News
Israeli Reportedly Killed 80 In Gaza Few Hours After Ceasefire Deal
The health ministry in Gaza says dozens of Palestinians have been killed by Israeli strikes ahead of a ceasefire deal between Hamas and Israel.
Meanwhile, Israel has accused Hamas of backtracking on the agreement, with a planned cabinet vote on the deal pushed back.
Hamas says it is committed to a deal, but the BBC’s Rushdi Abualouf hears the group is attempting a last-minute push for the release of one or two symbolic prisoners from its movement.
One attack on a house near the Engineers Union Building in Gaza City in the north of the Gaza Strip on Wednesday night killed at least 18 people, Al Jazeera Arabic’s correspondent reported.
The Palestinian Civil Defence also said it retrieved the bodies of 12 people from Gaza City’s Sheikh Radwan neighbourhood.
In central Gaza, five people were killed in an Israeli drone strike that targeted a gathering of people in the Karaj area in the Bureij camp.
The death toll, which was counted from dawn on Wednesday, continued to rise as Palestinians returned to shelter in their tents after briefly celebrating news of a ceasefire deal that was reached between Israel and Hamas on Wednesday evening.
“For a couple of hours, people turned this whole area into a stage of celebration, something we are not used to seeing here as this area used to be a stage for funerals for the victims of the war and a space filled with agony and sadness,” said Al Jazeera’s Hani Mahmoud, reporting from Deir el-Balah in central Gaza.
But the ceasefire does not start until Sunday and people in Gaza fear worse is to come before the Israeli bombing stops, Mahmoud said.
“We are expecting a surge in attacks by drones and heavy artillery, and that’s what caused people to end the celebrations after two hours,” he said.
Al Jazeera’s Anas al-Sharif, reporting from Gaza City, said intense Israeli attacks there had “extinguished” the joy people felt at the initial announcement of the ceasefire.
“Just hours ago there was an atmosphere of joy and relief among residents here when the ceasefire announcement was made from Doha, stating that it would take effect in the coming days,” al-Sharif said.
“However, immediately after the announcement, Israeli warplanes extinguished that joy for the people – striking hospitals, shelters, and homes with direct air strikes.”
Both Israel and Hamas have publicly acknowledged a ceasefire and captive exchange deal has been reached, although Israel has said some final details are still to be hashed out before the agreement is sealed.
In a statement, the office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he had spoken with Israel’s negotiating team in Doha at dawn on Thursday, who briefed him on disagreements with Hamas related to which Palestinian prisoners will be released in exchange for captives during the first phase of the deal.
As of January 1, 2025, there are at least 10, 221 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, excluding the unknown numbers of Palestinians taken from Gaza and detained by the military, including Dr Hussam Abu Safia, the director of north Gaza’s Kamal Adwan Hospital, which was destroyed by Israeli forces.
Izzat al-Risheq, a member of Hamas’s political bureau, earlier said the ceasefire deal met all of the Palestinian group’s conditions including the full withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza, the return of displaced people to their homes, and a permanent end to war in the enclave.
The exact time the ceasefire is due to start on Sunday is not yet known, though the entire process will be implemented in three phases.
Recall that Hamas attacked southern Israel on 7 October 2023, killing about 1,200 people and taking 251 back to Gaza as hostages
The attack triggered a massive Israeli offensive on Gaza, during which more than 46,000 Palestinians have been killed, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.
News
Presidency mocks Atiku over 2027 ambition, calls him serial loser, advises Obi to leave ADC
The Presidency has dismissed ex- Vice President Atiku Abubakar over his renewed declaration to contest the 2027 presidential election, describing his ambition as a recurring political miscalculation that will end in defeat.
Recall that Atiku, in a recent interview with said the 2027 general election would mark his final attempt at the presidency.
However, the Presidency, speaking through the Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, ridiculed the former vice president’s chances, insisting he was likely to “repeat history” and suffer another electoral loss.
Reacting through the Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, the Presidency argued that Atiku’s political trajectory shows a pattern that has repeatedly ended in defeat.
“This Atiku will never learn,” Onanuga said.
He further accused the former vice president of attempting to undermine the informal zoning and rotation understanding between Nigeria’s North and South, which has long influenced presidential politics.
Once again, Abubakar Atiku has put forward a self-serving argument to justify his attempt to disrupt Nigeria’s power rotation arrangement,” Onanuga stated. “In 2023, as a member of the PDP, a party that, like others, practices zoning, Atiku disregarded the established formula and sought to succeed a fellow northerner who had spent eight years in office. His ambition fractured the PDP, leading to his resounding defeat at the polls.”
The Presidency also predicted another electoral loss should Atiku proceed with his 2027 ambition.
“Now, he stands poised to repeat history and face another doom. Another spectacular failure awaits this perennial candidate in the next election,” he added.
Onanuga also referenced Atiku’s recent interview, where the former vice president reiterated his stance on North-South rotation, insisting that the South has held power for longer periods since 1999.
According to him, Atiku’s argument ignored key historical context, particularly the circumstances surrounding the transition following the death of former President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, which led to former President Goodluck Jonathan completing the tenure.
“He conveniently overlooks the fact that the North’s shorter tenure was due to the untimely death of President Umaru Yar’Adua, which led to President Jonathan’s succession,” Onanuga said. “This accidental breach does not invalidate the power rotation arrangement between the North and the South.”
Reaffirming the Presidency’s position on zoning, he maintained that the South should retain the presidency through 2027.
Since Buhari completed his eight years, Tinubu too must complete his own. All Atiku needs to do is to bury the thought of running again, as it is still the South’s turn in the 2027 election,” he concluded.
Onanuga also made a remark directed at Labour Party’s 2023 presidential candidate, Peter Obi, suggesting he distance himself from speculation linking him to a possible coalition arrangement involving the African Democratic Congress (ADC), following Atiku’s renewed political positioning.
News
BBC to fire 2,000 workers to make £500m savings
The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) has announced plans to reduce its workforce by up to 2,000 roles as it moves to address mounting financial challenges.
The broadcaster said it must cut costs by £500 million within the next two years.
Interim Director-General Rhodri Talfan Davies acknowledged that the planned job losses would be difficult for employees but stressed the need to act quickly to stabilise the organisation’s finances.
Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Media Show, Davies said the broadcaster would spend the coming months determining how to implement the reductions without undermining essential radio, television and online services relied upon by audiences.
He added that further details on how the restructuring would affect BBC operations would be released later in the year.
Speaking on the announcement, the head of the broadcasting union Bectu, Philippa Childs warned that job losses on such a scale would have serious consequences for both staff and the broadcaster’s future.
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The BBC currently employs around 21,500 full-time equivalent staff.
In an email to staff on Wednesday, April 15, 2026, Davies explained that the organisation is grappling with widening financial gaps due to rising production costs, pressure on licence fee revenue, reduced commercial income and ongoing global economic uncertainty.
Meanwhile, the UK Culture Secretary, Lisa Nandy, said the BBC, like other institutions, must make tough financial decisions.
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She noted that the broadcaster’s leadership was also exploring commercial opportunities and alternative revenue streams to strengthen its finances.
The restructuring announcement comes ahead of the arrival of incoming Director-General Matt Brittin, a former Google executive, who is set to officially replace departing chief Tim Davie on May 18.
News
PDP approved appointment of Wike as minister – APC
The National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Nentawe Yilwatda, has said that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) approved the appointment of Nyesom Wike as a minister in the administration of Bola Tinubu.
Yilwatda made the disclosure on Wednesday during a media chat in Abuja while responding to questions on Wike’s continued membership of the PDP despite serving in an APC-led government.
The APC chairman said Wike’s appointment was not unusual, citing precedents where past administrations appointed opposition figures into key government positions.
He referenced the appointments of Bala Mohammed and Adamu Aliero, who served as ministers of the Federal Capital Territory under previous PDP administrations despite belonging to other parties.
“President Jonathan discovered Bala Mohammed was good enough and brought him from ANPP,” he said.
“Aliero was also appointed by President Yar’Adua from ANPP because of his experience.”
Yilwatda argued that the backlash against Tinubu over Wike’s appointment was unjustified.
“What’s wrong if President Tinubu is doing what two former presidents have done and nobody condemned them?” he asked.
He also pointed to other opposition figures serving in the current administration, including Bianca Ojukwu, noting that criticism appears to be disproportionately focused on Wike.
According to the APC chairman, Wike formally wrote to the PDP’s National Working Committee in 2023 seeking permission to accept the ministerial role.
He said the party granted approval for Wike to serve in the APC-led government.
“Wike wrote the national working committee of PDP before he took the appointment,” Yilwatda said.
“The national working committee of PDP approved that he should come and serve with us.”
Yilwatda maintained that Wike’s role in the Tinubu administration is backed by the PDP, not the APC.
“He is serving with us with the approval of the national working committee of PDP,” he said.
“So, it was PDP that approved that Wike should work with the APC.”
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