Israeli kibbutz hopes to heal after hostages’ return

Israeli kibbutz hopes to heal after hostages’ return
Members of the Kfar Aza kibbutz hold a memorial service for those killed in Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel, in Kibbutz Kfar Aza, located in southern Israel near the Gaza border, on Oct. 16, 2025. (AFP)
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Israeli kibbutz hopes to heal after hostages’ return

Israeli kibbutz hopes to heal after hostages’ return
  • Survivors of the attack in Kfar Aza gathered in the cemetery for a memorial to honor those killed that day
  • At the Kfar Aza memorial, people placed flowers on the tombs of victims of the Hamas attack. Others, as per Jewish custom, laid stones

KFAR AZA, Israel: Two years after he survived Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel which killed 64 fellow residents of the Kfar Aza kibbutz, Avidor Schwartzman hopes his community can finally begin to overcome its pain.
“We can start the healing process,” Schwartzman told AFP, even if “we know that there are a lot of people who will not come back.”
On October 7, 2023, Hamas commandos stormed over the barrier separating Gaza and Israel, around two kilometers (just over a mile) away from Schwartzman’s kibbutz.
The militants set about burning down homes, looting and killing, before abducting 18 people from Kfar Aza and taking them hostage into the Gaza Strip.
Two of them died in captivity, while the last two to be released, Gali and Ziv Berman, were only returned by Hamas on Monday under a US-brokered deal to end the war in Gaza.
It took two days for the Israeli army to regain control of the kibbutz following the October 7 attack, and the violence killed 19 soldiers.
On Thursday, survivors of the attack in Kfar Aza gathered in the cemetery for a memorial to honor those killed that day.
At a state ceremony in Jerusalem to mark the second anniversary of the attack under the Jewish calendar, a torch was lit in memory of a young couple from the kibbutz, Sivan Elkabetz and Naor Hasidim, both killed by militants.

- ‘Gives us hope -

Elkabetz’s father, Shimon Elkabetz, told AFP that the return of the surviving hostages on Monday sparked hope.
But he was of the view that the Israeli army should not leave Gaza “until the last of the (dead) hostages is back to be buried in Israel.”
Israel has accused Hamas of violating the terms of the ceasefire agreement, under which the militants had until noon Monday (0900 GMT) to hand over all the hostages it still held in Gaza.
While Hamas handed over all 20 living hostages by the deadline, the group has only handed over nine of the 28 bodies, arguing it would need specialist equipment to retrieve the rest from Gaza’s ruins.
Israel’s defense minister on Wednesday threatened to restart the offensive if Hamas did not honor the deal.
Elkabetz agreed.
“Our soldiers are deep inside the Strip, and that is a good thing,” he said.

- ‘No home anymore’ -

At the Kfar Aza memorial, people placed flowers on the tombs of victims of the Hamas attack. Others, as per Jewish custom, laid stones.
On stage, survivors read out the names of the 64 victims, the noise of helicopters and drones overhead at times drowning out their voices.
Batia Holin could not hide her pain for “64 of my friends are gone, murdered.”
Reconstruction work has begun, though much of the kibbutz is still damaged and only a handful of residents have come back to live in Kfar Aza.
Holin, who has lived in Kfar Aza for 50 years, said she was struggling to imagine what the future might hold.
“I can’t go to my home because I have no home anymore. It will take more two years maybe, and it’s very difficult,” she told AFP.
In April, the kibbutz opened a new neighborhood of 16 housing units earmarked for younger people, to replace the old youth quarter destroyed in the attack.
Schwartzman, at 40 a father of two, lives in the neighborhood. His wife lost both her parents in the October 7 attack.
While the road to recovery will be long, he says he is confident that others will follow and move back, like he has.
Several people he knew, Schwartzman said, had been “living here for several generations, three generations, maybe even four...
“So I guess this is the only place they can call home and that’s why they want to come back.”


