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ISRAEL has now received the names of the hostages set to be released on the first day of a ceasefire in Gaza after a delay.
In a statement on Telegram, Hamas says it has handed over to mediators the names of the three captives held in Gaza who will be released today - Romi Gonen, Doron Steinbrecher and Emily Damari.
Israel has now confirmed that the truce with Hamas in Gaza will start at 9.15am after an hours-long delay. Benjamin Netanyahu said early on Sunday that the ceasefire in Gaza will not begin until Israel has received a list of the hostages set to be released from Hamas.
Barely an hour before the ceasefire was due to begin at 8.30am local time, Netanyahu said he had instructed the military that the ceasefire “will not begin until Israel has in its possession the list of hostages to be freed, which Hamas committed to provide”.
After the ceasefire was due to begin, the Israeli military said it was still operating in Gaza.
Officials in Gaza said that 10 people had been killed by Israeli strikes in the Gaza strip since the ceasefire was supposed to take effect.
Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari, the military’s chief spokesman, said the truce would not begin until Hamas hands over the names of the first three hostages to be released later on Sunday.
He said the army “continues to attack, even now, inside the Gaza arena,” and will do so until Hamas complies with the agreement.
An Israeli official said mediators have provided assurances the list will be delivered and the deal is still expected to go forward, though the timing remains in question. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing efforts to resolve the matter.
Hamas blamed the delay in handing over the names on “technical field reasons” although AFP is now quoting a Hamas official saying the list of hostages would be handed over "any moment".
The 42-day first phase of the ceasefire should see a total of 33 hostages returned from Gaza and hundreds of Palestinian prisoners and detainees released.
Hamas is expected to release three hostages later on Sunday in exchange for scores of Palestinians imprisoned by Israel, the first step in a long process aimed at winding down the 15-month war.
Israeli forces should pull back into a buffer zone inside Gaza and many displaced Palestinians should be able to return home. The devastated territory should also see a surge in humanitarian aid.
Palestinian residents began returning to their homes in parts of Gaza City early on Sunday, even as tank shelling continued to the east, closer to the Israeli border, overnight.
Negotiations on the far more difficult second phase of this ceasefire should begin in just over two weeks.
Major questions remain, including whether conflict will resume after the six-week first phase and how the rest of the nearly 100 hostages in Gaza will be freed.
Israel said on Sunday it recovered the remains of a soldier killed in the 2014 Gaza war, hours before the ceasefire and hostage release were set to begin.
Oron Shaul was killed in the previous conflict and his remains have been held by Hamas. The bodies of Shaul and another soldier, Hadar Goldin, remained in Gaza after the 2014 war and had not been returned despite a public campaign by their families.
The families fought to have the bodies returned as part of any ceasefire deal in the current war.
Netanyahu (above) said on Saturday that Israel is treating the ceasefire with Gaza as temporary and retains the right to continue fighting if necessary.
Israel’s Cabinet approved the ceasefire early Saturday in a rare session during the Jewish Sabbath, more than two days after mediators announced the deal.
The warring sides were under pressure from both the outgoing Biden administration and president-elect Donald Trump to achieve a deal before the US presidential inauguration on Monday.
The toll of Israel's bombardment has been immense with more than 46,000 Palestinians killed, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry.
The October 7 2023, Hamas-led attack on southern Israel killed more than 1200. Hundreds of Israeli soldiers have died while around 90% of Gaza’s population has been displaced.
The United Nations says the health system, road network and other vital infrastructure have been badly damaged.
Rebuilding – if the ceasefire reaches its final phase – will take several years at least. Major questions about Gaza’s future, political and otherwise, remain unresolved.
Elsewhere, Netanyahu's national security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir resigned from government over the ceasefire deal.
It does not come as a complete shock as he had threatened to quit over the deal on Thursday, claiming it would "erase the achievements of the war".
In a statement, his party - Jewish Power - called the ceasefire deal a "capitulation to Hamas" and hit out at what they called the "release of hundreds of murderers".
Netanyahu retains a slim majority in the Israeli parliament despite the resignations.