The Gaza twins whose whole lives have been war

Displaced Palestinian mother Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq holds her twin sons Uday and Hamza Abu Odah at their tent where they shelter, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 18, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 06 October 2025
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The Gaza twins whose whole lives have been war

  • Since they were born on November 2, 2023, the twins have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street

GAZA: Palestinian twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah have known nothing but war since they were born in Gaza, less than a month after the conflict began on October 7, 2023.
Their lives have been defined and encompassed by Israel’s devastating military offensive, launched in response to the deadly attack on southern Israel by the Palestinian militant group Hamas two years ago.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has embraced a plan by US President Donald Trump for Gaza and Hamas has partially accepted it, but there is no certainty over when or whether the plan will end the fighting.

MOTHER’S DREAMS OF A BETTER FUTURE
Since they were born on November 2, 2023, the twins have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street.
Their father was killed seeking aid, and two brothers were wounded.
They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment.
They now live in a crowded beach encampment to a background of almost constant crying by the people around them, the shouting of street vendors, the menacing buzz of warplanes and the crackle of gunfire in the distance.
Their mother Iman wants a different future for them: peace, food, a home and schooling.
The boys are already traumatized and slow to develop. She fears that if Israel’s assault goes on, they – and the new generation of Gazans – will be ever more scarred.
“We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end,” she said.

JOY AND SORROW
The family fled their home near front lines at the start of the war and sought shelter in a crowded school. There was little fuel, and when Iman went into labor she had to walk to the hospital. The maternity wing was crammed with the wounded.
Gunfire, funeral processions and wailing from the nearby morgue mingled with the cries of newborn babies, recalled Mohammed Salem, a Reuters photographer working there that day.
“The feeling among the doctors and the patients in the ward was strange, an emotional mix of joy and sorrow,” he said.
Iman gave birth soon after arriving, her twins each weighing 3 kg (6.6 lb).
Israel had cut off all supplies into Gaza at the start of the war, and there were shortages of baby formula and other necessities such as diapers. It allowed some aid to start flowing into Gaza again weeks into the war, but aid agencies said only a fraction of what was needed came in.
“I’d go around the maternity ward to the women lying there and I’d say ‘Which of you girls has extra milk?’,” Iman said, hoping to find breastfeeding women who could donate some milk powder.
With few beds available, she had to walk back to the shelter — nearly a kilometer away — with her babies the same day, she said.

GAZA HAS BEEN DEVASTATED DURING THE WAR
The war, the latest and bloodiest episode in decades of conflict, began when Hamas gunmen burst through defenses on October 7, 2023, killing 1,200 people and seizing about 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.
By the day of the twins’ birth on November 2, 2023, more than 9,000 people had already been killed in Gaza, local health authorities said that day.
Israel’s military response, with the declared goal of destroying Hamas, has now lasted two years, and killed more than 67,000 Palestinians, according to local health authorities.
Nearly all residents of Gaza, a narrow, densely populated strip of land on the Mediterranean Sea, have been driven from their homes and cities have been levelled in what critics of Israel call indiscriminate attacks.
Israel says it tries to avoid killing civilians, but that Hamas hides among the civilian population and the military strikes the group wherever it emerges. Hamas denies hiding among civilians.

TWINS’ FLIGHT TO SAFETY DURING A BOMBARDMENT
During the twins’ first winter, Israeli military operations focused on Nasser Hospital near the school where the family was sheltering.
The area was surrounded, and they fled through a heavy bombardment, ending up at Mawasi, a beach area that was declared a safe zone.
Winter was hard in a tent, with temperatures dropping to a few degrees above freezing at night. There was no sewage system and little clean water nearby, and the children suffered from diarrhea.
With no diapers available, Iman cut strips of cloth that could be cleaned and reused, and attached them to plastic bags. Even so, the babies developed sores and rashes.
As 2024 progressed, it became harder to find food. The twins’ father, Ayman, was killed by Israeli forces while out buying vegetables on July 27 of that year, Iman said.
“We were hungry. There was nothing at all. When he went outside, shrapnel hit his neck and he was martyred immediately. What was his fault? He was going to get food for his children,” she said.

POOR HEALTH, SLOW DEVELOPMENT
When a truce was declared in January, Iman and the children returned to the damaged family home. Their respite was short-lived, and Israel imposed a total blockade and resumed military operations in March.
They had to flee again. Without a tent, they lived on the street next to Nasser Hospital for several weeks before they moved back to Mawasi to discover that their home had been destroyed.
Iman was not eating enough to sustain the twins with her own breastmilk and could find no formula. She made tea from herbs and dunked bread in it to feed them. Hungry and frightened, they mumbled in their sleep or woke at night, crying, she said.
Uday and Hamza were expected to start walking by May, when they turned 18 months, but while Uday started taking a few steps, Hamza was still only crawling. A doctor told Iman they had calcium deficiency, which was delaying their development.
In August, the world hunger monitor, the IPC, determined there was famine in Gaza. Israel rejected its findings.

