Sharm el-Sheikh Summit: Can Gaza’s Ceasefire Hold?
At the Sharm el-Sheikh summit, the US brokered Gaza’s first ceasefire in two years—but political divides and reconstruction hurdles threaten lasting peace.
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At the Sharm el-Sheikh summit, the US brokered Gaza’s first ceasefire in two years—but political divides and reconstruction hurdles threaten lasting peace.
More than 1,900 Palestinian prisoners arrived in Gaza after their release by Israel, closing a chapter in the recent ceasefire deal.
Egypt, the US, Turkey and Qatar signed a document at the Sharm el-Sheikh Summit to back the Gaza ceasefire deal, setting the stage for peace and reconstruction.
As Gaza ceasefire begins, the death toll reaches 67,869 and 170,105 injured. The weekend deal aims to halt fighting, allow humanitarian aid, and highlights 255 journalists killed.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer says the UK is ready to monitor a ceasefire in Gaza and help decommission Hamas weaponry.
Hamas handed over 20 surviving Israeli hostages under a U.S.-brokered ceasefire, as Israel prepares to free nearly 2,000 detainees in a historic exchange.
A new ceasefire sees hostages freed, thousands returning to Gaza City, IDF redeployment, and the UN ready to scale up humanitarian aid and reconstruction.
A first-phase Gaza ceasefire kicks off with aid corridors opening and hostage swaps planned. Is this a genuine path to peace or a tactical pause?
Israel approves a U.S.-backed Gaza ceasefire plan; PLO official Abbas Zaki warns it’s a power play for Middle East control.
After a ceasefire in Gaza, tens of thousands of Palestinians returned to their devastated homes, confronting widespread destruction and beginning the challenge of rebuilding.