November 24, 2023 Israel-Hamas war | CNN

Live Updates

November 24, 2023 Israel-Hamas war

West bank Nima
Woman who was detained since she was just 16 is reuniting with mom, but behind closed doors. See why
02:47 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

69 Posts

Who are the hostages who were released on Friday?

Top row, from left: Yafa Adar, Margalit Moses, Ruth Munder, Emilia Aloni and Daniel Aloni. Middle row, from left: Hana Katzir, Adina Moshe, Channa Peri, Doron Katz Asher and Aviv Asher. Bottom row, from left: Ohad Munder, Raz Asher and Keren Munder.

The first group of hostages released Friday by Hamas under a deal with Israel included 13 Israeli women and children, 10 Thai citizens and one Filipino citizen.

Here is what we know about the freed Israelis:

  • Yafa Adar, 85: Adar is a founder of the Nir Oz kibbutz and is the oldest person to be taken hostage on October 7. Her eldest grandson was also abducted, and is still held hostage, said a Nir Oz spokesperson.
  • Margalit Moses, 77: The mother of three and grandmother of 10 is a retired biology teacher. She is also a cancer survivor who has diabetes, “fibromyalgia, and takes many additional medications,” said the Hostages and Missing Families Forum in Israel.
  • Hana Katzir, 76: She is also a member of Kibbutz Nir Oz and the wife of the late Rami Katzir, 79, who was killed in their home. Her son Elad was also kidnapped and is still in Gaza.
  • Adina Moshe, 72: The retired educator and Nir Oz resident is a mother of four and grandmother of 12. Her husband David (Sa’id) Moshe was killed in their home on October 7.
  • Ohad Munder, 9: The kibbutz spokesperson for Nir Oz said Munder “came to Nir Oz to visit family” when he was abducted alongside family members.
  • Doron Katz Asher, 34, Raz Asher, 4, Aviv Asher, 2: Doron visited Nir Oz with her family and was kidnapped with her two daughters, Aviv and Raz, as well as other family members.

Read more about the hostages here.

Filipino national released by Hamas doing “better than expected,” says family of employer

One of the hostages released by Hamas on Friday, a Filipino national who had been working as a caregiver in Israel, is doing “better than expected,” according to the son of the man he was caring for during the October 7 attacks.

Avishay Ben Zvi’s father, Amitai, was killed in the Hamas attack on his kibbutz while his caregiver Gelienor “Jimmy” Pacheco was taken hostage. 

Speaking to CNN’s Kaitlan Collins, Zvi said his brother had spoken to Pacheco and that he was OK.

“He was talking to his wife tonight and so better than expected, I would say,” said Zvi, referring to photos of Pacheco FaceTiming with his wife in the Philippines. 

“They’re going to do some medical tests and emotional tests and treatment but yes, most likely he will go to meet his family,” Zvi said.

Zvi said while the family was very happy that Pacheco was released, there was concern over the remaining hostages.

Egypt hails success of first day of truce between Israel and Hamas

Egypt said it was pleased with the first day of the truce between Israel and Hamas, part of the four-day pause in fighting under the hostage release deal.

Diaa Rashwan, the chairman of Egypt’s State Information Service, pointed to Israel’s agreement to stop flying surveillance drones over Gaza during the truce as one reason it got off to a successful start. 

Rashwan also said increased deliveries of medical supplies, food and fuel to Gaza residents was another factor that would help maintain the truce.

Earlier on Friday, the United Nations said 137 trucks of humanitarian aid were driven into the enclave. The relief convoy marked the largest delivery of aid since Israel enforced a total blockade of Gaza following the October 7 Hamas attack.

Egypt also allowed at least 134 Palestinians who had been stranded in Egypt to return to the Gaza Strip at their request, Rashwan’s statement said. 

Philippines president confirms one national among hostages released by Hamas 

Philippine President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos confirmed the release of a Philippine national, Gelienor “Jimmy” Pacheco, on Friday.

Pacheco was among the first group of 24 hostages released by Hamas under the agreement struck with Israel.

The whereabouts of one other Philippine citizen, Noralyn Babadilla, remains unknown. 

Released Palestinian prisoners celebrated as they return to West Bank

Family members welcome released Palestinian prisoner Fatima Amarneh near Jenin, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, on Saturday.

Palestinians released from Israeli prisons were met with celebrations on Friday evening as they returned to their hometowns and villages in Jerusalem and the West Bank.

In videos obtained by CNN, the released prisoners can be seen paraded through the streets, carried on people’s shoulders as crowds wave the Palestinian flag, as well as that of Hamas.

Thirty-nine people were released Friday under the deal between Israel and Hamas, which also saw the release of 24 hostages from Gaza, and the start of a four-day truce in the enclave. 

Twenty-two women were among those released, as well as two girls. Fifteen teenage boys up to the age of 18 were also released — the youngest aged 14. 

Fireworks streak across the sky as Palestinian prisoners that were released from the Israeli Ofer military facility are paraded in Beitunia, in the occupied West Bank, on Friday.

What they were imprisoned for: There are few more sensitive issues for Palestinians in the occupied territories than the issue of prisoners held in Israeli jails.

Some are serving sentences for attacks on Israelis, while many others are being held in administrative detention, a widely criticized practice that sees people held without knowing the charges against them, and without any legal process.

Aseel El-Titi, a 23-year-old prisoner released on Friday, told CNN she had only found out that morning she was being released. But, she said, her joy was tempered by the knowledge of what was happening in Gaza.

“Despite this, the Palestinian people are steadfast, and Hamas is trying to release all the prisoners and end the occupation,” she said. 

Wael Ahmad, a bystander at the Beitunia crossing in the occupied West Bank, where the prisoners were driven after their release, told CNN he also found it hard to celebrate when so many had been killed in Gaza.

More releases to come: The agreement struck between Israel and Hamas will see three more days of prisoner releases.

For Hamas, securing the freedom of an expected 150 incarcerated Palestinians represents an opportunity to burnish its credentials in the West Bank as the flagbearer of Palestinian resistance.

Watch: One Palestinian was detained when she was 16. This video shows the reunion with her mother after 10 years.

Israel says it's received a list of hostages to be released on Saturday

The Mossad and the Israel Defense Forces have received the second list of Israeli hostages due to be released on Saturday as part of the framework agreed with Hamas, the office of Israel’s prime minister wrote in a statement on Friday.

Security officials are reviewing the list of names, the statement read. An Israeli source told CNN there are children on the list of hostages expected to be released on Saturday.

Israel’s Hostage Coordinator Brig. Gen. (res.) Gal Hirsch has given the information to the families of the hostages, the statement added.  

The list will not be released to the public until the hostages are safely in Israeli hands.

CNN’s Kaitlan Collins contributed to this report.

11 released foreign nationals transferred to Israeli medical center, foreign ministry says

Eleven foreign nationals — 10 men and one woman — freed by Hamas in Gaza are spending the night at Shamir-Assaf HaRofeh Medical Center, according to the Israeli Foreign Ministry.

The medical center is located in the Israeli town of Beer Yaakov, southeast of Tel Aviv,

The 10 Thai citizens and one Filipino citizen will remain at the hospital until medical examinations are complete, the ministry said in a statement.

“We’re very glad and proud to take a part in this effort,” the doctor said.

"There wasn't a dry eye in the room" during hostage family reunions, Israeli health official says

“There wasn’t a dry eye in the room” when five hostages were reunited with their families,  Israel’s Chief Nurse Dr. Shoshy Goldberg said at a news conference at Wolfson Medical Center near Tel Aviv.

The five elderly women were received in a specially prepared complex for them and their families. The reunions as a “very emotional and exciting event,” Goldberg said Friday.

