasefire,’ it’s only because there’s a visit here of the vice president, JD Vance, and because the U.S. sent its envoy.”

    Pinkas said he was certain Israeli forces would resume operations in Gaza within days, noting they remained deployed in about half of the Palestinian territory.

    Israeli soldiers stand next to tanks near the Israel-Gaza border, in Israel

    Israeli soldiers stand next to vehicles near the Israel-Gaza border, in southern Israel, Oct. 19, 2025.

    Amir Cohen/REUTERS


    “The hostages are no longer in danger because they were freed, and Hamas was not decisively destroyed, as Mr. Netanyahu promised and boasted and bragged for two years, so I see a serious incentive for Mr. Netanyahu to resume” an offensive against Hamas, Pinkas told CBS News. “Maybe not on a huge scale, given the agreement, but I do see … a local skirmish that becomes a wider flare-up, that then deteriorates or escalates into a full Israeli military operation.”

    Hamas’ top negotiator said Tuesday that the group remained committed to the ceasefire agreement. But President Trump’s peace plan calls for the demilitarization of Gaza, and many analysts, including Pinkas, have doubts that Hamas will willingly hand over all its weapons.

    “That’s probably the biggest flaw in the agreement,” said Pinkas. “The agreement in and of itself is a good agreement, but in order for an agreement like that to work, it requires good faith, good will, and trust. None of these ingredients exist. In fact, both sides have a vested interest in not progressing beyond the ceasefire.”

    “Hamas wants to lure Israel inside [Gaza] into a de-facto occupation, and mount an insurgency and show to the Palestinians that they are the real resistance. And Netanyahu wants to go in because he knows that if everything stops now and there is progress into the next phases, that almost inevitably means that he will be deemed as the guy who failed to defeat Hamas.”

    Pinkas said that while the past two years of war have left Hamas defeated militarily and degraded, “Hamas is not done. Hamas are there, and you see those pictures every day. You show them on CBS — Hamas gangs walking around in battle fatigues, armed. That’s not going to cut it politically for Mr. Netanyahu.”

    Red Cross receives bodies of hostages from Hamas as part of Gaza ceasefire swap

    An armed Hamas militant stands guard as a Red Cross vehicle arrives to receive the bodies of deceased Israeli hostages, in Gaza City, Oct. 14, 2025.

    Dawoud Abu Alkas/REUTERS


    Speaking in a recent interview with CBS News’ Tony Dokoupil, Netanyahu said his government had agreed “to give peace a chance,” but he noted that the conditions of Mr. Trump’s 20-point peace plan “are very clear — it’s not only that we get the hostages out without getting our military out, but that we would subsequently have both demilitarization and disarmament. They’re not the same thing. First Hamas has to give up its arms. And second, you want to make sure that there are no weapons factories inside Gaza. There’s no smuggling of weapons into Gaza.”

    “We also agreed: Okay, let’s get the first part done. Now let’s give a chance to do the second part peacefully, which is my hope,” the Israeli leader told CBS News.

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  • Remains of another hostage return to Israel, Israeli military says

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    The remains of another deceased hostage crossed into Israel after being handed over to the Red Cross on Monday evening local time, the Israel Defense Forces said in a statement posted on social media

    There were thought to be 16 remains of deceased hostages still in Gaza before this handover, with 12 confirmed sets of remains already transferred. 

    The individual’s identity wasn’t immediately known. The IDF asked that the “public act with sensitivity and wait for the official identification, which will first be provided to the families.”

    “Hamas is required to uphold the agreement and take the necessary steps to return all the deceased hostages,” it said in an earlier statement. 

    The return of all the hostages — 20 living and 28 dead — is a cornerstone of the U.S.-brokered Gaza peace plan. Hamas was supposed to have completed the handover by Monday, Oct. 13, but only returned the 20 living hostages by that deadline.

    The return of the remains on Monday comes after senior envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner met with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel on Monday to try to keep the  peace process on track following a bout of violence over the weekend. 

