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Inside Gaza after Israel’s last captive is found

With the final Israeli captive returned, Palestinians are waiting to see if Israel will now implement a true ceasefire.

The remains of the final Israeli captive have been returned from Gaza. For months, the Israeli government has cited the remaining bodies of captives as a reason for limiting crossings, delaying aid deliveries and slowing the implementation of the agreed ceasefire. With this justification now gone, what will change for Palestinians in Gaza?

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Episode credits:

This episode was produced by Sarí el-Khalili and Melanie Marich, with Tamara Khandaker, Tuleen Barakat, and our host, Malika Bilal. It was edited by Alexandra Locke. 

Our sound designer is Alex Roldan. Our video editors are Hisham Abu Salah and Mohannad al-Melhemm. Alexandra Locke is The Take’s executive producer. Ney Alvarez is Al Jazeera’s head of audio. 

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Al Jazeera denounces YouTube’s compliance with Israel’s ban on network

Al Jazeera has condemned YouTube’s compliance with an Israeli law banning the network’s livestreams in the country, warning that the move signals how major tech companies can be “co-opted as instruments of regimes hostile to freedom”.

YouTube’s submission to Israel’s ban became apparent on Wednesday, days after Israeli Communications Minister Shlomo Karahi ordered a 90-day extension of an existing ban on the network’s operations in Israel, blocking broadcasting and internet companies from carrying the network’s content.

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On Thursday, with livestreams of Al Jazeera Arabic, Al Jazeera English and Al Jazeera Mubasher blocked in Israel, the network denounced YouTube for failing to uphold the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights.

“Such principles mandate that global tech companies ensure freedom of expression and resist government pressures that lead to the withholding of the truth and the silencing of independent journalism,” it said in a statement.

“The Network stresses that this escalation is part of a broader and systematic pattern of Israeli violations, including the killing and detention of its journalists and the closure of its offices in the occupied territories, aimed at suppressing the truth.”

Israel has killed more than 270 journalists and media workers since it launched its genocidal war on Gaza in October 2023.

Some have been from Al Jazeera, including correspondent Anas al-Sharif, 28, who was killed with three of his colleagues in an Israeli strike on a media tent in Gaza City in August.

In May 2024, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s cabinet voted to shut down Al Jazeera’s operations in Israel, weeks after the Israeli parliament passed a law allowing the temporary closure of foreign broadcasters considered to be a “threat to national security”.

In September that year, Israeli forces stormed Al Jazeera’s offices in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, confiscating equipment and documents and closing the network’s office.

In December last year, the Israeli parliament approved an extension of the 2024 law, called the “Al Jazeera law”, for two more years.

Will killings by immigration agents cause another US government shutdown?

The United States could be careening toward another government shutdown, in which federal agencies are forced to close because Congress cannot pass legislation to fund them.

That was not always the case. At first, it seemed like Friday’s deadline to pass a new spending package would pass without much fuss.

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But an impasse has emerged in the waning days before the deadline. The shift came amid public outrage at the latest shooting death resulting from President Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement drive.

In the days since immigration agents killed US citizen Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Saturday, Democrats have drawn a stark line.

They have pledged to approve no funding increases for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which oversees the agencies spearheading Trump’s deportation drive, unless it agrees to place guardrails on its use of force.

On Thursday, Tom Homan, the US border security chief, said immigration agents would shift their approach in Minnesota but vowed to maintain a continued presence in the state.

Lawmakers in the Senate now have until midnight Friday (05:00 GMT on Saturday) to find a solution. Here’s how we got here and what comes next:

What’s in the legislation?

Republicans will need to reach a 60-vote threshold in the 100-seat Senate to pass the funding legislation. They currently control 53 seats, meaning they will need the support of at least seven members of the Democratic caucus.

All told, the legislation includes six separate bills to fund the Department of Defense, the Department of Labor, the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Education, the Department of Transportation, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Department of the Treasury, and most notably, DHS.

The bills are all linked in a sprawling $1.2 trillion package passed by the US House of Representatives last week. Without the funding, non-essential services in those departments would grind to a halt.

Why not vote separately on DHS funding?

Any changes to the House-approved package — including voting separately on DHS funding — would require overcoming lengthy procedural hurdles in the Senate.

Then, the legislation would have to return to the House of Representatives for a new vote.