Videos provided by the hospital showed people cheering as ambulances carrying three of the women transported them from a helicopter.

“I promise to the returning women and their families: You are finally home, in a safe place,” said Wolfson Medical Center Director General Dr. Anat Engel.

Family member of 3 released hostages says return to normal life will be a delicate process

Eyal Mor speaks to CNN's Wolf Blitzer on Friday.

Eyal Mor, whose family members were among those hostages released by Hamas on Friday, said he has “mixed emotions” about the complicated homecoming.

The family – Ohad Munder, who turned 9 while in captivity, his mother, Keren Munder, 54, and grandmother, Ruth Munder, 78 — are in good shape “both physically and mentally.” But, added later: “Of course, we have to see, this is all initial reports.”

“The psychologist says it has to be very slowly, very progressive. The come back to normality has to be very controlled way so we will follow that advice,” Mor told CNN.

He said he and other family members know the transition back to life will be a delicate process. He said they have to tell Ohad, Keren and Ruth about other family members that have died while they were being held by Hamas.

From left, Ohad Munder, Keren Munder and Ruth Munder.

“It puts us in a very conflicting situation because, on one hand, people would like to come and celebrate with them,” he said, referring to people supporting his family and the story of Ohad. But, “on the other hand, they just learned that they lost someone. So it’s a mixed emotions here.”

Mor said he saw a “very emotional” video taken at a hospital of the moment the three were reunited with other family members on Friday.

Mor said he plans to meet with them on Saturday. He said his family is still hoping for the release of another family member — Ruth Munder’s 78-year-old husband who is still being held by Hamas.

"This is a drop of joy in a sea of sadness." Well-wishers gather outside hospital as freed hostages arrive

People wave Israeli flags as helicopter carrying hostages released by Hamas arrives at Schneider Children's Medical Center in Petah Tikva, Israel, on Friday.

Outside the Schneider Children’s Medical Center, a group of well-wishers gathered Friday to observe the helicopters landing and departing. 

At moments there were cheers and claps of excitement at the arrival of the released hostages. At other times the mood was somber and emotional.

CNN spoke to one ER nurse from a neighboring hospital — still in her scrubs — who came straight from her shift to witness the moment. She asked to be identified only by her first name, Elena.

She told us she was working in the ER on October 7 and treated some of the injured after the Hamas attacks in Israel.

She added that it won’t change the future and the sadness and bloodshed that are still likely to come. But that the drop of joy is so desperately needed here now. 

Eli Rado, 18, came with a group of his friends.

“We are very happy. We want all the hostages to be free. My cousin is fighting in Gaza right now and my friends and we want them to come home soon. May God be with them. But we know that this war will go until the last man standing.”

Hospital staff told CNN that eight freed hostages from three families are at the hospital – the Munder family, the Ashers and the Alonis.

The eight are in good condition and will undergo a medical assessment, according to Dr. Efrat Bron-Harlev, CEO of the hospital.

All were seized by Hamas from the Nir Oz kibbutz on October 7. Read more about them here

Tamar Michaelis contributed to this report.

Hamas releases video showing handover of hostages to Red Cross officials inside Gaza

A still from a video released by Hamas on Friday shows Israeli hostages being transferred from unmarked white SUVs into the back of Red Cross vehicles.

Hamas has released a video showing several of the 24 freed hostages being handed over to Red Cross officials inside Gaza on Friday.

The video, which consists of a series of edited clips and runs just under two minutes in length, was released on the social media platforms of the Al Qassam Brigades, the Hamas military wing. 

CNN was not present at any of the locations when the clips were filmed and had no control over the content. Apart from a few seconds at the start of the video, there is no audio on any of the clips.

After a brief opening shot of several Red Cross vehicles apparently arriving at a handover point inside Gaza, the video shows six of the foreign nationals released today getting out of two unmarked white SUVs, before being escorted by Red Cross officials toward Red Cross vehicles.

The video then has a series of clips showing several of the female Israeli hostages, along with one of the children, also being transferred from unmarked white SUVs into the back of Red Cross vehicles. 

Many of the clips show a heavy presence of Hamas gunmen, wearing black balaclavas and green bandanas, escorting the hostages at the handover point. 

Some of the clips show a large number of people surrounding the handover, many filming it on their phones.

It was not immediately clear if the handovers shown on the video were all carried out at the same location. 

It appears as though the handovers were carried out in the mid to late afternoon.

Helicopters carrying released hostages arrive at medical centers near Tel Aviv

A helicopter carrying hostages released by Hamas lands at Schneider Children's Medical Center of Israel in Petah Tikva, Israel, on Friday.

Helicopters carrying released hostages have been arriving at medical centers in Israel.

CNN previously reported four helicopters had departed Israel’s Hatzerim Air Base near Beersheva on Friday. They were expected to fly to various hospitals in the Tel Aviv area.

So far, two helicopters have arrived at Schneider Children’s Medical Center of Israel, which is near Tel Aviv. 

Three more Israeli hostages also arrived by helicopter at Wolfson Medical Center in Holon, south of Tel Aviv, a hospital spokesperson told CNN. They were then transferred by ambulance to the hospital for evaluation and treatment.

The newly arrived hostages have been taken into the hospital and are now undergoing medical checks and evaluations, a hospital spokesperson said.

Two other hostages had arrived at the Wolfson Medical Center several hours earlier in the evening by ambulance.

All five hostages being treated at the hospital are elderly women.

This post has been updated with the latest information about the arrivals at Wolfson Medical Center.

Red Cross said it facilitated release of 33 Palestinian prisoners from Ofer prison to Ramallah 

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said Friday it facilitated the transfer of 33 Palestinian prisoners, released as part of the Israel-Hamas truce deal, from an Israeli prison to the West Bank.

In total, 39 Palestinian women and minors were released from three prisons — Damon, Megiddo and Ofer – on Friday, according to the Israeli prison service. 

4 helicopters depart Israeli air base to transport released hostages to hospitals 

Four helicopters carrying released hostages have departed Israel’s Hatzerim Air Base near Beersheva.

Of the 24 that were freed Friday, 22 were initially taken to Hatzerim and are expected to be flown to hospitals in the Tel Aviv area.

The other two hostages released Friday by Hamas have already been taken to the Wolfson Medical Center in the city of Holon, south of Tel Aviv, a hospital spokesperson told CNN.

CNN’s Sarina Rofé and Joseph Ataman contributed reporting to this post

UN special coordinator for Middle East peace welcomes Israel-Hamas truce

The United Nations Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process Tor Wennesland welcomed the implementation of the hostage agreement between Israel and Hamas.

“I also welcome the release of a number of foreign workers held in Gaza. I look forward to additional releases expected over the coming days,” Wennesland added.

Israel and Hamas reached a deal for a four-day pause in fighting and the release of 50 hostages held in Gaza that began on Friday. The Israel Prison Service announced on Friday night that 39 Palestinian prisoners were released as part of the hostage agreement

Wennesland said the pause in fighting “went into effect with relative calm, allowing truckloads of aid to go into Gaza.”

“These developments are a significant humanitarian breakthrough that we need to build on,” according to Wennesland.

Earlier Friday, the UN said 137 trucks of humanitarian aid were driven into the Gaza Strip, marking the largest aid convoy that has moved into the enclave since October 7. 

Wennesland also called for the release of all hostages held by Hamas and others in Gaza.

Hostages held in Gaza and Palestinians jailed in Israel were released today. Here's what you should know

International Red Cross vehicles transport freed hostages through the Rafah border crossing in Gaza on November 24.

