IDF retrieves hostage's body from Gaza, a day after recovering three others. Tensions escalate in the region
The Israeli military announced Saturday
that it had recovered the body of a hostage from the Gaza Strip, one day after
saying it had retrieved the remains of three others in the besieged territory.
The hostage was identified as Ron
Benjamin, who was killed on October 7 at the Mefalsim intersection during the
Hamas attack, Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesperson Rear Admiral Daniel
Hagari said in a news conference. Benjamin’s body was abducted by Hamas and
taken to Gaza, he added.
The three previous hostages were
identified as Shani Louk, Amit Bouskila, and Itshak Gelernter, Hagari said in a
press conference in Tel Aviv on Friday. All three were taken hostage on October
7 and were killed while escaping the Nova music festival and their bodies taken
into Gaza, the IDF said.
“They were celebrating life in the Nova
music festival and they were murdered by Hamas,” he said.
The bodies were identified by
authorities and the families have been informed, Hagari said, adding that the
bodies had been transferred to medical professionals for forensic examination.
Hagari did not disclose where the bodies
were found during the press conference. He said the bodies were recovered
during a joint IDF and Shin Bet operation.
CNN analyst and Axios reporter Barak
Ravid, citing an IDF spokesperson, reported the bodies were found in a tunnel
in Gaza.
Nissim Louk, father of Shani Louk whose
body was one of those recovered also told Israeli media his daughter’s body was
very well preserved because it had been kept in a “deep and very cold tunnel”.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu expressed his grief in a post on X on Friday. “The heart breaks for
the great loss. My wife Sara and I grieve with the families. All our hearts are
with them in this hour of grieving,” he said.
“We will return all our hostages, the
dead and the alive alike. I congratulate our brave forces who, with determined
action, have returned our sons and daughters home,” he added.
Of the three hostages, only Louk had
previously been confirmed dead by the Israeli government.
The 23-year-old German-Israeli woman was
declared dead by the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs in late October. A
source involved with her identification told CNN Louk’s death was announced
after forensic examiners found a bone fragment from her skull.
Her lifeless body was seen on video on
the back of a Hamas truck after the music festival attack.
Louk’s family said they feel some
closure now that her body has been recovered. In a statement given to CNN, the
family said the IDF came to their house on Friday and informed them that they
were able to rescue Louk’s body from a tunnel in Gaza and bring her back to
Israel.
“Every news like this brings us back to
the horrific moment we had to find out that our loving daughter was brutally
murdered by Hamas on the 7th of October. However, it is also a relief to get
the body back and we are now able to bury her close by. It gives us some kind
of closure,” the family said.
“We want to remember Shani as the
beautiful and peace-loving person she was, who loved music, dancing and life.
She brought us and many other people in the world light and the belief in good.
This is how we choose to remember Shani,” the statement added.
Around 240 people were taken hostage and
moved to Gaza during Hamas’ October 7 attack on Israel which also killed more
than 1,200 people. In the seven months since that attack, Israel has launched a
war in Gaza that has killed more than 35,000 Palestinians, according to the
Palestinian Ministry of Health.
A little more than 100 hostages were freed
during a release deal in November, but the IDF believes there are still 132
hostages being held in Gaza, 128 of whom were taken on October 7.
The IDF believed that of those 132
hostages, 40 are believed to be dead, including two who were taken in 2014.
A deal to secure the release of the
remaining hostages has remained elusive for months, despite rounds of talks
between Israeli and Hamas negotiating teams.
Last Friday, Hamas militants said
Israel’s rejection of a ceasefire plan submitted by mediators at negotiations
in Cairo had sent hostage release talks back to “square one.”
The statement came a day after the
latest round of Gaza truce and hostage deal talks ended in Cairo, without a
deal.
The militant group also accused
Netanyahu of hindering the ceasefire talks, so as to use negotiations as a
cover to attack the southern Gaza city of Rafah.
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