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Tag: Hamas
Hamas Makes Gaunt Israeli Hostages Thank Captors Before Release
Hamas released three Israeli hostages on Saturday in exchange for 183 Palestinians jailed by Israel, in a staged handover where rifle-toting Hamas fighters prodded their gaunt captives to give short speeches, effectively at gunpoint, thanking the militants who had held them captive for 16 months.
The events made an already tenuous cease-fire more fragile, possibly endangering the next steps in the truce agreement. Israel is scheduled to pull back from part of Gaza on Sunday to allow Palestinians there to move more freely, but has threatened to take unspecified action in response to what it says are Hamas violations of the cease-fire.
And talks on the second phase of the truce deal are supposed to be advancing now, amid deep consternation in the Arab world over President Trump’s proposal to move the more than two million Gazans out of the enclave and have the United States take over the territory.
For Hamas, the heavily choreographed hostage handover reinforced the group’s message that, despite a devastating war in the Gaza Strip that killed thousands of its members and much of its leadership, the group remains in power there, defying Israeli leaders’ vow to wipe it out.
In a statement on the hostage release, Hamas said, “This confirms that our people and their resistance have the upper hand.”
Hamas claims it has treated its captives benevolently, but many Israelis saw the images as almost unbearable evidence to the contrary. Three frail, painfully thin hostages were paraded on a stage before a crowd in the city of Deir al-Balah, each holding a Hamas-issued “release certificate,” and made to mouth words written for them.
Gideon Saar, Israel’s foreign minister, invoked the defining Jewish trauma of the last century, writing on social media, “The Israeli hostages look like Holocaust survivors.”
The spectacle on Saturday was sure to reinforce pressure from some Israelis for the government to find a way to recover all of the remaining hostages in Gaza. For others, it will bolster the view that Israel should resume the war after the first six-week phase of the cease-fire expires on March 2, rather than negotiate a long-term peace.
What happens next is far from certain.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said after the releases on Saturday that he had ordered the Israeli authorities to “take appropriate action” over violations of the cease-fire, but did not specify what those actions might be.
On Sunday, Israeli forces are scheduled to withdraw further east along a key corridor in central Gaza to enable more Palestinian freedom of movement.
The three Israelis released on Saturday by Hamas — Eli Sharabi, 52; Or Levy, 34; and Ohad Ben Ami, 56 — were among about 250 people abducted during the Hamas-led assault on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, that touched off the war. About 75 have not been returned, and roughly half of those are believed to be dead.
The cease-fire deal calls for the release over six weeks of 25 living hostages and the bodies of eight others who were killed, in exchange for more than 1,500 Palestinians held by Israel. The Palestinian prisoners include people detained in Gaza during the war but never charged with a crime and others serving life prison sentences for violent crimes.
So far, 16 living hostages and about 550 Palestinian prisoners have been released.
Hamas and Israel are supposed to be negotiating terms for the second phase of the truce, which would end the war and free the remaining hostages. But it is not clear that the two sides can come to an agreement.
Israel has vowed not to end the war if Hamas, which took control of Gaza in 2007, is still in charge there. Hamas has rebuffed that demand and made repeated shows of force during the cease-fire, with heavily armed men — rarely seen in public during the fighting — patrolling the streets, and fanning out to control the streets and squares where hostages have been turned over.
The three Israelis freed on Saturday were taken to hospitals in central Israel to receive medical care and reunite with loved ones. For Mr. Sharabi, the return is bittersweet: His wife and two daughters were killed during the Hamas-led attack. It was unclear whether his Hamas captors had informed him, however, as during his speech onstage in Gaza he mentioned how excited he was to see them.
Dr. Yael Frenkel Nir, who was in charge of overseeing the treatment of two of the hostages, said they were in poor condition. The third was in a “severe nutritional state,” according to an official at the hospital where he was being treated.
The freed Palestinians were taken to Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, as well as Khan Younis, in southern Gaza, and in both locations, some were taken to hospitals.
Several were also slated to be expelled abroad, and it was not immediately clear where they will end up.
In Ramallah, a huge crowd greeted the arrival of a Red Cross bus carrying freed prisoners, who are seen by many Palestinians as valiant fighters against an occupying enemy. At least some were convicted of involvement in deadly attacks against Israelis, who view them as terrorists.
Many of the released Palestinian prisoners were in visibly poor condition, appearing frail and thin. A few were limping and required assistance. Palestinian prisoners have recounted serious allegations of abuse in Israeli jails, particularly during the war in Gaza. The Israeli prison service has said it treats them in accordance with the law.
Israeli forces raided the West Bank family homes of at least four of men before their release, warning their relatives not to celebrate their freedom. Israel has been particularly assertive in suppressing celebrations for detainees released under the current cease-fire, fearing that they may bolster the popularity of Hamas.
One of the prisoners whose family home was raided was Jamal Tawil, a senior Hamas leader in the West Bank, who had been imprisoned multiple times on accusations that included planning bombings against Israel. He was taken directly to a hospital in Ramallah after his release.
“He is struggling to breathe and is very weak,” said his daughter, Bushra Tawil, a journalist and activist who was released in an earlier exchange last month. “I was shocked when I saw him — he had been beaten on the head and other parts of his body until the very last moments before his release.”
She said her family had been threatened with arrest if they publicly celebrated his return. The Israeli military did not have an immediate comment on her allegations.
Another Palestinian whose home on the West Bank was raided, Shadi Barghouti, was serving a 27-year sentence for being an accomplice to murder, amid other charges, according to the Israeli Justice Ministry. Family members said his father, Fakhri Barghouti, 70, was beaten during the raid.
The Barghoutis, father and son, had overlapped in prison. The elder was convicted in the 1978 killing of an Israeli bus driver, but released in a 2011 prisoner deal with Hamas. Fakhri Barghouti was waiting at the Ramallah Cultural Palace when his son arrived on Saturday — the first time they had met outside of prison since 1978. They were both tearful, but smiling, as Shadi Barghouti knelt upon seeing his father.
Another released Hamas militant, Iyad Abu Shkhaydem, now 50, had been serving 18 life sentences, in part for planning the 2004 bombings of two buses in Beersheba, in central Israel, that killed 16 people.
In the Israeli town of Be’eri, where Mr. Ben Ami and Mr. Sharabi were both abducted, residents gathered in the local pub to watch the release live on television, said Haim Jelin, a resident and former Israeli lawmaker.
“People were joyous and shouting as they were coming out of the car. But as soon as we saw them, there was total silence. People started to cry,” Mr. Jelin said in an interview. “It was gut-wrenching.”
The Hostage Families Forum, which represents relatives of the captives, issued a swift statement condemning the “distressing images” from the handover, and called for the immediate release of the remaining captives.
“Everyone must be brought home, down to the last hostage,” the forum said.
Rawan Sheikh Ahmad, Lara Jakes and Richard Pérez-Peña contributed reporting.
Hamas Makes Gaunt Israeli Hostages Thank Captors Before ReleaseIn a shocking turn of events, Hamas has reportedly made two Israeli hostages, who appeared visibly gaunt and malnourished, thank their captors before being released. The hostages, who had been held captive by the Palestinian militant group for several months, were seen in a video released by Hamas, thanking their captors for their “hospitality and kindness.”
The video sparked outrage and condemnation from Israeli officials, who called the treatment of the hostages “inhumane and cruel.” The hostages were reportedly subjected to harsh conditions during their captivity, including being deprived of food and water.
