We will end our live coverage here

This is it for our live coverage for today. We will continue to bring you updates in other stories until tomorrow.

We are currently waiting for more information on alleged raids by the Israeli army in the Jenin refugee camp in the West Bank where the international president of Doctors Without Borders says it has blocked a hospital.

We are also expecting a sixth group of hostages and prisoners to be released from Gaza and Israeli prisons.

IDF repeats calls for Gazans not to return to the north

The Israeli military continues to warn against Palestinians returning to northern Gaza during the truce, saying it is a place of "war and fighting".

In a video message posted to Twitter (currently X), the IDF's Arabic spokesman Avichay Adraee speaks directly to Palestinians in Gaza, telling them the IDF will now allow any movement from the south to the north, but encourages movement in the other direction.

He also says they are forbidden from entering the sea or from coming within one kilometre of the fence line with Israel.

"Abide by these instructions for your safety and your loved one's safety," he says.

It has previously posted this picture telling people to use the route shaded in yellow to head to the south and to the humanitarian area shaded in orange.

This is a rough outline of what a one kilometre buffer area along the permitter of Gaza looks like.

For a look at how big Gaza is, read our story here:

'We will get you out': Families and friends of remaining Israeli hostages plea for release

Reporting by Bridget McArthur

The sister of a 16-year-old boy currently being held hostage by Hamas says her mother's last words to him were a promise: "we will get you out."

"[My brother] Amit was already in the car. He was not looking at her. He was looking straight. He was trying to be calm in his reaction to calm her," 18-year-old Mika Shani said.

Mika was one of dozens of friends and families of murdered and captured Israelis who shared their experiences in Victorian parliament today, surrounded by the cardboard silhouettes of their loved ones missing and dead — part of an installation by the 'Bring Them Home Now' campaign group.

They called for all remaining hostages to be released, and for more information.

"A lot of people are asking me if there are any updates on Noa," said Amit Parpara, a friend of Noa Argamani, who was kidnapped by Hamas while she was at a music festival on October 7.

"If they're dead or alive, if they need medical care, even if they're living safe, we need this information. Without it we're dying ourselves."

Mika said she was worried Amit would have no home to return to when he was freed, as most of the houses in her kibbutz were burnt, including her own.

But for some the hope of a return has been quashed. Elad Levy's 19-year-old niece Roni Eshel was listed as missing for 34 days, presumed kidnapped, before it was revealed he'd been murdered by Hamas on October 7.

Tali Kizhner's 22-year-old son Segev Kizhner was also murdered. She told those at parliament that she must now focus on raising her remaining two children, and hopes they can live "in peace and have a long and happy life."

Several politicians took turns to stand by the friends and family members, and their loved ones in absentia, to demonstrate their support — both for them individually, and for Israel.

"We will not forget them and we will continue to stand with you side by side," said Victorian opposition leader John Pesutto. "You are not alone."

Labor delegation calls on federal MPs to advocate for ceasefire

By political reporter Chantelle Al-Khouri

A community delegation of Western Sydney Labor Party members today met with several federal Labor ministers and MPs in Canberra, calling for "immediate, permanent and just ceasefire" in Gaza.

The government has previously called for "steps" towards a ceasefire, but Labor's Auburn-Lidcombe branch vice president Dr Mohamad Assoum said that language would not assist the "deteriorating humanitarian condition" in Gaza and the West Bank.

Dr Assoum — who is also an infectious diseases epidemiologist — said Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's language surrounding the conflict had been disappointing.

"It is disappointing to see the change in his rhetoric, because he had a history of standing for human rights, he had a history of standing against apartheid, against human suffering and yet what we're hearing from him at the moment is something very different," Dr Assoum said.

"We have doctors operating without anaesthetic, children having to have their limbs amputated because of the utter deterioration of the humanitarian condition in Gaza. International law is very clear, the Geneva Conventions is very clear. The UN is very clear, the WHO are very clear: we need an immediate and permanent ceasefire."

The group also warned that many communities in Western Sydney had become disillusioned with Australia's political system because of the political response.

The president of Palestinian Christians in Australia, Suzan Wahhab – who led the delegation – said politicians and Australians could not stay silent.

"We are seeing the dispossession of 1.7 million Palestinians right now in Gaza. That is double the number of Palestinians who were dispossessed in 1948 and many of them are the grandkids of those people that were dispossessed in '48… for us, we have been traumatised," Ms Wahhab said.

Fadi Quran helps prepare Palestinian children in case they're arrested by Israel

Fadi Quran, a campaign director at Avaaz and a policy analyst at independent transnational Palestinian think-tank Al-Shabaka, tells RN Breakfast it's extremely common for people to be held without charge under administrative detention by the Israeli military.

"Currently, there are over 2,000 Palestinians who are held under administrative detention," he says.

