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Tens of thousands of Palestinians return to northern Gaza as Trump says deal is 'great for everyone'

Tens of thousands of Palestinians have returned to northern Gaza following the Israeli military's announcement of a ceasefire, which mediators hope will bring an end to the two-year conflict.

Israel agreed to the ceasefire deal with Hamas on Friday morning, which the military confirmed took effect a few hours later. Gaza's Hamas-run civil defence agency said around 200,000 people have now returned to northern Gaza since the ceasefire was announced.

As part of the agreement, Israeli troops pulled back to new agreed positions on Friday, while Hamas is expected to release the 20 surviving and 28 deceased Israeli hostages on Monday. Once all the hostages are released, Israel will free 250 Palestinian prisoners serving life sentences and 1,700 Gazans detained after the October 7 attacks.

"It's a great deal for Israel, but it's a great deal [for] everybody," President Donald Trump said from the Oval Office. "Gaza is very important, but this is beyond Gaza.

This is peace in the Middle East, and it is a beautiful thing, you know? It's a term that you and I have been hearing since we were very young, right? And now we have a chance of really having that." When asked whether there was consensus on the traditional points of the plan, Mr Trump said that "for the most part, there's consensus, yes". "I think there is consensus on most of it, and some of the details, like anything else, will be worked out, because you'll find out that when you're sitting in a beautiful room in Egypt, you know, it's easy to work something out.

But then sometimes it doesn't work from a practical standpoint," he added. Mr Trump said he will visit Israel on Monday and give a speech at the Knesset, Israel's parliament.

He will then travel to Egypt, where he plans to hold a summit of world leaders on Gaza. Guarantors of the Gaza deal will take part in a signing ceremony, which could take place on Monday or Tuesday.

The city of Sharm el-Sheikh, where talks over the deal occurred, has been mentioned as a possible location but that hasn't been officially confirmed. Sky News understands that the countries attending the summit in Egypt include the US, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Turkey, Indonesia, Azerbaijan, Pakistan, India, the UK, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Greece, Cyprus, Bahrain and Kuwait.

Hamas 'ready to leave' Gaza government but Tony Blair not welcome Meanwhile, a senior Hamas official told Sky News that while the group is open to allowing a Palestinian authority to govern Gaza after the war, they intend to maintain a presence "on the ground". Dr Basem Naim told Sky's World News Presenter Yalda Hakim that without the personal interference of President Trump, the agreement would not have been possible.

"Therefore, yes, we thank President Trump and his personal efforts to interfere and to pressure [Benjamin] Netanyahu to bring an end to this massacre and slaughtering," he said, referring to the Israeli prime minister. "We believe and we hope that President Trump will continue to interfere personally and to exercise the maximum pressure on Netanyahu to fulfil the obligation." Hamas's alignment with Mr Trump represents a sharp departure from their earlier stance, when they called him racist, mocked his proposals as a "recipe for chaos.

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By - Tnews 11 Oct 2025 5 Mins Read
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