Israeli cabinet voting on landmark Gaza deal
Government ministers in Israel meet to approve President Trump's peace plan. There's an outburst of joy and celebration in Israel and Gaza after the deal was signed. But will it hold? We also look at an attack on a hospital in the besieged city of El-Fasher in Sudan, and hear about the winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature.
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This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Bernard Ekkio and at 1700 GMT on Thursday the 9th of October, these are our main stories.
Israel's cabinet is meeting to approve a Gaza deal, which would see the release of the hostages and the partial withdrawal of Israeli troops.
The agreement with Hamas was announced by Donald Trump after intense negotiations in Egypt.
We'll hear from inside Gaza, where the developments have been met with joyous scenes.
We have witnessed a kind of relative calm since the early morning hours.
Things feel different now.
Also in this podcast, in other news, eyewitnesses in the besieged Sudanese city of Al-Fasha report that a strike on a hospital blamed on the paramilitary RSF has killed at least 13 people.
Israel's cabinet is meeting to ratify the first phase of a landmark agreement on a ceasefire in Gaza.
The US-backed deal, signed earlier in Egypt, will see all remaining hostages and 2,000 Palestinian prisoners freed.
The BBC has followed the story of Amal al-Badla, a mother in Gaza, whose youngest son was born on October 7, 2023, when Hamas launched its attacks on Israel.
She sent us her reaction from a camp in southern Gaza.
I can't believe I'm finally saying this.
The war is over.
After two years of hunger, destruction, and endless loss, I'm going to be making this moment
to tell my boys.
You're
I'm happy, but my heart is still broken too because my brother Ahmed isn't here
and so many others isn't here with us to celebrate the ceasefire today.
We survive today,
but we won't forget.
Our Middle East analyst is Sebastian Usher.
He started by telling us the details of the first phase.
This is essentially not that different from the ceasefire deal that has been talked about for months up until now.
What is different about what's happening in this case is there's a bigger umbrella around it and much greater momentum from President Trump.
So, what we're going to see is once the Israeli cabinet, which looks like it's a done deal, ratifies the agreement that we believe has been signed by Hamas and by the Israeli team in Sham al-Sheikh in Egypt, but that happened a little earlier today.
Once the Israeli cabinet ratifies this, and despite the fact that two of the far-right ministers in the cabinet have said that they won't sign up to it, it's still likely to go through, then the mechanism, this 72 hours that's part of a twenty-point
US plan, will come into effect.
That's the time frame within which the living Israeli hostages, twenty of them, and the bodies of those who died either before or in captivity will be returned to Israel and around 2,000 Palestinian prisoners are due to be released.
Aid in far greater number we've seen for a long time is also due to start going in.
All the aid points, all the entrance points into Gaza, all five of them are due to be opened up so a huge influx of aid will be allowed and which of course is needed desperately there.
And
President Trump is likely to arrive in Israel or potentially Egypt Egypt if there's a signing there over the weekend, maybe on Sunday.
So everything is due to happen fast now, just as the movement towards this agreement, after all these months of stalemate moments when it looked like something was going to happen, then it didn't, it's also moved very fast in the past less than two weeks since the twenty point plan was put forward by the Americans and Hamas and Israel signed up at least a part of it.
The other element that's due to happen over the next few days is an Israeli pullback from its positions in Gaza.
Now that's not a full pull-out by any means.
I think it's around forty-seven percent of the territory they will be no longer in.
That leaves more than a half where Israeli troops will still have control.
So I mean as we were hearing there from a Palestinian mother, there's been huge relief, huge joy in both Gaza and in Israel amongst the hostage families over this and grasping it as being an end to the war.
It isn't, as I'm sure many people have heard, an end right now.
It is a ceasefire which could hold.
I think the chances of it holding more than the two previous ceasefires that were in place are much stronger than before.
I think things have changed enough in Israel, in Gaza, the Israeli Government, Hamas, the leadership in the US, the way that Israel's closest Western allies have increasingly shown their displeasure, their anger at the continuation of a war in Gaza.
All of these things have really built up to this point.
And I think it would be difficult for an all-out war to be returned to, but people are still going to have to just cross their fingers and hope that it all works out.
Let's hear another voice from inside the Gaza Strip now.
