We're movingpublished at 04:19 Greenwich Mean Time 27 November 2023
Thanks for staying with us. We're moving to a new live page and you can follow our coverage here.
Fourteen Israeli hostages and three foreign nationals have been released by Hamas
Among those freed is four-year-old Abigail Idan, who has dual Israeli and US nationality
In exchange, Israel has released 39 Palestinian prisoners, its prison service says
Hamas says it is seeking to extend the current four-day truce with Israel and increase the number of hostages released
Gazans have been using the pause in fighting to get desperately-needed supplies of fuel, food and medicine
Hamas’s attacks on 7 October killed 1,200 people, with about 240 taken hostage
Since then, Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry says more than 14,500 people have been killed in Israel's retaliatory campaign
Edited by Nathan Williams
Thanks for staying with us. We're moving to a new live page and you can follow our coverage here.
Nathan Williams
Live reporter
We're pausing our live coverage for the next hour or so, so here's a quick recap on where things stand in the Israel-Gaza war.
Fourteen Israeli and three foreign nationals were released from Gaza today.
Among them was Abigail Idan, a four-year-old girl with joint Israeli and US citizenship. Both her parents were killed in the 7 October attack by Hamas on Israel that triggered the war.
President Biden welcomed her release, saying she had been through terrible trauma.
Israel freed 39 Palestinian prisoners in return. Crowds gathered in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank to welcome them home.
The exchange comes on the third day of a fragile four-day pause in fighting. Gazans have been using the opportunity to get in much-needed supplies of fuel food and medicine.
The BBC's Lucy Williamson says that both sides appear to be edging towards an extension to the current pause.
Hamas has said it is seeking to extend the truce and increase the number of hostages released – 24-hours before the current deal expires.
And a senior Palestinian official has told the BBC that Hamas told negotiators it was ready to extend the pause by up to four days.
Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu has talked about his "framework", under which the release of 10 extra hostages could lead to another day of pause in the fighting.
But he also said that after the framework ends Israel will return to its goals, which include the elimination of Hamas.
You can continue to follow our coverage of the conflict with these key stories:
Sarah Al-Suwaisa was one of the 39 Palestinian prisoners released by Israel in the first exchange for hostages on Friday.
Speaking after her release, she said she felt "humiliated" by her time in jail, and that pepper spray was used against detainees.
She alleged they were locked in dark rooms, saying "they suffered from the cold". "Only Hamas felt our sufferings," she added.
Clarification: The video below, posted on Saturday at 14:48 GMT, originally carried inaccurate subtitles due to an error in the editing process. It has now been updated to a longer version.
Wael Hussein Al Sayed
Reporting from Cairo
When Palestinians cheered this evening in the streets of Ramallah in the West Bank for the release of 39 more prisoners under the hostage deal, Abdurahman Al-Zaghal from Silwan village in east Jerusalem was not one of those freed from jail because he was under house arrest and receiving treatment.
Al-Zaghal, said to be aged 14, was shot in the head and hit by shrapnel in the lower part of his body in August this year as he went out to buy bread, according to his uncle. Israeli authorities said he was trying to throw a petrol bomb at a settlement post in the area.
Al-Zaghal’s trial was held in absentia as he was still in intensive care at an Israeli hospital in west Jerusalem at the time.
He was seen today removing an electronic bracelet from his leg at the hospital where he’s receiving medical treatment.
Benjamin Netanyahu has said the return of hostages from Gaza "stirs the soul" and repeated a vow to secure the release of those still being held.
"We brought back another group of hostages this evening - women and children - and we are moved from the depths of our hearts, the entire nation, when we see this reuniting of families," he said in a statement.
He added that he and President Biden discussed the release of four-year-old Israeli-American Avigail Idan, both of whose parents were killed in the 7 October attacks, in a phone call earlier today.
"What a joy it is to see her with us," he said. "But, on the other hand, how sad it is that she is returning to a reality in which she has no parents. She has no parents – but she has an entire nation that embraces her and we will take care of all her needs."
The mother of Mohammed Al-Awar, a Palestinian minor freed today from an Israeli prison as part of the truce deal between Israel and Hamas said she had mixed feelings about the release of her son.
"Our joy is incomplete because of the huge number of people killed in Gaza,” she said in a video.
Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry says more than 14,500 people have been killed in Israel's retaliatory campaign following the 7 October attacks. Those attacks by Hamas killed 1,200 people, with about 240 taken hostage.
