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The left corner of Yoav’s forehead is held together by metal staples where shrapnel hit him from an RPG or grenade. He doesn’t know which, or remember exactly when it happened, but it doesn’t really matter. He has a long gash in his neck from a bullet that went in but miraculously didn’t sever his carotid artery.

Warning – this story contains pictures of battlefield injuries below

“I remember just constantly touching it, waiting for the blood to explode out the side. And that never happened,” he says.

Speaking with clarity, but at times with long pauses to collect himself, the young British Jew who came to Israel in 2018 to serve his country, describes the morning of 7 October.

The morning that changed Israel.

Follow live: Gazans told ‘go south if you want to live’

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Gaza City reduced to rubble

He says: “We are getting calls over the radio that they are identifying hundreds upon hundreds of terrorists running and reaching the border, breaking down the fence and coming towards Israel.

“So in response, we split off into different groups and go to different towns and villages and kibbutzim.

“We drive towards where we were given the report, and as we turn the corner, they open fire on us.”

Yoav adds: “There must have been around six or seven and we had no way to react.

“I tell my driver to hit the gas and we try to bypass them, and as we bypass them we met even more terrorists.

“Hard to remember exactly, couldn’t quite count at the time, but there must have been between 50 and 60 of them.

“We continued to be hit by fire and shooting.

“And as we were driving forward, we lost control of our vehicle as an RPG [rocket-propelled grenade] hits the front of our vehicle, which caused us to crash.

“And then we got stuck and we continued to get fire.

“We can see from behind us that they’re running into the kibbutz, and we can see in front of us that they’re running towards the other villages and towns and kibbutzim that are further – further into Israel.”

hamas gaza israel
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We ‘did our best to take back the base’, he said

‘A grenade blew up next to me’

By now, this scene was being repeated in Kibbutzim, villages and towns along the Gaza envelope.

It was barely 7am.

Yoav continues his story, saying: “We get hit by another RPG, which caused my driver to get injured.

“It ripped off half of his arm and a half of his leg and as we’re continuing to sit there, we keep getting hit with more fire and more fire.

“One of the RPGs hit the back of the vehicle and caused the vehicle to fill up with lots of smoke, so I had to open my door so that we wouldn’t suffocate.

“When I did, either another RPG or a grenade blew up next to me and threw shrapnel into the side of my face.”

israel hamas gaza
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Yoav suffered serious injuries

hamas gaza israel

Yoav’s commander arrived and helped him lift the driver into a working vehicle.

It was only then he discovered what had happened to the third soldier in his jeep.

“As we came to leave, we came to take my radio man, who we also thought was injured, but we realised that he was already,” Yoav pauses and looks for the words. “He was already killed in action.”

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Netanyahu: ‘Are you ready for what’s next?’

‘We don’t have control anymore’

The battle of Kibbutz Kerem Shalom lasted for hours, as residents waited for military backup.

The number killed there is yet to be officially established.

With a dead radio operator and a severely wounded driver, Yoav had to retreat to his base.

By now it is around 7.30 in the morning, but Yoav’s fight is far from over.

hamas gaza israel
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‘We’re a very small force, so we were quite limited with our options,’ Yoav said

“As we’re driving to the base, we’re continuing to be hit by live fire and more RPGs. Around us is complete and total chaos,” he explains.

“It’s very hard to describe.

“I mean, as we’re getting closer to the base, we were getting to this understanding that we don’t have control over the base anymore.”

hamas gaza israel

He continues: “We break through the gates of the base and we drive inside.

“And we see a sight of total anarchy – of vehicles in flames that have exploded from other sorts of explosive devices – and soldiers scattered around.

“We do our best to centralise all the injured people and bring the paramedics and the medics and the whole medical team to start treating them.”

Yoav is full of praise for the medics, saying: “I’ve never seen anything quite like it.

“They put everything aside and they just got on with it.

“They literally kept these boys alive for about five, six hours until the evacuation could get to us.