    Netanyahu said Monday the military dropped almost 169 tons of bombs in the Gaza Strip over the weekend. The IDF said it launched the strikes after two soldiers were killed when Hamas operatives opened fire with an RPG. Hamas has rejected Israel’s claim that it was involved in that attack.

    The skies over Gaza were quiet again Monday, and both sides recommitted to the peace process.

    Vice President JD Vance was due to follow in the footsteps of Mr. Trump’s two peace envoys later this week. Shosh Bedrosian, a spokeswoman for Netanyahu’s office, said Monday that Vance and his wife are expected to be in Israel “for a few days and will be meeting with the prime minister,” but neither she nor the White House have confirmed dates for the visit.

    The IDF said on Monday it was marking a so-called “yellow line” – the line to which Israeli troops withdrew as part of the peace plan. 

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  • As Israel-Hamas clashes test Trump’s Gaza peace deal, Vance, Witkoff and Kushner all head to region

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    The fragile peace deal President Trump spearheaded between Israel and Hamas in Gaza appeared on Monday to have survived serious threats over the weekend. The top U.S. officials who helped negotiate the ceasefire and hostage release agreement — senior envoy Steve Witkoff and Mr. Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner — were back in Israel on Monday to help ensure it does not unravel.

    Israel struck multiple targets inside Gaza after a deadly attack on Israeli soldiers. Hamas has rejected Israel’s claim that it was involved in that attack.

    On Monday, the skies over Gaza were quiet again in the wake of the gravest threat since the ceasefire there came into effect on Oct. 10. Hamas and Israel accused each other of violating the terms of Mr. Trump’s peace plan over the weekend, but both sides recommitted to the process on Monday.

    For a couple tense days, however, war was back in Gaza. Local health officials in the Hamas-ruled Palestinian territory said 45 people were killed in Israeli strikes. The Israel Defense Forces said, meanwhile, that two soldiers were killed when Hamas operatives opened fire with an RPG.

    Israeli soldiers stand next to vehicles near the Israel-Gaza border, in southern Israel, Oct. 19, 2025.

    Amir Cohen/REUTERS


    As mediators raced to get the peace process back on track, President Trump said the situation would be “handled toughly, but properly,” and added that in his view, the ceasefire remained in effect.

    Over the weekend, Palestinian families had come out to enjoy a quiet moment at a seaside café in Gaza, when cameras captured the moment that an Israeli strike shattered the peace.

    Many feared the blood-soaked scenes left in the wake of the explosions were a sign that two years of relentless violence had resumed after just a week.

    “We were drinking tea,” said Salih Salman, “when suddenly people were bombed.”

    PALESTINIAN-ISRAEL-CONFLICT-GAZA

    Smoke billows following an Israeli strike that targeted a building in the Bureij camp for Palestinian refugees in the central Gaza Strip, Oct. 19, 2025.

    EYAD BABA/AFP/Getty


    Once again Gaza’s crippled hospitals filled up with dozens of injured in the wake of 1multiple Israeli strikes.

    The IDF said it was targeting Hamas forces responsible for ceasefire violations, and it provided video purportedly showing armed Hamas fighters moving toward Israeli troops.

    A media center in central Gaza was among the locations bombed, with the strike killing a cameraman and an engineer, and wounding three other people.

    “We are all journalists here,” protested Ajeb Mohamed at the scene. “No-one else can even enter here.”

    More than 220 journalists and media workers have been killed in Gaza since the war started, according to the international advocacy group Reporters Without Borders.

    Amid the renewed fighting and accusations over the weekend, an Israeli official said all humanitarian aid deliveries into Gaza would be suspended. On Monday, however, COGAT, the Israeli government agency that handles affairs in the Palestinian territories, told CBS News that the Kerem Shalom border crossing was open for aid to transit.

    The United Nations and a number of humanitarian aid agencies have called repeatedly since the ceasefire came into effect for Israel to open all of the border crossings into Gaza to allow far more food, water, medicine, building materials and other essential items in.

