United States President Donald Trump has announced that Israel and Hamas have agreed on the first phase of a peace framework that aims at a Gaza ceasefire and the release of Israeli captives and Palestinian prisoners.
The announcement follows from Trumpâs 20-point plan to end the war on Gaza, which he announced last week, and which Israel, Hamas and most of the world broadly welcomed.
More than 67,000 people have been killed in Israelâs war on Gaza, described by many international rights organisations and a United Nations commission as genocidal in nature.
Here is what we know about the ceasefire agreement:
Trump said Israel and Hamas had agreed to the first step of his Gaza ceasefire plan.
In a post on Truth Social at 23:17 GMT, he wrote that all captives would be released âvery soonâ and that Israel would pull its troops back to an agreed line as part of the deal.
Just hours earlier, Trump had told reporters he was ready to travel to the Middle East as soon as this weekend to help push the plan forward.
He had first unveiled his 20-point proposal on September 29, following a White House meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, framing it as a roadmap to end the war in Gaza.
That possibility grew more concrete during a White House event on Wednesday, when Secretary of State Marco Rubio entered the room and handed him a note.
After reading it, Trump told reporters: âI was just given a note by the secretary of state saying that weâre very close to a deal in the Middle East, and theyâre going to need me pretty quickly.â
Concluding the event, Trump said, âI have to go now to try and solve some problems in the Middle East.â
According to a photograph, the note urged the president to sign off on a Truth Social post so he could be the first to announce the deal.
Trump, in his Truth Social post, said:
Trump also thanked mediators from Qatar, Egypt and Turkiye.
The announcement represents the most significant breakthrough Trump has achieved regarding the war, after eight months of attempts at brokering an end to the conflict. During his re-election campaign, he had described ending the war in Gaza as one of his foreign-policy priorities.
"I am very proud to announce that Israel and Hamas have both signed off on the first Phase of our Peace Plan... BLESSED ARE THE PEACEMAKERS!" - President Donald J. Trump pic.twitter.com/lAUxi1UPYh
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) October 8, 2025
The deal has raised hopes of ending the war, but crucial details are still unclear.
Al Jazeeraâs senior political analyst Marwan Bishara said âsome serious disagreementsâ remain between Israel and Hamas, and crucial details are yet to be hammered out. They include the timing and the extent of an Israeli withdrawal, the makeup of the post-war administration for the Gaza Strip and the fate of Hamas.
âYou could say that the initial phase of the initial phase is working out,â Bishara said. According to him, both sides appeared to agree on âsome sort of parametersâ for a captive-prisoner exchange.
âAccording to the [Trump] plan ⌠after Hamas hands over the captives, then the war should be over,â Bishara said. But, he added, âIsrael says no, the war will be over only after Hamas disarms.â
Trump told Sean Hannity of Fox News on Wednesday that the captives could be released on Monday, including the bodies of those who have died.
A Hamas source said the surviving captives would be released within 72 hours of the Israeli governmentâs approval of the deal. Israeli officials indicated the process could be expected to start on Saturday.
Trump said he believed Iran would be part of âthe whole peace situationâ.
About 20 Israeli captives are believed to be alive in Gaza. Hamas and other Palestinian factions had taken about 250 captives on October 7, 2023, when they attacked Israel. More than 1,100 people died during that attack.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called it âa great day for Israelâ.
âI offer my heartfelt thanks to President Trump and his team for their dedication to this sacred mission of freeing our hostages,â Netanyahu said in a statement late on Wednesday night.
âWith Godâs help, together we will continue to achieve all our goals and enhance peace with our neighbours.â
With the approval of the first phase of the plan, all our hostages will be brought home. This is a diplomatic success and a national and moral victory for the State of Israel.
— Benjamin Netanyahu - ×× ×××× × ×Ş× ××× (@netanyahu) October 8, 2025
From the beginning, I made it clear: we will not rest until all our hostages return and all our goalsâŚ
Hamas released a statement, saying the agreement stipulated âan end to the war on Gaza, the occupationâs withdrawal from it, the entry of aid and a prisoner exchangeâ.
It thanked Qatar, Egypt, Turkiye and Trump for their mediation efforts, and it also called on the US and other parties to âcompel the occupation government to fully implement the agreementâs requirements and not allow it to evade or delay the implementation of what has been agreed uponâ.
âWe salute our great people in the Gaza Strip, Jerusalem and the West Bank, who have demonstrated unparalleled pride, heroism, and honour,â Hamas said.
âThese great sacrifices and stances have thwarted the Israeli occupationâs plan for subjugation and displacement.â
The statement said Hamas âwill not abandon our peopleâs national rights: to achieve freedom, independence, and self-determinationâ.
Palestinians, particularly those in Gaza, have expressed a mix of jubilation and caution, according to Al Jazeera correspondent Tareq Abu Azzoum.
Reporting from Deir el-Balah in central Gaza, Abu Azzoum said families cheered when they heard the news of the ceasefire after two years of devastation, destruction, displacement and broken promises.
âPeople are desperately waiting to be reunited with loved ones and even to have a moment to mourn what they have lost. But this ceasefire has not taken effect so far, and caution is highly required among civilians regarding the return to homes in areas that are still classified as an active red zone,â he said.
Leaders and groups around the world celebrated the negotiators signing off on the first phase of the Gaza ceasefire agreement.
âI commend the diplomatic efforts of the United States, Qatar, Egypt and Turkey in brokering this desperately needed breakthrough,â UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in a statement.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer welcomed the news and urged that the agreement on the first stage of Trumpâs plan for Gaza must be implemented in full without delay.
Indiaâs Prime Minister Narendra Modi said he hoped âthe release of hostages and enhanced humanitarian assistance to the people of Gaza will bring respite to them and pave the way for lasting peaceâ.
New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters said, while this is âan essential first stepâ to achieve peace, âHamas needs to release all of the hostages and Israel must withdraw their troops to the agreed-upon lineâ.
Netanyahu said he will bring the agreement to his cabinet on Thursday for approval.
Once the vote is passed, the Israeli military will pull back. Seventy-two hours after that, Hamas is expected to begin releasing captives.
HA Hellyer, a senior fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, told Al Jazeera that the âcrucial point now is how much pressureâ will continue, especially on Israel, to ensure the ceasefire holds.
The different phases of Israelâs withdrawal from Gaza under the proposed deal are âcrucialâ, Hellyer said, noting that withdrawing goes against Israelâs long-stated plans for the Palestinian enclave.
Trump is expected to travel to Egypt in the coming days. Netanyahu has also invited him to address Israelâs parliament, and Trump told Axios he is âlikelyâ to make the trip to deliver that address.
The next stage of Trumpâs plan calls for the creation of an international body, the Board of Peace, to oversee Gazaâs post-war administration. Trump will chair the board, which will include other world leaders, including former British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
Source: Al Jazeera
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