Twenty-four people held hostage for nearly seven weeks in the Gaza Strip were released Friday as part of a truce brokered between Israel and Hamas, according to officials.

The group includes 10 Thai citizens, 13 Israelis and one Filipino citizen, according to Qatar’s foreign ministry spokesperson Majed Al-Ansari. They are now in Israel, the Israel Defense Forces said Friday. 

In addition, 39 Palestinian women and teenagers were freed from Israeli jails and were on their way to the West Bank.

A total of 50 hostages could be freed over the four-day pause in flighting, while Palestinian prisoners are also due to be released in waves. 

The pause and releases followed weeks of tense negotiations – and took several agonizing days to come into effect. The agreement represents the first major diplomatic breakthrough in the conflict.

Here’s what else you know about today’s developments:

  • Kidnapped from kibbutz: The civilians released included 13 Israeli women and children who had been captured by Hamas during its brutal cross-border raids on October 7 and held for 48 days amid worsening humanitarian conditions. All but one were abducted from the Nir Oz kibbutz, according to spokespeople for the kibbutz and the Hostages and Missing Families Forum. They included 5-year-old Emilia Aloni and Adina Moshe, who was seen being driven away on a motorbike after being abducted.
  • Reaction to releases: Hailing the release, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he remains committed to securing the release of all those still held in Gaza. Israel’s Ministry of Welfare and Social Affairs released detailed instructions outlining how to care for released children. The release sparked a range of emotions in Tel Aviv on Friday and raised hopes for the families of those still held in the enclave.
  • Palestinian prisoner release: Qatar’s foreign ministry confirmed that Palestinian prisoners are on their way to the West Bank. The 39 were released from three prisons — Damon, Megiddo and Ofer — according to the prison service. A CNN team outside Ofer prison witnessed clashes between the Israeli military and some Palestinians ahead of the release. Around 8,300 Palestinian prisoners are currently held in Israeli jails, said Qadura Fares, head of the Palestinian Commission for Detainees and Ex-Prisoners’ Affairs.
  • Developments on the ground: The Israeli military told people in southern Gaza not to move north, with its forces restricting travel to only one road. Also, a CNN team in the southern Israel city of Sderot said it heard “loud booms” that sounded like Israeli artillery fire landing in Gaza, up to 15 minutes after the expected start time of the truce between Israel and Hamas.
  • Humanitarian aid: The United Nations said 137 trucks with humanitarian goods were offloaded in Gaza on the first day of the pause, marking the largest aid convoy since October 7. Some 130,000 liters of diesel fuel and four trucks of gas will enter daily starting Friday, according to an Egyptian official.
  • Returning Palestinians: Displaced Palestinians attempting to return to homes in northern Gaza were allegedly blocked by Israeli forces, a journalist told CNN. But eventually, at least 67 Palestinians who had been stuck in Egypt since fighting began on October 7 crossed back Friday, hours after the truce went into effect.

Implementing hostage agreement in days ahead will be complicated, Israel military spokesperson says

The Israeli military is warning that the implementation of the hostage release agreement will be complicated and “nothing is over until it’s over.”  

“The days ahead of us will be complicated, nothing is over until it’s over. We should be prepared,” Israel Defense Forces spokesman Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said on Friday.

He said the 24 hostages freed from Gaza, including 13 Israeli citizens, is “a great relief,” but “our hearts are with the hostages that are still being held in Gaza.”

The agreement, accompanied by a four-day truce between Hamas and Israel that began on Friday morning, represents the first major diplomatic breakthrough in the conflict.

Asked about the possibility that senior Hamas officials might attempt to flee Gaza during the truce, Hagari said, “We’re monitoring everything necessary, and are monitoring senior Hamas officials, in Gaza and anywhere in the world.”

Biden said we can be thankful for families being reunited in remarks

US President Joe Biden delivers remarks in Nantucket, Massachusetts, on November 24.

President Joe Biden said we can be thankful for the families being “reunited with loved ones” following the initial group of hostages released as a part of a four-day truce between Israel and Hamas.

“This morning I’ve been engaged with my team as we began the first difficult days of implementing this deal. It’s only a start, but so far it’s gone well,” Biden said in remarks Friday.

The released hostages  include 13 Israelis, 10 Thai citizens and 1 Filipino citizen, according to Qatar’s foreign ministry. A total of 50 hostages could be freed over the four-day pause in flighting, while Palestinian prisoners are also due to be released in waves. 

Biden said over the next few days, they expect dozens of hostages will be returned to their families. “We also remember all those who are still being held and renew our commitment to work for their release as well,” he said.

“All of these hostages have been through a terrible ordeal, and this is the beginning of a long journey of healing for them,” Biden said. “The teddy bears waiting to greet those children at the hospital are a stark reminder of the trauma these children have been through and at such a very young age.”

Biden said Hamas “unleashed this terrorist attack because they fear nothing more than Israelis and Palestinians living side by side in peace.”

“As we look to the future, we have to end this cycle of violence in the Middle East. We need to renew our resolve to pursue this two-state solution where Israelis and Palestinians can one day live side by side in a two-state solution with equal measure of freedom and dignity,” Biden said. 

2 freed hostages have arrived to hospital near Tel Aviv, spokesperson says

Two of the hostages freed from Gaza today have arrived at the Wolfson Medical Center in the Israeli city of Holon, which is south of Tel Aviv, a hospital spokesperson confirmed to CNN.

Hagai Levine, head of the medical team of the hostage families association, told journalists he had spoken to some of the freed hostages on the phone and that some of them have gastroenteritis.

He added that their recovery from weeks in captivity would likely take time, also stressing the importance of their reunions with their families.

The other hostages who were freed today remain at the Hatzerim Airbase near Beersheva, according to Israel Defense Forces spokesman Daniel Hagari. They are expected to be flown to hospitals in the Tel Aviv area, he added.

11 foreign nationals also returned to Israel, IDF says

The 11 foreign nationals who were released alongside the Israeli hostages on Friday have also returned to Israel, the Israeli military said.

CNN previously reported that the hostages released on Friday include 13 Israelis, 10 Thai citizens and 1 Filipino citizen, according to the Qatar Foreign Ministry spokesperson.

“The foreign nationals will meet their countries’ representatives at the Hatzerim Airbase, and will be transferred to the hospitals as well,” Hagari said.

UN says 137 aid trucks offloaded in Gaza on first day of truce

Trucks carrying humanitarian aid enter Gaza through the Rafah border crossing on November 24.

The United Nations said Friday that 137 trucks with humanitarian goods were offloaded in Gaza on the first day of the pause in fighting, marking the largest aid convoy that has moved into the Gaza Strip since October 7. 

“During the humanitarian pause that has been in place since this morning, the UN was able to scale up the delivery of humanitarian assistance into and across Gaza,” a statement from the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said.

On Friday, 129,000 liters of fuel and four trucks of gas were also delivered to Gaza, OCHA said.

OCHA also announced that “21 critical patients were evacuated in a large-scale medical operation from the north of Gaza.” It is not clear where those patients were evacuated. 

The UN welcomed the initial release of 24 hostages held in Gaza and reaffirmed its call for an “immediate and unconditional release of all hostages.”  

“Humanitarian teams from the UN and partners will continue to ramp up humanitarian operations to meet the needs of people throughout Gaza in the coming days,” the statement said.

Israel Prison Service confirms 39 Palestinian prisoners released as part of hostage agreement

An Israeli prison transport vehicle is seen at Ofer prison on Friday, November 24.

Thirty-nine Palestinian prisoners were released as part of the hostage agreement, the Israel Prison Service announced Friday night.

The Palestinian women and minors were released from three prisons — Damon, Megiddo and Ofer — according to the prison service. 

