Celebrations as 90 detained Palestinians freed from Israeli prisons
Ninety Palestinians have been freed from Israeli prisons and were greeted by large crowds of jubilant relatives, friends and supporters as they returned home to the occupied West Bank in the first prisoner exchange of the Hamas-Israel ceasefire following the release of three Israeli captives in Gaza.
At about 1am local time on Monday (23:00 GMT), Red Cross buses carrying the 90 Palestinian prisoners arrived in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, where they were greeted by crowds of thousands despite warnings from Israeli forces that celebrations would not be allowed.
The freed Palestinians included 69 women and 21 teenage boys – some as young as 12 – from the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem.
Among them was Khalida Jarrar, 62, a leading member of the leftist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, who had been held for six months in solitary confinement under “administrative detention”, which allows Israeli authorities to jail suspects indefinitely without charge or court verdict.
In the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah, crowds lifted many of the returned prisoners up onto their shoulders in an emotional show of support, as others shouted and whistled. Some attending the gathering carried the flags of Fatah, Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and other armed resistance groups.
Seven hours earlier, three Israeli women captives in their mid-20s to early 30s were released in Gaza.
Bushra al-Tawil, a Palestinian journalist jailed in Israel in March 2024, was also among the prisoners released on Monday.
Tawil said she began her journey at 3am on Sunday morning (01:00 GMT), when she was taken from another Israeli prison ahead of release. In the second prison, she was grouped with other Palestinians awaiting release.
“The wait was extremely hard. But thank God, we were certain that at any moment we would be released,” she said.
Tawil said her father, who is also in an Israeli jail, will be released soon, too.
“I was worried about him. He is still a prisoner, but I just received good news that he will be released as part of this deal,” she added.
Amanda Abu Sharkh, 23, from Ramallah, was among the crowd of hundreds who gathered to greet the freed prisoners.
“We came here to witness it and feel the emotions, just like the families of the prisoners who are being released today,” Abu Sharkh said.
“All the prisoners being released today feel like family to us. They are part of us, even if they’re not blood relatives,” she told the AFP news agency.
Muhammad, 20, said he had come from Ramallah with his friends as soon as he heard the prisoners would be released.
Recently freed from Israel’s Ofer Prison himself, he expressed “great joy” at the thought of families being reunited.
“I know a lot of people in prison, there are innocent people, children and women,” he said.
The prisoner exchange between Hamas and Israel marks the first of its kind since November 2023.
The exact number of Palestinians due to be released as part of the ceasefire deal is still unknown, with reported estimates ranging from approximately 1,000 to nearly 2,000.
In the first phase of the deal, Hamas is expected to return a total of 33 Israeli captives over the next 42 days – with the next release due on Saturday.
The second phase of ceasefire negotiations is due to begin in two weeks.
More than 46,000 Palestinians have been killed since the war began on October 7, and nearly 90 percent of Gaza’s population has been forcibly displaced by Israeli evacuation orders and attacks.
Source: Al Jazeera
Palestinians hoping to return to Gaza’s Rafah find city in ruins
Rafah, Gaza Strip, Palestine – Palestinian farmer Abd al-Sattari owned two houses in Gaza’s Rafah. For the nine months since Israeli forces invaded the southern city, he has been forced into displacement. The 53-year-old had lived with the hope that if one house got hit in one of the Israeli attacks, which have flattened more than 70 percent of the territory, the other one would stay standing to take his family back in when the war finally ended.
On Sunday, even before the ceasefire came into effect, Abd took his eldest son Mohammed and left the rest of their family in their displacement tent in al-Mawasi, on Gaza’s southwestern coast. They rushed to one property, then the next, to face the grim reality: both his houses – one in the area of Shaboura and the other in Mirage – had been reduced to rubble. Abd’s hopes of returning to normalcy have been shattered.
The much-anticipated ceasefire agreement came into effect on Sunday morning, bringing what Palestinians hope will be an end to a gruesome war that has killed more than 46,900 people, demolished much of the besieged enclave and driven more than 2 million people into displacement. Even before the ceasefire began, hundreds of families were rushing back to Rafah, having fled after the Israeli invasion, with their few belongings packed into vehicles, animal-pulled carts and bikes.