Raghad Salam is a 38-year-old journalist in Gaza City and a mother of two children.
She's remained there for most of the conflict, moving from place to place to avoid military activity.
Because of poor communication links, we weren't able to do a full interview.
However, she sent us these voice recordings.
She first gave us her reaction to the ceasefire announcement.
My reaction is not very different from all Gazans here in the city.
They are very relieved.
They are cheerful.
They are celebrating.
they are distributing some sweets, shooting some fires, celebrating the ceasefire announcement.
So, we are very relieved because you know, we have been suffering for the past two years, we have been struggling, we have been
moving from one place to the other, we have faced many situations of lack of medicine, lack of food, lack of drinking water.
So, all of this has vanished, we can say, today.
Especially as people will begin returning to their homes in the northern parts of Gaza Strip.
Humanitarian situation here, in fact, it's very devastating.
It's very difficult.
Access to basic needs like medicine, food and clean water are proper housing is extremely limited.
Many people rely on humanitarian aid which doesn't reach everyone.
Pharmacies are almost empty and hospitals lack for the essential supplies and equipment.
Food Food prices have rocketed and clean drinking water is very rare.
Thousands of families are living in temporary shelters and often without electricity or proper sanitation, people are living on the minimum.
But we are trying to survive.
Me, myself, and my family,
we have been moving from one place to the other as the Israeli bombardment hasn't stopped for about two weeks now.
So we are trying trying to keep it to the minimum, as I said.
So finally, we are relieved by the announcement of the ceasefire.
Raghad went on to say she felt hopeful about the future and for the first time in ages had a real desire to stay in Gaza.
We have witnessed a kind of relative calm since the early morning hours.
Although the forces haven't yet withdrawn from the areas that they have proceeded to, the situation looks promising so far.
I have always been waiting for the border crossing to open so I could escape with my children from the bombing and the death.
I used too long for that moment, but things feel different now.
I feel that Gaza deserves us to stay in it, to rebuild it and to make it even better than before.
So I think, yes, I have changed my mind.
From Gaza to Israel now, this was the reaction of cafe goers in Jerusalem to news of the ceasefire agreement.
I'm happy.
I'm very happy.
I'm sure all of Israel is very happy today.
And let's hope from this day we are going to better days for the next future.
I heard last night that Trump basically announced that it looks like a deal was signed between the Hamas and Israel.
And I couldn't go back to sleep.
It was very exciting.
Very exciting.
To see the families of the hostages celebrating and drinking Lechayim and celebrating in the hostage square the minute this came out.
I can't even imagine the way they feel.
I know I feel elated.
They must just feel the burden of the world off of their shoulders.
Gil Dickman is the cousin of Carmel Gatt, who was taken hostage in the Hamas attacks on October the 7th.
She survived 11 months in captivity, but was killed.
Her body was recovered by Israeli troops last year.
Gil Dickman told us he had been up all night.
I'm just coming back from the hostage square here in Tel Aviv.
We were celebrating.
We had a hostages who came back from captivity celebrating their own freedom and the freedom of the hostages, their friends that are finally coming home.
And you know, you just told the story of my cousin who was murdered in captivity.
After she was murdered
at the beginning of September 2024, we promised that we will never let even one more hostage die or be murdered in captivity.
And it looks like we made it.
And the 20 hostages who are considered to be alive then are coming back alive
in just a matter of a few days.
And this is so,
I'm so joyful just thinking about this and about the fact that innocent people on the other side of the border will have to suffer no more because of the horrible decisions of leaders on both sides of the border.
It's such good news.
It's new air coming into our lungs and it's breathing breaths of hope.
And and israelis uh on our side uh wanted to you know to to try and do as much damage as possible on on the other side and palestinians wanted to do damage on our side but now when the war is finally over we can start rebuilding uh the
maybe the world is peace it's going to take time i'm sure because many people still believe in revenge but i think most of us don't i don't believe in revenge even though my cousin kamil was murdered her mother kinelet was murdered on october 7th both of them will no longer come back to us and we will miss them forever but revenge is not the answer the answer is more life is more peace between the the two peoples this is the only way to live together in this magnificent piece of land in the middle east let's hope this is a beginning of a new morning today And what about President Trump?
He's often hinted that he wants to win the Nobel Peace Prize.
