World

Fighting rages on ahead of expected 4-day Israel-Hamas truce

Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas will start a four-day truce on Friday morning, mediators in Qatar said. But fighting raged on as the hours counted down to the planned start of the first break in a brutal, near seven-week-old war.

Deadly Gaza airstrikes continue as mediator Qatar says some hostages will be freed Friday

Qatar says Israel-Hamas pause will begin Friday morning

1 year ago
Duration 1:48
A Qatari foreign affairs says the temporary pause in fighting between Israel and Hamas is expected to begin early Friday, with a group of hostages in Gaza — made up of women and children — expected to be released later in the day.

Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas will start a four-day truce on Friday morning with a first group of 13 Israeli women and child hostages released later that day, mediators in Qatar said.

World powers gave the news a cautious welcome. But fighting raged on as the hours counted down to the planned start of the first break in a brutal, near seven-week-old war. Both sides also signalled the pause would be temporary and they were ready to expand operations afterwards.

The truce is set to begin at 7 a.m. local time and involve a comprehensive ceasefire in north and south Gaza, Qatar's Foreign Ministry said.

  • What questions do you have about the war between Israel and Hamas? Send an email to ask@cbc.ca.

Additional aid would start flowing into Gaza and the first hostages, including elderly women, would be freed at 4 p.m., with the total number rising to 50 over the four days, ministry spokesperson Majed Al-Ansari said in the Qatari capital Doha.

It was expected Palestinians would be released from Israeli jail, he told reporters. "We all hope that this truce will lead to a chance to start a wider work to achieve a permanent truce."

Israeli soldiers stand on a tank near Israel's border with Gaza in southern Israel.
Israeli soldiers are seen at a position near the Gaza border in southern Israel on Thursday. (Amir Cohen/Reuters)

Hamas — which had been expected to declare a truce with Israel a day earlier on Thursday only for negotiations to drag on — confirmed on its Telegram channel that all hostilities from its forces would cease.

But Abu Ubaida, a spokesperson for Hamas' armed wing, later referred to "this temporary truce" in a video message that called for an "escalation of the confrontation with (Israel) on all resistance fronts," including the Israeli-occupied West Bank where violence has surged since the Gaza war erupted.

WATCH l Complex details in transportation, communication involving hostage release:

The Israel-Hamas truce is a breakthrough. Here's how it could fall apart | About That

1 year ago
Duration 7:54
Israel and Hamas have agreed to a four-day ceasefire in Gaza, enabling the release of Israeli hostages and Palestinians held in Israeli prisons. Andrew Chang examines the fragile truce and the ways it could fall apart.

Israel's military said its troops would stay behind a ceasefire line inside Gaza, without giving details of its position.

"These will be complicated days and nothing is certain... Even during this process there could be changes," Israeli military spokesperson Daniel Hagari said.

"Control over northern Gaza is the first step of a long war, and we are preparing for the next stages," he added. Israel had received an initial list of hostages to be freed and was in touch with families, the prime minister's office said.

West Bank Palestinians could be released

Those in prison in Israel who could be released include many teenage boys detained during a wave of violence in the West Bank in 2022 or 2023 and charged with offences such as stone-throwing or disturbing public order, according to a list of eligible prisoners published by Israel's Justice Ministry. Israel currently holds nearly 7,000 Palestinians accused or convicted of security offences.

Two men in helmets and military fatigues are shown looking to something off camera near the open doors of their tank-like vehicle.
An Israeli soldier aims a weapon next to an Israeli army vehicle in the Balata refugee camp in Nablus on Thursday in the the Israeli-occupied West Bank. (Raneen Sawafta/Reuters)

Israel launched its war in Gaza after gunmen from Hamas burst across the border fence on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people and seizing about 240 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.

Since then, more than 14,000 Gazans have been killed by Israeli bombardment, around 40 per cent of them children, according to health authorities in the Hamas-ruled territory. However they have said it has become increasingly difficult to keep an up-to-date tally as the health service has buckled under the Israeli bombardment.