Israel released today 39 Palestinian prisoners, 21 of whom are from Jerusalem.
Al-Awar was sentenced to 32 months in jail, of which he served 16 months. He moved between two Israeli prisons, Damon and Megiddo, before he was released this afternoon.
Elma Avraham, an 84-year-old hostage who was rushed to hospital after being released by Hamas, has suffered "significant medical neglect", her doctors have said.
Avraham was among the 17 hostages released earlier today and was taken to the Soroka Medical Center by helicopter.
In a statement, the head of the hospital, Dr. Shlomi Codish, described Avraham's condition as "critical" and said there was a "risk to her life".
"She is treated in an emergency department after significant medical neglect for the past several weeks while being held by Hamas," he said.
"She will be admitted to our intensive care unit, and we hope we will be able to stabilise and improve her condition."
Maayan Zin, the mother of Dafna, 15. and Ela, eight, has spoken of her relief after being reunited with them both following their release by Hamas today.
She said she had been living in "terrible uncertainty" while her daughters were being kept as hostages.
"These were 51 days in which I lived between despair and hope, between pain and optimism, and I am happy that now I am here with them. The girls are returning to a new and complex situation, and now we have a period of recovery that will take time," she said.
But Maayan went on to add that her feelings of joy are "mixed with sadness" for those who are still being kept captive, as she added that "my heart will not be whole again until everyone returns home safely”.
"The moment will come to thank everyone who was around me and supported me, and everyone who helped to cry out my cry in the country and the world," she said.
Lucy Williamson
Reporting from the West Bank
Both Israel and Hamas appear to be edging towards extending their fragile truce, 24 hours before their current deal expires.
Tonight, Hamas offered to extend the agreement, and increase the number of hostages released.
A senior Palestinian official told the BBC that Hamas had told negotiators it was ready to extend the pause in fighting by two to four days, to allow the release of 20 to 40 Israeli hostages.
The possibility of an extension was mapped out in the original deal between Israel and Hamas, and there are thought to be more than a dozen children still held hostage in Gaza.
Within hours of the Hamas statement, the Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu referred to this "framework", under which the release of ten extra hostages would lead to another day of truce, calling it "a blessed thing".
But, Netanyahu said, "at the end of that framework, we will return with all our strength to realise our goals".
And top of Israel’s list of goals in Gaza is the elimination of Hamas.
As we've been reporting, 39 Palestinian prisoners were released earlier today in exchange for 17 Israeli and foreign national hostages held in Gaza.
The released Palestinians were greeted with celebrations in Ramallah, in the occupied West Bank.
Crowds gathered around a bus which carried the some of the prisoners, as people waved flags and chanted and cheered.
Hamas would need to locate dozens of hostages held in Gaza by other groups in order to secure an extension of the current truce, the Qatari prime minister has said, in an interview with the Financial Times, external.
Many of those kidnapped in the 7 October attacks are being held by Hamas, but groups including Palestinian Islamic Jihad, which also participated, are believed to be holding some.
The pause in fighting is due to end on Monday, but Hamas has said it is seeking an extension and would be willing to release more hostages in return. Qatar has been acting as a key mediator in negotiations between the group and Israel.
Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman said more than 40 women and children are thought to be being held by groups besides Hamas and that "we don’t yet have any clear information [about] how many they can find".
"One of the purposes [of the pause] is they [Hamas] will have time to search for the rest of the missing people,” he said. “If they get additional women and children, there will be an extension."
Asked about the possibility that some hostages were being held by other groups at a media briefing today, President Biden said: "We think there are probably other militant groups but we are not certain."
Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu has said he told President Biden in a phone call today that Israel will restart its operations in Gaza with full force once the current truce comes to an end.
Israel paused its operations in Gaza on Friday to allow hostages being held in the territory to be freed in return for the release of Palestinian prisoners, but the truce is only set to last until Monday.
Netanyahu added that he would welcome an extension to the truce if it meant the release of 10 more hostages each day, as set out in the initial agreement.
A White House readout of the call said the two leaders had agreed that "they will continue working to secure the release of all hostages".
Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry says more than 14,500 people, including at least 5,500 children, have been killed in Gaza since Israel began attacking the territory in reprisal for the 7 October attacks. UN agencies say the ministry provides reliable figures.
