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Israel-Hamas War:

3 Israeli Hostages Released amid Ceasefire

Deutsche Welle

  20 Jan 2025, 10:14
Photo: AFP

The first three Israeli hostages were handed over to the International Committee of the Red Cross as part of the ceasefire agreement with Hamas, the Israeli military said.

Meanwhile, a senior Hamas official told AFP news agency that the Palestinian militant group had handed over three Israeli women hostages to the Red Cross, as agreed with Israel in a ceasefire deal.

An Israeli official told Reuters that the Red Cross said the women were in good health.

Earlier, Hamas identified the first three Israeli hostages to be released as Romi Gonen, Doron Steinbrecher and Emily Damari.

The Israeli army has announced that three hostages from Gaza have crossed into Israel. The hostages will be taken to a hospital in Tel Aviv, where they will be met by their families.

The Israeli military had earlier announced that the three female hostages who were released by Hamas are with its forces in the Gaza Strip.

"The three released hostages are being accompanied by IDF (Israel Defense Forces) and ISA (Israel Security Agency) forces on their return to Israeli territory, where they will undergo an initial medical assessment," the military had said.

Palestinians in Gaza hope for peace and safety
As Gaza celebrates the first day of a ceasefire, DW spoke to two Palestinians in Gaza who shared their hopes for a lasting peace.

43-year-old Ali Nassar, from Rafah, said he felt immense happiness when the ceasefire was announced, because it meant "an end to the bloodshed and the preservation of children's lives."

"However, when I returned to Rafah and saw the area where I used to live, I was overcome with sadness. It looked as though an earthquake had struck. The scene was truly horrifying," he said.

Nassar said all Palestinians in Gaza hope for is peace and safety. "We don't want money; we just want to live in peace here in Gaza," he added.

Meanwhile, 21-year-old Malak Hussain, displaced in Nuseirat (refugee camp in central Gaza), said that she sincerely wishes "that all of Gaza will return to how it was before, and that we can begin rebuilding it."

"God willing, the truce will hold, and we will not return to war. This is a feeling we hope will last, and I pray it continues. May the war never return," she said.

Biden praises Gaza truce in last day in office
President Joe Biden welcomed the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, on what will be his final day in office.

"After so much pain, death and loss of life, today the guns in Gaza have gone silent," Biden said, regarding a truce he had hoped would come before the end of his term.

The US president said the "region has been fundamentally transformed."

Speaking about the ceasefire deal, Biden said it was one of the toughest negotiations he has been involved in. He defended his decision to support Israel throughout the conflict.

"The road to this deal has been not easy at all, it was a long road," Biden said. "But we've reached this point today because of the pressure Israel built on Hamas, backed by the United States."

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