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Friday, December 1, 2023

Hamas releases eight hostages to Israel as talks seek to extend Gaza truce

Hamas on Thursday released eight Israeli hostages in Gaza under a last-minute extension of a truce deal, and Israel freed 30 Palestinian prisoners.

• December 1, 2023
HAMAS MILITANTS
HAMAS MILITANTS[Credit: NBC News]

Hamas on Thursday released eight Israeli hostages in Gaza under a last-minute extension of a truce deal, and Israel freed 30 Palestinian prisoners as negotiators sought to renew the pause in fighting again.

Israel identified two women who were released first on Thursday as 21-year-old Mia Schem, among those seized at a dance party that Hamas militants attacked on October 7, and 40-year-old Amit Soussana.

Photos released by the Israeli prime minister’s office showed Ms Schem, who also holds French nationality, embracing her mother and brother after they were reunited at Hatzerim military base in Israel.

The Palestinian militant group Hamas then freed six more hostages, transferring them to the Red Cross, the Israeli military said. According to official information, four were women aged 29 to 41, including one Mexican-Israeli dual national.

Television images showed some of the women walking past ambulances once they reached Israeli territory.

The other two newly released hostages were a brother and sister, Belal and Aisha al-Ziadna, aged 18 and 17, respectively, according to the Israeli prime minister’s office.

They are Bedouin Arab citizens of Israel and among four members of their family taken hostage while they were milking cows on a farm. Wahid Alhuzail, who chairs a group for Bedouins kidnapped on October 7, said he was happy they were freed.

“But it’s not completely fulfilling. We want everyone to come home and for nobody to be stuck in the hands of the terror organisation Hamas,” he told Reuters.

As part of the agreement, 30 Palestinians were released from jails, the Israeli prison service said.

Israel has sworn to annihilate Hamas, which rules Gaza, in response to the October 7 rampage by the militant group, when Israel says gunmen killed 1,200 people and took 240 hostages.

Until the truce, Israel bombarded the territory for seven weeks.

Palestinian health authorities deemed reliable by the United Nations said more than 15,000 Gazans were killed.

While Israel required Hamas to release 10 hostages daily to continue the Qatari-mediated truce, a Qatari foreign ministry spokesperson said there would be no more hostages freed on Thursday beyond the eight.

Israeli officials accepted eight rather than 10 hostages because Hamas on Wednesday released two extra hostages, the Qatari spokesperson said.

They were Israeli-Russian women whose liberty the Palestinian faction described as a goodwill gesture to Moscow. Israel and Hamas agreed to add a seventh day of a humanitarian pause on Thursday while Egyptian and Qatari mediators were working to negotiate a further extension of two days, Egypt’s official state media agency said.

With fewer Israeli women and children left in captivity, extending the truce could require setting new terms for the release of Israeli men, including soldiers.

Thus far, during the truce, Palestinian militants have freed 105 hostages, and Israel has released 240 Palestinian prisoners.

The truce has allowed some humanitarian aid into Gaza after much of the coastal territory of 2.3 million people was reduced to wasteland in the Israeli assault.

Israel’s defence ministry and the Palestinian Red Crescent Society said that more fuel and 56 trucks of humanitarian supplies entered Gaza on Thursday.

But deliveries of food, water, medical supplies and fuel remain far below what is needed, aid workers say. At an emergency meeting in Amman, Jordan’s King Abdullah on Thursday urged UN officials and international groups to pressure Israel to allow more aid into the beleaguered enclave, according to delegates.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, in Israel during his third visit to the Middle East since the war began, agreed that the flow of aid into Gaza was not sufficient.

Mr Blinken said he told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that Israel must do more to protect civilians before any further military operations, and Netanyahu and his cabinet supported this approach.

(Reuters/NAN)

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