logo
Hamas releases six Israeli captives in Gaza as part of ceasefire deal

Hamas releases six Israeli captives in Gaza as part of ceasefire deal

Al Jazeera22-02-2025
Sixth captive to be handed over by Hamas to Israeli authorities in Gaza City without a ceremony.
22 Feb 2025
|
Updated:
Hamas has released six Israeli captives from Gaza ahead of the release of hundreds of Palestinians detained in Israeli prisons in the final swap under the first phase of the ceasefire between the Palestinian group and Israel.
The first two captives, Tal Shoham and Avera Mengistu, were handed over to the Red Cross in Rafah in southern Gaza on Saturday after they were led onto a stage by armed Hamas fighters.
Three more captives – Eliya Cohen, Omer Wenkert and Omer Shem Tov – were later released to Red Cross officials in Nuseirat in central Gazain a separate ceremony.
Hisham al-Sayed, was the last captive to be handed over to the Red Cross on Saturday. The 37-year-old Bedouin Israeli was taken captive when he entered Gaza in April 2015.
The six are the last from a group of 33 to be freed in the first stage of the ceasefire, which took effect on January 19.
Al Jazeera's Hani Mahmoud, reporting from Nuseirat, said a large crowd has gathered to witness the release of the three captives.
'We see reinforcements from the Qassam Brigades in order to maintain order and safety of the process,' he reported, referring to Hamas's armed wing. 'Compared with past handovers, the scene here at Nuseirat looks more organised.'
Our correspondent said that Hamas did not give any explanation why there was a last-minute change of the plan to release four captives in Nuseirat.
Speaking to Al Jazeera before the release, Professor Sami al-Arian from Istanbul Zaim University said the elaborate staging of the handover is a way for Hamas to signal it is responsible stakeholders by 'showing the whole world that they were trying to keep them [the captives] alive, keep them safe'.
Later on Saturday, Israel is expected to release 602 Palestinians held in its jails. It includes 445 people detained by Israeli forces during its war on Gaza as well as dozens serving lengthy or life terms, according to Hamas.
The fragile ceasefire had been threatened with derailment by the misidentification of a body released on Thursday as that of Shiri Bibas, who was taken captive with her two young sons and husband in the Hamas-led October 7, 2023, attacks on southern Israel.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

In Gaza City, we are saying goodbye
In Gaza City, we are saying goodbye

Al Jazeera

time14 hours ago

  • Al Jazeera

In Gaza City, we are saying goodbye

To those who still care, this may be the last letter I write from Gaza City. We are expecting Israel to officially issue its 'evacuation orders' any time now. My beloved city, Gaza, stands on the brink of a full military occupation by the Israeli army. Their plan is to force us all to leave our homes and move into tents in the southern part of the Strip. We do not know what will happen to those who resist. We may be living our last days in Gaza City. Since the beginning of the war, we have heard that Israel wants to occupy our city and take it as a settlement area for its people. At first, we didn't believe it; we thought this kind of news was psychological warfare. After all, we have had 'evacuation orders' before and people were able to return, even if it was to the ruins of their homes. On October 13, shortly after the genocide started, the Israeli army told everyone in northern Gaza, including Gaza City, to move south. The orders were accompanied by relentless bombardment. Hundreds would sometimes die in a day. Hundreds of thousands of people fled south for their lives. We didn't. My father refused to leave our home, so we all stayed. We lived in our home for months in unbearable pain and fear. We witnessed the destruction of our neighbourhood with our eyes. Then the Israeli army cut off the north from the south. Aid could not reach the north. From January to April 2024, my family and I lived the most suffocating days of the war. We were starved; we spent our days searching for anything to ease our hunger. Sometimes, we were forced to eat animal feed. In January this year, when a ceasefire took effect, people were allowed to go back to the north. It was an emotional moment that reflected just how much we, Palestinians, are attached to our land. This time, the atmosphere feels different. It feels that the threat of permanent occupation, of permanent loss, is very real. 'In preparation for the transfer of civilians from the war zone to the south … a large number of tents and shelter equipment will be allowed to enter [Gaza]', Israeli army spokesperson Avichay Adraee posted on Facebook. People across Gaza read this news with a heavy heart. There are many questions and few answers: Where will we flee? When will this start? Will anyone intervene and stop this catastrophe? People are overwhelmed – emotionally, mentally, physically, financially; they cannot endure any more suffering. Since my family and I heard this announcement, we have been looking at each other with confused, fearful eyes. When I saw images on social media of tents and tarpaulins entering Gaza City, my heart broke into a million pieces. The thought of my future being stuffed into a tent terrified me. My dreams are big; how can I fit them into a small tent? I told my father I don't want to live in a tent. Tears were rolling down my cheeks. He looked at me with helplessness in his eyes and said, 'We do not have another choice, the tent is becoming our new reality.' We do not want to leave, but we feel we do not have a choice. We do not think we can endure the relentless bombardment and shelling once again. The Israelis will likely be even more brutal when they invade this time. It will not be punishment this time; it will be total erasure. Feeling the end of their city is coming, people are spending what they fear may be their last days in it with their families, having their single meal for the day, together. They are walking around their neighbourhoods, taking pictures of themselves with the places tied to their childhood memories, capturing everything that might be erased. I write these words, sitting in a shared workspace where many students and writers are trying to fight the fear of what is to come by studying and working. They are hanging on to their work routines, hoping for some normalcy amid the terrifying chaos. People in Gaza love life, even when life means surviving by the bare minimum. Even in the darkest moments, we always find a way to have hope, joy, and happiness. I want to have hope, but I am also terrified – not only of the bombs, of forced displacement, of tents and exile. I am terrified of being cut off from the world, of being silenced. I feel like what Israel is preparing for us in the south is a concentration camp where we will be cut off from the world, our voices muffled, our existence erased. I do not know how much longer my words will reach the outside world, so I want to take this opportunity to make an appeal. Do not forget me, Sara Awad, a Palestinian student, whose biggest dream is to finish her degree in English literature and become a professional journalist. Do not forget the people of Gaza and their 2 million stories of love, heartbreak and perseverance. Do not forget my city, Gaza – an ancient metropolis, full of history and culture, full of love. Do not forget how fiercely we resisted and held on to our homes and land, even when the world all but abandoned us. The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial stance.

Koen Olthuis: Why the future of cities may be floating
Koen Olthuis: Why the future of cities may be floating

Al Jazeera

timea day ago

  • Al Jazeera

Koen Olthuis: Why the future of cities may be floating

Can floating cities protect from rising seas? Architect Koen Olthuis says it's time to live with water, not fight it. As climate change pushes sea levels higher, Dutch architect Koen Olthuis says the answer isn't higher dikes – it's floating cities. From luxury homes in the Netherlands to sustainable floating schools in slums and entire island communities in the Maldives, his vision blends architecture and adaptation. But can floating design truly offer an inclusive solution – or will only the wealthy stay dry? In this episode of Talk to Al Jazeera , Olthuis explains why living on water may be the only way forward.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store