“Tonight we finished the first day of our mission to bring the hostages home. We will continue in the coming days to take any necessary action to support this national effort,” the head of the Israel Prison Service Katy Perry said in a statement.

A prison service spokesperson added:

Qatar foreign ministry confirms released Palestinian prisoners are on way to West Bank

Qatar’s foreign ministry confirmed that Palestinian prisoners were released as part of the hostage agreement and are on their way to the West Bank. 

Crowds gathered in the Beituniya municipality in the West Bank and are awaiting the released Palestinians, CNN journalists witnessed. 

Videos circulating showed one released Palestinian prisoner, Marah Bakir, being greeted by her family in East Jerusalem.

Remember: Qatari officials have played a main mediating role in hostage deal negotiations.

There are mixed emotions in Israel as Hamas releases some hostages

The release of Israeli hostages and the start of a four-day truce between Israel and Hamas in Gaza sparked a range of emotions in Tel Aviv on Friday, and raised hopes for the families of those still held in the besieged enclave.

As officials announced that 13 Israeli hostages, along with 10 Thai citizens and a Filipino national had been freed by Hamas, a murmur rang through a crowd of hundreds who had gathered near Tel Aviv’s Museum of Art in an area that has gained the name “Hostages Square.” 

Tamar Shamir has been coming to the square for weeks to show her support to those still in Gaza, but she said more must be done. “We’re not happy, we cannot be happy until everyone comes back home,” she told CNN. 

The fragile truce will see the staggered release of 50 women and children held in Gaza out of more than 200 people Israel said were abducted when Hamas militants attacked Israel on October 7. The deal also includes the release of 150 imprisoned Palestinian women and children held in Israeli jails. 

Shamir said it was heart-breaking to think about young hostages. “The kids will come back and they won’t have a mom or dad – some are orphans,” she said.  

Israeli-American Michal Feuer.

Israeli-American Michal Feuer explained she was conflicted between the need to release all the hostages and “get rid of Hamas” as there was a “certain momentum” in the war, which is being damaged by the truce.

“I really feel for Palestinian civilians,” she said. “Most of them are innocent, but I don’t think we have a choice and I hope that, in the long run, they’ll have better lives for it as well” she said.

Netanyahu says he is committed to returning all hostages

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivers an address on Friday.

Hailing the release of Israeli hostages today, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says he remains committed to securing the release of all those still held in Gaza.

What happens next for the released hostages

International Red Cross vehicles transport freed hostages to the Rafah border crossing in Gaza, on November 24.

If Israel and Hamas can smoothly navigate freeing hostages in Gaza and Palestinians in Israeli custody on Friday, Matthew Chance, CNN’s chief global affairs correspondent, said it is a positive sign for the next several days ahead.

Negotiating and executing the freeing of hostages has been a “long and difficult logistical operation,” he said.

So what happens to the released hostages now? The 13 Israeli hostages as well as 11 other foreign nations are now back in Israel. There, they will be given medical assessments and have access to things like food, showers and a change of clothes, he said.

Once that processing is complete, the freed hostages will board helicopters at the Hatzerim Airbase to go to specific hospitals across the country, based on their needs, Chance reported from the Israeli airbase.

Palestinian prisoners reported to have left prison as part of hostage deal

Buses reported to be carrying the 39 Palestinian women and teenagers being released as part of the hostage agreement have been seen leaving Ofer prison in the occupied West Bank.

The head of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Affairs Authority, Qadura Fares, said buses carrying the prisoners were on their way to Ramallah.

Earlier Friday, a CNN team outside of the prison witnessed clashes between the Israeli military and some Palestinians.

Israeli prime minister's office releases names of 13 released hostages

The prime minister’s office in Israel has released a list of 13 hostages freed on Friday:

  • Margalit Moses
  • Adina Moshe 
  • Daniel Aloni
  • Emilia Aloni
  • Yafa Adar
  • Ohad Munder
  • Keren Munder
  • Ruth Munder
  • Aviv Asher
  • Raz Asher
  • Doron Katz Asher
  • Hana Katzir
  • Channa Peri

The office also said that 11 foreign nationals were released today. Qatar’s foreign ministry had earlier confirmed that 10 Thai citizens and one Filipino citizen were released along with the 13 Israelis.

Remember: These hostages have been released as part of a deal between Israel and Hamas, which involves a four-day truce. A total of 50 hostages will be freed over the four-day pause in flighting, while Palestinian prisoners are also due to be released in waves. An Israeli official said a total of 39 Palestinian prisoners will be freed in return on Friday.

Released hostages are now in Israel, IDF says

The released hostages are now in Israel, the Israel Defense Forces said Friday. 

They have undergone an initial medical assessment, it added.

The IDF and the Israel Security Agency, also known as Shin Bet, are currently with the released hostages, according to the statement. As they head to Israeli hospitals, IDF soldiers will accompany the hostages, the statement added.

The IDF “reiterates the importance of demonstrating patience and sensitivity during this time out of respect for the released hostages and their families,” it said.

This post has been updated with the IDF’s statement.

CNN team sees clashes near West Bank prison where 39 Palestinian prisoners will be released

Members of the Israeli military clash with Palestinians outside Ofer prison on November 24.

A CNN team outside Ofer prison in the occupied West Bank witnessed clashes between the Israeli military and some Palestinians ahead of the expected release of 39 Palestinian women and teenagers.

The Israel Defense Forces used tear gas in an effort to disperse dozens of Palestinians who came to the site, some of whom were throwing rocks. Among the crowds were family members of the 39 set to be released.

The Palestine Red Crescent Society said a 16-year-old boy, as well as a 12-year-old child, had been shot and injured during the disturbances.

CNN is reaching out to the IDF for comment on the incidents.

Qatar foreign ministry spokesperson breaks down nationalities of 24 released hostages

The 24 hostages released include 13 Israelis, 10 Thai citizens and 1 Filipino citizen, according to Qatar’s foreign ministry spokesperson Majed Al-Ansari.

Egypt and Thailand initially said 12 Thai citizens would be released.

Qatari officials have played a main mediating role in hostage deal negotiations.

24 hostages have been released, Red Cross says

Families of the hostages and others watch news broadcasts as hostages are released into Egypt before being brought into Israel by the ICRC, outside the Museum of Tel Aviv, Israel, on November 24.

Twenty-four people are in the group of hostages released Friday, the International Committee of the Red Cross said.

The Red Cross did not say how many of the freed hostages were from Israel and how many were from Thailand.

Israel previously said 13 Israeli hostages would be released and the Thai prime minister said 12 Thai hostages had been freed – a total of 25. The reason for the discrepancy in the numbers was not immediately clear, and the ICRC did not provide the breakdown of the nationalities.

Red Cross convoy contains at least 4 vehicles

International Red Cross vehicles cross the Rafah border point in Gaza on the way to Egypt on November 24.

The Red Cross convoy entering the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt contained at least four vehicles — each with up to six people sitting in the rear. 

Pictures from the scene showed at least one woman with white hair waving in the back seat of her vehicle, and another vehicle that appeared to have several Thai men sitting in the back.

Biden is being regularly briefed on hostage recovery efforts, source says

US President Joe Biden has been briefed this morning and continues to regularly be updated on hostage recovery efforts, a source familiar tells CNN.

Biden told reporters Thursday he would speak about the situation on Friday, pending a successful initial release.

There are no public events currently on his schedule.

Convoy of Red Cross vehicles enters Rafah crossing from Gaza to Egypt

A Red Cross vehicle arrives at the Rafah border amid a hostages-prisoners swap deal between Hamas and Israel as seen from Gaza on November 24.