“And all the meantime, while the medics are treating the boys, treating my soldiers, we’re doing our best to take back the base as much as we could.

“But we’re a very small force, so we were quite limited with our options.”

Read more on this story:
Why Israel is braced for Hezbollah attack from Lebanon
How negotiators will be working to free Hamas hostages
‘Top secret’ documents suggest year-long planning

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People rush to be treated at Gaza hospital

‘Everyone in Israel knows someone who’s died’

By early afternoon, backup support starts to break through.

Slowly, the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) started to regain control of the base.

At around 6pm that evening, almost twelve hours after he was shot and injured by shrapnel, Yoav was airlifted to hospital.

Yoav says: “It’s just a miracle [that I survived].

“My unit commander and my deputy unit commander, both of them were killed in action.

“And other soldiers as well from our unit, and other colleagues who I’ve met along my time in the army, [friends] who I have done courses with, and others who I drafted with.

“I don’t think there’s anyone in the country right now who doesn’t know someone who hasn’t been killed in action.”

hamas gaza israel

Losing those close to him has made Yoav determined to get back to the fight.

He says: “I want to rejoin. All my soldiers are still there.

“I need a bit longer to recover but hopefully in the next week or two, I’ll be strong enough and able enough to go back and join them.

“We have no other option except for defending our country and we’ll continue defending the country.

“We’ve dealt with horrific tragedies in the past, and as a people we know how to get through it.

“It will take time. It’s a long process, but we’ll come out stronger the other side.”

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What is the possible Gaza hostage and ceasefire deal – and what challenges could lie ahead?

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What is the possible Gaza hostage and ceasefire deal - and what challenges could lie ahead?

An Israeli delegation is heading to Qatar for indirect talks with Hamas on a possible hostage and ceasefire deal in Gaza.

The development comes ahead of a meeting between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump in Washington DC on Monday aimed at pushing forward peace efforts.

The US leader has been increasing pressure on the Israeli government and Hamas to secure a permanent ceasefire and an end to the 21-month-long war in Gaza.

Smoke rises in Gaza following an explosion. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Smoke rises in Gaza following an explosion. Pic: Reuters

Mr Trump said on Tuesday on social media that Israel had agreed “to the necessary conditions to finalise” a deal on a truce.

And Hamas, which runs the coastal Palestinian territory, said on Friday it has responded to the US-backed proposal in a “positive spirit”.

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So what is in the plan?

The plan is for an initial 60-day ceasefire that would include a partial release of hostages held by the militant group in exchange for more humanitarian supplies being allowed into Gaza.

The proposed truce calls for talks on ending the war altogether.

The war in Gaza began after Hamas attacked Israel on 7 October 2023, killing 1,200 people and taking 250 others hostage. Dozens of hostages have since been released or rescued by Israeli forces, while 50 remain in captivity, including about 30 who Israel believes are dead.

The proposal would reportedly see about half of the living hostages and about half of the dead hostages returned to Israel over 60 days, in five separate releases.

Eight living hostages would be freed on the first day and two released on the 50th day, according to an Arab diplomat from one of the mediating countries, it is reported.

Five dead hostages would be returned on the seventh day, five more on the 30th day and eight more on the 60th day.

That would leave 22 hostages still held in Gaza, 10 of them believed to be alive. It is not clear whether Israel or Hamas would determine who is to be released.

Hamas has sought guarantees that the initial truce would lead to a total end to the war and the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza.

A Hamas official has said Mr Trump has guaranteed that the ceasefire will extend beyond 60 days if necessary to reach a peace deal, but there is no confirmation from the US of such a guarantee.

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Contractors allege colleagues ‘fired on Palestinians’

Possible challenges ahead

And in a sign of the potential challenges still facing the two sides, a Palestinian official from a militant group allied with Hamas said concerns remained.

The concerns were over humanitarian aid, passage through the Rafah crossing in southern Israel to Egypt and clarity over a timetable for Israeli troop withdrawals.