Israeli guards beat Palestinian prisoner Barghouti, says son

Israeli guards beat Palestinian prisoner Barghouti, says son
Updated 8 sec ago

Israeli guards beat Palestinian prisoner Barghouti, says son

Israeli guards beat Palestinian prisoner Barghouti, says son
  • Barghouti is among several high-profile inmates whose release Hamas sought during a recent prisoner exchange
  • He is serving multiple life sentences since 2002 for deadly attacks on Israelis

RAMALLAH: Prominent Palestinian prisoner Marwan Barghouti’s son has said Israeli guards beat his father during a prison transfer last month, an accusation denied by Israel’s prison authorities.
“Eight guards started beating him up until he passed out,” Arab Barghouti told AFP on Wednesday, describing an incident he said took place on September 14.
Arab Barghouti said he only learnt of the attack after five other inmates who had been with his father were able to communicate with the outside world.
Barghouti, in his 60s, is serving multiple life sentences since 2002 for deadly attacks on Israelis.
A senior leader of Fatah party, he is often described by supporters as the “Palestinian Mandela.”
An Israel Prison Service spokesperson called the reports “fake,” saying the service “operates in accordance with the law, while ensuring the safety and health of all inmates.”
Arab Barghouti said the alleged assault happened while his father was being transferred from Ganot prison in the south to Megiddo in the north.
Israel’s Prison Service declined to share Barghouti’s current location.
Arab Barghouti said the guards responsible for his transfer were the ones who attacked Barghouti.
“He got some ribs broken and (the five other inmates) said that when he got to Megiddo prison, they were shocked that he could barely walk,” Arab said adding that his father “couldn’t walk for days” as a result.
Barghouti is among several high-profile inmates whose release Hamas sought during a recent prisoner exchange conducted under a US-brokered ceasefire deal.
In a video he shared on social media in August, Israel’s National Security Minister and far-right firebrand Itamar Ben Gvir was seen visiting Barghouti in jail.
“Whoever tries to attack the people of Israel, whoever tries to murder our children, whoever tries to murder our women, we will wipe them out,” Ben Gvir is seen telling a physically diminished and handcuffed Barghouti.


Israel hands 30 Palestinian bodies to Red Cross in Gaza

Israel hands 30 Palestinian bodies to Red Cross in Gaza
Updated 23 min ago

Israel hands 30 Palestinian bodies to Red Cross in Gaza

Israel hands 30 Palestinian bodies to Red Cross in Gaza
  • Since the US-brokered ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas last week, the bodies of 120 Palestinians have been handed over by Israel
  • According to the terms of the ceasefire, for every slain hostage held by Hamas, Israel will return the bodies of 15 Palestinians

LONDON: Palestinian medical authorities in Gaza received the bodies of 30 people who were held by Israel and handed over on Thursday through the International Committee of the Red Cross.

Since the US-brokered ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas last week, the bodies of 120 Palestinians have been handed over by Israel, according to Wafa news agency.

Hamas returned two more bodies of hostages to Israel overnight, increasing the total to nine out of 28 released. According to the terms of the ceasefire, for every slain hostage held by Hamas, Israel will return the bodies of 15 Palestinians.

Palestinian forensic teams said that some bodies showed signs of abuse, including beatings, handcuffing and blindfolding. Families have confirmed the identities of four victims, while others await the completion of examinations and documentation before handover.

On Thursday, medical sources reported to Wafa that 29 bodies, including 22 recovered from rubble and 10 with injuries, were taken to hospitals in Gaza over the past 24 hours.

Despite a ceasefire in Gaza going into effect on Friday, the death toll has continued to rise, totaling 67,967 people. The number is likely incomplete, as many victims remain trapped under rubble and inaccessible to ambulance and rescue crews, Wafa reported.


Turkish experts to help find hostage bodies in Gaza: ministry sources

Turkish experts to help find hostage bodies in Gaza: ministry sources
Updated 28 min 3 sec ago

Turkish experts to help find hostage bodies in Gaza: ministry sources

Turkish experts to help find hostage bodies in Gaza: ministry sources
  • “There is already a team of 81 AFAD staff there,” the source said
  • “The tasks are known: transmitting humanitarian aid, finding corpses and protecting the ceasefire”

