‘Where’s the gold?’: How the Assads sucked Syria dry

‘Where’s the gold?’: How the Assads sucked Syria dry
From a Bond villain lair in the rugged heights overlooking Damascus, the all-seeing eye of a notorious Syrian military unit gazed down on a city it bled dry. (AFP)
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Updated 03 March 2025

‘Where’s the gold?’: How the Assads sucked Syria dry

‘Where’s the gold?’: How the Assads sucked Syria dry
  • From a Bond villain lair in the rugged heights overlooking Damascus, the all-seeing eye of a notorious Syrian military unit gazed down on a city it bled dry

DAMASCUS:From a Bond villain lair in the rugged heights overlooking Damascus, the all-seeing eye of a notorious Syrian military unit gazed down on a city it bled dry.
Many of the bases of the elite Fourth Division formerly run by toppled president Bashar Assad’s feared younger brother Maher now lie looted.
But papers left strewn behind reveal how the man they called “The Master” and his cronies wallowed in immense wealth while some of their foot soldiers struggled to feed their families and even begged on the streets.
Piles of documents seen by AFP expose a vast economic empire that Maher Assad and his network of profiteers built by pillaging a country already impoverished by nearly 14 years of civil war.
Western governments long accused him and his entourage of turning Syria into a narco state, flooding the Middle East with captagon, an illegal stimulant used both as a party drug in the Gulf and to push migrant workers through punishingly long days in the gruelling heat.
But far beyond that $10-billion trade — whose vast scale was exposed in a 2022 AFP investigation — papers found in its abandoned posts show the Fourth Division had its fingers in many pies in Syria, an all-consuming “mafia” within the pariah state.

+ It expropriated homes and farms
+ Seized food, cars and electronics to sell on
+ Looted copper and metal from bombed-out buildings
+ Collected “fees” at roadblocks and checkpoints
+ Ran protection rackets, making firms pay for escorts of oil tankers, some from areas controlled by jihadists
+ Controlled the tobacco and metal trades

The center of this corrupt web was Maher Assad’s private offices, hidden in an underground labyrinth of tunnels — some big enough to drive a truck through — cut into a mountain above Damascus.
A masked guard took AFP through the tunnels with all the brisk efficiency of a tour guide — the sauna, the bedroom, what appeared to be cells and various “emergency” exit routes.
But at its heart, down a steep flight of 160 stairs, lay a series of vaults with iron-clad doors.
The guard said he had counted nine vaults behind one sealed-off room.
He said safes had been “broken open” by looters who entered the office just hours after the Assad brothers fled Syria on December 8 when Damascus fell to an Islamist-led offensive, ending the family’s five-decade rule.
Maher, 57, did not know of his brother’s plans to flee to Russia and escaped separately, taking a helicopter to the Iraqi border, according to a senior Iraqi security official and two other sources. He then made his way to Russia, they said, apparently via Iran.
The chaos of their fall is apparent in the underground complex. Safes and empty Rolex and Cartier watch boxes still lie scattered about, though it is not known if the vaults were emptied before the looters arrived.
“This is Maher Assad’s main office,” the guard said, “which has two floors above the ground but also tunnels containing locked rooms that can’t be opened.”
In one corridor, a shrink wrap machine — probably used for bundling cash — was abandoned next to a huge safe.

There was never any shortage of bills to wrap.
One document retrieved from the papers that litter the Fourth Division’s Security Bureau farther down the hill show they had ready cash of $80 million, eight million euros and 41 billion Syrian pounds at their fingertips in June. That was a perfectly normal cash float, according to papers going back to 2021.
“This is only a small sample of the wealth that Maher and his associates gathered from their shady business deals,” said Carnegie Middle East Center scholar Kheder Khaddour.
Their real fortune is probably hidden “abroad, likely in Arab and African countries,” he said.
“The Fourth Division was a money-making machine,” Khaddour added, preying on a land where the UN says more than 90 percent of the population was living on a little more than $2 a day.

Western sanctions to squeeze the Assads and their cronies did little to impede Maher and his men.
Theirs was an “independent state” within the state, said Omar Shaaban, a former Fourth Division colonel who has signed a deal with the new Syrian authorities.
“It had all the means... It had everything,” he said.
While the US dollar was officially banned under Assad — with Syrians not even allowed to utter the word — Shaaban said many Fourth Division officers grew “wealthy and had safes full of money.”
“In dollars,” naturally, Shaaban added.
Maher’s cronies lived in sprawling villas, shipping luxury cars abroad while beyond their gates the country was mired in poverty and despair.
Weeks after the Assads’ fall, desperate people were still combing through Maher’s mansion built into a hill in Damascus’ Yaafour neighborhood next to the stables where his daughter rode her prize-winning horses.
“I want the gold. Where’s the gold?” a man asked AFP as he went through its ransacked rooms. But all that was left were old photographs of Maher, his wife and their three children strewn on the floor.

