Hamas, Israel and Netanyahu
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A Hamas official says the group is ready to discuss “freezing or storing” its arsenal of weapons as part of its ceasefire with Israel.
A cease-fire after two years of war with Israel has allowed Hamas to tighten its grip on power again. “It’s still standing,” one Israeli official said.
Hamas is willing to discuss “freezing or storing” its weapons, a senior official said on Sunday, amid concerns that the nascent ceasefire deal between Israel and the militant group could collapse.
Hamas and the Red Cross have failed to find the remains of the last hostage, Police Master Sgt. Ran Gvili, in the eastern part of Gaza City’s Zeitoun neighborhood, Al Jazeera reports.
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American-Israeli held hostage in Gaza for over 580 days sends message to Hamas: 'I’ll give you hell'
Former hostage Edan Alexander wears IDF uniform for first time since Gaza captivity, vowing to use his knowledge of Hamas tactics to fight back.
Abu Shabab's death would be a boost to Hamas, which branded him a collaborator and ordered its fighters to kill or capture him.
The Qatari Prime Minister, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, pushed back on claims that his country supports or finances Hamas, telling Tucker Carlson in an interview at the 2025 Doha Forum that Hamas is only there because the Obama administration asked Qatar to take them,
Gaza militia leader Yasser Abu Shabab died from injuries sustained in a clan confrontation while working to distribute aid and fight Hamas in Rafah.
For most of the year, a couple hundred Hamas militants have manned fighting positions in the tunnels under southern Gaza. But the walls are closing in.
Fadi a-Dayeb, one of Gaza’s most affluent merchants, was abducted and held ransom by Hamas, according to a now-deleted Facebook post reviewed by KAN on Sunday. Dayeb was forced to pay millions of shekels for his freedom, the post claimed.