In a smoke-filled room in Bethlehem, four men pore over a list – just released – of the names of Palestinian detainees to be freed in phase one of the ceasefire deal.
This is the office of the Palestinian Prisoners Society. The phone has not stopped ringing. Families are desperate for news.
Some 735 names are on the list – 328 of them handed one or more life sentences, 74 have faced no charges and 49 are under “administrative detention”, which means they have been held for an indeterminate amount of time, without charge.
Image: Firas Hassan hopes the ceasefire lasts long enough to get his son back
One room here is packed floor to ceiling in case files.
“Since 1967 the Israeli occupation has arrested 1.2 million Palestinians,” says Abdullah Zaghari, the director of the organisation.
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Now, he says, 10,400 Palestinians – from the West Bank and East Jerusalem – are in Israeli jails.
Image: A handwritten list of prisoners and their status
The number who’ve been taken from Gaza since 7 October, though, is unknown.
“This is the biggest challenge for us,” Mr Zaghari says.
“We’ve received calls from families in Gaza since the beginning of the war, they have no confirmation about who has been arrested. Maybe some, maybe they’ve been killed. Maybe they are in secret jails.”
He claims conditions in prisons have worsened since 7 October – as “revenge” for the Hamas attacks.
“Hundreds of people in the jails are suffering from starvation, from disease, unable to shower… most of the prisoners in the jails lose more than 40kg in body weight,” he claims.
Before 7 October, the biggest prisoner handover came after the release of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in 2011. He was abducted in a cross-border tunnel raid and held by Hamas for five years.
Image: The Palestinian Prisoners Society
More than 1,000 Palestinians were freed in the prisoner exchange, but among them, after 22 years in prison, was Yahya Sinwar. He became Hamas leader in Gaza and is widely regarded as the architect of 7 October – finally killed by the Israeli military in Tal as-Sultan, in Rafah, last October.
Across Bethlehem, sat together on a terrace in the shade of a tree, we meet a family with three generations who’ve each experienced time in Israeli prisons. Grandfather, son and, now missing, their eldest son.
It was at two o’clock in the morning, Firas Hassan, 50, tells me that his son Ahmed, 16, was dragged from his bed. He’d criticised the Israeli occupation on Facebook. That was last September. Firas fears for his son in Ktzi’ot jail in southern Israel.
Image: Ahmed Firas
He knows too well what jail is like. He’s spent 15 years in and out of various Israeli prisons. He was last released in April 2024, after two years, this time with no charge.
He’d been arrested at a checkpoint, sat in his car, on his way to university to study for his master’s degree.
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As a young man, he had been a member of the political wing of Palestinian Islamic Jihad, he told me, but no more.
“I was in prison multiple times for a long time because of my opposition to the occupation. The situation in jail is very difficult – especially after 7 October. Before 7 October the situation was stable, after that, everything turned upside down, it was horrible, crazy, scary – the beatings, starvation and decreasing the amount of food compared to before 7 October.”
Image: The Palestinian Prisoners Society
Firas says he was beaten on his last day in jail, showing us a photograph – his face swollen and bruised.
Now he wants his son home. His hope: that the ceasefire lasts long enough to get his first born back to his family.
Israel says its arrests and detentions comply with international law and the Israeli Prison Service denies all allegations of abuse.
Donald Trump has announced he will impose a 30% tariff on imports from the European Union from 1 August.
The tariffs could make everything from French cheese and Italian leather goods to German electronics and Spanish pharmaceuticals more expensive in the US.
Mr Trump has also imposed a 30% tariff on goods from Mexico, according to a post from his Truth Social account.
Announcing the moves in separate letters on the account, the president said the US trade deficit was a national security threat.
In his letter to the EU, he wrote: “We have had years to discuss our trading relationship with The European Union, and we have concluded we must move away from these long-term, large, and persistent, trade Deficits, engendered by your tariff, and non-Tariff, policies, and trade barriers.
“Our relationship has been, unfortunately, far from reciprocal.”
In his letter to Mexico, Mr Trump said he did not think the country had done enough to stop the US from turning into a “narco-trafficking playground”.
The president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, said today that the EU could adopt “proportionate countermeasures” if the US proceeds with imposing the 30% tariff.
Ms von der Leyen, who heads the EU’s executive arm, said in a statement that the bloc remained ready “to continue working towards an agreement by Aug 1”.
“Few economies in the world match the European Union’s level of openness and adherence to fair trading practices,” she continued.
“We will take all necessary steps to safeguard EU interests, including the adoption of proportionate countermeasures if required.”
Ms von der Leyen has also said imposing tariffs on EU exports would “disrupt essential transatlantic supply chains”.
Meanwhile, Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof said on the X social media platform that Mr Trump’s announcement was “very concerning and not the way forward”.
He added: “The European Commission can count on our full support. As the EU we must remain united and resolute in pursuing an outcome with the United States that is mutually beneficial.”
Mexico’s economy ministry said a bilateral working group aims to reach an alternative to the 30% US tariffs before they are due to take effect.
