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Hamas says to hand over remains of Israeli officer killed in 2014 Gaza war

Hamas says to hand over remains of Israeli officer killed in 2014 Gaza war
Israeli soldiers carry the flag-draped coffin of slain Israeli-American Staff Sgt. Itay Chen after his body was returned from Gaza, during his funeral at Kiryat Shaul Cemetery in Tel Aviv, Israel. (AP)
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Hamas says to hand over remains of Israeli officer killed in 2014 Gaza war

Hamas says to hand over remains of Israeli officer killed in 2014 Gaza war
  • Israeli forensic experts are expected to determine the identity of the remains once they are received

GAZA CITY: Hamas’ armed wing said it would hand over on Sunday the remains of Israeli officer Lt. Hadar Goldin, who was killed during the 2014 war in Gaza.
Israeli forensic experts are expected to determine the identity of the remains once they are received.
“The (Ezzedine) Al-Qassam Brigades will deliver the body of officer Hadar Goldin, which was found yesterday in a tunnel in the city of Rafah, at 2:00 p.m. (1200 GMT) Gaza time,” the group said in a statement on its Telegram channel.
If confirmed, Goldin would be the 24th deceased hostage whose remains Hamas has returned since the start of the current ceasefire on October 10.
Goldin’s body has been held in Gaza since his death in 2014. Until now, Hamas had never acknowledged his death or possession of his remains.
Israeli media reported on Saturday that Israel had allowed Hamas and Red Cross personnel to search in an area under Israeli control in Rafah to locate Goldin’s remains.
Several outlets said Hamas recovered the remains in a tunnel beneath territory held by Israeli forces.
Shortly after those reports, Israel’s military chief Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir visited the Goldin family, pledging to bring home his remains and those of other dead hostages still held in Gaza.
“The chief of the general staff emphasized his commitment and the IDF’s commitment to bringing back Hadar and all the fallen hostages,” the military said in a statement.
Another Israeli soldier, Oron Shaul, was also killed in the six-week war in 2014.
His body was recovered earlier this year during the latest war, which erupted after Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel.
Efforts to secure the return of both soldiers’ remains in past prisoner swaps had repeatedly failed.
Goldin, 23, was part of an Israeli unit tasked with locating and destroying Hamas tunnels when he was killed on August 1, 2014, just hours after a 72-hour humanitarian ceasefire took effect.
The army said militants ambushed his team, killing him and seizing his body.
Israel listed Goldin among the deceased hostages whose remains it seeks to repatriate under the ongoing US-brokered ceasefire deal to end the latest Gaza war.
At the start of the truce, Hamas was holding 20 living hostages and 28 bodies of deceased captives.
It has since released all the living hostages and returned 23 of the deceased’s remains in line with the ceasefire terms.
In exchange, Israel has released nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners in its custody and returned the bodies of hundreds of Palestinians.
Apart from Goldin, four hostage bodies — three Israeli and one Thai — remain to be returned from Gaza, all of them seized during the October 2023 attack.


Palestinians recount ‘black hole’ of Israeli detention

Updated 4 sec ago

Palestinians recount ‘black hole’ of Israeli detention

Palestinians recount ‘black hole’ of Israeli detention
JERUSALEM: Denied contact with his lawyer for months, now freed Palestinian prisoner Shady Abu Sedo said he lost all sense of time while he was held in Israeli jails during the war in Gaza.
The 35-year-old resident of the Palestinian territory was arrested in March 2024, five months into the war sparked by Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel.
Abu Sedo, a photojournalist, said he was arrested while working at Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City and detained at Sde Teiman prison, a military facility in Israel used to hold Gazans during the war.
At the time of his arrest the Al-Shifa complex was at the center of the war, with humanitarian organizations accusing Israel of rights violations while Israel accused Hamas of using it and other civilian facilities as command centers.
Abu Sedo was held under Israel’s “unlawful combatants” law, which permits the detention of suspected members of “hostile forces” for months on end without charge.
Abu Sedo said he was repeatedly confronted with claims from the Israelis that “they had killed our children, our women and bombed our homes.”
“So, when I saw (my children), honestly, it was a shock,” he told AFP by telephone after his release to Gaza on October 13 under the US-brokered ceasefire.
The truce, which came into effect on October 10, saw 20 living hostages returned by Hamas to Israel in exchange for approximately 2,000 Palestinian prisoners.
“Imagine, 100 days from five in the morning until 11 at night, sitting on your knees, handcuffed, blindfolded, forbidden to speak or talk,” Abu Sedo said.
“You don’t know the time, you don’t know the days, you don’t know where you are.”
“After 100 days of torture, they took me for interrogation to confirm my identity. They tortured me without knowing who I was,” he said, describing eye and ear injuries.
Then came a transfer to Ofer military prison in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, where he said conditions were “beyond imagination.”
During his incarceration, Abu Sedo was able to speak with his lawyer only twice.
He said he hadn’t been charged and that his detention had been “automatically extended” without explanation.
The Israeli military declined to comment on his case.
The Israel prison service says all inmates “are held according to legal procedures, and their rights including access to medical care and adequate living conditions are upheld.”

- ‘Unlawful combatants’ -

According to the Red Cross, the term “unlawful combatant” refers to someone who “belongs to an armed group, in a context where either the individual or the group do not fulfil the conditions for combatant status.”
The term emerged in the United States after the September 11, 2001 attacks, when the administration of George W. Bush used it to justify the detention of terrorism suspects.
It was introduced into Israeli law in 2002 and denies protections typically granted to detainees and prisoners of war.
Israel then amended the law at the start of the Gaza war.
Under the revised legislation, prisoners can be detained for 45 days without an administrative process, compared with 96 hours previously.
Prisoners can be held for 75 days without a court hearing, up from 14 days, and this can be extended to 180 days.
In July 2024, Amnesty International demanded the law be repealed.
It said the legislation served to “arbitrarily round up Palestinian civilians from Gaza and toss them into a virtual black hole for prolonged periods without producing any evidence that they pose a security threat.”

- ‘Months to get appointment’ -

In late October, Israel issued an order banning the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) from visiting prisoners held as “unlawful combatants.”
In practice, that will make law the status quo that has prevailed since the beginning of the war in Gaza.
The ICRC says it has not been allowed to visit detainees in jail since then, save for pre-release interviews conducted under ceasefire and prisoner exchange deals.
Several rghts groups have denounced what they say is a form of incommunicado detention for Palestinian prisoners, hampering the legal defense of detainees.
Israel holds around 1,000 “unlawful combatants” in military and civilian prisons, according to several NGOs.
For these detainees, “the lawyer is their only connection to the outside world,” said Naji Abbas of Physicians for Human Rights.
The rights group says that 18 doctors and dozens of other health professionals from Gaza are still languishing without charge in Israeli prisons.
“It takes months to get an appointment. We visit them but we have a lot of difficulties,” said Abbas, adding that such visits often lasted less than half an hour.
Several NGOs have appealed to the Israeli Supreme Court to grant the Red Cross access to “unlawful combatants,” but no date has been set for the decision.