If the deal holds, how much of a diplomatic victory will it be for him personally?
Nomia Iqbal is our North America correspondent.
Donald Trump, we know, has long wanted some sort of deal.
It appeared to be elusive at one point.
There was always other issues.
But
I think that it's fair to say that Donald Trump is on the brink of achieving something remarkable here.
That is, if indeed all the conditions are met for this first phase where all the hostages are released, Israel pulls back its troops, the killing of Palestinians stops.
This is all done on a permanent basis.
And if that happens, I think it will be a stunning victory for him.
We know that Donald Trump styles himself as a deal maker, a peacemaker, and that would all be true if the deal does come to fruition.
The thing I really want to point out is that I've been covering this conflict under the Biden administration and under the Trump administration.
And there's no doubt the similarity between the two men is that they are staunchly pro-Israel.
US presidents often are.
And there were attempts by the Biden administration to try and put an end to the war.
But what we have seen in Donald Trump is this real use of his personality where he's put pressure on pretty much everybody here.
I mean, just last week, Benjamin Netanyahu was at the White House and he made him apologise to the leaders of Qatar for that Israeli strike on Qatar.
They said that they were targeting Hamas back in September.
Reportedly, Mr.
Trump has also accused Mr.
Netanyahu of being too negative and not taking the deal.
And I think, with all those power moves, as well as getting Qatar involved and Turkey involved, has allowed Donald Trump to get to this point.
Nomia Iqbal.
More reaction on the Gaza agreement to end the war.
It's unequivocally welcome, and we should be really clear about that.
And I think everybody has spoken out, including the people of Gaza.
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We're leaving events in the Middle East for a few moments now to take a look at some other stories.
The Sudanese city of El Fasha in North Darfur has been under siege for around 18 months.
An estimated 260,000 civilians remain trapped inside, and tens of thousands of people have been killed in the fighting.
El Fasha is the last major foothold in Darfur for Sudan's army, which has been battling the paramilitary rapid support force since April 2023.
In the latest attack, at least 13 people were killed in an artillery attack reportedly carried out by the RSF.
The shelling hit the main hospital in the city.
Our global affairs reporter, Richard Kagoyi, joined us from Nairobi.
This attack was quite devastating.
In fact, the Sudanese Doctors Network says that it has really made a bad situation worse because the hospital has been operating literally on just about like 10% in terms of capacity because they are unable to access supplies and even get more medical teams to come and support them.
Now, this hospital has just been used specifically to cater for women and for maternity services and even for children as well.
So the fact that medical staff there, they're really quite exhausted.
And so really, this is quite a huge setback.
Humanitarian efforts are within El Fasha.
Now, Richard, the UN has described El Fasha as an epicenter of suffering.
Indeed, because you have, as you mentioned, about a quarter of a million people who are trapped inside El Fasha.
So, they're unable actually to get outside.
Because, according to research by Yale, the RSF has built an earth bomb around the city still, stretching for kilometers.
So, aid can get into El Al-Fasha and people can get out of El Fasha.
In fact, those who do attempt to do that are either detained, are conscripted fully into the battlefronts and subjected to sexual violence.
So it's quite a very desperate situation because this was at the hub of humanitarian efforts and the RSF have built this blockade for the last nearly 18 months and it's been difficult to really access and to reach the most vulnerable population.
So a very desperate situation there.
Now just briefly, if you can please, please, could you give us a quick background to the conflict?
This started off in April 2023.
This was a struggle between the leaders of the two forces, the Rapid Support Forces and the Sudanese Army.
And both, because they were embroiled in a power struggle, they fell out.
And since then, they have been battling across the country.
The country is almost fragmented into two, with the army controlling nearly half of the country towards the east and to the north, and the RSF are controlling most of the western and the southern bits of the country.
Richard Kadgoy.
This year's Nobel Prize for Literature has been awarded.
The winner, who will receive $1.2 million,
was announced by the permanent secretary of the Swedish Academy, Mats Maum.
The Nobel Prize in Literature for 2025 is awarded to the Hungarian author Vaslo Krasnajorkai for his compelling and visionary erupt that, in the midst of apocalyptic terror, reaffirms the power of art.
George Xertes is a Hungarian-born British poet and translator.
