Zürcher Nachrichten - Hostages freed in Gaza truce pine for those left behind

EUR -
AED 4.111191
AFN 76.176764
ALL 98.924914
AMD 430.675932
ANG 2.005524
AOA 1048.230274
ARS 1080.411629
AUD 1.626274
AWG 2.014753
AZN 1.904943
BAM 1.955691
BBD 2.246784
BDT 132.972569
BGN 1.954589
BHD 0.421837
BIF 3227.178229
BMD 1.119307
BND 1.43409
BOB 7.689502
BRL 6.10112
BSD 1.112743
BTN 93.092998
BWP 14.622575
BYN 3.641694
BYR 21938.426002
BZD 2.243035
CAD 1.503509
CDF 3207.372538
CHF 0.942384
CLF 0.037065
CLP 1022.744999
CNY 7.860561
CNH 7.85371
COP 4643.726779
CRC 577.678039
CUC 1.119307
CUP 29.661647
CVE 110.258838
CZK 25.087482
DJF 198.149812
DKK 7.457475
DOP 66.917456
DZD 148.177495
EGP 54.525606
ERN 16.789612
ETB 132.820551
FJD 2.445071
FKP 0.852419
GBP 0.834309
GEL 3.050146
GGP 0.852419
GHS 17.525864
GIP 0.852419
GMD 76.677407
GNF 9613.548649
GTQ 8.601519
GYD 232.80491
HKD 8.716528
HNL 27.637949
HRK 7.610184
HTG 147.055723
HUF 394.186328
IDR 16901.598447
ILS 4.204623
IMP 0.852419
INR 93.564364
IQD 1457.757607
IRR 47114.446489
ISK 151.095006
JEP 0.852419
JMD 175.604893
JOD 0.793251
JPY 160.450463
KES 143.259601
KGS 94.270541
KHR 4522.050295
KMF 494.678059
KPW 1007.37607
KRW 1488.510825
KWD 0.341535
KYD 0.927373
KZT 533.68448
LAK 24529.286657
LBP 99649.502064
LKR 337.170195
LRD 222.549551
LSL 19.278239
LTL 3.305024
LVL 0.677058
LYD 5.279729
MAD 10.782701
MDL 19.423435
MGA 5029.853725
MKD 61.515792
MMK 3635.466933
MNT 3803.406662
MOP 8.92374
MRU 44.019933
MUR 51.34309
MVR 17.192597
MWK 1929.543886
MXN 21.645537
MYR 4.617699
MZN 71.467739
NAD 19.278239
NGN 1829.617053
NIO 40.948992
NOK 11.643926
NPR 148.951338
NZD 1.7669
OMR 0.430886
PAB 1.112738
PEN 4.198665
PGK 4.356815
PHP 62.589996
PKR 309.123406
PLN 4.255125
PYG 8660.554704
QAR 4.055973
RON 4.97465
RSD 117.061721
RUB 103.42405
RWF 1501.942903
SAR 4.199304
SBD 9.301144
SCR 14.153881
SDG 673.257204
SEK 11.288714
SGD 1.436726
SHP 0.852419
SLE 25.573156
SLL 23471.311798
SOS 635.975823
SRD 33.857932
STD 23167.404323
SVC 9.736717
SYP 2812.293474
SZL 19.284008
THB 36.516845
TJS 11.828539
TMT 3.917576
TND 3.372112
TOP 2.621526
TRY 38.209328
TTD 7.57178
TWD 35.674007
TZS 3056.828171
UAH 45.976763
UGX 4116.733163
USD 1.119307
UYU 46.397407
UZS 14184.207336
VEF 4054750.036532
VES 41.150838
VND 27470.603069
VUV 132.886429
WST 3.131221
XAF 655.932064
XAG 0.034959
XAU 0.00042
XCD 3.024984
XDR 0.823176
XOF 655.923275
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.1648
ZAR 19.372413
ZMK 10075.107333
ZMW 29.516142
ZWL 360.416542
  • RBGPF

