Israeli hostage families plead for Hamas to release all 240 hostages as Israel-Hamas truce is extended for another two days

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Israeli hostage families plead for Hamas to release all 240 hostages as Israel-Hamas truce is extended for another two days

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[ad_1] The mother of a 22-year-old man who has been held hostage by Hamas after being kidnapped in his home by militants has pleaded for confirmatio

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The mother of a 22-year-old man who has been held hostage by Hamas after being kidnapped in his home by militants has pleaded for confirmation of the safety of her son.

Iris Haim, whose son, Yotam, was abducted from his home in Kibbutz Nir Oz in the early hours of October 7, said she lives in fear every day she doesn’t see her son listed by militants for release as part of hostage exchange deal between Israel and Hamas.

“Everyone’s praying that their son will be on the list,” Ms Haim told reporters.

“My family, we are living in psychological terror because they don’t give names until the last minute, while we wait in fear.”

Ms Haim joined four other family members and representatives of people who were kidnapped or murdered by Hamas on October 7 ahead of a meeting with the Prime Minister on Tuesday.

They have flown to Australia from Israel to meet with senior government officials to call for the immediate release of all 240 hostages thought to be held captive by Hamas.

Elad Levy, 49, whose 19-year-old niece Roni Eshel, an IDF soldier, was murdered on October 7, said he believed there was a very strong distinction between Hamas terrorists and the Palestinian people.

“Hamas is a terrorist organisation. They kill people for being people, not Muslims, not believing – they kill Muslims and Arabs in Gaza. They kill their own people,” he said.

Tali Kizhner, 50, whose 22-year-old son Sergev was murdered while attending a music festival after Hamas gunmen initiated a surprise attack on October 7, issued to tearful plea to people spreading anti-Semitic messages to grieving families.

“It was not a matter of religion, it was not a matter of gender. They [Hamas] simply came to kill everyone,” she said.
“We deserve peace and quiet and we do not understand why people are saying these horrible, anti-Semitic things about us. Hatred is a disease.”

The families’ pleas come after a reported 69 hostages were freed by Palestinian militant group Hamas over the first three days of a mutually agreed truce, which began on Friday. In exchange, a total of 33 Palestinians were released from Israeli prisons on Monday, according to Israeli authorities.

Qatari officials announced on Monday that the truce would be extended for another two days, raising hopes that more additional aid will flow into Gaza and the release of more hostages, prisoners and detainees than initially expected.

The cease-fire has marked the longest break in fighting in the Gaza Strip since Oct. 7, when Hamas gunman and other armed groups launched an attack on Israel, killing about 1,200 people and taking about 240 people hostage.

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