A convoy of Red Cross vehicles entered the Rafah border crossing from Gaza into Egypt Friday night, live pictures from the crossing showed. 

How the children's hospital that could treat hostages is preparing for their arrival

A significant amount of preparation is underway at a children’s hospital in Israel where released hostages could be sent to, according to CNN chief international correspondent Clarissa Ward, who is outside of the hospital.

Mothers and children who are released will not be separated if brought to the hospital for shelter, she reported. Staff there say the main objective is for the hospital not to look or feel sterile, intimidating or frightening, Ward reported.

Each group of hostages who end up at the hospital will have their own social worker appointed to them, Ward reports.

Watch more from the report:

877c5ab6-545c-4579-be88-e6f110db7024.mp4
02:42 - Source: cnn

"Where's Mum?" Israel's welfare ministry issues guidance on caring for released child hostages

A person walks past a tent with faces of child hostages near Sarona on November 24, in Tel Aviv, Israel.

Israel’s Ministry of Welfare and Social Affairs has released detailed instructions outlining how to care for released child hostages, ahead of the release of the first group of hostages later Friday.

Israel Defense Forces (IDF) troops have been advised on how to introduce themselves to the children – who have been held hostage in Gaza for nearly seven weeks – and how to interact with them following their release, before they are admitted to hospitals.

The guidelines, released ahead of the truce, advise that each child or each family unit should be assigned a soldier and that soldiers should ask the children for permission before touching or picking up the child.

The instructions stress the importance of building routine including rest, balanced meals and moderate physical activity outdoors in the first week, as well as creating open spaces for dialogue about what the child has experienced.

A source familiar with the preparations told CNN all hostages will receive noise-canceling headphones to provide “peace and quiet” during the helicopter flight.

On board each helicopter will be a medical team including a commander, three combat soldiers and two doctors, the source said.

The personnel have been advised to introduce themselves by name with a visible face and a smile, maintain eye contact and distance in order to allow the caregivers and support teams to do their work in the best possible way, the source added.

Preparations completed: The IDF said it was ready to receive hostages later Friday and that it had prepared “several locations” dedicated to the initial reception of those released.

The IDF said that “after the initial reception and medical treatment, the released hostages will continue to hospitals, where they will be reunited with their families.”

White House officials are monitoring hostage transfer in real time, sources say

White House officials are monitoring the transfer of hostages taking place right now in real time, sources say.

There has been heavy emphasis put on a successful first day of the hostage release, as US officials believe that will help pave the way for the next several days going smoothly. 

Americans are not expected to be among the first 13 hostages released today. 

All 13 Israeli hostages have been released, Israel Prime Minister's office says

All 13 Israeli hostages have been released, the Israel Prime Minister’s office has said.

Thai prime minister says he received confirmation of release of 12 Thai nationals held in Gaza

Thailand’s Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin said he received confirmation of the release of 12 Thai nationals from Gaza.

“I have received confirmation from our national security team and ministry of foreign affairs that 12 Thai hostages have been released. Our RTE staffs are on their way to receive them,” Thavisin said in a post on X, the social media platform formerly called Twitter.

RTE refers to Royal Thai Embassy.  

“We should know more about their names and details, please stay tuned,” Thavisin added.

This comes after Egypt had said earlier that the 12 Thai nationals who are held by Hamas will be released in addition to the 13 hostages due to be released on Friday.

The Rafah border between Egypt and Gaza is being prepared to receive hostages released by Hamas in preparation for their transfer to the Israeli side, the head of the state information service Diaa Rashwan had said in a statement.

Hamas due to release hostages at any moment

Hamas is due to release 13 Israelis hostages from the October 7 attack at any moment, under the terms of an agreement announced by Qatar on Friday.

Helicopters carrying hostages expected to land at Hatzerim Air Base, IDF says

A soldier stands guard outside the Hatzerim Air Base near Beersheba in Israel's southern district on November 24.

Israeli helicopters carrying hostages released by Hamas are expected to land later Friday at Hatzerim Air Base, according to the Israel Defense Forces.

While all “is going to plan” with the exchange of hostages and prisoners as of mid-afternoon local time, the exact timings of the arrival of the Israeli hostages is still unclear, an Israeli official told CNN.

Hatzerim is about 50 kilometers (or about 31 miles) east of Gaza, close to the Israeli city of Beersheva.

Hamas publishes names of Palestinian prisoners set for release from Israeli jails 

Israeli military police guard the entrance to Ofer Israeli military prison on November 24.

Hamas published the names of Palestinian prisoners expected to be in the first batch released from Israeli jails on Friday.

The list has 39 names — 24 women and 15 minors. The majority of the people on the list are from the occupied West Bank.

CNN previously reported the numbers on the list.

The prisoners are being moved from two jails — Damon and Megiddo, both southeast of Haifa – and driven to the Ofer prison, south of Ramallah, in the occupied West Bank, for final checks by the Red Cross, an Israeli official told CNN Thursday. 

Some background: Around 8,300 Palestinian prisoners are currently held in Israeli jails, said Qadura Fares, head of the Palestinian Commission for Detainees and Ex-Prisoners’ Affairs.

More than 3,000 of them are being held in what Israel calls “administrative detention,” Fares told CNN, adding that this means they are being held without knowing the charges against them, and without an ongoing legal process.

Israel has stepped up its arrests since Hamas’ attacks on October 7. Up to 2,070 arrests were documented in the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem in that month alone, according to the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society, a non-governmental organization dedicated to addressing the concerns of Palestinian detainees in Israeli prisons. That figure includes 145 children and 55 women.

Professionals will need to tell released hostages about what happened to their families soon, Israel says

Professionals will have to “pretty quickly” share relevant information with the hostages released from Gaza about what has happened to their families and communities once they return to Israel, a representative with Israel’s Ministry of Welfare and Social Affairs said Friday.

An initial group of 13 hostages – expected to be women and children – are set to be released at 4 p.m. local time (9 a.m. ET), while an Israeli official said a total of 39 Palestinian prisoners will be freed in return on Friday.

More will follow, with a total of 50 hostages to be freed over the four days, while Palestinian prisoners are also due to be released in waves.

The first release of hostages is expected imminently. Here's what you need to know

Just after 7 a.m. local time Friday, the skies over Gaza fell quiet for the first time in nearly seven weeks. The truce agreement – brokered through painstaking negotiations – appears to be holding, CNN journalists in southern Israel close to the Gaza Strip have reported.

Now, the world is waiting to see if the second part of the truce agreement – the release of civilian hostages held by Hamas in exchange for Palestinian prisoners in Israel – will also be observed.

An initial group of 13 hostages – expected to be women and children – are set to be released at 4 p.m. local time (9 a.m. ET). Under the Israel-Hamas agreement, a total of 50 women and children are expected to be freed in a release staggered over four days, while there is a pause in fighting. In return, Israel is set to release 39 Palestinian prisoners – also expected to be women and children.

Meanwhile, Palestinians from the north of the Strip – but who had fled south to avoid the worst of the fighting – are reportedly attempting to return to their homes now the truce has begun.

