Israel will allow Gaza's Rafah crossing to open and will ramp up aid, according to the Israeli Broadcasting Authority
Israel reopened the Rafah border crossing to allow 600 aid trucks daily into Gaza following a ceasefire and the return of four Israeli hostage bodies, easing a severe humanitarian crisis.
- Israel has decided to open the Rafah crossing between Gaza and Egypt and allow humanitarian aid into Gaza after the return of four hostage bodies.
- Around 600 aid trucks will be dispatched to Gaza by the UN, international organizations, the private sector and donor countries.
- If Hamas does not disarm, Trump said, 'we will disarm them, and it will happen quickly and perhaps violently.
101 Articles
101 Articles
What's next for the Middle East peace plan now that many hostages have been released? The release is part of the first phase of US President Donald Trump's peace plan, which Israel and Hamas agreed to. Follow developments in the Middle East via our live blog.
Hamas handed over the bodies of four hostages to the Red Cross last night as part of the agreement with Israel.
After the adoption of the peace plan presented by Donald Trump and the return of the hostages on Monday 13 October, the Israeli government is studying the action demanded by the UN and NGOs since the beginning of the war.
The Rafah crossing was closed on Tuesday, but has been reopened this Wednesday after Hamas handed over other bodies of Israeli hostages
Israeli authorities claim that they will allow 600 trucks to pass by daily after announcing that they would reduce the delivery of supplies to Gaza to put pressure on Hamas for the return of the dead hostages Israel confirms the identity of three of the four dead captives handed over on Tuesday and the media claims that the last is not that of a hostage
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 39% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium