israel hamas prisoner exchange – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Sun, 09 Nov 2025 14:00:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png israel hamas prisoner exchange – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Red Cross receives body of a hostage in Gaza that Hamas claims is Israeli soldier Hadar Goldin https://artifex.news/article70259715-ece/ Sun, 09 Nov 2025 14:00:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70259715-ece/ Read More “Red Cross receives body of a hostage in Gaza that Hamas claims is Israeli soldier Hadar Goldin” »

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The Red Cross received on Sunday (November 9, 2025) the remains of a hostage in Gaza that Hamas claims is the body of an Israeli soldier who was killed in 2014 and who has been held in Gaza for the past 11 years. His remains are the only ones currently held in Gaza since before the latest, two-year war between Israel and Hamas.

Hamas said it found the body of the soldier, Hadar Goldin, in a tunnel in the enclave’s southernmost city of Rafah on Saturday (November 8, 2025). Goldin was killed on August 1, 2014, two hours after a ceasefire took effect ending that year’s war between Israel and Hamas.

The remains will be transferred to Israel and to the national forensic institute for identification. If the body is identified as Goldin’s, there will be four bodies of hostages remaining in Gaza.

His return would be a significant development in the U.S.-brokered truce and close a painful, 11-year saga for his family.

At the start of the weekly Cabinet meeting, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that holding the body for so long has caused “great agony of his family, which will now be able to give him a Jewish burial.”

Goldin’s family spearheaded a very public campaign, along with the family of another soldier whose body was taken in 2014, to bring their sons home for burial. Israel recovered the remains of the other soldier earlier this year.

Mr. Netanyahu said the country would continue trying to bring home the bodies of Israelis still being held across enemy lines, such as Eli Cohen, an Israeli spy hung in Damascus in 1965.

Israeli media, citing anonymous officials, have reported that Hamas was delaying the release of Goldin’s body in hopes of negotiating safe passage for more than 100 militants surrounded by Israeli forces and trapped in the enclave’s southernmost city of Rafah.

Gila Gamliel, the Minister of Innovation, Science and Technology and a member of Netanyahu’s Likud party, told Army radio that Israel is not negotiating for a deal within a deal.

“There are agreements whose implementation is guaranteed by the mediators, and we shouldn’t allow anyone to come know and play (games) and to reopen the agreement,” she said.

Hamas made no comment on a possible exchange for its fighters stuck in the so-called yellow zone, which is controlled by Israeli forces, though they acknowledged that there are clashes taking place there.

Hamas made no comment on a possible exchange for its fighters stuck in the so-called yellow zone, which is controlled by Israeli forces, though they acknowledged that there are clashes taking place there.

Since the ceasefire began last month, militants have released the remains of 23 hostages. As part of the truce deal, the militants are expected to return all of the remains of hostages.

For each Israeli hostage returned, Israel has been releasing the remains of 15 Palestinians. Ahmed Dheir, director of forensic medicine at Nasser Hospital in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis, said that the remains of 300 have now been returned, with 89 identified.

The war began with a Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on October 7, 2023, in which 251 people were kidnapped and 1,200 killed in Israel, mostly civilians.

On Saturday (November 8, 2025), Gaza’s Health Ministry said the number of Palestinians killed in Gaza has risen to 69,176. The Ministry, part of the Hamas-run government and staffed by medical professionals, maintains detailed records viewed as generally reliable by independent experts.

Back in 2014, the Israeli military determined, based on evidence found in the tunnel where Goldin’s body was taken — including a blood-soaked shirt and prayer fringes — that he had been killed in the attack. His family held what Leah Goldin now calls a “pseudo-funeral’ including Goldin’s shirt and fringes, at the urging of Israel’s military rabbis. But the lingering uncertainty was like a “knife constantly making new cuts.”

Leah Goldin told the Associated Press earlier this year that returning her son’s body is an ethical and religious value, part of the sacrosanct pact Israel makes with its citizens, who are required by law to serve in the military.