The House is currently in the middle of a weeklong recess, and House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican, is unlikely to call his chamber’s representatives back to Washington for a second vote.

How much funding is there for DHS?

Compared with last year, the new spending package would add $400m more to the detention budget for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and $370m more for its enforcement budget.

That is on top of a $170bn windfall for DHS included in last year’s sprawling tax-and-spending law, known as the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act.” It earmarked about $75bn for ICE over the next four years.

Why is the funding controversial?

Rights advocates have condemned the current funding bill for providing yet more funding to ICE, the agency at the heart of Trump’s deportation drive.

Just this month, ICE has been connected to two high-profile shooting deaths in Minneapolis: Pretti’s killing on Saturday and the shooting of Renee Nicole Good on January 7. Both were US citizens.

Still, a handful of Democrats have broken with their party to vote for the spending package. On January 22, seven Democrats backed the funding legislation, while 206 opposed it.

The vote was ultimately 220 to 207, with Republican Thomas Massie joining the majority of the Democrats in opposition.

This latest budget fight comes less than three months after a record-breaking, 43-day-long government shutdown came to a close on November 12, 2025. Polls show such disruptions are widely unpopular across the political spectrum.

What were the expectations leading up to this week?

In the run-up to Friday’s shutdown deadline, Democrats in the Senate were bracing for a similar fracture among their party members.

Several had been expected to hold their nose and vote to support the spending bill, in part fearing the political optics of another government shutdown.

On January 20, Democratic Senator Patty Murray argued against shutting down the government yet again, calling it an ineffective tactic to curb ICE.

“ICE must be reined in, and unfortunately, neither a [continuing resolution] nor a shutdown would do anything to restrain it, because, thanks to Republicans, ICE is now sitting on a massive slush fund it can tap whether or not we pass a funding bill,” she wrote in a statement.

Murray called on her party to instead focus its efforts on winning the upcoming midterm elections. “The hard truth is that Democrats must win political power to enact the kind of accountability we need,” she said.

Why has Democratic sentiment changed?

Pretti’s killing on Saturday changed the dynamic for Democrats.

The ICE shooting was followed by a swarm of baseless claims from the Trump administration, accusing Pretti — a nurse who treated US veterans — of being a “domestic terrorist”. That, in turn, fuelled further outrage at his death.

Senator Murray was among those who shifted her stance in the wake of the killing. Her response was unequivocal.

“I will NOT support the DHS bill as it stands,” she wrote in a post on the social media platform X. “Federal agents cannot murder people in broad daylight and face zero consequences.”

Chuck Schumer, the top Democrat in the Senate, also abandoned earlier assurances that a shutdown would be avoided.

Left-wing senators Catherine Cortez Masto, Jacky Rosen and Angus King have also announced they will not vote in favour of the funding bill as is, despite having broken from party ranks to end the last shutdown in November.

In a post on Wednesday on X, Schumer showed little sign of yielding.

“In the wake of ICE’s abuses and the administration’s recklessness, Senate Democrats will NOT pass the DHS budget until it is rewritten,” he wrote.

Will the party remain united?

To date, only one Democrat — Senator John Fetterman of Pennsylvania — has committed to voting in favour of the funding package in the wake of Pretti’s killing.

However, the party has yet to present a list of demands to Republicans, who remain largely united against a shutdown, though some have voiced dismay over the events in Minnesota.

Reforms floated by Democrats include requiring judicial warrants for immigration arrests, doing away with the Trump administration’s detention quotas, and mandating that federal agents unmask themselves and wear identification.

Other proposed measures involve prohibiting border patrol agents from being deployed within the interior of the US and requiring that local and state authorities be involved in use-of-force investigations.

State officials in Minnesota have complained in recent weeks that they have been shut out of the federal investigations into the killings of Good and Pretti.

While Trump has distanced himself from his administration’s comments calling Pretti a “terrorist”, his more conciliatory tone has not extended to Democratic officials.

On Wednesday, he again blamed Democrats for escalating tensions in Minnesota and warned that Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey was “playing with fire” for failing to fall in line with his immigration policies.

Top Democrats, in turn, have dismissed any promises for reform not codified in law.

“If the government shuts down yet again, it will be because congressional Republicans refuse to place guardrails on this reckless president and the ICE agency,” Senator Dick Durbin said during a floor speech on Wednesday.