    The ingress of aid — which under the U.S. peace plan should be maximized under the ceasefire — is likely to be among the key issues as Witkoff and Kushner meet with Israeli officials this week to ensure the process stays on track. Vice President JD Vance is also due in Israel this week, and set to meet with Netanyahu.

    Netanyahu met Monday with Witkoff and Kushner to discuss “developments and updates in the region,” Shosh Bedrosian, a spokeswoman for Netanyahu’s office said Monday. 



    Kushner, Witkoff reveal key moments that led to the Israel-Hamas deal

    14:12

    She added that Vance and his wife were also expected in the country “for a few days and will be meeting with the prime minister,” but neither she nor the White House have confirmed the Vances’ arrival date.

    Witkoff and Kushner were entrusted by Mr. Trump to broker the peace deal, and in an exclusive interview with 60 Minutes that aired on Sunday, they said an apology phone call from Netanyahu to Qatar’s leader, about unprecedented airstrikes on the U.S. ally’s capital, Doha, and a moment of personal connection between Witkoff and Hamas’ top negotiator marked two key turning points that led to the ceasefire. 

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  • Israel accuses Hamas of attacking IDF soldiers, launches retaliatory strikes

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    Israel is accusing Hamas of violating their ceasefire agreement and attacking Israeli soldiers in the Gaza Strip, prompting the IDF to carry out strikes in retaliation. Debora Patta is in East Jerusalem with the latest.

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  • Man living in Louisiana connected to Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel, U.S. says

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    Federal prosecutors accused a man in Louisiana of participating in Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, terrorist attack on Israel, then traveling to the U.S. on a fraudulent visa, according to newly unsealed court documents. 

    Mahmoud Amin Ya’qub al-Muhtadi, 33, was allegedly part of the National Resistance Brigades, the military wing of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a paramilitary group that has fought alongside Hamas and participated in the 2023 attack, according to the documents. 

    Al-Muhtadi was charged with providing, attempting to provide or conspiring to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization and the fraud and misuse of a visa or other documents. The charges were brought in the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana. 

    Al-Muhtadi allegedly coordinated a “group of armed fighters” to cross into Israel after hearing about Hamas’ attack, according to the court documents. He told one man to “bring the rifles” and another to “get ready.” He also sent messages asking for ammunition and a bulletproof vest for another man. 

    Al-Muhtadi’s phone pinged a cell tower near Kibbutz Kfar Aza at about 10:01 a.m. on Oct. 7, 2023, the documents said, a few hours after the attack began. Kibbutz Kfar Aza is just a few miles from Gaza’s border. Sixty people were killed there, and 19 were kidnapped, the court documents said. More than 1,200 people in Israel were killed and 250 taken hostage during the attack. The documents do not accuse al-Muhtadi of any killings or specific crimes.  

    Al-Muhtadi allegedly coordinated a “group of armed fighters” to cross into Israel within hours of hearing about Hamas’ attack, according to the court documents. He told one man to “bring the rifles” and another to “get ready.” He also sent messages asking for ammunition and a bulletproof vest for another man. 

    Al-Muhtadi allegedly submitted a U.S. visa application in June 2024, the court documents said. In the application, he said that he was not a member or representative of a terror organization, that he had no specialized skills or training, including firearm usage, and had never engaged in terrorist activities. 

    He met with a U.S. Embassy consular official in August and entered the United States through Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport on Sept. 12, 2024, according to the documents. He lived in Tulsa, Oklahoma, for several months, the documents said. Photos shared by al-Muhtadi on social media show him posing with a gun in his Tulsa apartment. 

    Mahmoud Amin Ya’qub al-Muhtadi loads a gun at his home in Oklahoma.

    United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana


    In early 2025, Federal Bureau of Investigation agents located al-Muhtadi living in Lafayette, Louisiana, where he worked in a local restaurant.