Maher was a shadowy, menacing figure in Assad’s Syria, branded “the butcher” by the opposition. His Fourth Division was the ousted regime’s iron fist, linked to a long list of atrocities.
But while his portrait was hung in all their bases, he was seldom seen in public.
Despite rights groups accusing him of ordering the 2011 massacre of protesters in Daraa — which helped ignite the civil war — and the United Nations linking him to the 2005 assassination of ex-Lebanese prime minister Rafic Hariri, he was “the invisible man,” one person close to the former ruling family told AFP.
“Few people would tell you that they know him,” the source said.
Yet Maher could be generous and good company, according to his sister-in-law Majd Al-Jadaan, a longtime opponent of the regime.
“However, when he gets angry, he completely loses control... This is what makes his personality terrifying,” she told Al-Arabiya TV.
“He knows how to destroy — he knows how to kill and then lie to appear innocent,” Jadaan told French TV early in the civil war, saying he was as ruthless as his father, Hafez.

One other name keeps cropping up alongside Maher’s when people in Damascus curse the crimes of the Fourth Division.
Ghassan Belal was the head of its powerful Security Bureau. Like his boss, he collected luxury cars and lived in a villa in the Yaafour district. Belal has also left Syria, according to security sources.
Inside his spacious offices in the bureau’s headquarters, you can piece together his lavish lifestyle bill by bill from the papers he left, including the cost of running his Cadillac.
Over the summer, Belal shipped two cars, a Lexus and a Mercedes, to Dubai, the $29,000 customs and other expenses charged to a credit card under another name.
A handwritten note showed that despite being sanctioned for human rights abuses, he paid his Netflix subscription using a “friend’s foreign credit card.”
Another list showed that mostly domestic expenses for his properties, including his main villa — which has since also been looted — amounted to $55,000 for just 10 days in August.
That same month, a Fourth Division soldier wrote to Belal begging for help because he was in “a terrible financial situation.” Belal gave him 500,000 Syrian pounds — $33. Another soldier who abandoned his post was caught begging on the street.

While thousands of the papers were burned as the regime fell, many of the classified documents survived the flames and have tales to tell.
Among prominent names mentioned as paying into Fourth Division funds are sanctioned businessmen Khaled Qaddour, Raif Quwatli and the Katerji brothers, who have been accused of generating hundreds of millions of dollars for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard and the Yemeni Houthis through the sale of Iranian oil to Syria and China.
Quwatli operated checkpoints and crossings where goods were often confiscated or “taxed,” multiple sources said.
Qaddour — who was sanctioned by the United States for bankrolling Maher through captagon, cigarette and mobile phone smuggling — denied having any dealings with him when he tried to have his EU sanctions lifted in 2018.
But the Security Bureau’s revenue list showed he paid $6.5 million into its coffers in 2020 alone.

Khaddour said the Security Bureau handled most of the division’s financial dealings and issued security cards for people it did business with to ease their movements.
A drug lord told Lebanese investigators in 2021 that he held a Fourth Division security card and that the Security Bureau had agreed to protect another dealer’s drug shipment for $2 million, according to a statement seen by AFP.
The US Treasury and several Syrian and Lebanese security figures have also cited Belal and the bureau as key players in the captagon trade.
AFP visited a captagon lab linked to the division in December in a villa in the Dimas area near Lebanon’s border, its rooms full of boxes and barrels of the caffeine, ethanol and paracetamol needed to make the drug.
Locals said they were not allowed to approach the villa, with shepherds banned from the surrounding hills.
A former Fourth Division officer who worked for Belal, and who asked not to be named, said the bureau enjoyed “so much immunity, no one could touch a member without Maher’s approval.”
“It was a mafia, and I knew I was working for a mafia,” he added.

