logo
Hamas says it will release last living American hostage in Gaza

Hamas says it will release last living American hostage in Gaza

The Guardian11-05-2025

Hamas announced on Sunday that it will release the last living American hostage in Gaza, Edan Alexander, an Israeli-American soldier who was kidnapped on 7 October 2023.
The 21-year old's release is set to take place on Tuesday, Reuters reports, citing a source familiar with the matter.
Donald Trump begins a trip to the Middle East on the same day, although there is no stop in Israel on his schedule as of yet. The US president is set to visit Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar.
Trump's Middle East envoy, Steve Witkoff, told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz he will travel to Israel on Monday. 'Right now, the intention is to return Edan Alexander home to his family,' Witkoff said.
The office of the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said in a statement: 'The US has informed Israel of Hamas's intention to release soldier Edan Alexander as a gesture to the Americans, without conditions or anything in exchange. The US has conveyed to Israel that this is expected to lead to negotiations for the release of hostages according to the original Witkoff framework, which Israel has already accepted. Israel is preparing for the possibility that this effort will be implemented.'
The statement made clear that Israel had not agreed to a ceasefire, and intends to continue its military assault on Gaza. 'In accordance with Israel's policy, the negotiations will be held under fire, based on the commitment to achieve all of the objectives of the war,' Netanyahu's office said.
Israel will not be asked to release Palestinian prisoners in exchange for the release of Alexander, Axios reports, but will have to agree to a temporary ceasefire and a halt to drone flights over Gaza to allow Alexander to safely leave the enclave.
Alexander's family said in a statement released by the Israeli Hostages and Missing Families Forum: 'The family confirms that it has been informed of Hamas's announcement and that it is in constant contact with the American government regarding the possibility of Edan's expected release in the coming days.'
Adam Boehler, the US special envoy for hostage affairs, told Reuters the planned release of Alexander was 'a positive step forward' and asked for Hamas to also release of the bodies of four other Americans who have died in captivity in Gaza.
According to Haaretz, the four dead Americans include two who were serving in the Israeli military, Omer Neutra, 21, and Itay Hen, 19, and two older Israeli-Americans, Judih Weinstein-Haggai, 70, and her husband Gad Haggai, 73, were living in the Israeli kibbutz Nir Oz on the Gaza border when it was raided by Hamas-led militants on 7 October.
Khalil al-Hayya, a Hamas leader in Gaza, told the Associated PressHamas is ready to 'immediately start intensive negotiation' to reach a final deal that will end Israel's deadly war on Gaza.
Over the last year and a half, Israeli forces have killed at least 52,800 Palestinians while forcibly displacing 2 million survivors – including babies – across the narrow strip amid widespread food and aid shortages due to Israeli restrictions.
Meanwhile, 59 hostages remain in Gaza. According to Trump, just 21 remain alive.
The governments of Qatar and Egypt, which have been brokering talks aimed at ending the war in Gaza, said in a joint statement that Hamas's decision to release Alexander 'demonstrates goodwill' and is an 'encouraging' step that could lead the parties back to the negotiating table.
Alexander, who was born in Israel but raised in the US by Israeli parents, moved to Israel in 2022 after graduating high school and enlisted in the Israeli military.
His parents and two younger siblings still live in Tenafly, New Jersey.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Big Balls' and other Musk DOGE proteges could see payback from Trump-Elon feud after mass firings
‘Big Balls' and other Musk DOGE proteges could see payback from Trump-Elon feud after mass firings

The Independent

time12 minutes ago

  • The Independent

‘Big Balls' and other Musk DOGE proteges could see payback from Trump-Elon feud after mass firings

A public feud between Donald Trump and Elon Musk has put the fate of his signature Department of Government Efficiency work into question. After leading a charge to fire thousands of federal workers, DOGE employees are now wondering whether they could be next thanks to the world's richest man's apparent animosity towards the president. With Musk's oversight, the now-former adviser to the president deployed DOGE staff to purge the workforce, gut entire agencies and slash billions of dollars in grant funding and research. Some of Musk's top DOGE lieutenants connected to his companies were hired for full-time roles drawing large salaries. Among them: Edward 'Big Balls' Coristine, Luke Farritor, and Ethan Shaotran, who have had unprecedented access to the inner workings of critical government agencies. The White House has insisted to The Independent that DOGE isn't limited to a handful of employees but is now baked into every level of government, with a mission to find 'waste, fraud and abuse.' But the employees that Musk brought into the administration are now reportedly worried they could become its targets. Several of Musk's top allies in DOGE left the administration with him, but remaining staffers fear the growing tension between the billionaire and the president could expose them to his political retribution, according to ABC News. DOGE staffers texted one another on Thursday as the Trump-Musk feud spilled out over social media and asked whether they could be fired next, according to The Wall Street Journal. Some DOGE employees are also looking for jobs elsewhere, ABC reported, but it's unclear what their prospects look like after a toxic run inside the federal government that most Americans don't support. But some major companies like Coinbase are opening their doors to DOGE workers. The cryptocurrency exchange created an online hiring portal specifically for former DOGE staff. The Independent has requested comment from the White House. Musk's signature achievement in government fell significantly short of his stated goal of cutting $2 trillion from the federal budget. Instead, DOGE's efforts sparked chaos across the government, from gutting the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to facing accusations of being responsible for thousands of deaths by putting the U.S. Agency for International Development through a 'wood chipper,' as Musk called it. DOGE's work under Musk also drew more than a dozen legal challenges and court orders finding the whole operation likely unconstitutional. Musk and his allies, meanwhile, siphoned data from agencies like the Social Security Administration and IRS, knitting together an unprecedented surveillance network. In Musk's absence, DOGE staff continues to report to federal agency managers and the U.S. DOGE Service, the former U.S. Digital Service that Trump renamed to reflect Musk's efforts. 'The DOGE team is doing an incredible job, they're going to be continuing to do an incredible job, and I'll continue to be visiting here and a friend and adviser to the president,' Musk said just last week as he announced the end of his 130-day 'special government employee' role. 'Elon's really not leaving,' Trump said at the time. 'He's going to be back and forth, I think — I have a feeling. It's his baby, and I think he's going to be doing a lot of things.'

