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Three women hostages are the first to be freed under ceasefire deal

20/1/2025 5:57
Thousands of

Israelis gathered in Hostages Square in Tel Aviv, some cheering

and some in tears, as a giant television screen broadcast the

first glimpse of the first three hostages to be released under

the Gaza ceasefire deal.



They watched as the three women - Romi Gonen, Doron

Steinbrecher and Emily Damari - got out of a car in Gaza City

and were handed over to Red Cross officials amid a surging crowd

that was held back by armed men in camouflaged military gear,

with green Hamas headbands.



"I'm excited, I was so nervous, that they would come safe

and alive to their mothers' hands. They were in the hands of

terrorists for 471 days, three young women," said Shay Dickmann,

whose cousin was found slain by her Hamas captors in August.



The Israeli military shared video showing their families

gathered in what appeared to be a military facility crying out

in emotion as they watched footage of the handover to Israeli

forces in Gaza before they were brought back into Israel.



Pictures shared by the families showed the three women

embracing their mothers at a reception centre, with Emily Damari

beaming broadly and waving a bandaged hand missing two fingers

at family on the other end of a mobile phone video call.



After a nerve-racking morning, waiting to hear whether

Damari would be one of the three hostages freed on Sunday, her

friends breathed a sigh of relief.



"We didn't have any sign of life from her for a whole year

and this is the first time we are seeing her, and we are seeing

her walking on her two feet and we are just waiting here to hug

her and say how much we love her," said Guy Kleinberger.



They were later flown to a hospital in Tel Aviv in a

helicopter that Israeli media reported was piloted by the head

of the Israeli air force.



"Romi, Doron, Emily," an entire nation embraces you," Prime

Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.







UNCERTAINTY SURROUNDING REMAINING HOSTAGES



The release of the three women, the first of 33 hostages due

to be freed from Gaza under phase one of the deal, is in

exchange for 90 Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails.



The hostages were taken in one of the most traumatic

episodes in Israel's history, when Hamas gunmen attacked a

string of communities around the Gaza Strip in the early hours

of Oct. 7, 2023, killing around 1,200 civilians and soldiers and

abducting 251 hostages - men, women, children and elderly.



But amid hope among many Israelis that the six-week

ceasefire marks the beginning of the end to the war, there is

deep unease about the uncertainty surrounding the remaining 94

hostages still held in the Gaza Strip.



"The ceasefire is something that I hope will work out," said

Tomer Mizrahi, in Sderot, a town in southern Israel within sight

of Gaza that was attacked on Oct. 7. "But as I know Hamas, you

cannot even trust them one percent."



Images of Hamas police emerging on to the streets as the

ceasefire took effect underscored how far Israel remains from

its originally stated war aims of destroying the Islamist group

that has ruled in Gaza since 2007.



"I'm torn," said Dafna Sharabi from Beit Aryeh-Ofarim, a

Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank. "On the one hand

there's a ceasefire to strengthen the forces, to rest from all

the madness, on the other, maybe it's not the time," she said.



"They should have been eliminated, wiped out," she said. "My

son was on reserve duty for a year over there ... and he sees

all the Gazans returning, Hamas returning its forces to all the

places he fought in."







MEN OF MILITARY AGE NOT IN THE DEAL



After 15 months of war, Gaza lies largely in ruins. Israel's

campaign has killed almost 47,000 Palestinians, according to the

Palestinian health ministry and displaced most of the two

million people who live in the enclave.



But for many in Israel, the war will not be over while Hamas

still stands and there have been a series of rallies opposing

the ceasefire as a sell-out that abandons men of military age

taken captive, who are not in the first batch of 33 hostages.



National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir has already

resigned and his fellow hardliner Bezalel Smotrich has also

opposed the deal and said he has been reassured that it is not

the end of the war.



The Israel Democracy Institute said its latest Israeli Voice

Index, conducted just before the deal was agreed, found 57.5% of

Israelis in favour of a comprehensive agreement that would see

all hostages back in return for ending the war. Twelve percent

supported a partial hostage release in return for a temporary

ceasefire.



Amid the mix of emotions, for some, a sense of exhaustion

outweighed any concerns about the future.



"We have been waiting for this for a long time. We wanted it

to be an absolute victory, I hope we get that absolute victory,"

said Shlomi Elkayam, who owns a business in Sderot. "There are

pros and cons, but in the end we are tired of it all. We are

tired and we want everyone here at home."



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