The division’s unbridled greed haunted families for decades as a letter written by Adnan Deeb, a graveyard caretaker from Homs, shows.
His plea for the return of his family’s seized property was found among hundreds of damp and dirty documents at an abandoned checkpoint near Damascus.
When AFP tracked Deeb down, he told how the Fourth Division confiscated his family’s villa, and those of several of their neighbors in the village of Kafraya 10 years ago.
Despite not being allowed near them, Deeb said they still had to pay taxes on the properties, which were used as offices, warehouses and likely a jail.
“The Fourth Division Security Bureau here was a red line that no one dared to come close to,” the son of one of the owners told AFP.
They found hundreds of cars, motorcycles and hundreds of gallons of cooking oil in the properties after the regime fell.
“They left people in hunger while everything was available for them,” he said.
A woman with 25 family members — some living in a tent — repeatedly requested the Fourth Division give her back her home in a document found in another of the villas.

The Fourth Division controlled no part of the Syrian economy more than the metals market, with former colonel Shaaban saying “no one was permitted to move iron” without its approval.
It also had “exclusive” control of copper, he said.
When Assad’s forces took control of a Damascus suburb after a fierce battle with rebels, the Fourth Division swiftly sent its men to pull the copper and iron from destroyed homes, one of its officers recalled.
Fares Shehabi, former head of Syria’s Chamber of Industry said a metal plant managed by one of Maher Assad’s partners monopolized the market, with factories forced to buy exclusively from it.
Many “could no longer operate” under such pressure, Shehabi said.
Maher Assad and his “friends” controlled a big share of Syria’s economy, he said. But the ultimate beneficiary was always his brother Bashar, he argued. “It was one company. The (presidential) palace was always the reference.”
The former Fourth Division officer also insisted a share of profits and seized items always went to the president.

While little seems to be left of Fourth Division today other than its ransacked depots and headquarters, Syria expert Lars Hauch, of Conflict Mediation Solutions (CMS), warned its legacy could yet be highly toxic.
“The Fourth Division was a military actor, a security apparatus, an intelligence entity, an economic force, a political power, and a transnational criminal enterprise,” he said.
“An institution with a decades-long history, enormous financial capacity and close relations with elites doesn’t just vanish,” he added.
“While the top-level leadership fled the country, the committed and mostly Alawite core (from which the Assads come)... retreated to the coastal regions,” Hauch said.
Syria’s new leadership has repeatedly sought to reassure minorities they will not be harmed. But across the country, violence against Alawites has surged.
Hauch said caches of weapons may have been hidden away.
Add to that the division’s war chest of “billions of dollars,” and “you have what you need for a sustained insurgency... if Syria’s transition fails to achieve genuine inclusivity and transitional justice,” the analyst warned.


A bomb in Gaza’s rubble wounds twins who thought it was a toy

A bomb in Gaza’s rubble wounds twins who thought it was a toy
Updated 25 October 2025

A bomb in Gaza’s rubble wounds twins who thought it was a toy

A bomb in Gaza’s rubble wounds twins who thought it was a toy
  • The boy, Yahya, and his sister, Nabila, had discovered a round object while playing. One touch, and it went off

GAZA CITY: The Shorbasi family was sitting in their severely damaged house in Gaza City, enjoying the relative calm of the ceasefire. Then they heard an explosion and rushed outside to find their 6-year-old twins bleeding on the ground.

The boy, Yahya, and his sister, Nabila, had discovered a round object while playing. One touch, and it went off.

“It was like a toy,” their grandfather, Tawfiq Shorbasi, said of the unexploded ordnance, after the children were rushed to Shifa hospital on Friday. “It was extremely difficult.”

Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians are seizing the chance to return to what’s left of their homes under the ceasefire that began on Oct. 10. 

But the dangers are far from over as people, including children, sift through the rubble for what remains of their belongings, and for bodies unreachable until now.

Shorbasi said the family had returned home after the ceasefire took hold. Gaza City had been the focus of the final Israeli military offensive before the deal was reached between Israel and Hamas.

“We’ve just returned last week,” the grandfather said at Shifa hospital, fighting back tears. “Their lives have been ruined forever.”

The boy, Yahya, lay on a hospital bed with his right arm and leg wrapped in bandages. Nabila, now being treated at Patient’s Friends hospital, had a bandaged forehead.

Both children’s faces were freckled with tiny shrapnel wounds.

A British emergency physician and pediatrician working at one of the hospitals said the twins had life-threatening injuries, including a lost hand, a hole in the bowel, broken bones, and potential loss of a leg.

The children underwent emergency surgery, and their conditions have relatively stabilized, the doctor said. 

