Day one of Gaza peace talks ends on ‘positive’ note in Egypt

Multiple sources told Al Jazeera and other media outlets that the first day of resumed indirect talks between Israel and Hamas in Egypt came to a positive conclusion in anticipation of a potential agreement implementing US President Donald Trump’s 20-point plan to end the Gaza war.

On Tuesday, the negotiators are scheduled to return for additional discussions.

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A roadmap was created for how the current round of talks would proceed, according to sources who spoke to Al Jazeera Arabic about the meeting held on Monday in Sharm el-Sheikh, a resort city in the Red Sea.

According to Al Jazeera Arabic, the Hamas delegation informed mediators that negotiations over the release of prisoners are hampered by Israel’s continued bombing of Gaza.

Khalil al-Hayya and Zaher Jabarin, two negotiators who survived a five-person Israeli assassination attempt in central Doha last month, were among the Hamas delegation’s members.

According to Egypt’s state-linked Al-Qahera News, talks on day one covered the proposed exchange of prisoners and captives, a ceasefire, and humanitarian aid entering Gaza.

In an effort to create “momentum,” according to White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, Trump also pushed for the immediate exchange of Palestinian prisoners and Israeli captives in an effort to implement other aspects of his plan to end the Gaza war.

Leavitt stated that the technical teams were “going over the list of both the Israeli hostages and the political prisoners who will be released” and that they were “looking over the situation to ensure that the environment is ideal for release those hostages as we speak.”

Trump stated to reporters from the Oval Office on Monday afternoon, “We have a really good chance of making a deal,” while also mentioning that he still has his own “red lines.”

“But I believe our situation is excellent,” she continued. And I believe Hamas has been expressing its disagreements with crucial issues,” Trump continued.

Trump has not “not given any details how he thinks the discussions are going beyond his general positive assessment,” according to Rosiland Jordan, who reports from Washington, D.C.

The US President also praised Israel’s leadership in these negotiations, his own special envoy Steve Witkoff, and his country’s support for Hamas, according to Jordan.

Jared Kushner, the son of Donald Trump’s real estate developer, is reportedly a member of the US delegation.

Meanwhile, Egypt’s Al-Qahera News and &nbsp confirmed that the talks were scheduled to continue on Tuesday, two years after the Hamas attack on Israel that claimed the lives of 1, 139 people and held about 200 people hostage.

In a conflict that has been characterized as genocidal by a UN inquiry, leading genocide scholars, and leading human rights organizations, including Israeli non-profits, Israeli forces have since killed at least 67 Palestinians, 160 Palestinians, and injured 169, 679 in Gaza.

According to Al Jazeera sources, Israeli forces killed at least 10 Palestinians in attacks across Gaza on Monday, including three who were requesting humanitarian aid.

On October 7, 2023, Hamas’ “abhorrent large-scale terror attack on Israel” was acknowledged in a social media post by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres late on Monday, New York time.

Guterres added that Trump’s “recent proposal” “presents an opportunity that must be seized to put an end to this tragic conflict.”

The UN chief wrote that “a permanent ceasefire and a credible political process are necessary to stop further bloodshed and open the door to peace.”

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,321

On Tuesday, October 7, 2025, how things are going:

Fighting

  • On Monday afternoon, “two rounds of shelling struck less than a mile” [less than a mile] from Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, according to the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
  • The plant has been using emergency diesel generators for almost two weeks now that it has lost its external power source, according to IAEA chief Rafael Grossi, who issued the warning. Russia and Ukraine have claimed responsibility for recent attacks near the nuclear power station.
  • Ukrainian drones hit the Feodosia oil terminal in Russian-occupied Crimea on Monday night, sparking a “large-scale fire,” according to a post on Telegram from the country’s general staff.
  • According to Andriy Yermak, the head of the Ukrainian President’s Office, a Russian attack has reportedly slammed the roof of a Sumy perinatal center, causing it to catch fire. Before the attack, Yermak noted that the children, patients, and employees had been moved to a bomb shelter.
  • In a post on Telegram, the region’s governor Oleh Syniehubov claimed two people were killed and five others were hurt by Russian shelling in Kharkiv, Ukraine.
  • One person was killed and three others were injured in the Kherson region of Ukraine, according to regional governor Oleksandr Prokudin, who had launched drone attacks, air strikes, and artillery shelling.
  • In a post on Telegram, Ukrainian governor Ivan Fedorov wrote that a Russian attack in the Zaporizhia region had claimed the lives of one person and injured eleven people.
  • According to Russian governor Vyacheslav Gladkov, the country’s state-run TASS news agency, two people were killed in a Ukrainian missile attack in the Belgorod region.
  • One person was killed by a Ukrainian drone attack in Luhansk, according to a post on Telegram from the Russian-occupied region of Luhansk.

Regional security

    There is no reason for Russia to be at fault for recent drone sightings across Europe, according to Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, who described the “whole story” as “really quite strange, to say the least.”

  • After German Chancellor Friedrich Merz recently claimed he assumed Russia was the source of the reported drone flights, Peskov added that “many politicians in Europe are now inclined to blame Russia for everything” and that they do so “unreasonably, indiscriminately.”
  • The Ukrainian diver wanted by Germany over his alleged involvement in explosions that damaged the Nord Stream gas pipeline must remain in custody for another 40 days, according to his attorney.

diplomacy and politics

  • The Finnish government announced on Monday that President Alexander Stubb and Prime Minister Petteri Orpo will meet with US President Donald Trump in Washington DC on Thursday and Friday.

military assistance

    The US President responded to a question posed by Ukrainian journalists asking for long-range Tomahawk missiles from Trump: “I would ask some questions. I’m not trying to make that war worse.

  • Vladimir Putin’s video, which claimed the sale of Tomahawk missiles would end any progress made in Moscow’s relationship with Washington, was released the day after Trump made his comments.
  • After populists who have pledged to end the scheme won a recent election in his country, Czech President Petr Pavel urged political parties to keep funding Ukraine.
  • According to Pavel, “If we were to reduce or even end this support, we would primarily harm ourselves, but ending it would also have a negative impact on Ukraine, where many more would lose their lives.”

US sends another ‘third-country’ deportation flight to Eswatini

Human rights concerns have been dismissed as the United States has deported Eswatini, a tiny southern African nation, with the second so-called “third-country” deportation flight.

Ten deported US citizens who were not citizens of the kingdom were received by Eswatini’s government on Monday. Five additional US deportees were sent to Eswatini in July as a result of that.

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On Monday, the White House confirmed the deportations, claiming that the individuals had committed serious crimes.

The nationalities of the people who arrived on Monday were not confirmed by the US or Eswatini. However, according to US-based immigration attorney Tin Thanh Nguyen, there were three Vietnamese, one from the Philippines, and one Cambodian national.

The first group of deportedees sent to Eswatini, which included people from Vietnam, Jamaica, Laos, Cuba, and Yemen, have been detained and denied access to lawyers, according to rights groups.

Nguyen said he was speaking with only two of the two people who had already arrived on Monday and two others who had previously been sent to Eswatini, but he has since remained unable to speak with any of them.

I’m unable to contact them. I’m unable to email them. Because the Eswatini government restricts attorney access, he claimed in a statement to Reuters news agency. “I cannot communicate with local counsel.

The Trump administration has increasingly relied on sending deportees to third countries when it is legally unable to do so.

The practice has been challenged by rights groups because they fear it will strand people who have been expelled in nations where they are unable to access due process and do not speak the language.

Deportedees from “third countries” have also been sent to Rwanda, Ghana, and South Sudan.

According to Abigail Jackson, a spokesman for the White House, the most recent group of deportees sent to Eswatini had been found guilty of “heinous crimes,” including murder and rape.

According to Jackson, “They do not belong in the United States.”