He knows Laszlo Kroznohorkai and has translated three of his novels into English.
He's been speaking to James Menendez about whether he knew he was a serious condender to win the award.
People in Hungary have talked about the possibility that he might be because his international reputation has grown so much.
But to actually do it, I mean, it's just superb.
Yep, delighted.
Do you think he'll be pleased?
Of course.
Who would not be?
He's a bit, you know, he's a little bit retiring, but I'm sure this will delight him.
Tell us a bit about his work.
I mean,
from what I've been reading, it sounds all rather forbidding, is it?
It looks forbidding, but it isn't once you're in it.
I suppose the most notable thing about them is that they use very few sentences.
So the sentences are very, very long
and there are no paragraphs.
So when you look at the page, it looks like a lava flow of black type.
That sounds very forbidding to me.
It does, but it's funny.
And it's apocalyptic.
And it's kind of hypnotic.
His first book, his first great success, which I translated, was made into a seven and a quarter hour film in black and white.
Right, gosh.
Which I've seen twice.
And how was it?
It's spellbinding.
I mean, granted,
it helps if you're the sort of person who can sit down to a long film where things happen very slowly.
But
the slowness is a part of it.
It's a part of the experience.
It's like, I think people talk about slow radio.
But I think once people are in it, once they get beyond the first page,
they do hold the attention remarkably well.
And it's the one that you're talking about, is that, and forgive me if I'm pronouncing this wrong, is that Satan Tango or Satan Tango?
Well, it's Satan Tango.
Satan Tango in English.
Yeah, it's the same word on Hungarian, but pronounced differently.
Yeah.
I mean, and was it difficult to translate?
Oh, yes.
It was exhausting.
I could do about an hour at a time and then I'd retire with a headache.
But was it because of the sort of density of the text, or just trying to, I mean, as always with translations, trying to convey some of the style in a completely different language?
Well, the style kind of declares itself because of those very long sentences.
I mean, there are authors who've used long sentences in the past, but not like this.
I mean, these are absolute monsters, really.
But they are
human.
They're not difficult to read in a sense of language.
They're not difficult to tell from a point of view of storytelling.
The storytelling is clear.
The dialogue is clear.
So it's not the density of prose.
It is simply the way of delivering that prose to your eyes.
Back now to our main story, the dramatic developments towards peace in Gaza.
The United Nations Emergency Aid Chief Tom Fletcher says there are 170,000 tonnes of food, medicine, shelter and other supplies that are ready to be delivered and has called for immediate access.
The UN Agency for Palestinian Refugees says it has food for the whole of Gaza for three months.
But with so little security in Gaza, how do you get it to the people who need it?
Martin Griffiths has over 50 years of experience in aid and conflict mediation.
He was the UN's emergency relief coordinator from 2021 to 2024.
It's unequivocally welcome, and we should be really clear about that.
And I think everybody has spoken out, including the people of Gaza.
It's most welcome.
The exchange of prisoners as well as hostages is long overdue.
It's a humane, a human thing, so it's great, but it's the beginning.
And one of the elements of this, what we're hoping for in the next few days, is that the crossings will open and that aid will go in.
It's an immense challenge, isn't it?
Because although there's the aid there, there is little security in Gaza.
Little security, and I agree with you completely, little security,
but also
a history of impediments.
So, you know, roads are blocked.
permission is withdrawn during convoys by the Israeli Defense Forces, roads are chosen but are unsafe.
And then there's, of course, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation factor.
But the fact, as Tom Fletcher said,
and you quoted him at the top here, that there's 170,000 tons of aid is a phenomenal amount.
So it's supposed to flood the Strip.
I think there's going to be a very tortuous negotiation to make that happen.
Because what you think there will be a dragging of feet, are you suggesting?
I think there's going to be a dragging of feet.
There's going to be a continuing emphasis on the primary role of the Gaza humanitarian foundation although the 20-point plan does provide for full involvement of united nations and other agencies i think there's going to be a question of where the idf withdraw and whether the ceasefire is held enough to make sure this happens safely and i think it's going to be a question of safety of delivery it's also essential to have visas for a lot of aid staff which have been withdrawn or they have to re-register all these aspects of the recent blockade.
You need people to deliver aid, as well as aid itself.