Trump brings the BOOM! New order opens skies across US to supersonic flights
Trump brings the BOOM! New order opens skies across US to supersonic flights

The Independent

time12 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Trump brings the BOOM! New order opens skies across US to supersonic flights

President Donald Trump has ordered the Federal Aviation Administration to scrap a longstanding ban on supersonic air travel across the U.S. and replace it with a to-be-determined set of regulations that will allow faster-than-sound travel so long as the sonic booms it creates do not breach certain noise limitations. In an executive order signed on Friday, Trump directed the FAA administrator to begin the process of repealing a section of the Code of Federal Regulations that prohibits anyone in the United States from flying a civilian aircraft 'at a true flight Mach number greater than 1.' That regulation was imposed in April 1973, at a time when the British and French governments were jointly developing Concorde, a supersonic airliner that had a cruising speed in excess of Mach 2, or twice the speed of sound. Because aircraft that break the sound barrier create shockwaves that produce loud sounds, known as sonic booms, the U.S. government banned supersonic flight over the U.S. out of concern over disruptive noise from supersonic jets criss-crossing the country. As a result, Concorde was limited to subsonic speeds when arriving or leaving American airports, only crossing the sound barrier during transit over the Atlantic Ocean on routes between New York's JFK airport and London. Michael Kratsios, the director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, told reporters that Trump's order 'seeks to revolutionize supersonic aviation in the United States' by allowing for modern aircraft to fly faster than sound over the continental U.S. 'The US used to be the global leader in this technology, but stifling regulations have grounded progress for generations. The reality is that Americans should be able to fly from New York to LA in under four hours,' he said. Kratsios added that 'advances in aerospace engineering, material science and noise reduction' by new startups working on faster-than-sound passenger aircraft can make supersonic travel 'safe, sustainable and commercially viable' and noted that the longstanding American ban on such flights had ' grounded supersonic passenger flight and weakened our global competitiveness in aviation.' 'Today's order fixes that,' he said. Trump's order comes just weeks after a pair of Republicans in Congress, Rep. Troy Nehls of Texas and Senator Ted Budd of North Carolina, introduced legislation to direct the FAA to repeal and replace the current supersonic flight ban within a year. That legislation will no longer be necessary, as the Trump executive order directs the FAA to withdraw the ban within 180 days and launch a notice-and-comment period for replacement regulations that would be based on a noise standard rather than a strict speed limit. According to a senior administration official, the function of the new regulations would be 'to replace the effective speed standard with instead an interim noise standard, and then to have a longer term process to publish a Notice of Proposed Rule Making to result in a final rule.' That process would be 'coordinated through the White House [and] through the National Science and Technology Council' and would be based on research and development that has been going on at NASA, the Department of Defense, and 'elsewhere within the federal government,' the official said. Trump's effort to enable supersonic flight across the U.S. follows the success of the first flight of a civilian supersonic aircraft since Concorde 216 (registered as G-BOAF) made its' final flight to Bristol Filton Airport in 2003. In January, Boom Supersonic's XB-1 aircraft reached a speed of Mach 1.122 during a 34-minute flight over California's Mojave Desert. The test flight, just eight days into Trump's second term, produced no audible sonic boom — or at least not one that was heard from the ground during the flight. The company says its' proposed Overture passenger jet will cut a trip from Los Angeles to Washington to three hours and 15 minutes, more than an hour less than the current duration of such a flight, while producing no sonic booms that are audible from the ground. It attributes this to atmospheric effects that cause the sound to reflect off layers in the atmosphere and travel upward, rather than downward. It also claims to be able to cut flights over water by even more time by reaching even higher speeds.

White House officials to meet Chinese delegation in London for next round of trade talks
White House officials to meet Chinese delegation in London for next round of trade talks

Sky News

time12 minutes ago

  • Sky News

White House officials to meet Chinese delegation in London for next round of trade talks

Senior White House officials will meet with a Chinese delegation in London on Monday for the next round of trade talks, President Donald Trump has said. The meeting comes after a phone call between Mr Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Thursday, which the US president said was "very positive". Writing on his Truth Social platform, Mr Trump said the London meeting "should go very well" and added that US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer would represent the US at the talks. The two countries are at an impasse over tariffs and a battle over critical minerals. On 12 May, China and the US struck a 90-day deal to pause retaliatory tariffs placed on each other since Mr Trump was inaugurated in January. Please refresh the page for the latest version.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store