Here are the latest developments:

  • Hostage release: In just over an hour, a group of hostages taken by Hamas are set to be freed. They will be received by Israel Defense Forces (IDF) troops who have made extensive preparations – from medical provisions to how to greet the likely traumatized women and children. The freed hostages are set to be airlifted to hospitals to receive medical treatment.
  • Palestinian prisoners: Israel is also set to free 39 Palestinian prisoners – of whom 24 are women and 15 are children, a Palestinian official told CNN. The majority of those listed as eligible for release by Israel are male Palestinians aged between 16 and 18 – children under the UN definition – while a handful are as young as 14.
  • Truce holding: CNN journalists in the southern Israeli city of Sderot said the sounds of heavy weapons fire stopped shortly after 7 a.m. local time Friday. They heard what sounded like small arms fire inside Gaza about 20 minutes later, but artillery fire, airstrikes and rockets appear to have stopped – and, hours on, the truce appears not to have been broken.
  • Aid in Rafah: With the truce being observed, aid is expected to flow more freely into Gaza. Some 130,000 liters of diesel fuel and four trucks of gas will enter Gaza from Egypt daily starting Friday, according to Egyptian authorities. At least 90 aid trucks have entered Gaza through the Rafah border crossing Friday, an Egyptian border official at the border told CNN.
  • Heading north?: More than a million Palestinians fled from the north of Gaza to the south last month, after Israel issued an order to evacuate. After the pause in fighting began, displaced Palestinians are reportedly attempting to return to their homes in the north – but they have been blocked by Israeli forces, a journalist told CNN. The IDF has told people in southern Gaza not to move north, with its forces restricting travel from the north to the south to only one road. “The IDF is stationed along the designated operational lines of the pause in accordance with the provisions of the agreed upon framework,” an IDF spokesperson told CNN.
  • Longer war?: Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said Israel’s military operation against Hamas will continue “forcefully” after the truce has been observed. “This will be a brief pause. When it ends, the fighting will continue forcefully, and will create pressure that will allow the return of more hostages,” Gallant said while visiting Israeli troops on Thursday. He said he expected the fighting to continue for “at least two more months.”

Americans not expected to be among the first 13 hostages released

American citizens are not expected to be among the first group of hostages released Friday, a US official tells CNN.

The official added they remain hopeful that there will be Americans among the initial 50.

The first hostage release from Gaza is scheduled to take place later today, when 13 women and children held captive in Gaza are expected to be freed, mediators in Qatar have said.

Dozens of Palestinians cross from Egypt to Gaza on first day of truce 

A Palestinian man who was stranded in Egypt due to the Israel-Hamas conflict is welcomed upon his arrival, during a temporary truce, at the Rafah border crossing in southern Gaza on November 24.

At least 67 Palestinians who have been stuck in Egypt since fighting began on October 7 crossed back into Gaza on Friday, hours after the truce went into effect.

The Palestinian embassy in Cairo said Thursday that Palestinians stuck in the Sinai Peninsula will be allowed to cross to Gaza on Friday. Other Palestinians elsewhere in parts of Egypt will be allowed to cross to Gaza from Saturday if they wish, the embassy added.

Zeinat Al-Gindy, who had traveled to Egypt for medical treatment before the war started, spoke to CNN shortly before she went through the Rafah border crossing. 

A young man who declined to give his name he wants to return home even if there is little left of it.

Some 24 women, 15 children expected to be among Palestinian prisoners released

The head of the Palestinian Commission for Detainees and Ex-Prisoners’ Affairs, Qadura Fares, told CNN 24 women and 15 children are expected to be released later Friday as part of the deal between Israel and Hamas.

An Israeli official told CNN Thursday a total of 39 Palestinian prisoners will be released Friday, in exchange for the initial release of 13 civilian hostages held by Hamas.

Fares said the identities of those who will be among the released is not known yet.

"No celebrations" for Palestinian family waiting to hear whether their loved one is released

Talal Sayyad, the uncle of Israa Jaabis, speaks to CNN from his home in East Jerusalem on Thursday. 

A Palestinian family says there will be “no celebrations” over the potential release of their family member on Friday because of the “high price” of bloodshed in Gaza.

Talal Sayyad is the uncle of Israa Jaabis, who is among the 300 Palestinian women and children listed for possible release from Israeli detention as part of the Israel-Hamas truce agreement. From his home in East Jerusalem, Sayyad spoke of the “muted happiness” he felt over the possibility of his niece being freed.

Thirty-nine Palestinian prisoners are set to be released later Friday as part of the deal between Israel and Hamas, according to an Israeli official, in exchange for the release of an initial group of 13 hostages taken by Hamas.

The Qatari-brokered truce, which began on Friday morning, marks the first sustained break in hostilities after nearly seven weeks, which began when Hamas massacred 1,200 civilians on October 7.

Israel’s ensuing war in Gaza has killed nearly 15,000 Palestinians, according to Hamas-run health authorities in the enclave.

His niece, Jaabis, is a 38-year-old woman who was sentenced to 13 years in prison in 2015 after Israel accused her of attempted murder when her car blew up at a checkpoint, a charge she and her family have continuously denied.

She and her family say she was carrying gas canisters in her car that exploded due to a technical fault. Jaabis sustained first- and third-degree burns on 60% of her body; eight of her fingers were melted to stubs and had to be amputated. Her family said her injuries became worse because she did not receive adequate medical treatment.

The majority of those eligible for release are male Palestinians aged between 16 to 18 – children under the United Nations definition – while a handful are as young as 14. Some 33 people on the list are women, according to a CNN count.

The list includes the ages of the prisoners, and the charges on which they are being held – throwing stones and “harming regional security” are among the most common.

Others are listed as detained for supporting illegal terror organizations, illegal weapons charges, incitement, and at least two accusations of attempted murder.

Some of the people are listed as being members of Hamas and other Islamic militant groups, but many of the prisoners are not listed as belonging to any organization.

Palestinians attempting return to north Gaza during truce blocked by Israeli military

Displaced Palestinians attempting to return to homes in northern Gaza were allegedly blocked by Israeli forces, a journalist told CNN.

Residents of Gaza began moving across parts of the Strip after a truce between Israel and Hamas seemingly began Friday morning.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) warned residents against attempting to travel from the south to the north, where combat between Hamas and Israel has been concentrated.

Social media videos showed people running away amid the sound of gunfire, presumed to be Israeli, on Salah Al-Din street. A journalist told CNN that Israeli tanks were seen and gunfire could be heard on Salah Al-Din street.

CNN has reached out to the IDF for comment on whether people attempting to enter north were fired upon.

Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in central Gaza said two people were killed and others injured as a result of Israeli gunfire. CNN could not independently verify the circumstances behind the deaths and injuries, and whether it was related to the incident on Salah Al-Din Street.

Two residents told Al-Jazeera in live interviews from Wadi Gaza that they were trying to get home between the central and northern parts of the strip to check on their houses and belongings, which they had evacuated.

The IDF called on residents to use the time to “stock up on needs and arrange affairs” instead of travelling to the north.

The only movement allowed in the north would be for residents evacuating to the south, the IDF said. It’s unclear how many people still reside in the north, but Palestinian data claims hundreds of thousands remain.

“We call on you not to approach the military forces or the areas north of Wadi Gaza. Use the time to stock up on needs and arrange your affairs. The northern Gaza Strip is a combat zone and staying there is prohibited,” the IDF spokesperson in Arabic, Avichay Adraee wrote on X.

Still, the truce largely seemed to hold, with no sign of significant fighting or airstrikes across Gaza.

The constant sound of overhead military drones quietened for the first time since October 7 – the day Hamas brutally assaulted Israeli cities killing more than 1,200 people – the largest such attack on Israel since the country’s founding in 1948.

Gazans in Khan Younis took advantage of the four-day truce to take to the streets, drone footage published by Reuters showed. Al-Jazeera footage showed hundreds on the streets of Al Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza.

"We want to hug our kids:" Dozens of Palestinians stranded in Egypt waiting to cross into Gaza

Zeinat Al-Gindy traveled to Egypt for medical treatment before the war.

At least 60 Palestinians who had been stranded in Egypt since October 7 have gathered at the Rafah border crossing hoping to return home during the pause in fighting.

