Summary

  • The Israeli military says a ceasefire is now in effect after its forces pulled back to parts of Gaza

  • Troops have positioned themselves along the lines agreed under the Trump plan, the IDF says - but will continue to "remove any immediate threat"

  • It comes after the Israeli government approved a deal with Hamas which will also see the release of hostages

  • Hamas now has 72 hours to release all Israeli hostages, while Israel will release hundreds of Palestinian detainees - here's how the next day is meant to play out

  • Once the deal is operating, aid trucks will surge into help Gaza's two million people, most of whom have been displaced

  • The mood in Gaza this morning is a mixture of hope and fear as Israel begins its partial military withdrawal, writes Gaza correspondent Rushdi Abualouf

  1. If you are just joining uspublished at 05:21 BST 9 October

    Here is what you need to know about Israel and Hamas agreeing to the first phase of Trump's Gaza ceasefire plan:

    • US President Donald Trump has announced that Israel and Hamas have agreed on the first first phase of a ceasefire deal for Gaza
    • If formally approved by the Israeli government, it will pave the way for an end to the war, the release of Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners, the withdrawal of Israeli forces and the entry of aid into Gaza
    • The Israeli government will meet on Thursday to approve the deal. If the deal is approved, the ceasefire will go into effect immediately. Hamas has also agreed to the deal
    • While world leaders, families of Israeli hostages and Palestinians displaced the war have welcomed the agreement, its details have not been fully disclosed
    • Negotiations for the deal were held in Egypt. Aside from the Egyptian government, Qatar, the US and Turkey also helped broker the talks
  2. Joy in Khan Younis and Tel Avivpublished at 05:09 BST 9 October

    Yolande Knell
    Middle East correspondent, in Jerusalem

    “A big day for Israel,” the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared on social media shortly after President Trump announced an agreement on the first stage of his plan. He’s expected to convene his government later to approve the deal. Hamas called on the US and other mediators to ensure that Israel implements the deal “without disavowal or delay”.

    Joy as the news spread in the dark streets of Khan Younis in southern Gaza overnight – and in Tel Aviv’s Hostages Square, the mother of an Israeli held captive lit a firework celebrating what she hopes is her son’s imminent release.

    A statement from the Hostages Families Forum expressed “profound gratitude to President Trump” for what it called an “historic breakthrough..”

    Israel’s Security Cabinet is now due to meet followed by a full government meeting to authorise the release of Palestinian prisoners in exchange for the hostages. Hamas has confirmed it’s waiting for final approval of the prisoner list. This is the third ceasefire reached since the start of a bloody war two years ago, and there’s hope on both sides that it marks a full end to the fighting.

    It’s not clear if any international guarantees have been given to ensure that. There are also few details on thorny issues covered by the US peace plan. It requires Hamas to give up its weapons, something it’s repeatedly refused to do – and lays out plans for post-war governance and rebuilding of Gaza – much of which lies in ruins.

  3. Mother of Israeli hostage in Gaza hopeful she will see her son soonpublished at 05:03 BST 9 October

    Einav Zangauker, mother of Matan, looks at a picture of her son that she's holding up in her left hand. In her right hand, she holds pictures of two other Israeli hostages in GazaImage source, Reuters

    The mother of Matan Zangauker - one of the Israeli hostages being held in Gaza - has just posted on X about her son's potential return.

    "Matan returns home to me, to (his sisters) Natalie and Shani, to (his partner) Ilana, the love of his life," writes Einav Zangauker.

    "To you, to the country, I prayed for these tears."

  4. Heart of Israel 'beats as one' with hostages and families, says Israeli presidentpublished at 05:03 BST 9 October

    Israeli President Isaac Herzog says the "heart of Israel beats as one with the hostages and their families" in a post on X.

    He adds a quote from the prophet Jeremiah in his post: “They shall return from the land of the enemy... and children shall return to their borders."

  5. Photographs show the destruction in Gazapublished at 04:58 BST 9 October

    plumes of smoke rising over brown and grey buildingsImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Smoke rising over the Gaza Strip after an Israeli bombardment on 5 October 2025 as seen from the Israeli side of the border

    Over the past two years, Israeli forces have destroyed much of Gaza and killed over 67,183 Palestinians, including 20,179 children, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry. Its figures are seen as reliable by the UN and other international bodies, although Israel disputes them.

    Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to the 7 October 2023 attack, in which Hamas-led gunmen killed about 1,200 people and took 251 others as hostages.

    Gaza's health ministry has said 460 people have died from the effects of malnutrition since the start of the war, including 182 since a man-made famine was confirmed in Gaza City in August by the UN-backed Integrated Food Security Phase Classification. Netanyahu has repeatedly denied starvation is taking place in Gaza and said Israel is facilitating deliveries of food and other aid.

    If both Hamas and Israel abide by the initial ceasefire deal, as many US politicians are hopeful they will, the war will come to an end.

    a child stands on top of a large pile of building rubble surrounded by destroyed buildingsImage source, Anadolu via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    A Palestinian child living in an accommodation centre is searching for something in the rubble of collapsed buildings in Khan Yunis, Gaza on October 08, 2025

    over a dozen tents pitched in front of damaged mosqueImage source, AFP via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Tents sheltering people displaced by war are pitched near the heavily-damaged Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani mosque in the southern Gaza Strip on October 6, 2025

    young child collects dusty pillows from rubble of buildingsImage source, Anadolu via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Palestinian children collect usable belongings from the rubble after an Israeli strike on Abu Hasira Street in Gaza City on September 30, 2025

    massive pile of rubble beside partially standing mosque structureImage source, Anadolu via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Dozens of mosques throughout the Gaza Strip, like this one in Gaza City, have been wholly or partially destroyed

    crowds of Palestinians walk along road as smoke rises from distant buildingsImage source, Anadolu via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Palestinians fleeing northern Gaza after heavy Israeli attacks in Gaza City

    man drags wheelchair behind him through rubble as flames and smoke rise from buildingImage source, Anadolu via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Smoke rises from a fire that broke out in a home after Israeli attacks in Gaza City

    crowds of Palestinians stand around destroyed buildingsImage source, AFP via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Palestinians check the destruction in the aftermath of an Israeli strike the previous night in the Jabalia camp for Palestinian refugees in the Gaza Strip, on November 1, 2023

    child hiding behind structure as smoke and explosions go off in backgroundImage source, Anadolu via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    A child hides behind a structure as Israeli forces target an area of Gaza City

    two boys grab hands as they step over rubble in front of damaged buildingImage source, Anadolu via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Civilians carry out search and rescue operations from the rubble after an Israeli attack at the school of United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East at Nuseirat Refugee Camp in Gaza City on September 11, 2024

    men carry an injured person out of rubbleImage source, Anadolu via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Injured Palestinians are rescued under the rubble after Israeli warplanes bombed houses around Kamal Advan Hospital in the town of Beit Lahiya in the northern Gaza Strip on May 18, 2024

    People sit and look out at destroyed city as smoke risesImage source, Anadolu via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Smoke rises over destroyed buildings in Gaza City

  6. 'We will rebuild Gaza' – displaced Palestinians respond to the newspublished at 04:44 BST 9 October

    Palestinians displaced by the war in Gaza tell the Associated Press that they hope the deal will allow them to leave the shelters and come home.

    “I will rebuild the house, we will rebuild Gaza,” says Ayman Saber, who lives in Khan Younis.

    Ahmed Sheheiber says he is waiting "impatiently" to return to his home in the Jabaliya refugee camp.

    “It’s a huge day, huge joy,” he says.

    Aid coordinator Eyad Amawi says he is worried Israel might put obstacles to the deal and that he feels a mix of happiness and sadness.

    “We believe and don’t believe. We have mixed feelings, between happiness and sadness, memories, everything is mixed,” he says.

    “We need to fix everything here, especially the psychological effects to (continue) with our lives,” he adds.

  7. Watch: 'Sense of happiness' in Gaza, says BBC correspondentpublished at 04:33 BST 9 October

    BBC's Gaza correspondent Rushdi Abualouf details the role of mediators – how the delegations were never in the same room together – and the feelings in Gaza:

    Media caption,

    'There is a sense of happiness' in Gaza, says BBC correspondent

  8. In pictures: Champagne and cheers in Hostages Squarepublished at 04:28 BST 9 October

    The sound of cheers filled Hostages Square in Tel Aviv overnight as the families of Israelis still being held captive in Gaza celebrated the potential return of their loved ones.