But concerns remain about their recovery because of Gaza’s vast lack of medicine and medical supplies, said Dr. Harriet, who declined to give her last name.

“Now it’s just a waiting game, so I hope that they both survive, but at this point, I can’t say, and this is a common recurrence,” she said.

Health workers call unexploded ordnance a major threat to Palestinians. 

Two other children, Yazan and Jude Nour, were wounded on Thursday while their family was inspecting their home in Gaza City, according to Shifa Hospital.

Gaza’s Health Ministry, which operates under the Hamas-run government, said five children were wounded by unexploded ordnance over the past week, including one in the southern city of Khan Younis.

“This is the death trap,” Dr. Harriet said. 

“We are talking about a ceasefire, but the killing has not stopped.”

Already over 68,500 Palestinians have died in the war, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which doesn’t distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count. 

The ministry maintains detailed casualty records that are generally considered reliable by UN agencies and independent experts. Israel has disputed them without providing its own toll.

Luke Irving, head of the UN Mine Action Service, UNMAS, in the Palestinian territories, has warned that “explosive risk is incredibly high” as both aid workers and displaced Palestinians return to areas vacated by the Israeli military in Gaza. As of Oct. 7, UNMAS had documented at least 52 Palestinians killed and 267 others wounded by unexploded ordnance in Gaza since the war began. 

UNMAS, however, said the toll could be much higher.

Irving told a UN briefing last week that 560 unexploded ordnance items have been found during the current ceasefire, with many more under the rubble. 

Two years of war have left up to 60 million tons of debris across Gaza, he added.

In the coming weeks, additional international de-mining experts are expected to join efforts to collect unexploded ordnance in Gaza, he said.

“As expected, we’re now finding more items because we’re getting out more; the teams have more access,” he said.


Gaza risks ‘lost generation’ due to ruined schools

Gaza risks ‘lost generation’ due to ruined schools
Updated 25 October 2025

Gaza risks ‘lost generation’ due to ruined schools

Gaza risks ‘lost generation’ due to ruined schools
  • The ceasefire has allowed UNICEF and other education partners to get about one-sixth of children who should be in school into temporary “learning centers,” said Beigbeder

JERUSALEM: With Gaza’s education system shattered by two years of grueling war, UNICEF’s regional director says he fears for a “lost generation” of children wandering ruined streets with nothing to do.

“This is the third year that there has been no school,” Edouard Beigbeder, the UN agency’s regional director for the Middle East and North Africa, said in Jerusalem.

“If we don’t start a real transition for all children in February, we will enter a fourth year. And then we can talk about a lost generation.”

The destruction “is almost omnipresent wherever you go,” Beigbeder said.

“It is impossible to imagine 80 percent of a territory that is completely flattened out or destroyed,” he added.

The ceasefire has allowed UNICEF and other education partners to get about one-sixth of children who should be in school into temporary “learning centers,” said Beigbeder.

“They have three days of learning in reading, mathematics, and writing, but this is far from a formal education as we know it,” he added.

Beigbeder said that such learning centers consisted of metal structures covered with plastic sheeting or of tents.

He said there were sometimes chairs, cardboard boxes, or wooden planks serving as tables, and that children would write on salvaged slates or plastic boards.

“I’ve never seen everyone sitting properly,” he added, describing children on mats or carpets.

Despite the ceasefire, Beigbeder said the situation for Gaza’s education system was catastrophic, with 85 percent of schools destroyed or unusable.

Of the buildings still standing, many are being used as shelters for displaced people, he said, a situation compounded by the fact that many children and teachers are also on the move and seeking to provide for their own families.

Gaza’s school system was already overcrowded before the conflict, with half the pre-war population under the age of 18.

Of the schools managed by the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority alone, Beigbeder said that some 80 out of 300 needed renovation.

He said 142 had been destroyed, while 38 were “completely inaccessible” because they were located in the area to which Israeli troops had withdrawn under the ceasefire.

The UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, said on Oct. 18 that it was launching a “new e-learning school year” to reach 290,000 pupils.

On Friday, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio accused UNRWA of being a “subsidiary of Hamas” and said it would play no role in post-war Gaza.

Beigbeder said it was vital to put education “at the top of the agenda” and rebuild a sense of social cohesion for Gaza’s children, almost all of whom are traumatized and in need of psychological support.

UNICEF said one of the priorities was obtaining permission at border crossings to bring in materials to set up semi-permanent schools, as well as school supplies, which have been blocked as non-essential.