"You are arrested and there's no trial, you don't even know what the case against you is. The Israeli military just says it's secret evidence. And they can hold you for six months and they can keep renewing it indefinitely.

"And this is one of the systematic policies used by the Israeli military to intimidate and subjugate Palestinians."

Israel has previously denied arresting people without reason.

Quran leads a program helping prepare Palestinian children for the possibility of being arrested by the Israeli military.

He says they are told how to take deep breaths, to cover their faces and bodies if they are beaten, and remember they have the right to remain silent and can request access to a lawyer.

Quran also spoke about his own arrest and the arrest of a 13-year-old child by the Israeli military in 2012, after he led a protest on the West Bank to open a road that had been shut down by the Israeli military.

"I was taken and beaten by the Israeli military. On their way to driving me to their military outpost, they suddenly stopped. And I had pepper spray in my eyes, and I was handcuffed, but all I hear is this child crying and screaming – and they throw the child in the car on top of me and drive off," he says.

"And so I asked this 13-year-old kid, 'What happened? Are you OK?' And he's crying and saying, 'I'm on my way to my sister's house, I was going there to have lunch, I don't know why they took me.'"

168 Palestinians detained in West Bank during truce: Palestinian Prisoner's Society

The Palestinian Prisoner's Society, a semi-official non-governmental organisation that works to help those in Israeli jails, says 168 Palestinians have been arrested in the West Bank during the first five days of the truce.

It said the total number of arrests in the West bank since October 7 had risen to more than 3,290 Palestinians, including 125 women and 145 minors.

It also said 41 journalists were arrested with 29 remaining under arrest in that period with 1661 orders of administrative detention being issued and at least six detainees dying in jail.

It noted in its statement that these numbers include people who were arrested even if they were later released.

The number of Palestinians released under the truce reached 180 after 30 were released on Tuesday. The society said half were women and the remainder were teenage males.

The Palestinian militant group Hamas and allied group Islamic Jihad freed 12 hostages on Tuesday, bringing the total released since the truce began on Friday to 81. Those have been mostly Israeli women and children along with foreign citizens.

The hostages — 10 Israeli women and two Thai citizens — were aged 17 to 84 and included a mother-daughter pair. All were given initial medical checks then moved to Israeli hospitals where they were to meet their families.

ABC/Reuters

Talks for longer ceasefire and preparations for more hostage swaps underway

Hamas and Israel are expected to release more hostages and prisoners on Wednesday, the last day of a prolonged six-day truce, as attention focuses on whether mediator Qatar could negotiate another extension.

Israeli media, citing the prime minister's office, reported that Israel received a list of hostages expected to be released by Hamas on Wednesday. The prime minister's office had no immediate comment.

Israel has said the truce could be prolonged further, provided Hamas continues to free at least 10 Israeli hostages a day. But with fewer women and children still in captivity, keeping the guns quiet beyond Wednesday may require negotiating to free at least some Israeli men for the first time.

Qatar, which mediated indirect talks between Hamas and Israel that resulted in the ceasefire, on Tuesday hosted the spy chiefs from Israel's Mossad and the United States' CIA.

The officials discussed possible parameters of a new phase of the truce deal including Hamas releasing hostages who are men or military personnel, not just women and children, a source briefed on the matter said. They also considered what might be needed to reach a ceasefire lasting more than a handful of days.

Qatar spoke to Hamas before the meeting to get a sense of what the group might agree to. The Israelis and Hamas are now internally discussing the ideas explored at the meeting, the source added.

Reuters

Displaced families salvage what they can from destroyed homes in Gaza

Displaced Palestinian families in Gaza used a pause in fighting on Tuesday to search for belongings they left behind, with some scouring through rubble where their homes once stood.

While the temporary ceasefire has stopped the Israeli air strikes, homeless families in Johor al-Deek in central Gaza said they were struggling to stay warm.

"Winter has come, and I have nothing for them to wear," said Hanan Tayeh as she searched for belongings buried under her flattened home. "It is cold, we are homeless."

There are about 1.8 million people displaced in Gaza, about three quarters of the besieged territory's population, according to the UN humanitarian agency.

Over the past two weeks the weather has turned, with rain and cold winds sweeping across the territory. Some areas have been affected by flooding.

"There is no home, as if it was erased from the map," said Yaser Felfel. "I have six children, we are eight members, where do we go?"

AP

New satellite photos show destruction in Gaza, as aid trucks wait to enter
Reports of 'armed clashes' around the West Bank's Jenin refugee camp

Earlier I brought you comments from Doctors Without Borders, which has accused the Israeli military of blocking a hospital inside the West Bank's Jenin refugee camp.

Al Jazeera is now reporting that "armed clashes" are taking place in the area, leaving some people injured.

We'll bring you any confirmed details as they come through.