Donald
Trump orders Israel to ‘immediately’ stop bombing Gaza as Hamas agrees to free
hostages
Palestinian
militant group accepts part of US president’s plan but seeks further
negotiations on many terms
William
Christou in Jerusalem
Fri 3 Oct
2025 22.02 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/oct/03/hamas-agrees-to-release-all-israeli-hostages
Donald
Trump ordered Israel to “immediately” stop bombing Gaza as he welcomed Hamas’s
partial acceptance of his ultimatum to end the nearly two-year war.
Hamas has
agreed to release all hostages in return for Palestinian prisoners held in
Israeli jails, as well as surrender governing power in the Gaza Strip, in
accordance with Trump’s plan.
In a
statement on Friday evening, the Palestinian militant group asked for further
negotiations on other parts of the plan, and did not say whether it would lay
down its arms – a key part of Trump’s proposal unveiled on Monday.
Despite
the qualified response by Hamas, Trump said in a post on Truth Social: “Based
on the Statement just issued by Hamas, I believe they are ready for a lasting
PEACE.
“Israel
must immediately stop the bombing of Gaza, so that we can get the Hostages out
safely and quickly! Right now, it’s far too dangerous to do that.
“We are
already in discussions on details to be worked out. This is not about Gaza
alone, this is about long sought PEACE in the Middle East.”
In a
brief video message posted separately Trump said it was a “very special day”
and added that “Everybody will be treated fairly.”
The
unprecedented order from Trump underlined that Israel and Hamas are the closest
they have been in two years to achieving an end to the war in Gaza.
After the
Hamas response, the office of the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu,
issued a statement cited by local media saying Israel was preparing for an
“immediate implementation” of the first stage of the plan for the immediate
release of all hostages.
“We will
continue to work in full cooperation with the president and his team to end the
war in accordance with the principles laid out by Israel, which correspond with
Trump’s vision for ending the war,” the statement said, making no mention of
Trump’s demand that Israel stop bombing Gaza.
Trump is
widely seen as the only international leader with the power to compel Netanyahu
to agree to a ceasefire deal.
Gaza’s
civil defence agency said on Saturday that Israel had carried out dozens of air
strikes and artillery shelling on Gaza City despite Trump’s appeal.
“It was a
very violent night, during which the [Israeli army] carried out dozens of air
strikes and artillery shelling on Gaza City and other areas in the Strip,
despite President Trump’s call to halt the bombing,” civil defence spokesman
Mahmud Bassal told AFP. He said 20 homes were destroyed in the attacks.
Gaza
City’s Baptist hospital said it had received casualties from a strike on a home
in the city’s Tuffah neighbourhood, including four dead and several wounded
while Nasser hospital in Khan Younis said two children were killed and eight
people wounded in a drone strike on a tent in a camp for displaced Gazans.
In a
statement earlier on Friday night, Hamas said it was giving its “approval of
releasing all occupation prisoners – both living and remains – according to the
exchange formula contained in president Trump’s proposal, with the necessary
field conditions for implementing the exchange”.
Hamas
also said it was prepared to turn over “the administration of the Gaza Strip to
a Palestinian body of independent technocrats based on Palestinian national
consensus and supported by Arab and Islamic backing”.
However,
the group said “other issues” in Trump’s proposal would need to be discussed
further “within a unified Palestinian national framework”. The unspecified
issues would likely include arms, the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza
and international guarantees for a permanent ceasefire.
A senior
Hamas official told Al Jazeera that the group would not disarm before Israel’s
occupation of the enclave ends, comments that underscored the gap between the
parties.
Trump’s
plan called for an immediate end to fighting in Gaza, an exchange of hostages
and Palestinian prisoners within 72 hours of the deal’s signing, a gradual
withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza, the disarmament of Hamas and a
transitional authority led by Trump.
The deal
also stipulated a surge of aid to Gaza, parts of which are experiencing famine,
and the reconstruction to the mostly demolished strip.
An AFP
journalist in the Gaza Strip’s coastal area of Al-Mawasi said they heard
celebratory cries of “Allahu Akbar!” (God is the greatest) rise from tents
housing Palestinians as news of Hamas’s response filtered through.
“The
moment I read the news … my body trembled and shivered. A feeling came over me,
like, ‘Oh Allah, at last relief has come to us’,” Samah Al-Hu, a displaced
Palestinian in Al-Mawasi, said.
The deal
was largely seen as unfavourable to Hamas and, if agreed in full, would likely
spell the group’s end as an armed Palestinian faction while demanding few
concessions from Israel. International pressure on the group to accept the plan
has been intense, with most regional and international powers welcoming the
Trump initiative.
The
catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza, with Israel’s continued aid
blockade and daily bombing, also puts pressure on the group to reach an
agreement to end the war.
Though
Hamas did not immediately agree to disarm, its acceptance of a hostage handover
will be seen as significant. The 48 hostages have been used as leverage
throughout the nearly two-year war. Giving them up would we leave the group
with few bargaining chips going forward.
Israel’s
war in Gaza has killed at least 66,288 Palestinians and wounded about 170,000,
according to the Gaza health authority, mainly civilians. The figure does not
include the thousands buried under the rubble or those killed by indirect
consequences of the war.
A UN
commission of inquiry and many human rights experts have concluded that Israel
has committed genocide in Gaza. Netanyahu’s government claims it has acted in
self-defence.
The war
was launched by Israel in response to Hamas-led militants killing about 1,200
people and taking 251 hostages in Israel on 7 October 2023.
The
Qatari ministry of foreign affairs also welcomed Hamas’s response, and said it
had begun working with fellow mediator Egypt to coordinate with the US on
negotiations towards ending the war in Gaza.
A
spokesman for the UN secretary general, António Guterres, said he “urges all
parties to seize the opportunity to bring the tragic conflict in Gaza to an
end”, while the UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, called for the Trump plan to
be implemented “without delay”, saying Hamas’s acceptance of it was “a
significant step forwards”.
The
French president, Emmanuel Macron, wrote on social media that “the release of
all hostages and a ceasefire in Gaza are within reach!”, and the German
chancellor, Friedrich Merz, said that “after almost two years, this is the best
chance for peace”.
With
Reuters and AFP

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