People gather at Rafah Crossing in Egypt.

Pushing trolleys laden with suitcases, they arrived at the crossing hoping to return home after nearly seven weeks of fighting. Zeinat Al-Gindy, who had traveled to Egypt for medical treatment before the war, was desperate to return to her family. 

The Chairman of Egypt’s State Information Service said in a statement Friday morning that Palestinians would be allowed to enter Gaza from Egypt for the first time since the war began.

90 aid trucks have entered Gaza through Rafah border, Egyptian official says

Trucks carrying humanitarian aid enter Gaza via the Rafah crossing with Egyp on Friday, November 24.

At least 90 aid trucks have so far entered Gaza through the Rafah border crossing on Friday, an Egyptian official at the border told CNN. 

The official said those trucks were among the 200 aid trucks that had entered the Egyptian side of the crossing on Friday morning. 

The Palestinian Red Crescent said that its teams received two ambulances and 85 trucks from the Egyptian Red Crescent on Friday.

The trucks contain food, water, relief supplies, medical supplies, and medications.

Fuel trucks start entering Gaza through Rafah border crossing

Trucks carrying fuel begin crossing into Gaza Strip through Rafah border crossing with Egypt on Friday, November 24.

At least seven fuel trucks entered Gaza from the Rafah border crossing with Egypt on Friday, according to a CNN stringer on the ground, after the anticipated truce between Israel and Hamas seemed to be taking hold.

Trucks carrying aid also appeared to have begun moving into Gaza from the Rafah border, according to live video from Reuters.

A large convoy of aid trucks had lined up at the border crossing on standby ahead of the truce, which appeared to have gone into effect after 7 a.m. local time (12 a.m. ET).

Israel’s Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) said in a statement that four fuel tankers and four tankers carrying cooking gas crossed into Gaza through the Rafah crossing.

“The fuel and cooking gas are designated for operating essential humanitarian infrastructure in Gaza” and was approved by the Israeli government as part of the truce, COGAT added.

It’s not clear exactly what other types of aid have so far been allowed into the Gaza Strip.

Israeli military says it destroyed tunnels near Al-Shifa area ahead of agreed truce

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said Friday that it destroyed a number of tunnels in the Al-Shifa Hospital area in Gaza City and completed “operational preparations” ahead of the agreed truce.

The Israeli military destroyed “a route of underground tunnels and a number of tunnel shafts in the area of the Shifa Hospital,” according to the IDF statement.

“The IDF has completed its operational preparations according to the combat lines of the pause.”

The statement added that Israeli troops had continued to strike targets “over the last day and night” ahead of the truce, without specifying the number of attacks. 

Thailand welcomes Israel-Hamas truce, hopes its own citizens will be released soon

Thailand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs says it welcomes the truce agreement between Israel and Hamas but hopes its own citizens held by militants in Gaza can return home soon.

Militants are holding more than 200 people captive inside Gaza from mass abductions that were part of Hamas’ October 7 attacks on Israel, according to figures from the Israeli military.

Under terms previously announced by mediators in Qatar, a total of 50 of those hostages, women and children, are expected to be freed over a four-day humanitarian pause in fighting beginning Friday.

Among many of the foreign nationals kidnapped and being held hostage in Gaza are migrant laborers from Asian countries such as Thailand, Nepal and the Philippines – many of whom were working in Israel’s southern district near the Gaza Strip, and unprotected, when Hamas launched its surprise terror attack.

At least 39 Thais have been killed in the conflict with 26 held as hostages, according to figures released by the Thai government.

Israeli military tells people in southern Gaza not to move north

A displaced Palestinian man, who fled his house for safety, carries his belongings as he makes his way back to his home, during the  temporary truce. in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza, on Friday, Novemeber 24.

The Israeli military has told people in southern Gaza not to move north, with its forces restricting travel from the north to the south to only one road.

“It is only possible to move from the north of the Strip to its south via Salah Eddine Road. The movement of the residents from the south of the Strip to the north will not be allowed in any way,” Israel Defense Forces Arabic spokesperson Avichay Adraee wrote on social media platform X.

Flyers were also allegedly dropped by the Israeli military over parts of the Gaza Strip with the notice, according to video shared from the city of Khan Younis and people on social media sharing photos of the flyers. 

130,000 liters of diesel fuel to enter Gaza from Egypt daily, Egyptian official says

A truck of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) carrying fuel arrives at the Egyptian side of the Rafah border crossing with the Gaza Strip on November 22. 

Some 130,000 liters of diesel fuel and four trucks of gas will enter Gaza from Egypt daily starting Friday, according to an Egyptian official.

“Two hundred trucks, loaded with food, medicine and water, will enter daily for the first time since the start of the Israeli war on the strip,” Diaa Rashwan, the chairman of Egypt’s State Information Service, said in a statement on Friday. 

Rashwan said that Egypt would continue to receive groups of injured people from Gaza for treatment and facilitate the evacuation of foreigners and dual nationals who had been stuck in the territory. 

He also said that for the first time since the start of the conflict, Egypt would allow in Palestinians who wished to enter Gaza through the Rafah border crossing.

Truce between Israel and Hamas appears to be taking effect, CNN team in Sderot says

A convoy of Israeli military tanks and Armoured Personnel Carriers (APC) enter Israel on November 24.

A truce between Israel and Hamas appears to be taking effect, despite what sounded like sporadic Israeli artillery fire and sirens warning of rockets from Gaza in the minutes after it was due to begin. 

CNN journalists in the southern Israel city of Sderot said the sounds of heavy weapons fire stopped around 7:18 a.m. local time (12:18 a.m. ET). 

They heard what sounded like small arms fire inside Gaza about 20 minutes later, but artillery fire, airstrikes and rockets appear to have stopped. 

Cousin of hostage says they hope first deal will lead to more releases

Maya Roman-Gat speaks during an interview with CNN.

Maya Roman-Gat, whose cousin Yarden Roman has been held by Hamas since the October 7 attacks, told CNN that she hopes the first hostage deal will lead to more of them being released.

Roman-Gat said the family was notified on Thursday that Yarden would not be among the first group released, but may be part of a later group.

To their family “any deal is important because we believe that one deal can lead to another,” Roman-Gat said.

Northern Gaza remains a "dangerous war zone," Israeli military says

Palestinians walk through the rubble of a destroyed building following an Israeli strike in Deir Al Balah, Gaza on November 23.

Shortly before the anticipated truce was due to come into effect, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) reaffirmed on Friday that the “war is not over yet” and that northern Gaza remains a “dangerous war zone.”  

The spokesperson urged people in Gaza to remain in the south of the strip.

Sirens warning of potential incoming rockets sound in Israeli communities near Gaza, Israeli military says

Sirens warning of potential incoming rockets sounded in Israeli communities near Gaza about 15 minutes after the expected start time of a truce between Israel and Hamas, the Israel Defense Forces said Friday. 

It was not immediately clear if there were any impacts or interceptions. 

A four-day truce between Israel and Hamas is due to take effect Friday at 7 a.m. local time (midnight ET), after Qatar helped broker a deal to free hostages held in Gaza since October 7.

CNN continues to hear "loud booms" consistent with artillery minutes after expected truce 

Smoke seen from Israel, rises following an Israeli airstrike in the Gaza, on Friday, November 24.

A CNN team in the southern Israel city of Sderot says they have continued to hear “loud booms” that sound like Israeli artillery fire landing in Gaza, up to 15 minutes after the expected start time of a truce between Israel and Hamas.

The sounds of activity are winding down but have not entirely subsided, according to CNN’s Jeremy Diamond and Matthias Somm.

