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Israel announces a ceasefire after 26 people are killed in Gaza.

Israeli military announced on Sunday that the ceasefire in Gaza was resumed following an attack in which two Israeli soldiers were killed. This attack prompted a wave airstrikes in which 26 people died, making it the most severe test of this month's U.S. mediated truce.

An Israeli security source confirmed that aid to the enclave would resume on Monday after U.S.-led pressure. This was shortly after Israel had announced a suspension of supplies as a response to Hamas's alleged "blatant" breach of the ceasefire.

According to local residents and medical authorities, the Israeli strike killed at least 26 Palestinians in Gaza, including one woman and one infant.

Steve Witkoff, the envoy of U.S. president Donald Trump and his son-in law Jared Kushner are expected to visit Israel on Monday. Both an Israeli and U.S. official confirmed this.

After militants fired an anti-tank rocket and launched a missile at its soldiers, Israel said that it had struck Hamas' targets in the enclave. These included field commanders and gunmen as well as a tunnel, weapons depots and a weapon storage facility.

Residents said that at least one strike struck a former Nuseirat school which housed displaced people.

The Hamas armed wing said that it was committed to the ceasefire accord, unaware of clashes at Rafah and had not been contacted with groups in Rafah since March.

Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, said that he ordered the military forcefully to respond to Hamas violations of the ceasefire.

The path to peace is uncertain

A senior Israeli official said that aid transfers to Gaza were halted after Hamas violated the ceasefire agreement in a blatant manner. After U.S. pressuring, another Israeli official confirmed that the aid would resume Monday.

After airstrikes in Khan Younis, families fled their homes after fearing that the truce would collapse.

The strikes resembled Israel's response in late 2024 to what it saw as serious violations of a ceasefire it had signed with Hamas and its Lebanese allies, Hezbollah, less than one week after the ceasefire was implemented, after several days of accusations from both sides of breaching truces, although that ceasefire is still largely intact.

There are still formidable obstacles to a lasting peace in Gaza. In March, after two months of relative quiet, Israel launched a barrage airstrikes that triggered a ceasefire.

DISPUTE OVER THE BODIES DECEASED HOSTAGES

The ceasefire was officially declared on 10 October, ending two years of conflict. However, the Israeli government has been accusing Hamas of violating the ceasefire since days.

Defense Minister Israel Katz announced that the "yellow lines" where Israeli forces have pulled back in accordance with the ceasefire agreement will be marked physically and that any attempt to violate the ceasefire, or cross the line, would be met by fire.

Hamas outlined what it called a series violations by Israel, which it claims has resulted in the deaths of 46 people and prevented essential supplies from reaching enclave.

Israel announced on Saturday that the Rafah crossing between Gaza, Egypt and Israel, which was expected to reopen this week, will remain closed. Its reopening depends on Hamas meeting its obligations under the ceasefire.

Israel claims that Hamas has been too slow to deliver the bodies of dead hostages. Hamas released last week all 20 of its hostages and has since handed over 12 bodies.

More Aid is Needed

The group claims it does not want to keep the bodies of hostages who are still alive and that special equipment will be needed to retrieve corpses from under rubble.

Rafah has been largely closed since May 2024. According to IPC's global hunger monitor, hundreds of thousands people in Gaza were declared to be suffering from famine by the IPC Global Hunger Monitor.

In previous ceasefires, the crossing was a major conduit for humanitarian aid into the enclave.

The United Nations claims that despite the fact that the flow of humanitarian aid through a second crossing has increased since the ceasefire was declared, it is still insufficient.

The key questions of Hamas' disarmament, the future of Gaza, and the composition of an international "stabilization" force, as well as the steps towards the creation a Palestinian State, have not yet been resolved. Reporting by Nidal AlMughrabi; Writing by Andrew Mills; Maayan Loubell; and John Kruzel. Editing by Philippa Fetcher, David Holmes, and Deepa Babington.

(source: Reuters)