“Hadar is a soldier who went to combat and they abandoned him, and they destroyed his humanitarian rights and ours as well,” Ms. Goldin said. She said her family often felt alone in their struggle to bring Hadar, a talented artist who had just gotten engaged, home for burial.

In the dizzying days after Hamas’ attack on southern Israel on October 7, 2023, the Goldin family threw themselves into attempting to help hundreds of families of the 251 people Hamas had dragged into Gaza. Initially, the Goldins found themselves shunned as advocacy for the October 7 hostages surged. “We were a symbol of failure,” Goldin recalled. “They told us, ‘we aren’t like you, our kids will come back soon.’”

Published – November 09, 2025 07:30 pm IST



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Hamas frees 8 more hostages; Israel releases Palestinian prisoners after delay https://artifex.news/article69158648-ece/ Thu, 30 Jan 2025 09:28:20 +0000 https://artifex.news/article69158648-ece/ Read More “Hamas frees 8 more hostages; Israel releases Palestinian prisoners after delay” »

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Israel began releasing 110 Palestinian prisoners on Thursday (January 30, 2025) after eight hostages in the Gaza Strip were freed by militants earlier in the day in a sometimes chaotic process that briefly called the exchange into question and underscored the fragility of a ceasefire that began this month.

The prisoners released include 30 serving life sentences for deadly attacks against Israelis. Some are allowed to return to the occupied West Bank, while those convicted of more serious crimes are being transferred to Egypt before further deportation.

Their releases began late Thursday (January 30, 2025) after militants in Gaza freed three Israelis and five Thai nationals, who were working on farms in southern Israel when taken hostage more than 15 months ago.

The releases are part of a ceasefire aimed at ending the deadliest and most destructive war ever fought between Israel and Hamas, and securing the release of dozens more hostages abducted in the Hamas-led attack on October 7, 2023, that ignited the war.

Scuffles erupted as the convoy of buses carrying the Palestinian prisoners departed from their Israeli prison in the West Bank. Palestinian teenagers threw stones outside the complex and Israeli forces fired tear gas as they tried to clear the area.

Three Palestinians were wounded in the confrontations outside the prison, according to Palestinian Red Crescent, which said Israeli forces had used gunfire and stun grenades to disperse crowds.

The families of Palestinian prisoners caught their first glimpses of the Red Cross buses carrying their loved ones through the bus windshields, some shattered in the melee of stone-throwing and tear gas-firing.

The uproar came hours after a chaotic hostage handover in the Gaza Strip, where masked militants shuttled some captives through a crowd of thousands of Palestinians.

Hamas released seven of the hostages in front of the destroyed home of its slain leader, Yahya Sinwar, as thousands pressed in. The militant group called it a “message of determination,” but it triggered the latest in a series of disputes that have sent U.S. and Arab mediators scrambling to patch up the truce.

Palestinian Hamas militants release female Israeli soldier Agam Berger held in Gaza since the deadly October 7, 2023 attack, as part of a ceasefire and a hostages-prisoners swap deal between Hamas and Israel, in Jabalia, in the northern Gaza Strip, on January 30, 2025.
| Photo Credit:
Reuters

The first hostage — female soldier Agam Berger, 20 — was released after Hamas paraded her in front of a smaller crowd in the heavily destroyed urban Jabaliya refugee camp in northern Gaza.

Hours later, a chaotic scene unfolded at a handover of the other seven in the southern city of Khan Younis. Hundreds of militants from Hamas and the smaller Islamic Jihad group arrived with a convoy, and thousands of people gathered to watch, some from the tilted rooftops of bombed-out buildings.

Footage showed hostage Arbel Yehoud, 29, looking stunned as masked militants hustled her through the shouting crowd, pushing people back. Also released were Gadi Moses, an 80-year-old Israeli man, and five Thai laborers. Both Ms. Yehoud and Mr. Moses are dual German-Israeli nationals.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned the “shocking scenes” and called on international mediators to ensure the safety of hostages in future releases.

Israel identified the Thai hostages released as: Watchara Sriaoun, 33; Pongsak Thaenna, 36; Sathian Suwannakham, 35; Surasak Rumnao, 32; and Bannawat Saethao, 27. Thai officials said they appeared to be in good health.