The government’s secretive agreement with the US has also been condemned by activists in Eswatini, a small mountain kingdom that borders South Africa. In an effort to scuttle the agreement, they have filed a legal challenge.

The Eswatini department of correctional services, for its part, has vowed to “commit to the humane treatment of all persons in its custody.”

Cycling team to drop Israel name after mass pro-Palestinian Vuelta protests

Following repeated pro-Palestinian protests at the recent Vuelta a Espana bike race, the Israel–Premier Tech cycling team will no longer be associated with Israel.

Just after its sponsors began to pressure the company to change its name, the move was made public on Monday.

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The team, which is based in Israel and is owned by the Israeli-Canadian billionaire Sylvan Adams, has received a lot of negative press due to Israel’s war against Gaza, which has resulted in the killing of more than 67, 000 Palestinians by Israel, and which international experts have labeled as a genocide.

Despite the destruction of the Palestinian enclave, where famine has spread, Adams has previously claimed that Israel has “miracled” in its fighting in Gaza and elsewhere.

Due to the organization’s involvement in the prestigious three-week cycling competition, protesters last month disrupted several Vuelta stages in Spain.

Midway through the race, the team removed its full name from its jerseys due to public pressure. Later, when pro-Palestinian demonstrators broke into a portion of the course in Madrid, the Vuelta had to be abandoned.

Israel-Premier Tech was then forbaded from Saturday’s Giro dell’Emilia race because of concerns for the safety of the crowd. Following the protests in Spain, Israel-Premier Tech was then expelled from the competition.

The team stated on Monday that it was changing its name in response to a “steadfast commitment to our riders, staff, and valued partners” when it explained its decision to rebrand.

This step is crucial to ensuring the team’s future, according to the statement, which states that “progress frequently necessitates sacrifice.”

Additionally, the statement stated that the team’s owner, Adams, would no longer be speaking up. He will instead concentrate on running for president of Israel’s World Jewish Congress, according to the statement.

The multinational corporation with which Premier Tech co-sponsors the team from Canada had last month expressed its desire for change.

The situation on the global stage, which has significantly changed since our entry on the World Tour in 2017, is something that “we are sensitive and attentive to,” it said.

The team will adopt a new identity and brand image, and we anticipate that the name will change to something else, excluding the word “Israel.”

The equipment provider, Factor, also warned that its involvement would end unless there was “a change of flag.”

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Indians hard hit as US student visas decline by a fifth from last year

In response to President Donald Trump’s restrictive policies, the number of student visas issued by the United States has decreased by about one-fifth compared to the same one-month period last year.

According to data from the International Trade Commission, the US issued approximately 313, 138 student visas in August, which is a 19.1% decrease from August 2024, when studies typically begin at US universities.

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The decline was 44.5 percent during that time for Indian students, who account for the majority of foreign students studying in the US. Students from China received fewer visas, though at a lower rate.

Iran’s student visas for Iranians dropped by 86 percent in a number of Muslim-majority nations. The proportion of foreign students who are currently enrolled in US universities is not representative of the overall number, many of whom are still on visas.

The Trump administration is using funding to put mounting political pressure on US universities as it pursues a restrictive immigration policy.

In response to US law violations, participation in protests, or in some cases, criticism of Israel, Secretary of State Marco Rubio has revoked thousands of student visas. The targeting has occurred in conjunction with pro-Israel organizations that monitor and monitor university students engaged in pro-Palestine activism.

In order to pass stricter control over student social media profiles, Rubio also imposed a temporary suspension on all student visa processing in June.

Those vetting applications were instructed to look for “any indications of hostility toward the citizens, culture, government, institutions, or founding principles of the United States.”

However, the administration’s message to some nations hasn’t always been consistent.

Trump announced to reporters in August that he planned to accept 600, 000 Chinese students as his plan to study there after initially vowing to restrict access to a sizable portion of Chinese students.

The number of Chinese students studying in the US is now twice that high.