ANKARA: Turkiye has sent 81 disaster relief experts to the Gaza Strip, some of whom will help with finding the remains of 19 hostages still unaccounted for, a defense ministry source said Thursday.
“There is already a team of 81 AFAD staff there,” the source said, referring to Turkiye’s disaster relief agency, indicating that “one team will be in charge of seeking and finding the bodies.”
Turkiye’s Disaster Management Authority (AFAD) is a government agency that operates under the interior ministry.
“The tasks are known: transmitting humanitarian aid, finding corpses and protecting the ceasefire. But there is no clear information on how to handle these tasks,” the ministry source said.
Asked whether Turkish military forces could get involved, the source said it would be “more the task of civilian entities like AFAD” but in theory the military could help out if needed.
AFAD rescue workers are accustomed to operating in difficult terrain and have responded to numerous earthquakes that have shaken Turkiye, including the one in February 2023 in the southeast of the country, which killed at least 53,000 people.
AFAD says it has carried out rescue and humanitarian aid missions in more than 50 countries on five continents in recent years, including Somalia, the Palestinian territories, Ecuador, the Philippines, Nepal, Yemen, Mozambique, and Chad.


Israeli forces demolish two-story home in Al-Mughayyir near Ramallah

Israeli forces demolish two-story home in Al-Mughayyir near Ramallah
Updated 16 October 2025

Israeli forces demolish two-story home in Al-Mughayyir near Ramallah

Israeli forces demolish two-story home in Al-Mughayyir near Ramallah
  • The house was under construction in the southern part of the village
  • Al-Mughayyir village has about 4,000 residents and in August had about 3,000 olive trees destroyed by the Israeli military

LONDON: Israeli forces on Thursday demolished a home in the village of Al-Mughayyir, northeast of Ramallah, which is the administrative seat of the Palestinian Authority, according to the Wafa news agency.

Amin Abu Aliya, the head of Al-Mughayyir, reported that Israeli forces stormed and demolished a two-story house under construction in the southern part of the village, citing building without a permit as the reason.

The house belonged to Wajih Musa Abu Aliya.

Al-Mughayyir, a village with about 4,000 residents, in August suffered the destruction of about 3,000 olive trees by the Israeli military under the pretext that the trees posed a “security threat” to an Israeli settlement road that runs through the village’s territory.

The olive tree is a national symbol for Palestinians and provides a vital source of income for 80,000 to 100,000 families who rely on harvesting and selling olives, olive oil, and other products derived from it.

The Israeli settlement of Adei Ad, established in 1998, encroaches on the agricultural groves of Al-Mughayyir as well as land belonging to the Palestinian villages of Jalud and Turmus’ayya.


Syrian authorities arrest drug kingpin from Assad clan near Lattakia

Syrian authorities arrest drug kingpin from Assad clan near Lattakia
Updated 16 October 2025

Syrian authorities arrest drug kingpin from Assad clan near Lattakia

Syrian authorities arrest drug kingpin from Assad clan near Lattakia
  • Internal Security Forces captured Nomair Al-Assad alongside several members of a criminal gang in the city of Qardaha
  • Ministry of Interior emphasized that the arrest reflects the forces’ commitment to pursuing remnants of the Assad regime

LONDON: Syrian authorities arrested a prominent drug dealer on Thursday in the coastal province of Lattakia.

Nomair Al-Assad is regarded as one of the country’s most prominent drug dealers and has been involved in several crimes during the era of the Bashar Assad regime, according to the Ministry of Interior.

Internal Security Forces captured Al-Assad alongside several members of a criminal gang in the city of Qardaha, famously known as the hometown of the Assad family.

Brig. Gen. Abdulaziz Al-Ahmad of the ISF told SANA that Al-Assad used his kinship with the Assad regime to “form and manage organized terrorist networks, which were involved in murders, kidnapping, extortion and armed robbery against civilians in a number of governorates.”

Al-Ahmad added that Al-Assad oversaw drug production and smuggling to neighboring countries and participated in an armed attack on Syria’s forces early this year.

The ministry emphasized that the arrest reflects the ISF’s commitment to pursuing remnants of the Assad regime, combating crime, and achieving justice.

Since the fall of the regime last December, the new government in Damascus has arrested several suspects, including army officers, for crimes committed against Syrians during the country’s civil conflict.

Additionally, Syrian authorities continue to fight against drug trafficking, cooperating with neighboring countries such as Jordan, Turkiye, and Iraq to dismantle criminal networks.