US President Joe Biden welcomed a ceasefire in Gaza on Sunday and said hundreds of trucks were entering the seaside enclave to help its civilians.
"Today the guns in Gaza have gone silent," Biden said in brief remarks during a visit to North Charleston, South Carolina. "We anticipate several hundred trucks will enter the Gaza Strip probably just as I am speaking."
Most civilians in the Gaza Strip have been displaced during 15 months of Israeli bombardment aimed at eliminating Hamas who attacked Israel on October 7, 2023.
Sunday was Biden's final full day in office. The outgoing president, a former US senator long involved in foreign policy, said the ceasefire deal was one of the toughest negotiations he has been involved with but defended his decision to back Israel through months of attacks that killed nearly 50,000 Palestinians in Gaza.
"The road to this deal has been not easy at all, it was a long road," Biden said, "but we've reached this point today because of the pressure Israel built on Hamas, backed by the United States."
Biden, who hands over the US presidency to Republican Donald Trump on Monday, said it falls on the next administration to implement the Gaza deal.
Eight people died and seven were injured in a fire at a nursing home outside Belgrade on Monday which authorities said was caused by arson, Serbian state TV RTS reported.
South African police have launched a manhunt for a Lesotho gang member believed to have controlled operations at an illegal gold mine where 78 bodies were recovered last week during a police siege, from which he escaped.
A ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip took effect on Sunday after a nearly three-hour delay, pausing a 15-month-old war that has brought devastation and seismic political change to the Middle East.
At least 86 people were killed and more injured in northern Nigeria on Saturday when a petrol tanker truck overturned, spilling fuel that exploded, the country's national emergency agency said.
Hundreds of supporters of South Korea's arrested president, Yoon Suk Yeol, stormed a court building early on Sunday after his detention was extended, smashing windows and breaking inside, an attack the country's acting leader called "unimaginable".