In its ongoing efforts to address the hostage crisis involving Hamas in the Gaza Strip, Israel has opted to declare some of the missing individuals as dead in captivity. This measure aims to provide a degree of closure to the anxious relatives of the hostages.
A three-person medical committee has been meticulously reviewing videos from the October 7th incident, where Hamas-led Palestinian gunmen staged an attack in southern Israel. The committee looks for signs of lethal injuries among the abducted individuals, cross-referencing the information with the testimony of hostages who were freed during a recent week-long Gaza truce that concluded on Friday.
The determination of death is made based on the evidence gathered, even if no formal pronouncement has been made by a doctor over the individual’s body. Hagar Mizrahi, a Health Ministry official who heads the panel, acknowledged the difficulty of designating death, especially in the current complex situation. She emphasized that the committee addresses the families’ desire for information about their loved ones abducted to Gaza.
Out of around 240 people kidnapped, Hamas released 108 in exchange for the release of Palestinian detainees by Israel and an increase in humanitarian aid shipments to Gaza. Since the truce concluded, Israeli authorities have declared six civilians and an army colonel dead in captivity, a declaration not confirmed by Hamas. The group has previously claimed that hostages were killed in Israeli airstrikes, threatened to execute hostages, and suggested the involvement of other armed Palestinian factions.
Despite Israel’s calls for the Red Cross to arrange visits and verify the well-being of the hostages, they have remained incommunicado.