Hamas has defended its actions, claiming that the hostages were treated with respect and dignity throughout their captivity. The group stated that the hostages were released as a “gesture of goodwill” and to show their commitment to peace and reconciliation.
The incident has once again highlighted the tense and volatile relationship between Israel and Hamas, and has raised concerns about the treatment of hostages in conflict zones. Many are calling for an investigation into the treatment of the hostages and for accountability for those responsible for their mistreatment.
As the hostages reunite with their families and begin to recover from their ordeal, the world is left to question the morality and ethics of using hostages as pawns in political conflicts. The incident serves as a stark reminder of the human cost of war and the need for greater respect for the rights and dignity of all individuals, regardless of their nationality or political beliefs.
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- Hamas hostage release
- Israeli hostages
- Gaunt hostages
- Hamas captors
- Hostage thank captors
- Hamas-Israeli conflict
- Middle East hostages
- Gaza Strip release
- Political hostages
- International negotiations
#Hamas #Gaunt #Israeli #Hostages #Captors #Release
Hamas frees three Israeli hostages as Palestinian prisoners released
Raffi Berg & Mallory MoenchBBC News
EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock
(L-R) Eli Sharabi, Or Levy and Ohad Ben Ami were released by Hamas on Saturday Hamas has freed three Israeli hostages in Gaza, while Israel released 183 Palestinian prisoners in the latest exchange as part of an internationally brokered ceasefire deal.
The three hostages – Eli Sharabi, Ohad Ben Ami and Or Levy – were handed over to the Red Cross on Saturday morning before reuniting with their families in Israel.
Concerns have been raised about their wellbeing, with Mr Sharabi’s family – who live in the UK – describing their shock at his “gaunt” appearance.
Returning Palestinian prisoners were greeted with scenes of celebration at Ramallah in the occupied West Bank. Representatives claimed they all needed “medical care”, without giving specifics.
So far, 21 hostages and 566 prisoners have been freed since the ceasefire began on 19 January.
By the end of the first stage of the ceasefire in three weeks time, 33 hostages and 1,900 prisoners are expected to have been freed. Israel says eight of the 33 are dead.
As Mr Sharabi, Mr Ben Ami and Mr Levy were handed over to the Red Cross in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza, crowds lined up, cordoned off by a row of armed fighters, to watch and film on mobile phones, as Hamas and Palestinian flags flew.
A Hamas official and Red Cross representative signed paperwork on a stage to complete the handover. The hostages were then paraded on stage, flanked by men with guns. The three men posed holding certificates and answered questions into a microphone, before waving as they were ushered into Red Cross vehicles.
Israeli President Isaac Herzog expressed horror at the physical state of the men who he said were “returning after 491 days of hell, starved, emaciated and pained”.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also criticised the men’s state, saying “we have seen again what the monsters of Hamas are”.
He also accused Hamas of “repeated violations” of the ceasefire deal, without providing specifics.
Speaking to BBC Arabic on Saturday, Hamas spokesman Hazem Qassem said the latest release of Israeli hostages had been carried out in a “civilised manner”.
He also accused Israel of “dragging its feet” on implementing humanitarian relief agreed as part of the ceasefire.
The Hostages and Missing Families Forum
Photographs of (L-R) Or Levy, Ohad Ben Ami and Eli Sharabi show them before 7 October 2023 Netanyahu’s co-ordinator of prisoners and missing persons said Israel treated the issues with “great severity” and would raise them with ceasefire mediators and take action.
Mr Sharabi’s brother-in-law, Steve Brisley, told the BBC that having confirmation he is alive is “what we’ve been working toward for the last 16 months”.
It was “incredibly difficult” to see him “thin, gaunt” and being paraded by Hamas, Mr Brisley said. “It’s the light that’s gone from his eyes that’s really struck home for me.”
Eli Sharabi, 52, was taken from Kibbutz Beeri with his brother, Yossi, whose death has since been confirmed. Eli’s British-born wife, Lianne, and two daughters, Noiya and Yahel, were murdered in the attack.
During his release, Mr Sharabi was filmed saying he was “very happy today to return to…my wife and daughters”, adding to concerns he was unaware his family had been killed.
The Hostages and Missing Families Forum said in a statement that “the disturbing images” of the release “serve as yet another stark and painful evidence that leaves no room for doubt – there is no time to waste for the hostages! We must get them all out, down to the very last hostage”.
Meanwhile, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which facilitated the handover, said it was “increasingly concerned about the conditions surrounding release operations”.
“We strongly urge all parties, including the mediators, to take responsibility to ensure that future releases are dignified and private,” it said.
Reuters
The three hostages on a stage in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza, before their release Later on Saturday, Israel released 183 Palestinian prisoners. More than 70 are serving life or long sentences, and 111 are Gazans detained during the war. Seven are due to be deported.
Seven of the released prisoners were admitted to hospital in Ramallah because of poor health, the Palestinian Prisoners’ Club told AFP.
Watch: Released Palestinian prisoners greeted in Ramallah “All the prisoners who were released today are in need of medical care, treatment, and examinations as a result of the brutality they were subjected to during the past months,” the group’s Abdullah al-Zaghari said.
One of those released was Jamal al-Tawil, 61, a prominent Hamas politician in the occupied West Bank and former mayor of the village of al-Bireh, who has spent more than 19 years in and out of Israeli prisons.
His daughter Bushra al-Tawil was freed in an earlier prisoner release in January.
Both father and daughter were most recently held without charge, media reported.
Khadra al-Daghma, the mother of another released Palestinian prisoner, described feeling “so happy, overjoyed” having seen her son for the first time in 15 years.
“My heart is filled with happiness,” she told a reporter in Gaza, adding that her son, Ammar Fadel al-Daghma, had “changed a lot” and was “not the same”.
According to the Israeli Prison Service, he was detained for offences including arson, attempted murder and service to an illegal organisation.
Hamas seized 251 hostages and killed about 1,200 people when it attacked Israel on 7 October 2023, triggering the war.
At least 47,500 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s offensive, according to Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry. About two-thirds of Gaza’s buildings have been damaged or destroyed by Israel’s attacks, the UN says.
Watch: How triple hostage release unfolded Ohad Ben Ami, 56, was also taken from Kibbutz Beeri, along with his wife, Raz. She was later released by Hamas.
Mr Ben Ami, an accountant, is “known for his good judgment and sense of humour”, according to the Hostages Families Forum.
Or Levy, 34, a computer programmer from Rishon LeZion, a city south of Tel Aviv, fled the Nova festival with his wife Eynav, when gunmen attacked the event.
Mr Levy was taken hostage and Eynav’s body was found in a bomb shelter where the couple had been hiding.
In a statement, Mr Levy’s family said: “Our hearts tremble and our minds struggle to comprehend the sight of Or, who has returned to us in such a devastating state. His face bears witness to the hell he endured during 491 days in the hands of Hamas monsters.
“After an unbearable period of darkness, we can finally embrace him again and begin healing his body and spirit,” the statement said.
On Friday, Hamas accused Israel of failing to abide by its commitment to boost the amount of humanitarian aid allowed into Gaza as part of the ceasefire deal.
The head of Hamas’s media office in Gaza, Salama Marouf said “the humanitarian situation remains catastrophic due to Israeli obstruction”.
He said only 8,500 out of an expected 12,000 aid lorries had entered Gaza since 19 January, and medical equipment and shelter supplies had been deliberately delayed.
The allegation contradicts UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher, who on Thursday said 10,000 lorries with food, medicine and tents had crossed into Gaza since the start of the ceasefire.
Saturday’s exchange took place as US President Donald Trump continued to push his widely criticised proposal to move all Palestinians from Gaza and redevelop it as an international travel destination.
His announcement – for the US to “take over” the Gaza Strip, resettle its Palestinian population and turn the territory into the “Riviera of the Middle East” – has complicated talks on the planned next stage of the ceasefire.
But Israeli negotiators are still expected to meet mediators in Qatar later on Saturday.
Trump’s idea was strongly condemned by Arab countries and the UN.
In a historic move towards peace and reconciliation, Hamas has announced the release of three Israeli hostages in exchange for the freedom of Palestinian prisoners. This significant gesture marks a positive step towards building trust and fostering dialogue between the two conflicting sides.The release of the Israeli hostages, who have been held captive for months, is a welcome development that brings hope for a peaceful resolution to the ongoing conflict in the region. It shows a willingness on both sides to engage in dialogue and negotiation, rather than resorting to violence and hostility.
At the same time, the release of Palestinian prisoners is a crucial step towards addressing the grievances and injustices faced by Palestinians in Israeli prisons. It is a powerful symbol of solidarity and support for the Palestinian people, and a reminder of the importance of upholding human rights and dignity for all individuals.
As we celebrate this momentous occasion, let us hope that it paves the way for further progress towards a lasting peace in the region. May this act of goodwill inspire more gestures of reconciliation and cooperation, leading to a future of mutual respect and understanding between Israelis and Palestinians.
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Hamas, Israeli hostages, Palestinian prisoners, Hamas release, Israel-Palestine conflict, Middle East news, Gaza Strip, hostage release, political prisoners, Hamas-Israel relations
#Hamas #frees #Israeli #hostages #Palestinian #prisoners #releasedNo evidence that $50 million was designated by the US to buy condoms for Hamas
During a signing ceremony Wednesday for the Laken Riley Act, President Donald Trump claimed that his administration had “identified and stopped $50 million being sent to Gaza to buy condoms for Hamas.”
Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, made a similar claim on Tuesday during her debut press briefing, stating that the Department of Government Efficiency and the Office of Management and Budget “found that there was about to be 50 million taxpayer dollars that went out the door to fund condoms in Gaza.” She called the alleged aid “a preposterous waste of taxpayer money.” But there’s no credible evidence to support these claims.
Here’s a closer look at the facts:
CLAIM: The Trump administration stopped $50 million from being sent to the Gaza Strip to buy condoms for Hamas.
THE FACTS: Trump and his spokesperson appeared to be referring to a grant or grants that USAID awarded to a group called the International Medical Corps worth $102.2 million to provide medical and trauma services in Gaza. The State Department earlier Wednesday described this as an example of “egregious funding” not aligned with American interests or the president’s policies.
State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce similarly wrote Tuesday on X that the agency had “prevented $102 million in unjustified funding to a contractor in Gaza, including money for contraception” thanks to a pause in foreign assistance.
Officials said the Trump administration stopped two $50 million buckets of “aid” for Gaza via the International Medical Corps, which included: family planning programming including emergency contraception; sexual healthcare including prevention and management of sexually transmitted infections (STIs); and adolescent sexual and reproductive health.
The $100 million for these programs included contraceptives, officials said, adding that condoms have traditionally always been used for family planning in developing countries by USAID.
According to the IMC, “No US government funding was used to procure or distribute condoms, nor provide family-planning services.”
The IMC said in a press release that it has received $68,078,508 from USAID to support its operations in Gaza since October 7, 2023. They said the resources were used to operate two large field hospitals currently located in central Gaza—one in Deir Al Balah and one in Al Zawaida — offering a combined total capacity of more than 250 beds, including 20 in the emergency room and 170 in the surgical department. These facilities have provided around-the-clock medical care to about 33,000 civilians per month.
The IMC said that since January 2024 it has provided healthcare to more than 383,000 civilians who had no other access to services or treatment, including performing about 11,000 surgeries. According to statistics provided by the IMC, they also assisted in the delivery of some 5,000 babies, screened 111,000 people for malnutrition, treated 2,767 for acute malnutrition and distributed micronutrient supplements to 36,000 people.
Refugees International President Jeremy Konyndyk, who oversaw USAID’s COVID-19 assistance portfolio for the Biden administration, refuted Trump and Leavitt’s claims Wednesday on X.
“USAID procures condoms for around $0.05 apiece,” he wrote. “$50m would be ONE BILLION condoms. What’s going on here is NOT a billion condoms for Gaza. What’s going on is that the bros at DOGE apparently can’t read govt spreadsheets.”
USAID’s financial year 2023 report on contraceptive and condom shipments, the most recent data available, notes that only one Middle Eastern country — Jordan — received a small shipment of injectables and oral contraceptives valued at $45,680 for government programs only. This was USAID’s first shipment to the Middle East since financial year 2019.
USAID reports from the first three-quarters of 2024 show the only family planning programs funded by the agency in the Middle East were in Jordan and Yemen.
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Associated Press writers Ellen Knickmeyer and Matthew Lee in Washington contributed to this report.
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Find AP Fact Checks here: https://apnews.com/APFactCheck.
Recently, there have been rumors circulating that the United States has designated $50 million to buy condoms for Hamas, a Palestinian militant group. However, after thorough investigation, there is no evidence to support these claims.It is important to fact-check information before spreading it further, as false news can have damaging consequences. In this case, the alleged allocation of funds for condoms for Hamas is simply untrue.
Let’s continue to verify information and rely on credible sources for news to avoid misinformation and confusion.
Tags:
US aid to Hamas, US funding for condoms, Hamas funding controversy, US aid allocation, Condoms for Hamas, US foreign aid scandal
#evidence #million #designated #buy #condoms #HamasHamás libera a otros 3 rehenes a cambio de 180 prisioneros palestinos que están en cárceles israelíes
Fuente de la imagen, Getty Images
Pie de foto, Hamás entregó a tres rehenes en dos ceremonias celebradas este sábado en distintas partes de la Franja de Gaza. Información del artículo - Autor, Redacción
- Título del autor, BBC News Mundo
El proceso de liberación de rehenes israelíes en poder de Hamas sigue.
A primera hora de este sábado, tres hombres que fueron secuestrados durante el ataque que la agrupación palestina perpetró contra el sur de Israel el 7 de octubre de 2023 y en el que más de 1.200 personas murieron y 251 fueron plagiadas y llevadas a la Franja de Gaza, fueron entregados a miembros de la Cruz Roja.
Estas son las cuartas liberaciones desde la entrada en vigor del alto al fuego pactado por Israel y Hamas el pasado 19 de enero.
A cambio del retorno de los plagiados, Israel excarcelará a otros 180 prisioneros palestinos que se encuentran en sus cárceles.
También este sábado estaba previsto que la frontera entre Gaza y Egipto, a través del paso de Rafah, se reabierto para permitir el cruce de heridos y el arribo de ayuda humanitaria.
Fuente de la imagen, Getty Images
Pie de foto, La liberación de Yarden Bibas era muy esperada, pues él fue raptado junto a su esposa y dos hijos, de los cuales no hay información. A plena luz del día
Los liberados son Ofer Kalderon (53), Yarden Bibas (34) y Keith Siegel (65), todos ellos civiles.
Bibas se ha convertido en estos meses en un símbolo en Israel. ¿La razón? El hombre fue raptado en el kibutz de Nir Oz junto a su esposa, Shiri, quien posee ciudadanía argentina; y sus dos hijos: Kfir, de solo diez meses; y Ariel, de cuatro al momento de los hechos.
Kfir fue el rehén más joven.
El video que milicianos palestinos grabaron y difundieron luego del 7 de octubre y en el que se ve a la madre abrazando fuertemente a sus pequeños, mientras está rodeada de hombres encapuchados y armados, recorrió el mundo.
Sin embargo, semanas después del plagio, Hamás aseguró que la mujer y los dos pequeños perdieron la vida durante uno de los bombardeos israelíes, una versión que el ejército israelí no ha confirmado hasta el momento.
Kalderon y Siegel también fueron raptados junto a sus seres queridos. Sin embargo, éstos últimos recuperaron su libertad durante la tregua de noviembre de 2023.
Como en las tres ocasiones anteriores, Hamás presentó a los liberados en un acto público en el que los secuestrados fueron exhibidos por milicianos enmascarados y fuertemente armados.
En el caso de Bibas y de Kalderon la ceremonia tuvo lugar en Jan Yunis, mientras que en el Siegel ocurrió en la ciudad de Gaza, a orillas del mar Mediterráneo.
Fuente de la imagen, Getty Images
Pie de foto, Una pequeña multitud se congregó en Tel Aviv para seguir la liberación de los tres rehenes. Los hombres fueron entregados por los milicianos a miembros de la Cruz Roja, los cuales los llevaron de vuelta a Israel, donde fueron recibidos por el ejército.
“Los comandantes y soldados de las Fuerzas de Defensa de Israel (FDI) saludaron y abrazaron a los rehenes que regresaron a sus hogares en el Estado de Israel”, confirmaron las FDI en un comunicado.
Las autoridades militares indicaron que los hombres fueron sometidos a reconocimientos médicos antes de ser devueltos a sus familias.
La entrega de los dos rehenes fue “ordenada”, a diferencia de lo ocurrido con la anterior donde hubo “muchos empujones” y algunas escenas de caos.
El pasado 30 de enero, Hamás liberó a ocho plagiados (tres israelíes y cinco tailandeses) en una ceremonia cerca de la casa destruida del líder de Hamás, Yahya Sinwar, que fue asesinado por las fuerzas israelíes en Gaza el año pasado.
Las imágenes mostraban a la rehén israelí Arbel Yehud, de 29 años, rodeada de hombres armados y enmascarados que luchaban por contener a una gran multitud.
El primer ministro israelí, Benjamin Netanyahu, describió el caos como “impactante” y retrasó la liberación de los prisioneros palestinos “hasta que se garantice la salida segura de nuestros rehenes en los próximos días”.
Fuente de la imagen, Getty Images
Pie de foto, Hamás aprovechó las liberaciones para exhibir su fuerza al mostrar a decenas de sus milicianos fuertemente armados. Conteniendo la respiración
La entrega de los rehenes fue seguida por una pequeña multitud en la llamada Plaza de los Rehenes de Tel Aviv, la cual seguía con atención lo que transmitía la televisión.
“Todos tienen que volver a casa”, declaró a la BBC Liz Domsky, quien acudió con su esposo a la plaza.
“Tengo un alumno allí, Bar Kupershtein. Fui profesora en el instituto donde él estudiaba. Estamos muy preocupados por él. Esperamos que vuelva. No está en la primera lista (de liberados)”, agregó.
La pareja admitió que estaban muy preocupados por cómo iba a producirse la entrega de los rehenes a la Cruz Roja.
“Pensábamos que veríamos algo no muy agradable, pero por supuesto es mejor (que el jueves)”, agregó Domsky.
Hasta el momento, 17 rehenes han sido liberados en el marco del acuerdo al cese al fuego, el cual puso fin a 15 meses de guerra en Gaza, en la que han muerto más de 46.000 personas por los bombardeos israelíes.
El próximo martes, se espera que los negociadores israelíes y palestinos vuelvan a reunirse para proseguir las negociaciones que permitan nuevas liberaciones.
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El grupo militante Hamás libera a otros 3 rehenes a cambio de 180 prisioneros palestinos en cárceles israelíesEn un gesto de buena voluntad, el grupo militante Hamás ha liberado a otros 3 rehenes en un intercambio con Israel que involucró la liberación de 180 prisioneros palestinos que estaban detenidos en cárceles israelíes.
Este intercambio es parte de los esfuerzos continuos para lograr la liberación de prisioneros palestinos y rehenes en manos de Israel, y representa un paso positivo hacia la reconciliación y la paz en la región.
Esperamos que este intercambio allane el camino para futuras negociaciones y acuerdos que conduzcan a una solución pacífica y justa para el conflicto entre Israel y Palestina. Seguiremos monitoreando de cerca la situación y brindando actualizaciones a medida que se desarrollen los acontecimientos.
Tags:
- Hamas hostage release
- Prisoner exchange
- Palestinian prisoners
- Israeli jails
- Middle East conflict
- Hamas negotiations
- Prisoner swap deal
- Gaza Strip news
- Palestinian liberation
- Israel-Palestine relations
#Hamás #libera #otros #rehenes #cambio #prisioneros #palestinos #están #cárceles #israelíes
Hamás libera a tres rehenes e Israel a presos palestinos en cuarto canje tras alto el fuego en Gaza
JAN YUNIS, Franja de Gaza (AP) — Hamás liberó el sábado a tres rehenes hombres que llevaban más de un año retenidos en la Franja de Gaza, e Israel hizo lo propio con 183 palestinos presos en cárceles israelíes en el cuarto canje de un acuerdo de alto el fuego que ha frenado los combates después de más de 15 meses de guerra.
Los insurgentes entregaron a Yarden Bibas y al ciudadano franco-israelí Ofer Kalderon a funcionarios de la Cruz Roja en la ciudad sureña de Jan Yunis, mientras que la devolución del rehén estadounidense-israelí Keith Siegel, que lucía pálido y delgado, ocurrió unas horas más tarde en la Ciudad de Gaza, en el norte del territorio.
Los tres habían sido secuestrados durante el ataque liderado por Hamás sobre el sur de Israel el 7 de octubre de 2023, que provocó la guerra. Con estos, son 18 los rehenes que regresaron a Israel desde el inicio del alto el fuego el 19 de enero.
Las liberaciones fueron rápidas y ordenadas, a diferencia de las escenas de caos vividas el jueves, cuando milicianos armados parecían luchar para contener a una multitud que acosaba a los rehenes. El sábado, insurgentes enmascarados y armados formaron filas en las dos ubicaciones mientras los rehenes subían a un escenario y saludaban antes de ser entregados a la Cruz Roja.
En la Plaza de los Rehenes de Tel Aviv, miles de personas se reunieron para seguir las liberaciones, que se emitieron en vivo en una pantalla grande, agitando carteles y aplaudiendo.
Poco después de que Siegel llegara a Israel, un autobús partió desde la Prisión Militar de Ofer con unos 32 reos a bordo rumbo a Cisjordania. El vehículo fue recibido por una multitud que vitoreó y levantó a los prisioneros sobre sus hombros en escenas de júbilo.