LIFE IN THE CAMP
Now nearly two, the twins still barely walk and can speak only a few words including “mama” and the names of their siblings, Iman said.
Their eldest sister Hala, 20, spends most of the time with them — playing, helping them walk, feeding them and putting them to bed. When Iman bathes them, she uses the same bucket that she washes clothes in, the water brought across the camp in heavy plastic containers.
There is constant noise in the camp. There is also the odour of the sewage pit each family digs next to its tent and the smell of smoke from clay ovens as women bake small loaves of flat bread.
Those loaves, sometimes with a pan of vegetables, rice, pasta or lentils, are all the family has to eat.
The boys love going to the beach with their mother or siblings and sitting in the waves.
“I wish for the twins... I wish for them a happy life during this war. God willing, God will stop the war and our life will become better,” she said.


Netanyahu says Israel and Hamas will enter ceasefire’s second phase soon

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Netanyahu says Israel and Hamas will enter ceasefire’s second phase soon

  • Says the second phase addresses the disarming of Hamas and withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza
  • Second stage also includes the deployment of an international force to secure Gaza and forming a temporary Palestinian government

TEL AVIV, Israel: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday that Israel and Hamas are “very shortly expected to move into the second phase of the ceasefire,” after Hamas returns the remains of the last hostage held in Gaza.
Netanyahu spoke during a news conference with visiting German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and stressed that the second phase, which addresses the disarming of Hamas and the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza, could begin as soon as the end of the month.
Hamas has yet to hand over the remains of Ran Gvili, a 24-year-old police officer who was killed in the Hamas-led Oct. 7, 2023, attack that sparked the war. His body was taken to Gaza.
The ceasefire’s second stage also includes the deployment of an international force to secure Gaza and forming a temporary Palestinian government to run day-to-day affairs under the supervision of an international board led by US President Donald Trump.
A senior Hamas official on Sunday told The Associated Press the group is ready to discuss “freezing or storing or laying down” its weapons as part of the ceasefire in a possible approach to one of the most difficult issues ahead.

Netanyahu says second phase will be challenging
Netanyahu said few people believed the ceasefire’s first stage could be achieved, and the second phase is just as challenging.
“As I mentioned to the chancellor, there’s a third phase, and that is to deradicalize Gaza, something that also people believed was impossible. But it was done in Germany, it was done in Japan, it was done in the Gulf States. It can be done in Gaza, too, but of course Hamas has to be dismantled,” he said.
The return of Gvili’s remains — and Israel’s return of 15 bodies of Palestinians in exchange — would complete the first phase of Trump’s 20-point ceasefire plan.
Hamas says it has not been able to reach all remains because they are buried under rubble left by Israel’s two-year offensive in Gaza. Israel has accused the militants of stalling and threatened to resume military operations or withhold humanitarian aid if all remains are not returned.
A group of families of hostages said in a statement that “we cannot advance to the next phase before Ran Gvili returns home.”
Meanwhile, Israeli military Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir on Sunday called the so-called Yellow Line that divides the Israeli-controlled majority of Gaza from the rest of the territory a “new border.”
“We have operational control over extensive parts of the Gaza Strip and we will remain on those defense lines,” Zamir said. “The Yellow Line is a new border line, serving as a forward defensive line for our communities and a line of operational activity.”
Germany says support for Israel is unchanged
Merz said Germany, one of Israel’s closest allies, is assisting with the implementation of the second phase by sending officers and diplomats to a US-led civilian and military coordination center in southern Israel, and by sending humanitarian aid to Gaza.
The chancellor also said Germany still believes that a two-state-solution is the best possible option but that “the German federal government remains of the opinion that recognition of a Palestinian state can only come at the end of such a process, not at the beginning.”
The US-drafted plan for Gaza leaves the door open to Palestinian independence. Netanyahu has long asserted that creating a Palestinian state would reward Hamas and eventually lead to an even larger Hamas-run state on Israel’s borders.
Netanyahu also said that while he would like to visit Germany, he hasn’t planned a diplomatic trip because he is concerned about an arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court, the UN’s top war crimes court, last year in connection with the war in Gaza.
Merz said there are currently no plans for a visit but he may invite Netanyahu in the future. He added that he is not aware of future sanctions against Israel from the European Union nor any plans to renew German bans on military exports to Israel.
Germany had a temporary ban on exporting military equipment to Israel, which was lifted after the ceasefire began on Oct. 10.
Israel kills militant in Gaza
The Israeli military said it killed a militant who approached its troops across the Yellow Line.
Gaza’s Health Ministry says Israeli forces have killed more than 370 Palestinians since the start of the ceasefire, and that the bodies of six people killed in attacks had been brought to local hospitals over the past 24 hours.
In the original Hamas-led attack in 2023, the militants killed around 1,200 people and took more than 250 others hostage. Almost all the hostages or their remains have been returned in ceasefires or other deals.
Israel’s offensive in Gaza has killed at least 70,360 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which operates under the Hamas-run government. The ministry does not differentiate between civilians and combatants, but says that nearly half the dead have been women and children. The ministry is part of Gaza’s Hamas government and its numbers are considered reliable by the UN and other international bodies.