Hamas’s “positive” response to the proposal had slightly different wording on three issues around humanitarian aid, the status of the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) inside Gaza and the language around guarantees beyond the 60-day ceasefire, a source with knowledge of the negotiations revealed.

But the source told Sky News: “Things are looking good.”

The Times of Israel reported Hamas has proposed three amendments to the proposed framework.

According to a source, Hamas wants the agreement to say that talks on a permanent ceasefire will continue until an agreement is reached; that aid will fully resume through mechanisms backed by the United Nations and other international aid organisations; and that the IDF withdraws to positions it maintained before the collapse of the previous ceasefire in March.

Mr Netanyahu’s office said in a statement that changes sought by Hamas to the ceasefire proposal were “not acceptable to Israel”.

However, his office said the delegation would still fly to Qatar to “continue efforts to secure the return of our hostages based on the Qatari proposal that Israel agreed to”.

Read more:
‘Two security workers injured after grenades thrown at aid site’
The man in the room acting as backchannel for Hamas in negotiations with US

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Another potential challenge is that Mr Netanyahu has repeatedly said Hamas must be disarmed, which is a demand the militant group has so far refused to discuss.

Hamas has said it is willing to free all the hostages in exchange for a full withdrawal of Israeli troops and an end to the war in Gaza.

Israel rejects that offer, saying it will agree to end the war if Hamas surrenders, disarms and goes into exile – something that the group refuses.

Previous negotiations have stalled over Hamas demands of guarantees that further negotiations would lead to the war’s end, while Mr Netanyahu has insisted Israel would resume fighting to ensure the group’s destruction.

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Defiance in Tehran as Khamenei makes appearance

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Defiance in Tehran as Khamenei makes appearance

They rose to their feet in ecstatic surprise, shouting “heydar, heydar” – a Shia victory chant.

This was the first public appearance of their supreme leader since Israel began attacking their country.

He emerged during evening prayers in his private compound. He said nothing but looked stern and resolute as he waved to the crowd.

He has spent the last weeks sequestered in a bunker, it is assumed, for his safety following numerous death threats from Israel and the US.

His re-emergence suggests a return to normality and a sense of defiance that we have witnessed here on the streets of Tehran too.

Earlier, we had filmed as men in black marched through the streets of the capital to the sound of mournful chants and the slow beat of drums, whipping their backs with metal flails.

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Defiance on streets of Tehran

This weekend they mark the Shia festival of Ashura as they have for 14 centuries. But this year has poignant significance for Iranians far more than most.

The devout remember the betrayal and death of Imam Hussein as if it happened yesterday. We filmed men and women weeping as they worshipped at the Imamzadeh Saleh Shrine in northern Tehran.

The armies of the Caliph Yazid killed the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad in the seventh-century Battle of Karbala.

Shiite Muslims mark the anniversary every year and reflect on the virtue it celebrates, of resistance against oppression and injustice.

But more so than ever in the wake of Israel and America’s attacks on their country.

The story is one of prevailing over adversity and deception. A sense of betrayal is keenly felt here among people and officials.

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Many Iranians believe they were lured into pursuing diplomacy as part of a ruse by the US.

Iran believed it was making diplomatic progress in talks with America it hoped could lead to a deal. Then Israel launched its attacks and, instead of condemning them, the US joined in.

Death to Israel chants resounded outside the mosque in skies which were filled for 12 days with the sounds of Israeli jets. There is a renewed sense of defiance here.

One man told us: “The lesson to be learned from Hussein is not to give in to oppression even if it is the most powerful force in the world.”

A woman was dismissive about the US president. “I don’t think about Trump, nobody likes him. He always wants to attack too many countries.”

Pictures on billboards nearby draw a line between Imam Hussein’s story and current events. The seventh-century imam on horseback alongside images of modern missiles and drones from the present day.

Other huge signs remember the dead. Iran says almost 1,000 people were killed in the strikes, many of them women and children.