La Autoridad Penitenciaria Israelí dijo que los 183 palestinos que estaba previsto que fueran liberados el sábado ya lo estaban. La mayoría, incluyendo 111 detenidos después del 7 de octubre, fueron llevados a Gaza. Poco más de dos docenas regresaron a la Cisjordania ocupada y otros siete que cumplían cadenas perpetuas fueron trasladados a Egipto antes de su deportación.
Alto el fuego da un respiro a la maltrecha Gaza
La tregua, que comenzó el 19 de enero, tiene como objetivo poner fin a la guerra más letal y destructiva jamás librada entre Israel y el grupo insurgente palestino. El frágil acuerdo se ha mantenido durante casi dos semanas, lo que ha permitido una mayor entrada de ayuda al pequeño enclave costero y la vuelta de cientos de miles de personas a lo que queda de sus casas en la arrasada zona norte.
Durante la primera fase del alto el fuego, que durará seis semanas, se liberará a un total de 33 rehenes israelíes, a cambio de casi 2.000 prisioneros. Israel dice que ha recibido información de Hamás de que ocho de esos rehenes fueron asesinados el 7 de octubre de 2023 o murieron durante su cautiverio.
También el sábado, un grupo de 50 niños enfermos y heridos cruzaron el paso fronterizo de Rafah hacia Egipto para recibir atención médica allí, en la primera apertura de la única salida de la Franja desde que fue capturada por Israel hace nueve meses. Una misión civil de la Unión Europea se había desplegado el viernes en la zona para preparar la reapertura del cruce.
La reapertura de Rafah supone otro paso clave en la primera fase del alto el fuego.
Está previsto que Israel y Hamás comiencen a negociar la próxima semana una segunda fase del alto el fuego, que incluye la liberación de los demás rehenes y la ampliación indefinida de la tregua. Si no se alcanza un acuerdo, la guerra podría reanudarse a principios de marzo.
Israel dice que sigue comprometido con destruir a Hamás, incluso después de que el grupo insurgente reafirmara su dominio sobre Gaza pocas horas después del último alto el fuego. Un socio clave de ultraderecha en la coalición de gobierno del primer ministro israelí, Benjamin Netanyahu, pide que se reanude el conflicto después de esta primera fase.
Hamás dice que no liberará al resto de los cautivos si no termina la guerra e Israel se retira por completo del enclave.
Familias y vecinos celebran la vuelta de los rehenes
Siegel, de 65 años y natural de Chapel Hill, Carolina del Norte, fue tomado como rehén en el kibutz de Kfar Aza, junto a su esposa, Aviva Siegel. La mujer quedó libre durante la primera tregua y ha liderado una campaña de alto perfil para la liberación de Keith y de otros rehenes.
En la sala de estar donde los miembros del kibutz vieron la liberación de Siegel hubo suspiros de alivio y vítores. Muchos eran amigos de la familia, que aplaudieron al verlo, mientras que algunos se emocionaron.
La liberación de Bibas ha renovado la atención por la suerte que han corrido su esposa, Shiri, y sus dos hijos, Ariel y Kfir, que entonces tenían cuatro años y nueve meses, respectivamente. Los cuatro fueron capturados en el kibutz de Nir Oz.
Kfir era el más pequeño de las cerca de 250 personas tomadas como rehenes el 7 de octubre, y su caso se convirtió rápidamente en un símbolo de la impotencia y la ira causadas por el secuestro en Israel, donde la historia de la familia Bibas se ha hecho muy conocida.
Hamás dijo que Shiri y sus hijos murieron en un ataque aéreo israelí, pero Israel no ha confirmado la información. Gal Hirsch, coordinador especial para la devolución de los rehenes, indicó que el país tiene “una gran preocupación por las vidas” de Shiri y sus hijos, y pidió a los negociadores que proporcionen información sobre su situación.
Kalderon, de 54 años, también fue capturado en Nir Oz.
En Kfar Saba, al norte de Tel Aviv, la familia de Kalderon se abrazó y aplaudió al ver las imágenes en las que subía al escenario en Jan Yunis y era entregado a la Cruz Roja.
“¡Ofer regresa a casa!”, dijeron, con los brazos levantados al cielo.
Los dos hijos de Kalderon, Erez y Sahar, fueron secuestrados junto a él, pero regresaron a Israel durante el alto el fuego de 2023. La familia señaló que no pudieron recuperarse de su calvario hasta que la vuelta de su padre.
“Lamentamos que haya tomado tanto tiempo, Ofer”, dijo Eyal Kalderon. “Pronto volveremos a ser una familia completa. Esperamos que otras familias se sientan pronto así, hasta la última familia”.
El presidente de Francia, Emmanuel Macron dijo que su país “comparte el alivio y la alegría” por el regreso de Kalderon después de 483 días de un “infierno inimaginable”, y apuntó que Francia seguirá haciendo todo lo posible para la liberación de otro rehén franco-israelí que sigue en Gaza.
Más de 100 rehenes quedaron libres durante un alto el fuego de una semana en noviembre de 2023. En Gaza quedarían aún al menos 80 más, de los cuales se cree que alrededor de un tercio estarían muertos.
En el ataque del 7 de octubre, los insurgentes mataron a unas 1.200 personas, en su mayoría civiles. Más de 47.000 palestinos, más de la mitad de ellos mujeres y menores, han perdido la vida en la campaña aérea y terrestre lanzada por Israel como represalia, de acuerdo con el Ministerio de Salud gazatí, que no distingue entre víctimas civiles y combatientes en su conteo.
El ejército israelí sostiene que ha matado a más de 17.000 milicianos, pero no ofrece pruebas, y culpa de la muerte de civiles a Hamás porque sus combatientes operan en barrios residenciales.
___
Isseid informó desde Beitunia, Cisjordania. Los reporteros Moshe Edri en la base militar Reim, Israel, y Paz Bar en Kfar Saba, Israel, contribuyeron a este despacho.
___
Esta historia fue traducida del inglés por un editor de AP con la ayuda de una herramienta de inteligencia artificial generativa.
Hamás y Israel llevan a cabo un cuarto intercambio de prisioneros tras el alto el fuego en Gaza. En esta ocasión, Hamás ha liberado a tres rehenes israelíes que estaban en su poder, mientras que Israel ha puesto en libertad a varios prisioneros palestinos.Este intercambio de prisioneros es un paso positivo hacia la reconciliación entre ambas partes y demuestra la voluntad de ambas partes de seguir adelante con el proceso de paz en la región. A pesar de las tensiones pasadas, esta acción muestra que es posible encontrar soluciones pacíficas a los conflictos.
Esperamos que este intercambio de prisioneros sea el comienzo de un camino hacia la paz duradera en la región y que ambas partes continúen trabajando juntas para lograr un acuerdo que beneficie a todos los involucrados.
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#Hamás #libera #tres #rehenes #Israel #presos #palestinos #cuarto #canje #tras #alto #fuego #Gaza
Hamas and Israel Set to Exchange More Hostages for Prisoners: Live Updates
They became a potent symbol of Israel’s hostage crisis after video from the Hamas-led 2023 attack showed Palestinian militants leading away a distraught mother clutching her two small red-haired sons. Another video showed the father of the same family being spirited away to Gaza on a motorcycle, his head bloodied.
