Israel launches strikes in Gaza
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Gaza awaits reopening of Rafah crossing
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Detainees seek to return to their normal lives in Gaza after being freed from Israeli captivity, where some say they faced torture and beatings.
Just over a week after US President Donald Trump strong-armed Israel and Hamas into an agreement that halted the war, Palestinians in Gaza are beginning to put the pieces of their lives back together.
Experts challenge Gaza famine claims by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, citing insufficient mortality data and declining food prices.
"If they are successful, Hamas will fail, and Gaza will not be a threat to Israel in the future," Kushner said. The U.S. peace deal, still in its first phase, saw Hamas release 20 living hostages, and so far return the bodies of at least 10 confirmed deceased hostages .
This long and difficult war has ended. So President Donald Trump proudly declared to his audiences delight on Monday afternoon, Oct. 13, in Jerusalem at the Knesset. In vintage
Jared Kushner and U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff spoke to CBS' "60 Minutes" about helping to negotiate the Gaza ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas.
The Israeli military said it had fired at a "suspicious vehicle" it said had crossed the line demarcating the area occupied by its forces.
For Palestinians returning to Gaza, rebuilding their lives feels at best like a faraway goal and at worst, like an impossible one.