GAZA, Palestine
Hamas will release six hostages this week and Israel will allow Gazans to return to homes in the north from Monday, Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says.
The hostages include Arbel
Yehud - the civilian at the centre of a row which has led to Israel delaying
the return of Gazans to northern Gaza.
Hamas released four soldiers
on Saturday, but not Ms Yehud. Israel accused Hamas of breaching the ceasefire
deal under which Israeli civilians were to be freed first in exchange for the
release of Palestinian prisoners.
Since the ceasefire deal came
into force, seven hostages and just under 300 prisoners have been released.
Thousands of displaced
Palestinians attempting to reach northern Gaza have gathered at the military
barrier blocking their progress for two days.
The ceasefire and hostage and
prisoner release deal came into force on 19 January. Two exchanges have been
completed.
In the third, Hamas will
release Ms Yehud and two other hostages on Thursday, followed by three more on
Saturday, Netanyahu and Qatar, which has mediated the talks, said.
Israel will begin to allow
Palestinians to move north on Monday, as well as freeing more Palestinian
prisoners later in the week.
Under the terms of the
ceasefire agreement, Palestinians had been scheduled to be allowed to travel
north of the Netzarim Corridor, a seven kilometre (4.3 miles) strip of land
controlled by Israel that cuts off north Gaza from the rest of the territory, on
Saturday.
"We're sleeping in the
streets," Nireem Musabeh told the BBC at the checkpoint on Sunday.
"We can't go home and every time we try to go home they shoot at us."
The 42-year-old had travelled
from Deir al-Balah in central Gaza, but was displaced from her home in
Shejaiya, in the south.
Diab Shehbari said he had been
at the checkpoint since 20:30 local time (18:30 GMT) on Saturday.
"All night the kids were
screaming because of the cold - we lit a fire and covered them," he said.
Israel has now said it will
allow residents to return to the northern Gaza Strip from 07:00 (09:00 GMT) on
Monday, and by vehicle two hours later, after the row over Ms Yehud was
resolved.
Qatari and Egyptian mediators
who have facilitated talks between Israel and Hamas were involved in the
efforts to end the dispute. Qatar's foreign ministry spokesman announced the
breakthrough moments before Israel's prime minister.
Israel had asked the mediators
for proof from Hamas that Ms Yehud was alive. It appeared that had been given
to the Egyptians as early as Saturday evening, the BBC understands.
Earlier on Sunday, US
President Donald Trump said he wanted Egypt and Jordan to take in Palestinians
from Gaza, which he described as a "demolition site".
Both Hamas and the Palestinian
Authority condemned the idea, while Jordan and Egypt have also rejected the
proposal.
The January ceasefire deal
halted the war which began when Hamas attacked Israel on 7 October 2023. About
1,200 people were killed and 251 taken back to Gaza as hostages.
More than 47,200 Palestinians,
the majority civilians, have been killed in Israel's offensive, Gaza's
Hamas-run health ministry says.
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