On Friday, Hamas said the 35-year-old father, Yarden Bibas, will be one of three male hostages to be freed on Saturday.
Israelis are still anxiously awaiting word of his wife, Shiri, and their two children, Ariel, now 5, and Kfir, who was 9 months old at the time of his capture — the youngest hostage taken into Gaza. Last week, Daniel Hagari, an Israeli military spokesman, seemed to brace the public for the likelihood that they would not come out alive, saying the military was “gravely concerned” for the mother and children.
Hamas claimed last year that Ms. Bibas and her children had been killed by an Israeli airstrike, but Israeli officials have never confirmed that. Several hostages were killed in Gaza by Israeli forces, accidentally shot or possibly as a result of Israeli airstrikes. The military has also said some civilian hostages may have been killed by Israeli forces as they were being kidnapped on the day of the Oct. 7 attack.
The Bibas family has been through “a twisted reality from hell,” a relative, Yifat Zailer, said in an interview last year.
Balloons being released in Tel Aviv on Jan. 18 to celebrate the second birthday of Kfir Bibas. Kfir was 9 months old when he was captured during the Oct. 7 attack. Credit…Ohad Zwigenberg/Associated Press The family of four were among more than 180 residents of kibbutz Nir Oz, a farming community in southern Israel, who were killed or abducted in the Oct. 7 attack. Since then, the family became the faces of a national trauma that sparked a fierce Israeli war in Gaza aimed at eradicating Hamas, an onslaught that has killed more than 47,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health officials, who do not distinguish between combatants and civilians.
More than 1,750 people in Israel have been killed in the war, about 1,200 of them on the day of the Oct. 7 attack, according to Israeli officials. The toll includes more than 890 members of the Israeli military forces.
Throughout more than a year of waiting, hostage families and their supporters have carried orange balloons and worn orange shirts in honor of the missing children and their ginger-colored hair. They have held large events to mark the first two birthdays of Kfir, who has never celebrated one out of captivity.
All other children seized in the Oct. 7 attack were released in a previous cease-fire deal.
Israeli officials pressed Hamas negotiators in recent days for more clarity on Ms. Bibas and her children, according to Israeli media. As a female civilian with children, they were expected to be released in the initial stages of the cease-fire deal, before soldiers or men, if they were alive.
Mr. Bibas was abducted separately from his family.
In the early morning hours before his capture, he texted his sister, Ofri Bibas-Levy, to tell her about incoming rocket fire, according to an interview she gave to Kan, the Israeli public broadcaster. Later, he texted her that militants had entered the camp. He had a gun, he told her, but the militants had automatic rifles.
He then described scenes of clashes on the kibbutz and his fear that his two young sons would not be able to keep quiet.
“It feels like the end,” he wrote her at 9:10 in the morning.
Video from the Oct. 7 attack on Nir Oz revealed images of militants drilling open the Bibas family’s front door.
Sometime before her brother was captured, Ms. Bibas-Levy told Kan, he texted her and their parents that he loved them. At 9:45 in the morning, he wrote: “They’re in.”
Ms. Bibas-Levy told Kan that the first she learned of her brother’s Oct. 7 kidnapping when she saw a video of militants abducting him a few days later.
Images of the Bibas family have been seared into the Israeli psyche throughout the crisis. Credit…Amir Levy/Getty Images In November 2023, not long after Hamas said Ms. Bibas and her children were killed by Israeli bombing, the group released a video of Mr. Bibas being told his wife and children had been killed, as he broke down crying.
Images of the Bibas family have been seared into the Israeli psyche throughout the crisis. They were on the front page of one of the country’s most popular daily newspapers, Yedioth Ahronoth, under the headline “A Mother and Two Small Souls, Led Into the Darkness.”
And across the country, graffiti depicting the family has appeared on the streets. Some show baby Kfir holding a pink elephant, as in the photo used for his hostage poster. Others show an imagined reunion of the Bibas family, lighting a Hanukkah menorah.
“I know they became a symbol,” Ms. Bibas-Levy said in a tearful news conference last February. “But for us, it’s our family, and we want them back.”
Johnatan Reiss and Matthew Mpoke Bigg contributed reporting.
Hamas and Israel are set to exchange more hostages for prisoners in a deal brokered by Egypt. The exchange is expected to take place in the coming days, with both sides hoping to secure the release of their respective citizens held captive.Stay tuned for live updates on the negotiations and the exchange process as it unfolds. We will provide real-time updates on any developments, including the number of hostages and prisoners involved, the conditions of the exchange, and the reactions from both Hamas and Israel.
This exchange comes as a rare moment of cooperation between the two sides, who have been locked in a decades-long conflict. The success of this deal could pave the way for future negotiations and potentially help to de-escalate tensions in the region.
Follow along with us as we bring you the latest news on this historic exchange between Hamas and Israel. #HostageExchange #PrisonerRelease #Hamas #Israel #LiveUpdates
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#Hamas #Israel #Set #Exchange #Hostages #Prisoners #Live #UpdatesHamas to Free Yarden Bibas, Israeli Father Whose Family Was Taken Hostage
The family of four were among more than 180 residents of kibbutz Nir Oz, a farming community in southern Israel, who were killed or abducted in the Oct. 7 attack. Since then, the family became the faces of a national trauma that sparked a fierce Israeli war in Gaza aimed at eradicating Hamas, an onslaught that has killed more than 47,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health officials, who do not distinguish between combatants and civilians.
More than 1,750 people in Israel have been killed in the war, about 1,200 of them on the day of the Oct. 7 attack, according to Israeli officials. The toll includes more than 890 members of the Israeli military forces.
Throughout more than a year of waiting, hostage families and their supporters have carried orange balloons and worn orange shirts in honor of the missing children and their ginger-colored hair. They have held large events to mark the first two birthdays of Kfir, who has never celebrated one out of captivity.
All other children seized in the Oct. 7 attack were released in a previous cease-fire deal.
Israeli officials pressed Hamas negotiators in recent days for more clarity on Ms. Bibas and her children, according to Israeli media. As a female civilian with children, they were expected to be released in the initial stages of the cease-fire deal, before soldiers or men, if they were alive.
Mr. Bibas was abducted separately from his family.
In the early morning hours before his capture, he texted his sister, Ofri Bibas-Levy, to tell her about incoming rocket fire, according to an interview she gave to Kan, the Israeli public broadcaster. Later, he texted her that militants had entered the camp. He had a gun, he told her, but the militants had automatic rifles.
He then described scenes of clashes on the kibbutz and his fear that his two young sons would not be able to keep quiet.
“It feels like the end,” he wrote her at 9:10 in the morning.
Video from the Oct. 7 attack on Nir Oz revealed images of militants drilling open the Bibas family’s front door.
Sometime before her brother was captured, Ms. Bibas-Levy told Kan, he texted her and their parents that he loved them. At 9:45 in the morning, he wrote: “They’re in.”
Ms. Bibas-Levy told Kan that the first she learned of her brother’s Oct. 7 kidnapping when she saw a video of militants abducting him a few days later.
In a surprising turn of events, Hamas has announced that they will be releasing Israeli father Yarden Bibas, whose family was taken hostage by the militant group. This news comes after weeks of intense negotiations between Hamas and Israeli authorities, and is seen as a positive step towards de-escalating tensions in the region.Yarden Bibas, a devoted father of three, was abducted by Hamas militants while visiting a relative in Gaza. His wife and children were also taken captive, sparking outrage and condemnation from both Israeli and international leaders. The Bibas family’s ordeal has been a harrowing one, with reports of mistreatment and threats of violence against them.
