Hamas has handed over the remains of an additional captive it recovered in the ravaged Gaza Strip, as the Palestinian group urges mediators and the international community to pressure Israel to open border crossings and allow aid in.
The armed wing of Hamas, the Qassam Brigades, said in a statement on Friday that its fighters handed over the remains at 11pm local time (20:00 GMT), without elaborating on where the body was retrieved.
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According to the group, the remains were pulled out earlier in the day and were those of an āoccupation prisonerā, suggesting they belonged to an Israeli rather than one of the captives of several other nationalities also taken by Hamas on October 7, 2023.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuās office confirmed a short while later that Israel had received the coffin of a captive after it was handed over to the Red Cross by Hamas in Gaza.
The coffin will be transferred to Israelās Ministry of Healthās National Center for Forensic Medicine, where a formal identification process will be conducted before the family is informed.
The Israeli military requested that āthe public act with sensitivity and wait for the official identificationā. It also added thatĀ āHamas is required to uphold the agreement and take the necessary steps to return all the deceased hostagesā.
Hamas has said itās committed to the terms of the United States-mediated ceasefire deal, including the handover of captive bodies still unaccounted for under Gazaās ruins. It has repeatedly said it has returned all the bodies it was able to recover, but needs help locating remaining captives trapped under the rubble following Israeli strikes.
āThere are still 18 bodies held inside Gaza,ā said Al Jazeeraās Hamda Salhut, reporting from Amman on Friday. āHamas says that theyāre waiting for the assistance they need in the help in the form of heavy machinery and teams on the ground.ā
Israel is ānot cooperatingā
Former Israeli ambassador Alon Liel said the return of the bodies of the dead captives is being treated very emotionally in the country, creating pressure on the government.
He said many Israelis believed that Hamas was cheating on the ceasefire agreement by not returning all the bodies of the deceased captives. āThere is a lot of anger,ā Liel said.
In a statement earlier on Friday, Hamas said some captivesā remains were in tunnels or buildings that were later destroyed by Israel, and that heavy machinery was required to dig through rubble to retrieve them. It blamed Israel for the delay, saying it had not allowed any new bulldozers into the Gaza Strip.
Most heavy equipment in Gaza was destroyed during the war, leaving only a limited number as Palestinians try to clear massive amounts of rubble across the bombarded territory.
Al Jazeeraās Nour Odeh, reporting from Amman, said Israel is ānot cooperating with countries that are lending help to possibly look for those remainsā.
āTurkiye, for example, was ready to send 81 experts in the retrieval of bodies, and Israel has not allowed it to enter. It has also not allowed it to provide equipment that could possibly facilitate that,ā Odeh said.
On Friday, two bulldozers ploughed up pits in the earth as Hamas searched for captivesā remains in Hamad City, a complex of apartment towers in Khan Younis. Israeli forces repeatedly bombarded the towers during the war, toppling some, and troops conducted a weeklong raid there in March 2024.
US President Donald Trump has warned Hamas that he would greenlight Israel to resume the war on Gaza if the group does not live up to its end of the deal and return all captivesā bodies, totalling 28. So far in the past days, Hamas handed over the remains of nine captives, along with a 10th body that Israel claims was not that of a captive.
The return of the 10th dead captive on Friday comes as Gazaās civil defence said more than 10,000 slain Palestinians remain trapped under debris and rubble across the enclave. Only 280 have so far been retrieved.
Hamas has urged mediators to ensure the increased flow of essential aid into Gaza, expedite the opening of the Rafah border crossing with Egypt and start reconstruction. Despite the ceasefire deal agreed last week, Israel has yet to allow the entry of aid in scale and is still operating in about half of the Gaza Strip, as attacks continue in some areas.