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The relatives of the Israeli hostages terrorize as the truce of Israel-Ahamas is in danger

The relatives of the Israeli hostages terrorize as the truce of Israel-Ahamas is in danger

The family of the Israeli hostage Eli Sharabi, whose wife and two daughters were killed the attack of October 7, react while they see the live broadcast of him freed from the captivity of Hamas in Gaza, in Tel Aviv, Israel, on February 8 of 2025, as part of the Alto El Fuego de Israel-Famas agreement.

The family of the Israeli hostage Eli Sharabi, whose wife and two daughters were killed the attack of October 7, react while they see the live broadcast of him freed from the captivity of Hamas in Gaza, in Tel Aviv, Israel, on February 8 of 2025, as part of the Alto El Fuego de Israel-Famas agreement. | Photo credit: AP

After 16 months of unbearable uncertainty, Idit Ohel finally received the news that his 24 -year -old son, a hostage in Gaza, is still alive.

She said she passed out the brutal details of her captivity of released hostages that Hamas had been held by Hamas since October 7, 2023. United by chains in an underground tunnel, Alon Ohel has subsist in a piece of bread every day daily. .

“He has not seen the sunlight in 493 days,” he told Presspersons on Monday.

Like the high fragile fire between Israel and Hamas seems more and more at risk of crumble of the hostages are fighting to maintain hope. They beg Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who does not give up the fire frame and accelerate the liberations timeline if possible.

His concerns about the collapse of Alto Fire have been exacerbated by the demand of President Donald Trump that all hostages are released on Saturday, and their insistence that Gaza empties all the Palestinians and develops as a tourist enclave as a tourist enclave as a tourist enclave controlled by the United States.

Terrified families

The demacrated state of three hostages published last Saturday has enraged Israelis and terrified families of the remaining hostages, especially as more details arise about the conditions of their captivity.

The situation is especially difficult for the relatives of the hostages who are not on the list of 33 hostages that are expected to be released in the first phase of six weeks high the fire, which began on January 19. The agreement requires that Israel releases 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees, whose families are also worried about how their enemy treats them.

Two hostages published on Saturday, or Levy and Eli Sharabi, remained along with Alon Ohel, and a fourth hostage, Eliya Cohen. The four remained underground since their kidnapping, Idit Ohel said.

Cohen is expected to be launched in the first stage of Alto El Fuego; Ohel would be released in the second stage, if Israel and Hamas reach that point.

Levy, Ohel and Cohen were kidnapped from a bomb shelter near a music festival in southern Israel, along with Hersh Goldberg-Polin, an American-Israeli who died in captivity in August.

“I break my heart knowing that I was chained and knowing what happened in the tunnels of people in the tunnels,” Cohen’s fiancee, Ziv Abud, 27, said Tuesday.

The hostages that returned said that Cohen had lost more than 20 kg and had a bullet in the leg that did not receive medical attention. While they were with him, Cohen did not know that Abud had survived Hamas attack against the bomb shelter where they hid.

During the October 7 attack, the militants threw grenades and sprayed bullets inside the concrete bomb shelter near the Music Festival, where almost 30 people had gotten inside. At least 16 people inside the shelter were killed.

Abud said she was protected by the crush of the bodies on her. Entering and leaving consciousness, spent hours lying under the bodies of his nephew and his girlfriend.

For hostage families that are not scheduled for their launch in the first phase of the high fire, their uncertainty is even more difficult to bear.

Conversations in the second phase

Israel and Hamas settled last week to begin conversations in a second phase of the high fire that would include the end of the war and the launch of the remaining hostages. But those efforts have been frozen while the two parties exchange accusations about whether the other is up to the terms of the first phase.

Tamir Nimrodi, 20, an Israeli soldier kidnapped from his position at a main cross between Israel and Gaza, is not on the list that is released in the first stage. His mother, Herut, said the Hamas Plan to delay the next hostage launch was a shock.

It has been difficult to see hostages in recent weeks, Nimrodi said, especially hostage emotional videos that meet with their families.

On the one hand, each meeting is one step closer to bringing your son back. But Nimrodi does not know if his son, who also has German citizens, is alive. The other two soldiers with which he was kidnapped were killed.

According to Israeli media, the hostages that return have provided a life test for at least seven Israeli hostages, including Cohen and Ohel.

Idit Ohel received information about the condition of his son less than an hour before Israel’s Channel 12 news program is carried out earlier this week. He sat at the news counter sobbing on live television, supplying the government to continue until the second stage of Alto El Fuego and bring all the hostages home as soon as possible.

Alon, who also has German and Serbian citizenship, is a talented pianist. The family has placed the pianos in Israel in their honor, many of which are yellow, the color associated with the fight for hostages.

The family marked Alon’s second birthday in captivity on Monday night in Tel Aviv, where his mother went to the Israeli government. “After all the views you saw, after all the testimonies you heard from the captivity survivors, how do you allow this situation to continue?” She said.

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