Israeli forces continued their attacks on Gaza, killing more Palestinians just before the ceasefire began. But that did not stop some families who had already headed to their old neighbourhoods and set up camp on the ruins of what were once their homes, eager to move past the darkest months of their lives.
As they crossed the cratered roads that crisscross Rafah, some families chanted: “We will rebuild. We will live.”
‘Rafah is gone’
But for many, joy turned to anguish as they returned to devastation.
As he surveyed his first home, spanning 200 square metres (2,000 sq ft), and his second two-storey house of 160 square metres (1,700 sq ft), Abd found only destruction. Visits to the homes of his three brothers revealed similar devastation. With no roof to shelter his family, his dreams of ending their seven-month displacement collapsed.
Sitting amid the ruins, Abd called his wife, who had been waiting in the al-Mawasi camp with the family’s belongings packed onto a truck. Over the phone, he broke the news: their homes were uninhabitable, with no walls, water or basic services. His wife wept bitterly, pleading to return despite the devastation, but Abd insisted it was impossible.
Their eldest son, Mohammed, took the phone to persuade his mother to stay put, reassuring her that they would explore ways to prepare for a future return.
“The Rafah we knew is gone,” Abd lamented. “The streets where we grew up, the places we worked—they are now unrecognisable.”
For Abd’s family of six children, this day was meant to mark an end to the misery of displacement. Instead, they face the grim reality of rebuilding from nothing.
Abd reflected on their dashed hopes. “We thought we would finally escape the tents and live within walls again. But now, it feels like a new kind of annihilation – this time, not from bombs but from the sheer absence of life’s essentials.”
A desperate homecoming
In the days leading up to the ceasefire, Palestinians in Gaza have been bracing for what they hoped would be an end to their misery – more than 1.8 million people suffered from severe hunger and hundreds of thousands were living in feeble tents that barely shielded them from a winter that has killed babies due to hypothermia.
Families like Nasim Abu Alwan’s, who brought his nine children back to find their home obliterated, resolved to live among the ruins. “We’ll haul water from afar if we must,” Nasim said. “We’re done with tents. We’re staying in Rafah, no matter what.”
According to United Nations figures, more than 60 percent of buildings and 65 percent of roads across Gaza have been destroyed since October 7, 2023, when the war started.
“More than 42 million tons of debris has been generated, within which is buried human remains and unexploded ordinance (UXO), asbestos and other hazardous substances,” the UN’s humanitarian agency’s (OCHA) report said.
Other residents of Rafah, like Amjad Abdullah, opted to stay in Khan Younis, unwilling to endure life amid the rubble. “It’s impossible to live here,” he said after finding his neighbourhood inaccessible even by foot. “Rafah has become a graveyard of buildings. Without water, roads, or basic infrastructure, life here is unimaginable.”
According to Mohammed al-Sufi, Rafah’s mayor, the scale of destruction in Rafah is “staggering”.
“The city is uninhabitable,” he told Al Jazeera.
Al-Sufi said that “70 percent of its facilities and infrastructure are destroyed”.
“Key areas like the Philadelphi Corridor, which constitutes 16 percent of Rafah’s area, remain off-limits, while large swaths of eastern Rafah are similarly inaccessible,” he added. The Philadelphi Corridor is a strip of land that extends along Gaza’s border with Egypt.
Municipal workers are racing against time to clear roads, restore water and address the dangers of unexploded ordnance. But the municipality is warning against hastened returns.
“We need a gradual, cautious approach. Without basic services, life cannot resume,” one of the workers said.
Despite the devastation, Rafah’s residents remain defiant. Families cling to their connection with the city, determined to reclaim what little remains. As one father put it, “We’ve suffered too much in exile. Rafah is home, and we will rebuild – even if it takes a lifetime.”
This piece was published in collaboration with Egab.
Source: Al Jazeera