Israel and Hamas A big news has come out regarding the ongoing war. According to the Washington Post, Israel, the US and Hamas have reached a temporary agreement to release dozens of hostages. Under the agreement, fighting in Gaza will cease for the next five days. The Washington Post This information was obtained from several people with knowledge of this agreement. According to the Washington Post, a six-page agreement has been signed under the deal. Under this agreement, both sides will cease fighting for the next five days. Meanwhile, 50 or more hostages will be released every 24 hours.
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Let us tell you that on October 7, Hamas claimed that it had captured 240 hostages from Israel. There has been no comment from the White House or the Israeli PM yet regarding the agreement. It is worth noting that according to people familiar with the agreement, the release of the hostages could begin in the next few days.
The refugee camp was attacked again
Amidst all this, the ongoing war between Israel and Gaza is still not stopping. Israel to Hamas Israel, which has vowed to end the war it started by attacking, continues to target the people of the Gaza Strip. A Hamas health official said more than 80 people were killed in two attacks on a refugee camp in northern Gaza on Saturday. The refugee camp that was targeted, which also included a UN school, was being used as a shelter for people displaced by the Israel-Hamas war.
32 people of a single family were killed in the attack
A separate attack on another building in the Jablia camp on Saturday killed 32 people from a single family, including 19 children, a Hamas official said. Without specifying the attacks, the Israeli military said “an incident in the Jabalia area” was being reviewed. About 1.6 million people have been displaced in the Gaza Strip in the six-week war, according to UN figures. UN humanitarian chief Martin Griffiths “condemned the killing of children, women and men. Shelters are a place of safety,” he wrote in a post on Twitter. “Citizens cannot and should not take this much longer.”