    Here are some of the latest images from Israel:

    Two women with wide smiles and arms in the air celebrating and making the peace sign, with others standing nearbyImage source, Reuters
    Group of women holding hands, celebrating. One has her eyes closed, and others have their arms raised in celebrationImage source, Reuters
    A woman, smiling and holding a bottle with champagne shooting out of it with others celebrating behind her and a partial US flagImage source, Reuters
  9. Watch: BBC's Tom Bateman explains key events leading up to peace dealpublished at 04:23 BST 9 October

    In this 75-second video, hear from the BBC's US State Department correspondent Tom Bateman on the circumstances that led to US President Donald Trump pressuring Israel to make a deal with Hamas to end the war in Gaza.

    Media caption,

    BBC's Tom Bateman on how Trump pressured Israel to make a deal

  10. Starmer calls for immediate lifting of restrictions of aid into Gazapublished at 04:10 BST 9 October

    Here is more from Starmer's statement.

    He says: “I am grateful for the tireless diplomatic efforts of Egypt, Qatar, Turkiye and the United States, supported by our regional partners, in securing this crucial first step. This agreement must now be implemented in full, without delay, and accompanied by the immediate lifting of all restrictions on life-saving humanitarian aid to Gaza.

    "We call on all parties to meet the commitments they have made, to end the war, and to build the foundations for a just and lasting end to the conflict and a sustainable path to a long-term peace. The UK will support these crucial immediate steps and the next stage of talks to ensure the full implementation of the peace plan."

  11. Starmer: 'This is a moment of profound relief'published at 04:05 BST 9 October

    UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has responded to the news of Israel and Hamas agreeing to the first phase of the Gaza ceasefire plan:

    “I welcome the news that a deal has been reached on the first stage of President Trump’s peace plan for Gaza," he says in a statement.

    “This is a moment of profound relief that will be felt all around the world, but particularly for the hostages, their families, and for the civilian population of Gaza, who have all endured unimaginable suffering over the last two years."

  12. 'All of the Gaza Strip is happy'published at 03:54 BST 9 October

    Reuters reports residents of Khan Younis in southern Gaza erupting in cheers following the announcement of a peace deal.

    “Thank God, today President Trump announced that the war stopped, we are very happy that the war stopped, this is something joyful for us and we thank our brothers and anyone who contributed even if verbally to stop the war and to stop the bloodshed,” Wael Radwan tells the news agency.

    “Thank God for the ceasefire, the end of bloodshed and killing. I am not the only one happy, all of the Gaza Strip is happy, all the Arab people, all of the world is happy with the ceasefire and the end of bloodshed. Thank you and all the love to those who stood with us,” says Abdul Majeed Rabbo.

  13. In pictures: Celebrations in Gazapublished at 03:47 BST 9 October

    Palestinians in Gaza have been celebrating overnight as news broke of a potential peace deal in the war-torn territory.

    Here are some of the latest pictures from the southern city of Khan Younis.

    Group of young men with hands raised in celebrationImage source, Reuters
    Group of young men with hands raised in celebration, with one man on the shoulders of anotherImage source, Reuters
    Group of young men with hands raised in celebrationImage source, Reuters
  14. Analysis

    Peace deal is a significant breakthroughpublished at 03:34 BST 9 October

    Lyse Doucet
    Chief international correspondent

    This is, most of all, a human moment. The first sparks tell this story: the eruption of joy in the dead of night in the streets of Gaza; the dancing in Tel Aviv’s Hostages Square.

    If all unfolds as it should on Thursday, the last of the Israeli hostages will soon start coming home, as will hundreds of Palestinian prisoners. The guns will fall silent in Gaza, more aid will flow in, and Palestinians won’t live their days fearing it could be their last.

    This moment is bittersweet. There is grumbling, too, that this deal is not so different from one put forward by former US President Biden as early as last May. And there are warnings that it must not fall apart – as Israeli-Palestinian deals have done through the decades.

    But it’s a significant breakthrough.

    And only President Donald Trump could do it. That’s what been said for so long. Only the US president and commander-in-chief could exert the pressure, most of all on his political ally and personal friend Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, to finally get this deal done. His strong partnership with Arab leaders, as well as Turkey, also brought a weakened Hamas to this point.

    It is only the beginning, not the end. It’s a ceasefire, not a peace deal. Major gaps still need to be closed on issues ranging from Hamas’s guns to governance in Gaza and the extent of Israel’s military presence. But it’s a moment to celebrate.