Israel repeatedly cut off supplies to the Gaza Strip during the war, exacerbating dire humanitarian conditions, with the UN saying it caused a famine in parts of the Palestinian territory.

The World Health Organization said Thursday there had been a slight improvement in the amount of aid going into Gaza since the ceasefire took hold — and no observable reduction in hunger.

“How can you rehabilitate classrooms if you don’t have cement? And above all, we need notebooks and books ... blackboards, the bare minimum,” said Beigbeder.

“Food is survival. Education is hope.”


Hundreds protest in Tunisia’s capital over worsening pollution crisis

Hundreds protest in Tunisia’s capital over worsening pollution crisis
Updated 25 October 2025

Hundreds protest in Tunisia’s capital over worsening pollution crisis

Hundreds protest in Tunisia’s capital over worsening pollution crisis
  • Residents of Gabes have reported rising rates of respiratory illnesses, osteoporosis and cancer
  • Protesters in Tunis carried banners and chanted slogans in solidarity with residents of Gabes, calling the response of authorities “repression“

TUNIS: Hundreds of Tunisians marched through the capital Tunis on Saturday to protest a severe environmental crisis caused by pollution from a state chemical plant in Gabes, as protests that began there widen outside the southern city.
The protest is the latest in a series of demonstrations that have underscored growing public frustration over the government’s handling of pollution and worsening state of public services, marking the biggest challenge to President Kais Saied since he seized all power in 2021.
Residents of Gabes have reported rising rates of respiratory illnesses, osteoporosis and cancer, which they blame on toxic gases from the state chemical group’s phosphate plants, which dump thousands of tons of waste into the sea daily.
The latest wave of protests in Gabes was triggered this month after dozens of schoolchildren suffered breathing difficulties caused by toxic fumes from a plant that converts phosphates into phosphoric acid and fertilizers.
Protesters in Tunis carried banners and chanted slogans in solidarity with residents of Gabes, calling the response of authorities “repression.” The government said it arrested people for violence.
“It’s that simple, the people of Gabes want to breathe,” Hani Faraj, a protester from the “Stop Pollution” campaign, told Reuters. “Gabes is dying slowly ... We will not remain silent. We will escalate our peaceful protests.”
Saied’s administration fears protests in the capital could spark unrest elsewhere in Tunisia, deepening pressure as it struggles with a prolonged economic downturn and political instability.
Saied has described the situation in Gabes as an “environmental assassination,” blaming criminal policy choices by a previous government.
In an effort to quell the protests, he has called for repairs to the industrial units to stop leaks as an immediate step. Health Minister Mustapha Ferjani said this week the government would build a cancer hospital in Gabes to deal with rising cases.
However, protesters have rejected the fixes as temporary, and are demanding the polluting facilities be permanently shut and relocated.
Environmental groups warn that tons of industrial waste are discharged daily into the sea at Chatt Essalam, severely damaging marine life. Local fishermen have reported a sharp decline in fish stocks over the past decade, threatening a vital source of income for many in the region.


Appeal date set for French sportswriter jailed in Algeria: lawyer

Appeal date set for French sportswriter jailed in Algeria: lawyer
Updated 25 October 2025

Appeal date set for French sportswriter jailed in Algeria: lawyer

Appeal date set for French sportswriter jailed in Algeria: lawyer
  • “The case of French journalist Christophe Gleizes is scheduled for December 3, 2025,” his lawyer said
  • Gleizes had traveled to Tizi Ouzou to write about the local football club Jeunesse Sportive de Kabylie

ALGIERS: The appeal trial of a French sports journalist jailed in Algeria on accusations of “glorifying terrorism” has been scheduled for December 3, his lawyer said Friday.
A contributor to the magazines So Foot and Society, Christophe Gleizes, 36, was sentenced in late June to seven years in prison.
“The case of French journalist Christophe Gleizes is scheduled for December 3, 2025, at the criminal appeal court in Tizi Ouzou,” 110 kilometers (70 miles) east of Algiers, his lawyer, Amirouche Bakouri, said on Facebook.
Gleizes had traveled to Tizi Ouzou to write about the local football club Jeunesse Sportive de Kabylie, named after Algeria’s Kabylia region, home to the Amazigh Kabyle people.
He is accused by the judiciary of having been in contact with a local football figure prominent in the Movement for the Self-Determination of Kabylie (MAK), designated a terrorist organization by the authorities in 2021.
The press freedom NGO Reporters Without Borders called on the appeal court to free Gleizes.
“Christophe is guilty only of practicing his profession as a sports journalist and loving Algerian football,” declared RSF Director-General Thierry Bruttin, according to an NGO statement.