People in medical scrubs place blue plastic body bags into a mass grave.
Palestinians bury people killed in the Israeli bombardment who were brought from the Shifa hospital, in a mass grave in the town of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip Wednesday. (Mohammed Dahman)

"People are exhausted and are losing hope in humanity," UN Palestinian refugee agency UNRWA's Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini said after a visit to Gaza, referring to "unspeakable suffering" in the enclave.

"They need respite, they deserve to sleep without being anxious about whether they will make it through the night. This is the bare minimum anyone should be able to have."

The delay to the start of the truce meant another day of worry for Israeli relatives of the hostages who say they still know nothing about the fate of missing loved ones, and of fear for Palestinian families trapped inside the Gaza combat zone.

"We need to know they are alive, if they're OK. It's the minimum," said Gilad Korngold, desperate for any information about the fate of seven of his family members, including his three-year-old granddaughter, believed to be among the hostages.

LISTEN | The consequences of speaking up: 
As the Israel-Hamas war continues, there has been an unmistakable upheaval in the art world. Writers Maris Kreizman, Josh Gondelman and Jen Sookfong Lee are grappling with the consequences of speaking up. They join host Elamin Abdelmahmoud and arts reporter Josh O’Kane to share their thoughts on the cancelled exhibits, protests, and the people who’ve lost jobs and opportunities for sharing their points of view — and what's at stake within our cultural institutions.

Al-Shifa doctor in Israeli custody

Ahead of the ceasefire, fighting continued at even greater than normal intensity, with Israeli jets hitting more than 300 targets and troops engaged in heavy fighting around Jabalia refugee camp north of Gaza City.

An army spokesman said operations would continue until troops received the order to stop.

Earlier, from across the border fence in Israel, clouds of smoke could be seen billowing above northern Gaza's war zone accompanied by the sounds of heavy gunfire and booming explosions.

A large cloud of black smoke is shown above buildings in a wide view.
Smoke rises following Israeli attacks in the Gaza Strip, as seen from southern Israel on Thursday. (Leo Correa/The Associated Press)

In Rafah, on the strip's southern edge, residents combed with bare hands through the ruins of a house smashed in a giant crater. A grey-bearded man wailed amid the shattered masonry while another man lay a hand on his shoulder to comfort him. Neighbour Khaled Hamad told Reuters it was the home of a primary school teacher, killed inside with his children.

Palestinian media reported at least 15 people killed in airstrikes on Khan Younis, Gaza's main southern city. Reuters could not immediately verify the toll there.

In a post on X, Doctors Without Borders said the city's Nasser hospital, where it treats burn patients and supports the emergency room, was overflowing with patients and families sheltering in the building.

Israel said its strikes in the past day had hit "military command centres, underground terror tunnels, weapon storage facilities, weapon manufacturing sites, and anti-tank missile launch posts." It released video of troops on foot patrol in rutted streets surrounded by bombed-out ruins.

Israel said on Thursday it had detained the head of Gaza's biggest hospital, Al-Shifa, for questioning over his role in what it said was the hospital's use as a Hamas command centre.

Hamas condemned the arrest of Al-Shifa director Dr. Mohammad Abu Salmiah and other doctors it said were trying to evacuate remaining patients and wounded from the facility.

International alarm has focused on the fate of the hospitals, especially in Gaza's northern half, where all medical facilities have ceased functioning with patients, staff and displaced people trapped inside.

WATCH l Diary of a war zone: Briton in Gaza documents conditions on the ground:

What life in Gaza looks like now

1 year ago
Duration 7:04
Mohammed Ghaliyini was on vacation in Gaza when the war began and chose to stay and help however he could. For weeks, he’s been sending videos to The National breaking down the reality of surviving in those harsh conditions.

Dr. Omar Abdel-Mannan of the organization Gaza Medic Voices told CBC News Network on Thursday he was dismayed by the development.

"I cannot tell you how angry and how upset I am to hear of this happening," he said. "Every day I cannot imagine how things are getting worse, but they are."

With files from CBC News and the Associated Press