  15. 'Is this the moment?', asks Unicef spokesman in Gazapublished at 03:25 BST 9 October

    Unicef spokesman James Elder has posted a short Instagram video of himself in Gaza, elated by the news of potential peace in the territory that has been ravaged by war for more than two years.

    "Is this the moment?," he asks, as roosters crow off-camera and he stands with a dark night sky behind him.

    "It's incredibly quiet outside, it's the middle of the night. People haven't heard yet but also it's incredibly quiet from the skies," he says, pointing upwards and with a wide smile.

    "Come on!," he adds, raising crossed fingers in the air.

  16. Israeli defence minister says 'entire nation is waiting and excited' for hostages' returnpublished at 03:10 BST 9 October

    close-up of Katz' faceImage source, Get
    Image caption,

    Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz seen at a meeting with US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth at the Pentagon in July

    Israel's defence minister Israel Katz has issued a statement on the deal.

    On X, Katz said the release of the hostages was a "blessing", and thanked the presidents of Israel and the US.

    He also thanked Israel Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers who "with their courage, determination, and immense sacrifice, brought us to this great moment".

    "I warmly embrace the families of the hostages for the anticipated return of their loved ones, including IDF soldiers and fallen heroes, home soon."

    Katz closed his post saying: "The entire nation is waiting and excited."

  17. IDF 'welcomes signing of the agreement for the return of hostages'published at 02:51 BST 9 October

    The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has released a statement saying it welcomes "the signing of the agreement for the return of the hostages, which was signed overnight".It also says in a social media post:

    "During a situational assessment held overnight, the Chief of the General Staff instructed all forces, both on the front lines and in the rear areas, to prepare strong defenses and be ready for any scenario.

    Force deployments will be carried out in accordance with the directives of the political echelon and the stages of the agreement, with responsibility and a focus on the safety of our soldiers. At the same time, the Chief of the General Staff instructed to prepare to lead the operation for the hostages’ return, which is expected to be conducted with sensitivity and professionalism.

    The IDF will continue to act to achieve the objectives of the war and to defend the citizens of the State of Israel on all fronts."

  18. Australia welcomes peace plan, urges all parties to respect the termspublished at 02:48 BST 9 October

    Anthony Albanese, wearing dark suit and glassesImage source, EPA

    Australia has welcomed the first phase of a Gaza ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas.

    "After more than two years of conflict, hostages held and a devastating loss of civilian life, this is a much needed step towards peace," Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says in a statement. "We urge all parties to respect the terms of the plan."

    He thanks Trump for his "diplomatic efforts" and the role of Egypt, Qatar and Turkey in the negotiations.

    Australia also supports the peace plan's commitment to deny Hamas any role in the future of Gaza, he says, adding it will be a "very long road to recovery in Gaza, securing long term peace and building the Palestinian state".

  19. Hamas has not received final list of Palestinian prisoners to be exchanged, source tells BBCpublished at 02:34 BST 9 October

    Rushdi Abualouf
    Gaza correspondent

    A Palestinian source has told the BBC that Hamas has not yet received the final list of Palestinian prisoners that Israel plans to release in exchange for the Israeli hostages in Gaza.

    The source said the delay was linked to pressure inside Israel over the identities of some of those whose release Hamas is seeking. However, they added, efforts were under way to resolve the issue within hours.

    The ceasefire agreement stipulates that 250 Palestinian prisoners and 1,700 Gazans detained by Israeli forces since the war began will be released, according to the source.

    Israel’s Haaretz newspaper also cited Israeli sources as saying that the deal did not specify the names of the Palestinian prisoners.

    On Wednesday morning, a Hamas official told the BBC that the list of prisoners it had submitted to mediators in Sharm el-Sheikh included high-profile figures serving multiple life sentences for deadly attacks on Israelis. One of them was Marwan Barghouti, seen by many Palestinians as a potential future president. It is unclear if his release has been agreed to.

  20. 'The Middle East came together,' Trump sayspublished at 02:26 BST 9 October

    Trump tells Hannity that now, "People are going to be taken care of. It's going to be a different world. I think really, the Middle East came together."

    "Gaza, we believe is going to be a much safer place and it's going to be a place that reconstructs and other countries in the area will help it reconstruct because they have tremendous amounts of wealth, and they want to see that happen."

    "I'm very confident there'll be peace in the Middle East."