Top US diplomat vows return of all hostage bodies to Israel, says multiple countries want to join Gaza stabilization force

Top US diplomat vows return of all hostage bodies to Israel, says multiple countries want to join Gaza stabilization force
Updated 49 min 35 sec ago

Top US diplomat vows return of all hostage bodies to Israel, says multiple countries want to join Gaza stabilization force

Top US diplomat vows return of all hostage bodies to Israel, says multiple countries want to join Gaza stabilization force
  • US could call for a UN resolution supporting the force so more nations can take part, says State Secretary Rubio
  • Adds that mediators of Gaza ceasefire shared information to uncover a recent threat

JERUSALEM/WASHINGTON: US Secretary of State Marco Rubio vowed Saturday to secure the return of all deceased hostages still held in Gaza, as he met with the families of two captives during his visit to Israel.

He also said that the US could call for a United Nations resolution supporting an international stabilization force that aims to deploy to Gaza so that more nations can take part.

“We will not forget the lives of the hostages who died in the captivity of Hamas,” Rubio said on X.

“Today I met with the families of American citizens Itay Chen and Omer Neutra. We will not rest until their – and all – remains are returned,” he said, hours before wrapping up his three-day visit to Israel.

Gaza stabilization force

On the planned international stabilization force to be deployed to Gaza, Rubio said multiple countries are interested in joining but that they need more details about the mission and rules of engagement.

Many of the countries who want to be a part of the force “can’t do it without” an international mandate, he told reporters en route from Israel to Qatar, where he met up with President Donald Trump for a multistop tour in Asia.

 

 

He added that the US has been talking with Qatar, Egypt and Turkiye — all mediators of the Gaza ceasefire, along with the US —  and noting interest from Indonesia and Azerbaijan.

Rubio also said that Israel and the ceasefire mediators are sharing information to disrupt any threats and that allowed them to identify a possible impending attack last weekend.

The State Department said a week ago that it had “credible reports” Hamas could violate the ceasefire with an attack on Palestinian civilians in Gaza.

“We put out a message through State Department, sent it to our mediators as well, about an impending attack, and it didn’t happen,” he said. “So that’s the goal here, is ultimately to identify a threat before it happens.”

He said that next week the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Dan Caine, is expected to be the latest in a parade of US officials to travel to Israel.

Vice President JD Vance joined special envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner earlier in the week in Israel in an effort to shore up the fragile ceasefire deal. Rubio arrived just as Vance was departing, meeting with Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and touring a US-led coordination center monitoring the ceasefire.

Return of dead hostages

The Israeli campaign group, the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, welcomed Rubio’s pledge to secure the return of all deceased hostages still held in Gaza.

“Thirteen hostages need to come home. Thirteen families need closure,” the group said on X, thanking the US secretary of state.

“Please don’t stop – until the last hostage is released,” it added.

Israelis rally at Hostage Square in the Israeli coastal city ofTel Aviv on October 25, 2025, calling for the release of all the bodies of hostages held in Gaza by the Palestinian militant group Hamas. (AFP)

Chen, a dual Israel-US national and a sergeant in the Israeli army, was working at the border with the Gaza Strip when Hamas and its allies attacked on October 7, 2023.

The military announced his death five months later in March 2024.

It said Chen, 19 at the time of the attack, died in combat and his body was taken to Gaza.

Neutra, 21 at the time of the attack and also a US-Israeli national, was a volunteer soldier killed on October 7.
Raised in New York, Neutra came to Israel to experience the country of his parents, his mother Orna Neutra said in November 2023. He later enlisted for military service as most young Israelis do.
Under the US-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, which came into effect on October 10, all 20 living hostages have been freed by Palestinian militants.
Remains of 15 deceased hostages have also been returned to Israel, while the bodies of 13 others remain in Gaza.
In exchange, Israel has released nearly 2,000 prisoners, mostly Palestinians, along with dozens of Palestinian bodies, as part of the deal.
The ceasefire has largely halted hostilities but on Sunday Israel carried out a wave of air strikes that left dozens of Gazans dead, according to the territory’s health ministry.
Israel said its troops came under attack, resulting in the death of two soldiers, after which it launched the strikes. Later, Israel reinforced the ceasefire.

With AFP & AP)