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Trump warns Hamas to disarm or be disarmed as fragile ceasefire is tested

Michael Koziol

Updated ,first published

Washington: US President Donald Trump has warned Hamas to disarm or be disarmed – “quickly and perhaps violently” – as its fighters executed a group of men in Gaza City and Israel accused the terrorist group of violating the ceasefire agreement, including by delivering a body discovered not to be a hostage.

A grisly video of the incident, verified by Reuters, came as Hamas released a further four bodies on Tuesday (Israel time), and said another four would be released on Wednesday, prompting Israel to cancel a threat to reduce the flow of aid into Gaza and keep the crucial Rafah border crossing closed.

A gunman wearing the uniform of the al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas, stands guard as Red Cross vehicles enter a warehouse allegedly to collect coffins containing the bodies of four deceased hostages, in Gaza City.AP

According to The Times of Israel, the bodies of hostages Uriel Baruch, Tamir Nimrodi, and Eitan Levy were among those transferred on Tuesday, but the Israel Defence Forces later said a fourth body handed over to Israel “does not match any of the hostages.”

The ceasefire brokered by Trump and the US has been tested on both sides. Israel has been accused by Gaza’s Hamas-run civil defence agency of killing several Palestinians who were returning to inspect their homes following the truce.

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The Israeli military reportedly killed six people in two incidents in the enclave on Tuesday. According to Agence France-Presse, five people were killed in one incident when Israeli drones opened fire on Palestinians returning to their homes in Gaza City.

Some Arab news outlets, including Al Jazeera, reported that as many as nine Palestinians had been killed in total, despite the ceasefire.

Israel’s military said it opened fire to remove a threat posed by “suspects” who approached its forces in the northern Gaza Strip. It said the suspects had crossed the boundary, deemed the Yellow Line, for an initial Israeli pullback.

Despite the incidents, Trump has continued to celebrate the ceasefire deal, which involved Hamas releasing all remaining hostages and Israel releasing nearly 2000 Palestinian prisoners.

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It represented the first phase of a peace plan that Trump says has now moved to phase two, which involves demilitarising Hamas, providing amnesty for those who disarm, and ensuring security in Gaza through an international stabilisation force.

Trump said Hamas had promised him it would disarm – and if it did not, it would be forcibly disarmed, although he declined to explain how.

“They’re going to disarm because they said they were going to disarm, and if they don’t disarm, we will disarm them,” he told reporters in Washington. “They know I’m not playing games.”

US President Donald Trump at the White House on Tuesday.AP
Israeli excavators work in the Gaza Strip as the sun sets on Tuesday.AP
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Asked how that would occur, Trump said: “I don’t have to explain that to you.” But he later added “it’ll happen quickly and perhaps violently”, and said he would give Hamas “a reasonable period of time” before intervening.

Trump was unbothered by reports that Hamas fighters killed upwards of two dozen people who were associated with the Dughmush clan, likening it to the US’s own battle against members of Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua gang.

“[Hamas] did take out a couple of gangs that were very bad ... They killed a number of gang members. That didn’t bother me much, to be honest with you,” he said.

But he was insistent that the terrorist group would voluntarily lay down arms. “I spoke to Hamas and I said, ‘You’re going to disarm, right?’ ‘Yes, sir, we’re going to disarm.’ That’s what they told me.”

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He later clarified he had not spoken directly with Hamas leaders, but that this was communicated to his team. American news outlet Axios revealed special envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner met Hamas’ leadership in Egypt last week.

Trump called for Hamas to return the bodies of the remaining dead hostages, believed to number about 20, but indicated that Hamas may not be in possession of all the remains.

“They misrepresented because we were told they had 26, 24 [bodies] of dead hostages,” he said. “It seems as though they don’t have that.”

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The International Committee of the Red Cross said it would take time to secure the return of the remaining deceased hostages, as finding them in the rubble of Gaza would be a “massive challenge”.

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Hostage bodies returned

On Wednesday (AEDT), the Israel Defence Forces said four coffins of deceased hostages were escorted into Israel by the IDF and Shin Bet and taken to the National Institute for Forensic Medicine for identification.

Three bodies were later named as those of Eitan Levy, 53, Tamir Nimrodi, 19, and Uriel Baruch, 35.

In a statement released by the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, the Nimrodi family said Tamir Nimrodi, an IDF soldier, had been killed by Israeli strikes in captivity, after previously saying he had been “murdered” by Hamas.

The body of Tamir Nimrodi was returned in the latest transfer of hostages.Bring Them Home Now
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Investigators are still to confirm the identity of the fourth person, the Times of Israel reported. Earlier this year, Hamas handed over a body it said was that of hostage Shiri Bibas, but which was later found to be that of a Palestinian woman. Bibas’ actual remains were eventually returned.

The bodies of four hostages released on Monday were identified as Daniel Peretz, 22; Yossi Sharabi, 53; Guy Illouz, 26 and Nepalese national Bipin Joshi, 23.

Palestinians walk through the al-Zahra area in central Gaza on Tuesday as displaced residents return to their homes.AFP

Earlier, the Hostages and Missing Families Forum released a letter it sent to Witkoff asking for US help to secure the release of the remaining bodies.

The group, the main body representing families of the October 7 hostages, urged Witkoff to “pull out every stop and leave no stone unturned” in demanding Hamas honour the full extent of the agreement.

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“What we feared is now happening before our eyes … We cannot rest, and we know you will not rest, until every last hostage is returned,” the letter said.

In a separate social media post, Trump called for the rapid return of more bodies. “A big burden has been lifted, but the job IS NOT DONE. THE DEAD HAVE NOT BEEN RETURNED, AS PROMISED!” he wrote on Truth Social.

Earlier, COGAT, the Israeli military arm responsible for aid flow into Gaza, said it would restrict aid trucks to 300 daily in response to Hamas’ slow release of the deceased hostages, and accused the group of violating the ceasefire agreement.

But the move was cancelled after Hamas returned more bodies, Israel’s Kan public broadcaster reported.

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with Reuters

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Michael KoziolMichael Koziol is the North America correspondent for The Age and Sydney Morning Herald. He is a former Sydney editor, Sun-Herald deputy editor and a federal political reporter in Canberra.Connect via Twitter or email.

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Original URL: https://www.watoday.com.au/world/middle-east/trump-warns-hamas-disarm-or-be-disarmed-quickly-and-perhaps-violently-20251015-p5n2kr.html