    -0.6200

    59.48

    -1.04%

  • SCS

    0.1100

    13.12

    +0.84%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    10.09

    -0.2%

  • GSK

    0.1200

    40.98

    +0.29%

  • AZN

    -0.2700

    76.87

    -0.35%

  • NGG

    -0.3700

    70.11

    -0.53%

  • RELX

    -0.3300

    48.53

    -0.68%

  • CMSC

    0.0299

    25.1

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    7.04

    -0.43%

  • RIO

    2.8400

    67.42

    +4.21%

  • BCC

    0.1300

    141.78

    +0.09%

  • BCE

    0.0300

    35.13

    +0.09%

  • JRI

    0.1200

    13.42

    +0.89%

  • CMSD

    0.1150

    25.12

    +0.46%

  • BTI

    0.2000

    38.1

    +0.52%

  • BP

    -0.0300

    32.83

    -0.09%

Hostages freed in Gaza truce pine for those left behind
Hostages freed in Gaza truce pine for those left behind / Photo: Fabrice COFFRINI - AFP/File

Hostages freed in Gaza truce pine for those left behind

It has been nearly 10 months since Aviva Siegel was freed from captivity in Gaza, but her thoughts remain in the Palestinian territory where her husband Keith is still held by Hamas.

Text size:

Siegel is one of a group of hostages released during a brief truce in the Israel-Hamas war last year who now pine for the loved ones they left behind -- and worry about what stalled truce talks mean for their fate.

"I'm still in Gaza, I haven't left yet," Siegel told AFP, describing her mental state.

"I'm with Keith in spirit at all times. I can't bear to imagine that he and the other hostages are 40 metres (130 feet) below ground, without air to breathe, without food to eat, without anything nice."

Aviva and Keith were seized from kibbutz Kfar Aza near the border with Gaza during Hamas's unprecedented attack on October 7, two of the 251 hostages abducted to the Palestinian territory that day.

The week-long truce last November saw Palestinian militants released 105 hostages seized on October 7, the Israelis among them in exchange for 240 Palestinians held in Israeli jails.

Siegel became one of the first to tell her story publicly after returning to Israel.

"I wanted to die so many times," she told AFP, her voice shaking at the memory.

"When I got out, I had lost 10 kilos (22 pounds). I could barely walk, eat or drink. I don't want to imagine the situation Keith is in."

Of the hostages seized on October 7, 97 are still held in Gaza, including 33 the Israeli military says are dead.

- 'Sick of burying hostages' -

Shortly after her liberation, Siegel began attending weekly protests held in the Israeli commercial hub of Tel Aviv, calling for a truce deal that would allow for the return of the remaining hostages.

Those protests have only grown as organisers try to ramp up pressure on the government to seal a deal.

The Israeli army's announcement that it had recovered the bodies of six hostages from a Gaza tunnel in late August has made a breakthrough all the more urgent, Siegel said.

"Keith is still there," she told AFP at one of the recent protests.

"We have to get them out. It's too cruel... It's unbearable and unforgivable."

Like Siegel, Raz Ben Ami was freed during the November truce and is now hoping for the release of her husband, Ohad Ben Ami, 55.

She too has taken to the streets to demand progress towards a deal, speaking at one recent rally while wearing a t-shirt bearing her husband's photograph.

"I'm sick of my government that doesn't do enough to bring back the hostages.. sick of this nightmare that takes me back to Gaza every day," she said.

"I'm sick of burying hostages, returned in coffins."

- 'I prefer to hope' -

Another regular at the Tel Aviv protests is Bat-Sheva Yahalomi, marching with a picture of her husband Ohad Yahalomi, who was captured on October 7 from their home in kibbutz Nir Oz along with their 12-year-old son Eitan.

Bat-Sheva can't stop thinking about the last time they saw each other, before armed men took her and the children away from Ohad, who lay on the floor wounded in an exchange of fire after trying to protect the family.

"I think the last thing he saw was our kidnapping, and he probably doesn't know what happened to us," she said.

Bat-Sheva and her two daughters managed to escape after they fell from their captor's motorbike.

Eitan was released in the November truce after 52 days in Gaza.

But Ohad's continued captivity means "it's still October 7" for Bat-Sheva, a French-Israeli joint citizen.

"What breaks me is hopelessness, the idea that (the hostages) lose hope and don't think they'll be rescued," she said from her new home in a kibbutz in central Israel.

On her fridge, alongside pictures from happier days, hangs an image of her husband with the words "Bring them home".

When the children ask where their father is, Bat-Sheva says she tells them "the truth" but also works to keep their spirits up -- as well as her own.

"I don't know but I prefer to hope that he's alive," she said.

P.E.Steiner--NZN