    A person with al-Muhtadi’s name and birth date was being held at the St. Martin Parish Correctional Center near Lafayette, according to online records. He was booked into the facility on Thursday. He made his initial court appearance on Friday, according to court records. Online records did not make it clear if he had a lawyer. 

    Federal prosecutors have previously charged six senior Hamas leaders with the deaths of at least 43 American citizens on Oct. 7. Those charged included former Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, who was killed in October 2024. 

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  • Israel launches strikes in Gaza after saying Hamas targeted its forces

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    The fragile truce in Gaza faced its first major test on Sunday after Israel alleged Hamas had violated the ceasefire and hit back with air and artillery strikes.

    An Israeli security official told the Associated Press, on the condition of anonymity pending a formal announcement, that the transfer of aid into Gaza is halted “until further notice.”

    Earlier Sunday, Israel’s military said it hit multiple targets in the Gaza Strip using aircraft and artillery, after it accused Hamas of shooting at Israeli soldiers.

    An Israeli military official told CBS News that Hamas had targeted its soldiers with a rocket-propelled grenade and sniper fire. No injuries were reported.

    “Both of the incidents happened in an Israeli-controlled area, east of the yellow line,” the official said. “This is a bold violation of the ceasefire.”

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held consultations with Israel’s security heads and his office said in a statement that he had directed the military to take “strong action” against what he called “terrorist targets.” He did not threaten to return to war.

    Hamas said that it was not involved in any of the clashes that had been reported earlier in Rafah in southern Gaza.

    “We reaffirm our full commitment to implement everything that was agreed upon, foremost of which is a ceasefire across all areas of the Gaza Strip,” the group’s Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades said in a statement. “We have no knowledge of any incidents or clashes taking place in the Rafah area, as these are red zones under the occupation’s control, and contact with the remaining groups of ours there has been cut off since the war resumed in March of this year.”

    Hospital sources in Gaza told CBS News at least 38 people have been killed in the territory since Sunday morning. 

    Israel’s military said it had struck dozens of what it called Hamas targets. 

    Shortly before sunset, Israel’s military said it had begun a series of airstrikes in southern Gaza against Hamas. It also said its forces struck “terrorists” approaching troops in Beit Lahiya in the north.

    The strikes came as Israel identified the remains of two hostages released by Hamas overnight, and the Palestinian group said talks to launch the second phase of ceasefire negotiations have begun.

    Meanwhile, Israel threatened to keep the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt closed “until further notice.” The statement from Netanyahu’s office said reopening Rafah would depend on how Hamas fulfills its obligation under the ceasefire deal to return the remains of all the deceased hostages. The bodies of 16 hostages, two of them foreign nationals, are still in Gaza, according to the Israeli media.

    At the same time, the U.S. State Department warned that it had received “credible reports” indicating that Hamas may be planning an attack on “Palestinian civilians” in the Gaza Strip.

    The State Department did not provide any details on the timing or location of the possible attack, saying only that it “would constitute a direct and grave violation of the ceasefire agreement and undermine the significant progress achieved through mediation efforts.”

    On Sunday, Hamas rejected the claims, calling them “false allegations.” The group accused Israel of supporting armed groups operating in Israeli-controlled areas. Hamas urged the U.S. administration to pressure Israel to stop supporting the gangs and “providing them a safe haven.”

    Israel and Gaza implemented the first phase of President Trump’s 20-point peace plan last week, with a ceasefire taking effect in Gaza after Israeli troops pulled back to a predetermined line. Since then, Hamas has released 20 living hostages and the remains of 12 others. Meanwhile, Israel has released nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees. The released Palestinians include 250 people who are serving life sentences, and about 1,700 others who have been detained and held without charges since the Oct. 7, 2023, terrorist attack on Israel.

    Israel has released 150 bodies of Palestinians back to Gaza, including 15 on Sunday, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry. Israel has neither identified the bodies nor said how they died. 

    The next stages of the ceasefire are expected to focus on disarming Hamas, Israeli withdrawal from additional areas it controls in Gaza and future governance of the devastated territory.

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