The sounds appear consistent with outgoing artillery.

At the same time, smoke continues to rise from the direction of Gaza — as it has in the hour leading up to the expected truce. The cause of the smoke is unknown. 

Truce between Israel and Hamas due to come into effect

The agreed truce between Israel and Hamas is due to come into effect, as clocks in Israel strike 7 a.m. Friday (midnight ET).

The expected pause in hostilities comes on the 49th day of war.

Who is expected to be released and how might the exchange look? Here's the latest

Families and friends of hostages held in Gaza call for Netanyahu to bring them home during a demonstration in Tel Aviv on November 21.

In the first release of Hamas’ hostages held in Gaza, scheduled for Friday afternoon local time, 13 women and children will be freed, according to a spokesperson for Qatar’s foreign ministry, Majed Al-Ansari.

Al-Ansari could not provide details on who the hostages are, nor could he provide details on the route they might take due to safety reasons. However, many of the first 50 hostages are expected to come out through Egypt.

The Israeli government said their families and the families of hostages who will not be released had been notified. Al-Ansari also revealed that hostages from the same families will be released together in the first group.

Meanwhile, an Israeli official tells CNN a total of 39 Palestinian prisoners will be released Friday as part of the deal.

The timing of the release is unclear, but the Israeli official said the prisoners would not be freed until the hostages from Gaza are back in Israeli hands.

The prisoners will be taken from two jails — Damon and Megiddo, both southeast of Haifa — and driven to the Ofer prison, south of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, for final checks by the Red Cross.

Women and male teenagers up to the age of 18 are expected to make up the released prisoners.

Here’s what else you should know:

Two more months of fighting: Israel’s defense minister says he expects the military operation against Hamas will continue “forcefully” after the brief truce, for at least two months.

No names of Palestinian prisoners: A Palestinian official told CNN he has not yet received a list of names of those expected to be released from Israeli prisons on Friday.

Biden hopeful 3-year-old American freed: US President Joe Biden said he has his “fingers crossed” that a 3-year-old American girl held hostage by Hamas will be freed on Friday. But he said he will not provide further updates until the deal is finished.

US will contact American hostage families: The US will contact family members of American hostages who are freed from Gaza “after we have confirmation they are departing Gaza,” a US official said.

Hezbollah fires rockets at Israel: Lebanese militant group Hezbollah fired 48 rockets at the headquarters of an Israeli infantry unit at Ein Zeitim military base earlier Thursday. In a statement, Hezbollah said it also fired a guided missile at Israeli Merkava tanks located near Al-Raheb, near the Israeli town of Shtula, and targeted Israeli infantry forces in the area.

The Israel Defense Forces said it “intercepted a number of the launches,” and later confirmed that it used helicopters and fighter jets to strike Hezbollah infrastructure and rocket launch sites in Lebanon, in response to the militant group’s attacks.

Medical aid group says 80 aid trucks entered Gaza from Egypt: The Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) says it received 80 trucks that entered Gaza through the Rafah crossing on Thursday. The trucks brought food, water, medical equipment, medications and general relief equipment into Gaza, the PRCS said.

A large convoy of aid trucks is lined up at the Rafah border crossing on the Egypt-Gaza border — on standby for when a pause in fighting between Israel and Hamas begins. The United Nations anticipates that aid trucks will move into the strip “immediately” after the Israel-Hamas truce commences, an official told CNN on Thursday.  

More than 14,800 people killed in Gaza, Hamas health authorities say

Smoke billows after an Israeli strike as flares are dropped over northern Gaza on November 22.

The number of people killed in Gaza from Israeli attacks since October 7 now stands at 14,854, including 5,850 children, according to information from Hamas authorities in the strip.

Getting up-to-date information on the number of fatalities in Gaza has become harder as Israel’s massive air and ground campaign grinds on.

On Monday, the Palestinian Health Ministry in Ramallah, which takes its data from hospitals and other sources in the Gaza Strip, put the number killed at 12,700.

In health updates since then, the Ramallah-based ministry said serious disruptions to communications networks in Gaza have made its own efforts at accurate data collection impossible.

The United Nations’ Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), which collects and audits data from across the occupied Palestinian territories, has continued to cite the figures originating from Gaza.

On Wednesday, UN OCHA chief Martin Griffiths told CNN the UN stood by its use of statistics from the Health Ministry in Gaza, saying his team had “triangulated [the numbers] over the years to make sure we feel confident about them.”

“We don’t put these figures out without thought,” he said.

"The people of Gaza are tired," say Palestinians in the shattered enclave ahead of truce

Palestinians walk through the rubble of a destroyed building following an Israeli strike in Deir Al Balah, Gaza on November 23.

Palestinians in Deir Al Balah, in the center of the Gaza Strip, expressed hope for an end to the hostilities ahead of an expected truce beginning Friday.

“We hope for a truce, we are tired. The people of Gaza are tired,” said one woman who had fled south from Gaza City, the focus of Israel’s massive air and ground campaign.

A man told CNN he had fled to Deir Al Balah from the Al Shati refugee camp, located just north of Gaza City. He, too, said he wanted an end to the constant state of anxiety.

“[A truce] will be a good beginning, and the fear in us will go away,” he said.

All the people CNN spoke to talked on condition of anonymity.

Another man similarly addressed the mental respite a truce would provide.

“If there is a truce, we will be mentally relieved; the truce is a mental comfort,” he said.

A third man told CNN he hoped the truce would see an increase in aid entering the Strip — as the terms of the agreement lay out — as well as the restoration of electricity.

He expressed hope the four-day pause would become something permanent and that the war would end.

“We hope they will reach an agreement and that it will be an agreement that allows us to hold our head high,” he said.

Israel expects at least 2 more months of fighting against Hamas, defense minister says

Yoav Gallant visits the 91st Division's base in northern Israel, on November 11.

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant says Israel’s military operation against Hamas will continue “forcefully” after the brief truce beginning Friday, and that the fighting is expected to go on for at least two more months. 

“A fighting of at least two more months is expected,” he added.

A tenuous agreement: The Israeli military has said the hostage handover process will be “complicated,” warning there could be changes in the deal at any moment.   

He said the Israeli army continues to fight in the Gaza Strip “at this hour,” pointing out that once the pause goes into effect, the IDF soldiers will be stationed along the “truce lines” established inside the strip. 

The truce line effectively keeps Israeli troops in northern Gaza, and they won’t move south during the pause in fighting, an IDF spokesperson told CNN.

This post has been updated with comments from an Israeli military spokesperson on the state of the hostage deal and fighting in Gaza.

CNN’s Jeremy Diamond in Sderot and Sugam Pokharel in London contributed reporting to this post.

Biden says he has "fingers crossed" 3-year-old American will be among hostages released Friday

US President Joe Biden crosses his fingers while responding to a question about the release of Hamas hostages after a visit to the Nantucket Fire Department on Thanksgiving today in Nantucket, Massachusetts.

US President Joe Biden told reporters he has his “fingers crossed” that a 3-year-old American girl being held hostage in Gaza will be among those released Friday in the Israel-Hamas hostage deal — but that he will not be providing any updates until the deal is finished.

“I’ll be able to talk to you guys tomorrow,” he told the traveling media pool in Nantucket, Massachusetts, after greeting first responders. “I’m not prepared to give you an update until it’s done.” 

When asked about Abigail Edan, the 3-year-old hostage, he said: “Keeping my fingers crossed.”

The president also said he won’t give up until he has freed other Americans held abroad, like Paul Whelan, the former United States Marine, and Evan Gershkovich, the Wall Street Journal reporter, who are being held in Russia. The US classifies both as being wrongfully detained.