And I think it's going to be a very tough negotiation, but you know, it's great that we're going to have it.
Sarah Montagu, speaking to Martin Griffiths.
We're ending this podcast with our chief international correspondent, Lise Doucette.
She gave us her assessment of what's been agreed.
It has all come together much more quickly than anyone dared to hope.
But we have seen time and and again down through the decades how the last details, the last difficult political compromises can sometimes take much more time than expected.
But then, yet, there it was, just after midnight, the news came through that a deal had been done.
This is a moment for most of all of unbridled joy for the Palestinians in Gaza who took to the streets of Gaza in the dead of night, also here in Tel Aviv, the Israelis who took to Hostages Square, which has been their gathering point for many months, dancing in the square.
Such a human moment.
But this is just a start.
It is not the end.
It is a ceasefire, as significant as that is, and it is not a peace deal.
But the most important thing is that it starts.
Well, we saw President Trump with Benjamin Netanyahu in Washington last week.
How much pressure do you think he put the Israeli Prime Minister under?
Huge.
There are those who have worked in the State Department for a very long time, who have worked with both Republican and Democratic administrations, presidents, and say they have never seen a US President using the pressure that they can wield personally, politically, on their most important strategic ally, Israel.
There was the moment, and I think the turning point was
Prime Minister Netanyahu's error in President Trump's eyes in going too far in trying to assassinate Hamas leaders in the Gulf state of Qatar, in this capital city of an ally that President Trump values highly.
The Qataris were furious.
President Trump was furious.
That led to a face-to-face meeting
in New York on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly, where President Trump met with Arab and Islamic leaders.
They too pressed home the message.
It is time to end the war.
Military options have been exhausted.
Now is the time to move towards a resolution of this conflict.
And too, what was really important, and I heard it from some of the families of the hostages this week in Tel Aviv in Hostages Square, they had been trying so hard to get President Trump's attention.
This is sadly a comment on the world in which we live now.
Getting President Trump's ear is what matters.
And finally, they did get his attention, so much so that he started posting photographs of Hostages Square, brimming with people and anger and grief and agony, calling on him for his help.
And at last he did help, leaning in a way he had never done before on Prime Minister Netanyahu.
It's stunning to remember that just weeks ago
there was the military operation was unleashed in Gaza City, that even Steve Witcoff, President Trump's envoy, was saying, well, the military operation could go to the end of the year, maybe into 2026.
Israelis and Palestinians were looking at months more of war, and then suddenly it's all wrapped up within days.
Now, of course, it's not just President Trump.
The Qataris, the Turks, and the Egyptians have been involved in getting the two sides to this point.
What role have they played?
The deal wouldn't have happened without their role as well.
They are the ones who talk directly directly to Hamas.
They have leverage over Hamas.
Hamas, which it has to be underlined, has been significantly weakened by the two years of devastating war.
They are no longer a significant fighting force.
We have seen they still have the ability to fire an occasional rocket into Israel, to carry out attacks on Israeli forces.
They still have a political presence, but they are not the Hamas that carried out the October 7 attacks.
And pressure was put on them to persuade them that the hostages were no longer leverage that in the sense of being kept.
The best leverage with the hostages was to move now.
Now is the moment to use a terrible expression to cash in, to try to use this to get a better deal, because holding on to the hostages was just prolonging the war.
And that was a huge shift of perspective for Hamas.
Again, we have to underline that there are so many issues that still haven't been resolved.
Will Hamas give up its guns?
What will be its role in the future Gaza?
Where will Israel's military presence be at the end when the deal moves into its second phase?
And there are the word I got from a mediator who has been involved in the Sharm al Sheikh talks is that there's still going to be a trouble ahead, and the big question, of course, will be will President Trump continue to focus on this deal in the way he has, or will he be sidelined by other issues on his agenda in the United States or indeed on other front lines in the world?
Lise Doucet.
And that's all from us for now, but there'll be a new edition of the Global News podcast later.
If you want to comment on this podcast or the topics covered in it, you can send us an email.
The address is globalpodcast at bbc.co.uk.
You can also find us on X at BBC World Service.
Use the hashtag GlobalNewsPod.
This edition was mixed by Russell Newlove and the producer was Ed Horton.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Bernard Ecchio.
Until next time, goodbye.
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