Red Cross vehicles in Khan Younis ahead of hostages and prisoners swap
Red Cross vehicles were seen in Khan Younis and are expected to pick up Palestinian prisoners that the Israelis will release Monday morning.

A ceasefire between Israel and Hamas went into effect on Friday.
President Donald Trump announced Wednesday that both Israel and Hamas had "signed off" on the first phase of a peace plan in Gaza following negotiations in the Egyptian Red Sea city of Sharm el-Sheikh. A ceasefire then came into effect on Friday.
Phase one of the deal will see all remaining hostages returned from Gaza, a number of Palestinian prisoners released from Israeli jails and the partial withdrawal of the Israel Defense Forces inside the strip.
Red Cross vehicles were seen in Khan Younis and are expected to pick up Palestinian prisoners that the Israelis will release Monday morning.

Hamas published a list of the 20 living Israeli hostages set to be released around 7 a.m. local time, Monday morning.
The names are:
In his nationally televised address Sunday night, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu said he and his wife "met many times with the families of the kidnapped. We saw their pain, their longing, their tears."
"These meetings accompanied me in every decision I made during the war," Netanyahu said. "We hugged the families, and I promised them: 'I will not rest until I bring back your loved ones.'"
"Tomorrow is the beginning of a new path," Netanyahu added, in part. "A path of construction, a path of healing and, I hope, a path of uniting hearts.
In a televised address on the eve of the anticipated release of Israeli hostages held by Hamas, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu Sunday night said it was "an evening of tears, an evening of joy, because tomorrow, sons will return to their borders."
Netanyahu called the release "a historic event that is tinged with sadness over the release of murderers, and joy over the return of kidnapped people."
"I know that there are many differences among us. But on this day, and I hope that also in the period that is coming, we have every reason to put them aside," he further said.
While saying that Israel had achieved "victories that have astonished the entire world," Netanyahu added "the campaign is not over. There are still very big security challenges ahead of us," including the possibility of future attacks.