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Israel and Hamas reach deal to release 50 hostages and pause fighting for 4 days in Gaza

The deal comes after weeks of closely guarded negotiations in Qatar, which along with the U.S. and Egypt has acted as a broker between the two sides.
/ Source: NBC News

Israel and Hamas have agreed a breakthrough deal to release 50 women and children who were kidnapped and held in Gaza, a potentially landmark agreement that will also involve a four-day pause in fighting, the delivery of hundreds of aid trucks, and the release of Palestinian women and children held by Israel.

The fate of the some 240 hostages captured in the Hamas terror attack on Oct. 7 has been a source of anguish in Israel, with regular demonstrations demanding their release and mounting political pressure on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The deal comes after weeks of mounting pressure from the United States and other countries over the fate of civilians in Gaza, where local officials say more than 14,000 people including 5,000 children have been killed in Israel’s aerial bombardment and ground assault, with more than 1.6 million displaced in a mounting humanitarian crisis.

After growing reports a deal was close, the breakthrough was announced early Wednesday local time (late Tuesday ET) by Qatar, the Gulf state that hosts Hamas leadership and worked alongside the United States and Egypt to broker the agreement.

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Israel’s government approved the deal early Wednesday local time. Hamas, which carried out the Oct. 7 attack that Israel says killed some 1,200 people, confirmed the deal in a statement, casting it as a chance to “consolidate the will of our victorious resistance.” It said that all hostages exchanged by both sides must be under the age of 19, although this details was not mentioned by any other party.

Three Americans could be part of the first group of hostages released: two adults and a 3-year-old girl named Abigail, a senior Biden administration official said.

The pause, the start time of which is yet to be announced, is set to last four days, an Israeli official said. Israeli drones — responsible for much of the bombardment, and whose buzzing noise is a constant psychological burden on many Palestinians — will stop flying over the strip for six hours a day as Hamas consolidates the remaining hostages, the official said. Some captives are being held by other militant groups, including Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

The deal includes an option to extend the pause in exchange for 10 hostages released per day, the Israeli official said.

Meanwhile, more fuel trucks will also be allowed to enter Gaza, which Israel had previously resisted on the grounds this can be used by Hamas to launch rockets and power tunnels, along with as many as 300 to 400 daily humanitarian aid trucks, according to a senior U.S. official and a source familiar with the talks in the region.

In addition, said an Israeli official briefed on the proposed deal, the Red Cross is expected to be allowed access to the hostages who remain in Gaza, including to provide them medicine.

Israeli Strike on Gaza in Rafah
A Palestinian boy stands amidst the rubble of a building following Israeli strikes in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on Nov. 22, 2023.Said Khatib / AFP - Getty Images

The agreement capped what the Biden administration official described as an “extremely excruciating five-week process” to free the hostages.

President Joe Biden was directly involved in the negotiations and received hourly updates on the progress, the administration official said. Among the sticking points, they said, were Israel’s requirement that Hamas provide identifying information and “proof of life” for the hostages and Hamas’ demand that fuel enter Gaza.

Image: Children walk past portraits of Israeli hostages posted on a wall in Tel Aviv
Children walk past portraits of Israeli hostages posted on a wall in Tel Aviv on Nov. 21, 2023.Ahmad Gharabli / AFP - Getty Images

Biden said in a statement late Tuesday he welcomed the agreement.

First lady Jill Biden “and I have been keeping all those held hostage and their loved ones close to our hearts these many weeks, and I am extraordinarily gratified that some of these brave souls, who have endured weeks of captivity and an unspeakable ordeal, will be reunited with their families once this deal is fully implemented,” he said.

Before the deal was announced, Netanyahu stressed that it would not mean the war with Hamas is over.

“We are at war, and we will continue the war until we achieve all our goals — to eliminate Hamas, to return all our hostages and missing persons and to guarantee that there will be no factor in Gaza that threatens Israel,” Netanyahu said in remarks Tuesday before the Cabinet vote.

“There are stages in a war, and there are also stages in the return of the abducted,” he added.

One remaining hurdle is that Israeli victims of alleged Palestinian attackers held in jails have a right to appeal a deal involving the prisoners’ release to the Supreme Court within 24 hours. So the deal is not final until that period closes.

Only four hostages have been released so far: Nurit Cooper, 79; Yocheved Lifshitz, 85; and two Americans — Judith Raanan and her teenage daughter, Natalie. Israeli forces also freed a soldier who had been taken captive, Pvt. Ori Megidish, 19.

Last week, two hostages were confirmed dead by the Israel Defense Forces: Yehudit Weiss, 65, a mother of five captured in the Be’eri kibbutz, and soldier Noa Marciano, 19. Their bodies were found near Al-Shifa Hospital in northern Gaza, the IDF said.

This article first appeared on NBCNews.com.