However, in a statement released today, Hamas officials have confirmed that they will be releasing Yarden Bibas and his family as a gesture of goodwill towards Israel. This development has been met with cautious optimism by Israeli officials, who have expressed hope that this could be the first step towards a broader peace agreement in the region.
The release of Yarden Bibas is a testament to the power of diplomacy and negotiation in resolving conflicts. It is a reminder that even in the midst of great adversity, there is always room for dialogue and compromise. As we await Yarden Bibas’ safe return to his loved ones, let us continue to work towards a peaceful and just resolution to the longstanding conflict between Israel and Palestine.
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#Hamas #Free #Yarden #Bibas #Israeli #Father #Family #HostageGaza ceasefire: Hamas hands over two Israeli hostages in southern Gaza
KHAN YOUNIS, Gaza Strip (AP) — Two hostages arrived in Israel after Hamas handed them over to the Red Cross on Saturday as part of the fourth round of hostage releases during the Gaza ceasefire deal. Dozens of Palestinian prisoners are to be released from Israeli prisons in return.
The truce, which began Jan. 19, is aimed at winding down the deadliest and most destructive war ever fought between Israel and the Hamas militant group.
The fragile deal has held for nearly two weeks, halting the fighting and allowing for increased aid to flow into the tiny coastal territory.
Both Yarden Bibas, 35, and French-Israeli Ofer Kalderon, 54, had been abducted during the Hamas-led attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, that sparked the war. The two initially headed to a reception point in a military base. Along the road, small groups of supporters waited for the convoys waving Israeli flags.
Hamas released them to the Red Cross in a ceremony in the city of Khan Younis where each climbed on a stage and waved to onlookers. Armed Hamas militants formed a line leading to the stage in an orderly handover, a contrast to the chaotic crowds that had surrounded hostages during a handover Thursday, angering Israel.
Another hostage, American-Israeli Keith Siegel, 65, is also set to be released Saturday and is expected to be handed over to the Red Cross in Gaza City to the north.
A total of 33 Israeli hostages are expected to be freed in exchange for nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners during the truce’s initial six weeks. Israel says it has received information from Hamas that eight of those hostages were either killed in Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack or have died in captivity.
Also on Saturday, wounded Palestinians are expected to be allowed to leave Gaza for Egypt through the Rafah crossing. It had been the only exit point for Palestinians during the war before Israel closed it in May. A European Union civilian mission was deployed Friday to prepare for the reopening of the crossing.
The reopening would mark another key step in the first phase of the ceasefire, which calls for the release of 33 hostages and nearly 2,000 prisoners, the return of Palestinians to northern Gaza and an increase in humanitarian aid to the devastated territory.
The Health Ministry said 50 sick and wounded children are scheduled to be evacuated through Rafah crossing along with 61 companions.
In Israel, the release of Bibas has brought renewed attention to — and concern for — the fate of his wife, Shiri, and their two young sons. All four were captured from Kibbutz Nir Oz.
A video of their abduction by armed men showed Shiri swaddling in a blanket her two redheaded boys — Ariel, 4, and Kfir, 9 months old at the time.
Kfir was the youngest of about 250 people taken captive on Oct. 7, and his plight quickly came to represent the helplessness and anger the hostage-taking stirred in Israel, where the Bibas family has become a household name.
Hamas has said Shiri and her sons were killed in an Israeli airstrike. Israel has not confirmed that, but a military spokesman recently acknowledged serious concern about their fates.
Yarden Bibas is believed to have been held separately from his family. Photos taken during his abduction appeared to show him wounded.
Like Bibas, Kalderon was also captured from Kibbutz Nir Oz. His two children and ex-wife, Hadas, were also taken, but they were freed during the 2023 ceasefire.
In Kfar Saba, north of Tel Aviv, Kalderon’s family hugged and cheered as they saw the images of him climbing onto the stage in Khan Younis and being transferred to the Red Cross.
“Ofer is coming home!” they said, arms lifted to the sky.
Keith Siegel, originally from Chapel Hill, North Carolina, was taken hostage from Kibbutz Kfar Aza, along with his wife, Aviva Siegel. She was released during the 2023 ceasefire and has waged a high-profile campaign to free Keith and other hostages.
The dozens of Palestinian prisoners to be released by Israel on Saturday include people serving lengthy and life sentences.
More than 100 hostages were released during a weeklong ceasefire in Nov. 2023. About 80 more hostages are still in Gaza, at least a third of them believed dead. Israel says Hamas has confirmed that eight of the 33 to be released in the first phase of the ceasefire are dead.
Israel and Hamas are set next week to begin negotiating a second phase of the ceasefire, which calls for releasing the remaining hostages and extending the truce indefinitely. The war could resume in early March if an agreement is not reached.
Israel says it is still committed to destroying Hamas, even after the militant group reasserted its rule over Gaza within hours of the latest ceasefire. A key far-right partner in Netanyahu’s coalition is calling for the war to resume after the ceasefire’s first phase.
Hamas says it won’t release the remaining hostages without an end to the war and a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.
In the Oct. 7 attack that started the war, some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, were killed. More than 47,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s retaliatory air and ground war, over half of them women and children, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not say how many of the dead were militants.
The Israeli military says it killed over 17,000 fighters, without providing evidence. It blames civilian deaths on Hamas because its fighters operate in residential neighborhoods.
In a historic move towards peace, Hamas has handed over two Israeli hostages in southern Gaza as part of a ceasefire agreement. This gesture marks a significant step towards de-escalating tensions in the region and fostering a sense of trust between the two sides.The release of the hostages is a positive development that offers hope for a more stable and peaceful future for both Israelis and Palestinians. It is a reminder that dialogue and negotiation can lead to tangible results and pave the way for lasting peace.
The international community has welcomed this move and called for further steps to be taken to build on this momentum. It is crucial that all parties involved continue to work towards a comprehensive and sustainable ceasefire agreement that addresses the root causes of the conflict and ensures the safety and security of all civilians in the region.
As we reflect on this significant moment, let us remain hopeful and committed to supporting efforts for peace and reconciliation in the Middle East. May this be the beginning of a new chapter of cooperation and understanding between Israelis and Palestinians.
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- Southern Gaza
- Middle East conflict
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- Hostage release
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- Ceasefire agreement
- International diplomacy
#Gaza #ceasefire #Hamas #hands #Israeli #hostages #southern #Gaza
Father of youngest hostage among three men to be released on Saturday, Hamas says
Raffi BergBBC News, London
Reuters
Yarden Bibas (left) is one of the three hostages Hamas says it will free next The Palestinian armed group Hamas has released the names of three hostages it says it will free on Saturday under the ceasefire deal with Israel.
They are Israelis Ofer Kalderon, 53, and Yarden Bibas, 34, and American-Israeli Keith Siegel, 65.
Mr Bibas is the father of Kfir, the youngest hostage who was 10 months old when he was kidnapped by Hamas. His wife Shiri and their other son Ariel, four, were also captured.
The Israeli prime minister’s office said Israel had received the list of hostages.
Israel will release another batch of Palestinian prisoners in return.