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Officially Iran is projecting defiance but not closing the door to diplomacy.

Government spokeswoman Dr Fatemeh Mohajerani told Sky News that Israel should not even think about attacking again.

“We are very strong in defence and as state officials have announced, this time Israel will receive an even stronger response compared to previous times,” she said.

“We hope that Israel will not make such a mistake.”

But there is also a hint of conciliation: Senior Iranian officials have told Sky News that back-channel efforts are under way to explore new talks with the US.

Israel had hoped its attacks could topple the Iranian leadership. That proved unfounded, the government is in control here.

For many Iranians, it seems quite the opposite happened – the 12-day war has brought them closer together.

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‘Nobody likes Trump’: Sky News finds defiance on the streets of Tehran

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'Nobody likes Trump': Sky News finds defiance on the streets of Tehran

To the sound of mournful chants and the slow beat of drums, they march, whipping their backs with metal flails.

It is an ancient ceremony going back almost 14 centuries – the Shia commemoration of Ashura.

But this year in particular has poignant significance for Iranians.

The devout remember the betrayal and death of the Imam Hussein as if it happened yesterday.

The Shia commemoration of Ashura in Tehran, 2025
Image:
Iranians gather ahead of Ashura

The Shia commemoration of Ashura in Tehran, 2025

We filmed men and women weep as they worshipped at the Imamzadeh Saleh Shrine in northern Tehran.

The grandson of the Prophet Muhammad was killed by the armies of the Caliph Yazid in the seventh century Battle of Karbala.

More on Iran

Shia Muslims mark the anniversary every year and reflect on the virtue it celebrates – of resistance against oppression and injustice. But more so than ever this year, in the wake of Israel and America’s attacks on their country.

The story is one of prevailing over adversity and deception. A sense of betrayal is keenly felt here by people and officials.

The Shia commemoration of Ashura in Tehran, 2025
Image:
Men and women weeped as they worshipped at the Imamzadeh Saleh Shrine

Many Iranians believe they were lured into pursuing diplomacy as part of a ruse by the US.

Iran believed it was making diplomatic progress in talks with America, which it hoped could lead to a deal. Then Israel launched its attacks and, instead of condemning them, the US joined in.

“Death to Israel” chants resounded outside the mosque in skies that for 12 days were filled with the sounds of Israeli jets.

There is a renewed sense of defiance here.

One man told us: “The lesson to be learned from Hussein is not to give in to oppression, even if it is the most powerful force in the world.”

I don't think about Trump. Nobody likes him," one woman tells Sky News
Image:
‘I don’t think about Trump. Nobody likes him,’ one woman tells Sky News

A woman was dismissive about the US president.

“I don’t think about Trump. Nobody likes him. He always wants to attack too many countries.”

Pictures on billboards nearby link Imam Hussein’s story and current events. They show the seventh century imam on horseback alongside images of modern missiles and drones from the present day.

The Shia commemoration of Ashura
The billboard illustrates the 7th century imam on horseback alongside missiles and drones from the present day

Other huge signs remember the dead. Iran says almost 1,000 people were killed in the strikes, many of them women and children.

Officially Iran is projecting defiance, but not closing the door to diplomacy.

Government spokeswoman Dr Fatemeh Mohajerani told Sky News that Israel should not even think about attacking again.

“We are very strong in defence, and as state officials have announced, this time Israel will receive an even stronger response compared to previous times. We hope that Israel will not make such a mistake.”

Government spokeswoman Dr Fatemeh Mohajerani told Sky News that Israel should not even think about attacking again
Image:
Dr Fatemeh Mohajerani said it would be a mistake for Israel to attack again

But there is also a hint of conciliation. Senior Iranian officials have told Sky News back-channel efforts are under way to explore new talks with the US.

Israel had hoped its attacks could topple the Iranian leadership. Those hopes proved unfounded. The government is in control here.

For many Iranians it seems quite the opposite happened – the 12-day war has brought them closer together.

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