The Israeli military rescued four hostages in a special operation in the Nuseirat refugee camp, central Gaza, that Gazan authorities said killed 210 people and injured more than 400 others.
Noa Argamani, Almog Meir Jan, Andrey Kozlov, and Shlomi Ziv, were rescued by the Israeli military, intelligence and special forces from two separate locations in Nuseirat, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said Saturday.
All four were kidnapped from the Nova music festival on October 7.
“They are in good medical condition and have been transferred to the ‘Sheba’ Tel-HaShomer Medical Center for further medical examinations,” the IDF added.
An Israeli policeman from a special counter-terrorism unit was killed in Saturday’s rescue operation, according to Israeli police.
News of the rescue came soon after Israel’s military said it was operating in Nuseirat and other areas of central Gaza, where heavy shelling and artillery fire was reported.
At least 210 people have been killed as a result of the rescue operation, the Government Media Office in Gaza said Saturday.
The killed and wounded are arriving at two hospitals in Gaza, Al-Awda Hospital in Nuseirat and Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir Al-Balah, the media office added.
CNN is not able to independently verify the media office numbers.
Nidal Abdo, was shopping in Nuseirat on Saturday when he described a “crazy bombardment” hitting.
“There are children torn apart and scattered in the streets, they wiped out Nuseirat, it is hell on earth,” he said.
Another local, Abu Abdallah, said the strike hit while people were sleeping, adding: “Dogs were eating people’s remains. We pulled out six martyrs, all torn up children and women, we risked our lives to get them to the hospital.”
Hamas described the operation as a “heinous crime” in a press release Saturday, saying the Israeli military “committed a horrific massacre against innocent civilians.”
Hostage rescues are rare: this is only the third such successful operation. IDF Corporal Ori Megidish was rescued in October last year from the northern Gaza Strip. In another operation on February 12 this year, Fernando Marman and Louis Har were rescued from southern Rafah.
One of the group, 25-year-old Noa Argamani, became one of the symbols of the October 7 attacks, after video emerged of her seen shouting and pleading from the seat of a motorbike as a group of Hamas fighters drive away with her in tow.
In the video, Argamani’s boyfriend, fellow Israeli citizen Avinatan Or, is also led away and kidnapped by Hamas fighters.
Noa’s mother Liora Argamani is a Chinese citizen who has been grappling with late stage brain cancer. In a video released last November, she made a desperate plea to be able to see her daughter one more time.
“I don’t know how long I have left. I wish for the chance to see my Noa at home,” her mother said, calling on US President Joe Biden to push for her daughter’s release.
Argamani’s family had previously received signs that she was still alive. She appeared in a series of Hamas propaganda videos released in January this year.
Video showed Argamani embracing her father after her release. She also held a phone call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who told her “we didn’t give up on you for a moment.”
Of the others freed:
– Almog Meir Jan, 22, is from the small city of Or Yehuda, outside Tel Aviv. He was due to start a new job at a technology company on October 8.
– Shlomi Ziv, 41, was working as a security guard at the Nova festival when he was kidnapped on October 7. Ziv had been living in the local moshav or agricultural settlement for 17 years with his wife Miren.
– Andrey Kozlov, 27, is a Russian citizen who move to Israel a year ago. He was also working as a security guard at the Nova festival.
Rescuing hostages taken during the Hamas attacks of October 7 remains a major goal of the Israeli military campaign in Gaza.
Following Saturday’s announcement, the total number of hostages still held in the Gaza Strip from October 7 is now 116, of which at least 41 are dead.
who was doing the shooting?
Israeli and they should be properly judged for that.
But hamas could have prevented all this just by releasing all hostages early. Or by not taking them in the first place. Or by not executing a totally useless massacre at October 7.
Hamas also should be judged for all that but there is no system around for that to happen.
you know you can't prove a counterfactual?
What exactly?
you can't prove what would have happened had hamas released all the hostages
That's easy. What would happen is that many more people all over the world would call Israel to stop killing civilians. I can't understand why it's not obvious to someone who is in terms with basic logic.
And can you prove that the outcome is going to be better if they keep the hostages until the very end? There will be more news about how Israel released hostages? Or hamas members are going to live much longer? Or maybe something else that will certainly help Palestinians?
you can't prove a counterfactual, but we can prove who killed those kids.
So you only want to prove who killers are, not to stop the murders?
Feels like you aren't reading what you're replying to.
i definitely want to stop the idf from murdering, but that's not what you meant, is it?
I meant that you are actively refusing the possibility of hamas doing anything good for the sake of Palestinians.
I'm mostly concerned with stopping the genocide, which means the Israeli occupying force would need to stop shooting kids
And what's your problem with understanding that more people opposing their actions will make it stop sooner?
this syntax is confusing. can you try it again, as a statement, and without pronouns?
Hamas could release hostages. This would lead to more people opposing Israel's actions all over the world. This would end the ground operation sooner.
people already opposed Israel killing kids and starving the the people of Gaza and refusing them the right of return or free movement between Gaza and the west bank.
Then why do people continue to oppose? If it doesn't work, stop it. Is this your logic?
I'm telling you that the goal you think releasing hostages might achieve has already been reached. it's like saying Israel would be able to hold gazans in an extermination camp, walls and everything, if hamas released the hostages. that shit is already happening.
No. Are you blind? What twisted logic allows you to assume that keeping hostages will do any good for Palestinians? See the article. Also I personally would condemn Israel much more if all hostages are released. I'm not the only one.
everyone already opposes Israels aggression. releasing hostages won't have any impact on that
The least wise thought concerning this conflict I've heard.
that's how I feel about people blaming others for Israel killing kids.
this is abuser's logic. it's not Palestinians fault that Israel is killing their kids.
And I'm not suggesting Palestinians to do anything extra if you read my comment properly.
It would be an effective measure to decrease support for Israel and increase support of Palestine.
Israel is responsible for it's own soldiers killing Palestinians. no thing anyone else does changes this.
It's amazing how you can act that righteous but completely miss the point and oppose any discussion about ways to bring an end to aggression. I hope you are not an LLM.
Israel can stop agressing right now. your insinuation that I'm not even human is disgusting.
Doesn't mean they will on their own. Hence the pressure. Also doesn't mean we should avoid any opportunities for increasing pressure. On both sides.
Zionists could have stopped any of this from happening by staying the fuck out of Palestine 77 years ago
Israel can achieve what they want (not that I justify them). Hamas on the other hand, can't, and should've done a better job to make sure their missile strikes and/or October 7 attack would not be useless for their goals. Or if you assume those were not useless for their goals, I'd conclude you agree their (hamas') goals included killing as many Palestines as possible.
So Israel has the right to kill all those kids because of Hamas? Or what's your point?