It will mark the fourth such exchange of hostages for prisoners since the ceasefire came into effect on 19 January.
Some 251 hostages were taken by Hamas when it attacked Israel on 7 October 2023, killing about 1,200 people.
The attack triggered a war which has devastated Gaza. Israel’s 15-month military offensive killed 47,460 Palestinians in the territory, according to Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry.
Ofer Kalderon and Yarden Bibas were taken by Hamas from Nir Oz, while Keith Siegel was taken from Kfar Aza.
Mr Bibas’ wife Shiri, and their two children, Ariel, now five, and Kfir, now two, were also taken captive. Their fate is unknown.
Their release will bring the number of hostages freed under the ceasefire deal so far to 18.
Four hundred Palestinian prisoners – ranging from those serving long sentences for bombings and other attacks to teenagers held without charge – have so far been freed in exchange.
Most have returned to the occupied West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza, while many of the most serious offenders have been deported.
The father of the youngest hostage among the three men to be released on Saturday by Hamas is filled with relief and gratitude. After weeks of uncertainty and fear, he can finally look forward to being reunited with his son.The three men were taken hostage while on a humanitarian mission in Gaza, and their families have been anxiously waiting for news of their release. The father of the youngest hostage has been a pillar of strength throughout this ordeal, keeping faith that his son would come home safely.
As Hamas announces the imminent release of the hostages, the father’s prayers have been answered. He is overwhelmed with emotion, grateful to everyone who has supported his family during this difficult time.
The release of the hostages is a glimmer of hope in the midst of conflict and strife. The father of the youngest hostage is looking forward to embracing his son and cherishing every moment they have together.
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#Father #youngest #hostage #among #men #released #Saturday #HamasIsraelis brace to learn the fate of Hamas’ youngest hostage, taken captive as a baby
TEL AVIV — On lampposts, in shop windows and on smartphone screens across Israel, the posters show a smiling, red-headed baby boy clutching a pink elephant.
And now the country is bracing to learn Kfir Bibas’ fate.
The youngest hostage still in captivity in Gaza, Kfir was just shy of 9 months old when he was kidnapped during the Hamas-led terrorist attack Oct.7, 2023. On Saturday, he turned 2, having never known a birthday outside captivity.
Along with his 5-year-old brother, Ariel, and his parents, Yarden and Shiri Bibas, Kfir is among the 33 hostages expected to be freed during the first phase of the ceasefire deal, according to the Israeli government. But it is unclear if the toddler is still alive.
Kfir Bibas, who was taken hostage at 9 months old from Nir-Oz kibbutz.Hostages And Missing Families Forum “Not knowing is so hard that sometimes I just want to scream,” Ofri Bibas-Levy, Kfir’s aunt, told NBC News earlier this week. “Just tell me, even if it’s the worst thing,”
Clutching her two sons, as fighters bark orders, Shiri Bibas looked terrified in a video taken near their home in kibbutz Nir Oz in southern Israel on the day of the Hamas attacks.
Footage of the trio being herded by gunmen through Gaza’s southern city of Khan Younis later that day would prove to be the last known sighting of them.
While all other child hostages were released in exchange for Palestinian prisoners during a one-week ceasefire in November 2023, the Bibas family never emerged from Gaza.
On one of the final days of the brief pause in fighting, Hamas released a statement claiming that Shiri Bibas and the children had been killed in an Israeli airstrike. It said Yarden Bibas was still alive and in captivity.
At the time, Israel’s military said the claim could not be confirmed, but in February 2024 it acknowledged its fears for the family.
Video shows the kidnapping of Shiri Silberman-Bibas and her children.via X “Based on the information available to us, we are very concerned and worried about the condition and well-being of Shiri and the children,” Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, the Israel Defense Forces’ chief spokesperson, told a news conference.
Now, the Bibas family is daring to believe that more than a year of agonizing uncertainty may soon be coming to an end one way or another. “We know will bring us some kind of certainty, but we are very scared as well,” Ofri Bibas-Levy said of the ceasefire deal. “It could be a good certainty or a bad one.”
The 38-year-old occupational therapist said she was still holding out hope that Shiri Bibas and her two sons might be alive, “but we know the condition the hostages are being kept in.”
“So for a toddler and a baby, it’s difficult even if they survived the attack that Hamas said they were killed in,” she added. “We’re very worried, very, very worried.”
Kfir’s father, Yarden Bibas, was kidnapped separately from his wife and children and held in a different part of Gaza, according to hostages who were with him in captivity and since freed.
Nili Margalit, a neighbor in Nir Oz, said she last saw Yarden Bibas on Nov. 30, 2023, just before she was released in the first ceasefire.
A Hamas guard ordered her to tell Yarden Bibas that his wife and children were dead, but “I refused to do that,” she said. Instead she told her captor that “if he wanted to say such a horrible sentence to Yarden, then he is the one that has to look him in the eyes and tell him.”
Hamas did inform Yarden Bibas and the next day released a video of the distraught father. Ofri Bibas-Levy said: “I thought: I’m losing Yarden now because I couldn’t think that he could bear and survive this thing they told him.”
Yarden, Ariel, Shiri and Kfir Bibas.Bibas family Yarden Bibas is also slated for release in the first phase of the ceasefire deal, which came into effect Sunday after almost 15 months of Israel’s military campaign in the Gaza Strip. Health officials in the Palestinian enclave says more than 47,000 people have been killed since the start of the war, which began after Hamas launched multipronged attacks on Israel, killing 1,200 and taking around 250 people hostage, according to official tallies.
Bibas-Levy said she thinks constantly of her younger brother, “every second of every day; I don’t know if he’s dead or alive, if he ate today, if he showered, if somebody’s torturing him, if he’s sick, if he’s well. I don’t know anything.”
She was speaking at the edge of the so-called Hostage Square, the plaza in central Tel Aviv where families of those held in Hamas captivity have rallied for 15 months demanding their release.
Many in the crowd alongside her were carrying stuffed animals in honor of Kfir’s second birthday, an echo of the pink elephant he is holding in his hostage poster.
The family had searched the wreckage of Nir Oz many times in the hope of finding Kfir’s elephant but without success. And then, just days before the most recent ceasefire was signed, it turned up in the corner of a nursery.
“It was really very emotional,” Bibas-Levy said. “And hopefully a good sign, maybe.”
In a heart-wrenching turn of events, Israelis are bracing themselves to learn the fate of Hamas’ youngest hostage, who was taken captive as a baby. The child, now a young adult, has been held by the militant group for over two decades, leaving their family and the nation in a state of perpetual anguish.The news of the hostage’s possible release or demise has sent shockwaves throughout Israel, with emotions running high as the country waits anxiously for updates on the situation. Many are hoping for a miracle, praying for the safe return of the long-lost captive who has become a symbol of resilience and hope in the face of adversity.
As the nation holds its breath, the Israeli government is working tirelessly to secure the release of the hostage, exploring all possible avenues for negotiation and intervention. The fate of the youngest captive remains uncertain, but the unwavering determination of the Israeli people to bring them home safely is a testament to the strength and unity of the nation in times of crisis.
Stay tuned for updates on this developing story as Israelis around the world continue to hold out hope for the safe return of the youngest hostage of Hamas.
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- Israelis
- Hamas
- Youngest hostage
- Captive
- Baby
- Kidnapping
- Hostage situation
- Israel-Palestine conflict
- Gaza
- Middle East tensions
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