The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said 12 hostages had been moved out of Gaza. Meanwhile, the Israeli military confirmed that 10 Israeli citizens and two foreigners were present on Israeli territory with their special forces.
The hostages were among about 240 taken by Hamas in the October 7 attack. Israel's response to the attack killed about 15,000 Gazans, according to data from the Gaza Health Ministry .
Live video broadcast by Al Jazeera on Tuesday showed a bus carrying Palestinian prisoners leaving Israel's Ofer prison in the West Bank.
Israel said it had freed 30 Palestinian prisoners from Ofer and another prison in Jerusalem . The group included 15 women and 15 men, according to the semi-official Palestinian Prisoners Organization.
Al Jazeera said the freed Palestinians were present in the West Bank cities of Ramallah and Jerusalem.
A spokesman for the foreign ministry of Qatar, which is acting as a mediator for the deals, said the freed Israelis included nine women and a child.
Some of the hostages were released by the Al Quds Brigades, the armed wing of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad organization.
The truce, which brought Gaza its first period of calm in seven weeks of fighting and bombing that has left much of the Strip leveled, was due to expire on Tuesday, but both sides agreed to extend it to allow for the release of more people held by Hamas and Israel.
Israel has said the truce can last longer as long as Hamas frees at least 10 Israeli hostages a day. However, with fewer and fewer women and children being held, extending the truce beyond Wednesday would require negotiations for Hamas to free its first male Israeli hostage.
The total number of hostages released by Hamas since the ceasefire came into effect is 81, including 60 Israeli women and children, and 21 foreigners, many of them Thai workers.
Israel freed 150 prisoners earlier on Tuesday.
Ability to extend the deal
On Tuesday, Israeli forces and Hamas soldiers stopped firing and both sides expressed their desire to extend the truce.
Photo: REUTERS/Ammar Awad.
Qatar has welcomed the head of Israel's Mossad intelligence agency and the head of the US CIA at a meeting aimed at "taking advantage of the progress made on the humanitarian truce and beginning further discussions on the prospects for further developments on the agreement in the future".
Although the fighting situation in Gaza remains largely calm, the Israeli military said three explosive devices were detonated near its troops on Tuesday afternoon at two locations in northern Gaza, violating the truce.
At one location, Hamas gunmen opened fire on Israeli soldiers. The soldiers returned fire and some suffered minor injuries.
Earlier, a plume of black smoke was spotted over the northern Gaza battlefield, but on the fifth day of the truce, there were still no signs of fighter jets or explosions.
Lieutenant General Herzi Halevi, head of the Israeli armed forces, said in a press conference that the country's army remains on high alert in Gaza and is ready to continue fighting.
Bury the dead
More than two-thirds of Gaza's population have been left homeless by Israeli bombing. Thousands of families have taken shelter in makeshift camps with the few possessions they can carry.
Many people took advantage of the truce to return to their flattened homes, like Abu Shamaleh, who had to dig through the debris to find what remained of his belongings.
He said 37 of his family members were killed and there was no machinery to exhume the body of a relative who was trapped under the rubble.
“The truce is a time for us to dig through the rubble, find the bodies of the dead and bury them. We mourn the dead by burying them. What is the point of a truce if their bodies are still trapped under the rubble?”
Among the Israeli hostages still at large are a 10-month-old boy named Kfir Bibas, along with his 4-year-old brother Ariel and their parents, Yarden and Shiri. They were seized from a kibbutz by gunmen on October 7.
Yarden's sister said relatives had been told the family would not be released on Tuesday. Israeli officials said they believed the family was being held by a militant group other than Hamas.
Jimmy Miller, a relative of the family, told Channel 12 TV: “Kfir… is a little baby who doesn’t know how to call his mother. This is very difficult for our family to deal with. We haven’t slept for a long, long time – 51 days.”
As the fighting continues, Israel has said it will continue to press its offensive south. US officials say they have asked their ally to be careful and protect civilians as it presses ahead with its offensive.
The Israeli siege has collapsed the health system in Gaza, especially in the north, where there are no functioning hospitals. The WHO says more Gazans could soon die from disease than from bombing, and many still lack medicines, vaccines, clean water, food and sanitation.
Nguyen Quang Minh (according to Reuters)
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