Twenty three Thais were among more than 100 hostages released during a weeklong ceasefire in November 2023. Israel says three Thais remain in captivity, two of whom are believed to be dead.

Ms. Yehoud had been at the centre of a dispute earlier this week over the sequence in which the hostages would be released. The United States, Egypt and Qatar, which brokered the ceasefire after a year of tough negotiations, resolved it with an agreement that Ms. Yehoud would be released with the others on Thursday (January 30, 2025).

About 20 friends of Ms. Yehoud gathered in southern Israel watched as the tense scene unfolded on live television. Some cried. Others had their hands over their eyes or mouths. The crowd then burst into tears after she was turned over to the Red Cross.

Footage released by the Israeli military showed 80-year-old Mr. Moses’ relatives bursting into the room, embracing the elderly man. His daughter exclaimed repeatedly, “My father, my father!”

In the first phase of the ceasefire, Hamas is set to release a total of 33 Israeli hostages, including women, children, older adults and sick or wounded men, in exchange for nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners. Israel says Hamas has confirmed that eight of the hostages to be released in this phase are dead.

Also Read | Israel says it won’t complete its withdrawal from Lebanon by January 26

A line of white buses carrying Palestinian prisoners left Ofer prison in the West Bank and made their way toward Beitunah, near the occupied West Bank City of Ramallah where relatives and celebrations awaited.

Among those set to be released from prisons on Thursday (January 30, 2025) is Zakaria Zubeidi, a prominent former militant leader and theatre director who took part in a dramatic jailbreak in 2021 before being rearrested days later.

Released Israeli hostages, Karina Ariev, Liri Albag and Daniella Gilboa, who were soldiers seized from their army base in southern Israel during the deadly October 7, 2023 attack by Hamas, watch as Agam Berger, a fellow hostage is passed over to the Red Cross, at Beilinson Schneider complex in Petah Tikva, Israel in a handout photo obtained by Reuters on January 30, 2025.

Released Israeli hostages, Karina Ariev, Liri Albag and Daniella Gilboa, who were soldiers seized from their army base in southern Israel during the deadly October 7, 2023 attack by Hamas, watch as Agam Berger, a fellow hostage is passed over to the Red Cross, at Beilinson Schneider complex in Petah Tikva, Israel in a handout photo obtained by Reuters on January 30, 2025.
| Photo Credit:
Reuters

Arbel Yehoud and Gadi Moses, hostages held in Gaza since the deadly October 7, 2023 attack, and who are to be released as part of a ceasefire and a hostages-prisoners swap deal between Hamas and Israel, are seen at an unspecified location in this screengrab from video released January 30, 2025.

Arbel Yehoud and Gadi Moses, hostages held in Gaza since the deadly October 7, 2023 attack, and who are to be released as part of a ceasefire and a hostages-prisoners swap deal between Hamas and Israel, are seen at an unspecified location in this screengrab from video released January 30, 2025.
| Photo Credit:
Reuters

In addition, around 30 people who are serving life sentences after being convicted of deadly attacks against Israelis are set to be freed.

Palestinians have cheered the release of the prisoners, who they widely see as heroes who have sacrificed for the cause of ending Israel’s decadeslong occupation of lands they want for a future state.

Also Read | Israel kills 2 Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, officials say

Israeli forces have meanwhile pulled back from most of Gaza, allowing hundreds of thousands of people to return to what remains of their homes and humanitarian groups to surge assistance.

The deal calls for Israel and Hamas to negotiate a second phase in which Hamas would release the remaining hostages and the ceasefire would continue indefinitely. The war could resume in early March if an agreement is not reached.

Explained | Will the ceasefire in the Gaza Strip hold?

Israel says it is still committed to destroying Hamas, even after the militant group reasserted its rule over Gaza within hours of the truce. A key far-right partner in Netanyahu’s coalition is already calling for the war to resume after the ceasefire’s first phase.

Also Read | Gaza ceasefire traps Netanyahu between Trump and far-right allies

Hamas says it won’t release the remaining hostages without an end to the war and a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.



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