One of the Israeli hostages freed by Hamas today is in a life-threatening condition, Israeli media is reporting
Elma Avraham, 84, was reportedly transferred directly to hospital by helicopter after being handed over to Israel from Gaza.
Citing a statement by the Soroka Hospital in Beersheba, the Times of Israel said Avraham had been described as being in a "poor physical condition and severe clinical condition".
We previously reported that Avraham was kidnapped from her home in Kibbutz Nahal Oz, where she has lived for almost 50 years, in the 7 October attacks, and that she was filmed being driven away by the hostage-takers.
Roni Krivoi, 25, who lives in Karmiel, northern Israel, was kidnapped from the Re'im festival while working there on the sound crew.
We previously reported the dual Israeli-Russian national's family tried to contact him on his phone but someone answered their call in Arabic. The Israeli military later told them they believed he had been abducted.
He was one of those released by Hamas on Sunday after being taken hostage for 51 days.
All 17 hostages released by Hamas today are now in Israel, the country's military has confirmed.
It said earlier that 12 of those released were on their way to the Hatzerim Base, west of Be'er Sheva, and that after a medical assessment they would be flown to hospitals and reunited with their families.
We also know that one of the Israeli hostages was transferred directly to hospital via helicopter as soon as they returned to Israel.
Israel later confirmed that four people - an Israeli and three foreign nationals - had been met at the Kerem Shalom Crossing on Israel's border with Egypt and were being taken to hospital.
Here are more details on some of the released captives, with information about them provided by the a campaign group speaking on behalf of friends and families of hostages.
Chen Goldstein-Almog: 48-year-old social worker. The campaign group says Chen loves working out and running.
Her husband Nadav and eldest daughter Yam were killed when Hamas attacked their kibbutz on 7 October.
Chen was kidnapped alongside her three other children.
Agam Goldstein-Almog: 17 years old. An outstanding student who loves studying literature and philosophy.
Gal Goldstein-Almog: 11 years old. Gal plays soccer and basketball and is a huge sports fan.
Tal Goldstein-Almog: 8 years old. He plays basketball, loves drawing cartoons.
The family of four-year-old Israeli-American Avigail Idan - who was one of those kidnapped by Hamas - have said there are "no words to express our relief and gratitude" after her release.
Her great aunt and cousin Liz Hirsh Naftali and Noa Naftali went on to add they "hoped and prayed today would come".
They said in a statement:
Quote Message"Today’s release proves that it’s possible. We can get all hostages back home. We have to keep pushing. We will continue to stand with the families of all the hostages still held captive, and we remain committed as ever to securing their safe and swift return."
They also thanked US President Joe Biden, his team, the Qatari government and all those involved in are involved in securing the release of Abigail and the other hostages.
Israel Defense Forces spokesman Daniel Hagari has been giving an update to reporters following the release of 17 hostages in Gaza in exchange for 39 Palestinian prisoners.
He started by listing the names of the freed hostages, adding the youngest four-year-old Abigail Edan is "proof this is a justified war, fighting against a cruel enemy".
Hagari said those still being held had not been forgotten as "there is still so much work left ahead of us".
When asked whether Israel was prepared for more fighting, he said Israeli troops were reorganising themselves and would be ready "even if we need to do it tomorrow".
"We want to release our hostages from within the incarceration of Hamas, we will continue fighting to release our hostages."
As we've been reporting Israel has confirmed the release of 39 Palestinian prisoners, who were let out in exchange for 14 Israeli hostages and four foreign nationals held by Hamas.
Hamas says it wants to see an extension of the current pause in fighting in Gaza, a move that could increase the number of hostages being released.
Under the current deal, the last day of the truce is Monday.
In a statement, Hamas says it is "seeking to extend the truce after the end of the four days through seriously trying to increase the number of hostages released as stipulated in the humanitarian truce deal".
A senior Palestinian official familiar with negotiations taking place in Qatar has also told the BBC that Hamas has informed mediators it is willing to extend the pause by two to four days, and that an extension could see the release of an additional 20 to 40 Israeli prisoners.
Under the terms of the current pause, which began on Friday, a total of 50 Israeli hostages will be freed over four days in exchange for 150 Palestinian prisoners.
We have yet to hear from the Israeli government on this latest statement by Hamas. However, it has previously said the truce could be extended if at least 10 Israelis a day are released, although it has also insisted the pause will only be temporary and vowed to wipe out Hamas.