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    Home»World News»Hostage families confirm identities of three of four bodies handed over by Hamas
    World News

    Hostage families confirm identities of three of four bodies handed over by Hamas

    Olive MetugeBy Olive MetugeOctober 15, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
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    Tom McArthur and

    Chris Graham

    ‘We want to raise our children’: Life in Gaza after hostages and prisoners released

    Israeli hostage families have confirmed the identities of three of four bodies handed over by Hamas in Gaza on Tuesday.

    The bodies of Tamir Nimrodi, 20, Eitan Levy, 53, and Uriel Baruch, 35, were part of the latest return, the Hostages Families Forum said. Scientists are still working to identify the fourth body.

    So far seven hostages’ bodies are confirmed to have been sent back from Gaza. Hamas has yet to return the other bodies as agreed under a ceasefire deal brokered by the US.

    Frustrated by the slow return of bodies, Israel has threatened to further restrict humanitarian aid until the remains of all 28 hostages were returned. Hamas says it has had difficulty locating the remains.

    The bodies of four more hostages are expected to be transferred from Gaza later on Wednesday, according to Israeli media.

    Hamas handed back all 20 living hostages on Monday. The remains of 45 dead Palestinians who had been held in Israel were returned to Gaza on Tuesday, the Red Cross said in a statement.

    US President Donald Trump’s ceasefire plan, which both Israel and Hamas accepted, envisaged the handover of all 48 hostages would be completed by noon on Monday.

    Palestinians are increasingly worried that a delay in Hamas returning the bodies could bring uncertainty to the future of the ceasefire.

    Reuters Red Cross vehicles transport the bodies of deceased hostages who had been held in Gaza Reuters

    Red Cross vehicles transport the bodies of deceased hostages who had been held in Gaza

    In a statement on Tuesday, the IDF said: “Hamas is required to fulfil its part of the agreement and make the necessary efforts to return all the hostages to their families and to proper burial.”

    Israel’s defence minister has warned the Palestinian armed group that “any delay or deliberate avoidance will be considered a gross violation of the agreement and will be responded to accordingly”.

    Israeli officials said they had decided to restrict aid and delay plans to open the Rafah border crossing with Egypt because Hamas had violated the ceasefire deal by failing to turn over bodies of hostages.

    Watch: ‘I felt immense happiness and joy’, Israelis react to hostage release

    A copy of the ceasefire agreement, published by Israeli media last week, appeared to acknowledge that Hamas and other Palestinian factions might not be able to locate all of the bodies within the original timeframe.

    An Israeli official has suggested that an international task force will start work to locate the remains of anyone who was not returned.

    “A big burden has been lifted, but the job is NOT DONE. THE DEAD HAVE NOT BEEN RETURNED, AS PROMISED! Phase two begins right NOW!!!” Trump said on X.

    Many Palestinians have told the BBC they are worried the delay in Hamas’ return of all bodies of Israeli hostages and the subsequent violence could risk the ceasefire and derail the start of the second phase of negotiations.

    Tayseer Abed, a well-known Gaza writer who has chronicled the war from his tent in Khan Younis, described the standoff as “a dangerous test for the ceasefire”, warning that if the delay continued and Israel refused to move to the next phase, “the corpses issue could become the fuse that ignites a new round of conflict”.

    Almost 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees were released as part of the 20-point peace plan, touted by the US president as the end of the two-year war.

    The first phase of Trump’s plan saw the ceasefire come into effect at 12:00 (09:00 GMT) on 10 October.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told CBS, the BBC’s US partner, that he remained hopeful for a peaceful next phase in the talks between Israel and Hamas.

    But he said Trump’s conditions were “very clear” that Hamas must demilitarise or “all hell breaks loose”.

    “First, Hamas has to give up its arms,” Netanyahu said. “And second, you want to make sure that there are no weapons factories inside Gaza. There’s no smuggling of weapons into Gaza. That’s demilitarisation.”

    Watch: Netanyahu responds to Trump comment that he’s not “the easiest” to work with

    Trump also added pressure on Hamas to give up arms. “They’re going to disarm, because they said they would disarm. And if they don’t disarm, we will disarm them,” the US president said.

    While the ceasefire has largely held, Palestinian Civil Defence told the BBC that seven people were killed by Israeli forces on Tuesday in two separate incidents – in eastern Gaza and to the east of Khan Younis.

    An Israeli drone strike in Gaza’s eastern Shejaiya neighbourhood killed five people, says Wafa news agency, which quoted a medical source saying “Israeli drones fired at residents inspecting their homes”. The Israeli military said it fired after people crossed the yellow line, where its troops have withdrawn to under Trump’s ceasefire plan.

    Meanwhile, Hamas fighters demonstrated they were reasserting control in Gaza, with reports of masked gunmen executing eight Palestinians in public triggering fear and outrage among residents.

    While Hamas maintains that its fighters are working to “restore security” and “eliminate lawlessness,” many fear the group is using the chaos to settle scores with rivals and silence critics.

    Reuters Red Cross vehicles escort a truck transporting the bodies of Palestinians who had been held in Israel during the warReuters

    Red Cross vehicles escort a truck transporting the bodies of Palestinians who had been held in Israel during the war

    Trump signed the declaration on Monday, alongside the leaders of Egypt and Qatar – the main mediators – and Turkey, which played a significant role in the latter stages of indirect negotiations between Israel and Hamas.

    UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron were among more than 20 world leaders attending – including many from Muslim and Arab countries. Netanyahu and Hamas did not take part.

    The plan would see Gaza initially governed by a transitional committee of Palestinian technocrats overseen by the “Board of Peace”, before power is eventually transferred to the Palestinian Authority once it has undergone reforms.

    But difficult negotiations will be needed in order to move forward with the latter phases of the plan.

    Among the points of contention are the extent and timeline of Israeli troop withdrawal, the disarmament of Hamas, and the future governance of the Gaza Strip.

    Hamas has previously said it will not disarm unless a Palestinian state was established – and has rejected the idea of foreign governance in Gaza.

    The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

    At least 67,869 people have been killed by Israeli military operations in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.



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