French ISIL suspects transferred from Syria allege torture in Iraqi prisons

Lawyers for a group of French nationals accused of being part of ISIL (ISIS) and transferred by the United States from Syria to prisons in Iraq say the inmates have been subjected to “torture and inhumane treatment” there.

French media reported on Wednesday that lawyers Marie Dose and Matthieu Bagard visited the accused men in Baghdad during a recent visit and said their clients had been subjected to ill-treatment in detention in Iraq.

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The abuse – including being slapped, strangled, handcuffed behind their backs “with a pulley system” and threatened with rape with iron bars – was inflicted to “make them confess to their presence in Iraq” during their alleged time in ISIL, which would give the Iraqi justice system jurisdiction to try them for their alleged crimes, the lawyers said.

The lawyers were quoted as saying the accused ISIL members “assured us that they had not been in Iraq before their arrest in Syria and their transfer to Baghdad”.

Deaths in Syrian custody

During their two-day visit, which began on Sunday, the lawyers, acting on behalf of the families of the prisoners, said they met 13 of the 47 French nationals alleged to be ISIL members who are being held in Iraq.

The 13 men said they were arrested from 2017 to March 23, 2019, the day ISIL lost control of Baghouz, Syria, ending its final hold on territory.

They said they were imprisoned in a jail in northeastern Syria under challenging conditions, in which four French inmates died due to illness and “severe deficiencies”, and they were interrogated on numerous occasions by the FBI, CIA and other agencies believed to represent France and the European Union.

US military transfers

The lawyers made the comments amid the transfer of large numbers of ISIL detainees from prisons and detention camps in Syria to Iraq on US military flights.

The wave of transfers was being carried out after a recent advance by Syrian government forces in the northeast against the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), which the US trained and supported to fight ISIL. The SDF has controlled camps and prisons holding suspected ISIL members for years.

The escape of ISIL detainees during the fighting in cities like al-Shaddadi sparked concerns that they could regroup and pose a renewed security threat, prompting an arrangement for the US military to run flights transferring the prisoners to Iraqi jails.

The Associated Press news agency reported on Sunday that 275 prisoners had been transferred so far while the Anadolu Agency reported that thousands were planned to be transferred under the agreement.

Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani on Sunday said the transfer of the ISIL detainees was “temporary” and urged countries to repatriate their nationals.

Boss Mitchell extends England contract as Scarratt joins coaching staff

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John Mitchell will continue as Red Roses head coach through to the next Women’s Rugby World Cup in 2029.

Mitchell led England’s women to their first World Cup win in 11 years with victory on home soil in 2025.

“I am pleased to extend my time with the Red Roses,” he said. “This extension provides continuity across a World Cup cycle and enables the programme to operate with a clear, long-term vision.

“The past three years have been both challenging and rewarding, delivering success at the highest level… and a culture that wins.

“This emerging group has the opportunity to continue leading our game globally.”

In addition, having announced her playing retirement last year, England’s record points-scorer Emily Scarratt joins the coaching set-up as “lead attack and backs coach”.

Former England attack coach Lou Meadows will be leaving.

The addition of Scarratt will likely be popular with the England players, but Scarratt has not been given the job permanently yet.

The England announcement said Mitchell will be “head of attack” in the 2026 Six Nations, indicating this is a trial period for Scarratt, who will also continue with her role as assistant coach at PWR side Loughborough Lightening.

Building a dynasty

Emily ScarrattGetty Images

Mitchell’s reappointment was expected after a successful tenure at England coach that delivered their previously elusive World Cup win, after years of increasing investment from the RFU compared to other nations.

The New Zealander stressed that the Red Roses will be pushing on from the 2025 World Cup win.

“There is a strong sense of unfinished opportunities within the group,” Mitchell explained, “and that will shape our preparation, training approach, and ongoing drive to raise our floor as we build our hunger in dynasty.”

The 61year-old confirmed his interest in the British and Irish Lions Women’s head coach role last year.

If he is successful in securing the role it would be an opportunity for an existing member of the current England coaching group to step up as England head coach while he was on a saabatical.

Sarah Hunter will continue as England defence coach and Louis Deacon as forwards coach.

Meadows’ exit could be a means of freshening up the voices in England camp or a way of getting Scarratt on the coaching ticket

Meadows was a surprise appointment when she was named attack coach in 2023 and helped England evolve away from being a side that relied on its forwards and set-piece for results.

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