The country was informed by the US that it would receive a letter about the tariffs, the ministry’s statement said, adding that Mexico was negotiating.
The US imposed a 20% tariff on imported goods from the EU in April but it was later paused and the bloc has since been paying a baseline tariff of 10% on goods it exports to the US.
In May, while the US and EU where holding trade negotiations, Mr Trump threated to impose a 50% tariff on the bloc as talks didn’t progress as he would have liked.
However, he later announced he was delaying the imposition of that tariff while negotiations over a trade deal took place.
As of earlier this week, the EU’s executive commission, which handles trade issues for the bloc’s 27-member nations, said its leaders were still hoping to strike a trade deal with the Trump administration.
Without one, the EU said it was prepared to retaliate with tariffs on hundreds of American products, ranging from beef and auto parts to beer and Boeing airplanes.
At least 798 people in Gaza have reportedly been killed while receiving aid in the past six weeks – while acute malnutrition is said to have reached an all-time high.
The UN human rights office said 615 of the deaths – between 27 May and 7 July – were “in the vicinity” of sites run by the controversial US and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).
A further 183 people killed were “presumably on the route of aid convoys,” said Ravina Shamdasani, from the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.
Its figures are based on a range of sources, including hospitals, cemeteries, and families in the Gaza Strip, as well as non-governmental organisations (NGOs), its partners on the ground, and Hamas-run health authorities.
Image: Ten children were reportedly killed when Israel attacked near a clinic on Thursday. Pic: AP
The GHF has claimed the UN figures are “false and misleading” and has repeatedly denied any violence at or around its sites.
Meanwhile, Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) – also known as Doctors Without Borders – said two of its sites were seeing their worst-ever levels of severe malnutrition.
Cases at its Gaza City clinic are said to have tripled from 293 in May to 983 in early July.
“Over 700 pregnant or breastfeeding women and nearly 500 children are now receiving emergency nutritional care,” MSF said.
The humanitarian medical charity said food prices were at extreme levels, with sugar at $766 (£567) per kilo and flour $30 (£22) per kilo, and many families surviving on one meal of rice or lentils a day.
It’s a major concern for the estimated 55,000 pregnant women in Gaza, who risk miscarriage, stillbirth and malnourished infants because of the shortages.
The GHF began distributing food packages in Gaza at the end of May, after Israel eased its 11-week blockade of aid into the coastal territory.
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US aid contractors claim live ammo fired at Palestinians
It has four distribution centres, three of which are in the southern Gaza Strip.
The sites, kept off-limits to independent media, are guarded by private security contractors and located in zones where the Israeli military operates.
Palestinian witnesses say Israeli forces have repeatedly opened fire towards crowds of people going to receive aid.
The Israeli military says it has fired warning shots at people who have behaved in what it says is a suspicious manner.
It says its forces operate near the aid sites to stop supplies from falling into the hands of militants.
After the deaths of hundreds of Palestinians trying to reach the aid hubs, the United Nations has called the GHF’s aid model “inherently unsafe” and a violation of humanitarian impartiality standards.
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In response, a GHF spokesperson said: “The fact is the most deadly attacks on aid sites have been linked to UN convoys.”
The GHF says it has delivered more than 70 million meals to Gazans in five weeks and claims other humanitarian groups had “nearly all of their aid looted” by Hamas or criminal gangs.
At least 798 people in Gaza have been killed while receiving aid in six weeks, the UN human rights office has said.
A spokesperson for the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said 615 of the killings were “in the vicinity” of sites run by the controversial US and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).
A further 183 people killed were “presumably on the route of aid convoys,” Ravina Shamdasani told reporters in Geneva.
The office said its figures are based on numbers from a range of sources, including hospitals, cemeteries and families in the Gaza Strip, as well as NGOs, its partners on the ground and the Hamas-run health authorities.
The GHF has claimed the figures are “false and misleading”. It has repeatedly denied there has been any violence at or around its sites.
The organisation began distributing food packages in Gaza at the end of May, after Israel eased its 11-week blockade of aid into the enclave.
It has four distribution centres, three of which are in the southern Gaza Strip. The sites, kept off-limits to independent media, are guarded by private security contractors and located in zones where the Israeli military operates.
Palestinian witnesses say Israeli forces have repeatedly opened fire towards crowds of people going to receive aid.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
1:01
US aid contractors claim live ammo fired at Palestinians
The Israeli military says it has fired warning shots at people who have behaved in what they say is a suspicious manner.
It says its forces operate near the aid sites to stop supplies falling into the hands of militants.
After the deaths of hundreds of Palestinians trying to reach the aid hubs, the United Nations has called the GHF’s aid model “inherently unsafe” and a violation of humanitarian impartiality standards.
Follow The World
Listen to The World with Richard Engel and Yalda Hakim every Wednesday
In response, a GHF spokesperson told the Reuters news agency: “The fact is the most deadly attacks on aid sites have been linked to UN convoys.”
The GHF says it has delivered more than 70 million meals to Gazans in five weeks and claims other humanitarian groups had “nearly all of their aid looted” by Hamas or criminal gangs.