Child hostage bodies returned in ‘cruel’ handover

The UN rights chief has criticised the “abhorrent” behaviour of Hamas for displaying the coffins of four Israeli hostages, as Central Israel has been rattled by a series of bus explosions.

Feb 21, 2025, updated Feb 21, 2025
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the country was “united in unbearable grief”. Source: X

The UN’s human rights chief has slammed the “abhorrent and cruel” parading of hostage remains as Hamas handed over the bodies of four Israelis — including two young children.

Israeli brothers Kfir and Ariel Bibas, aged 9 months and 4, were the youngest captives taken by Hamas on October 7, 2023 and are among the most potent symbols of the trauma inflicted that day.

Their bodies were delivered to the Red Cross along with their dead mother Shiri Bibas and a fourth deceased hostage, Oded Lifschitz, on Friday morning (AEDT).

The macabre handover marks the first return of dead bodies during the current ceasefire agreement.

The coffins were placed on a stage, with armed Hamas militants in black and camouflage uniforms surrounding the area.

One militant stood beside a poster of a man standing over coffins wrapped in Israeli flags. It read “The Return of the War = The Return of your Prisoners in Coffins”.

“The parading of bodies in the manner seen this morning is abhorrent and cruel, and flies in the face of international law,” said the office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk.

“We urge that all returns are conducted in privacy, and with respect and care.”

Kfir Bibas, Ariel Bibas, Shiri Bibas

Ariel Bibas, 4, his infant brother Kfir and their mother Shiri Bibas were snatched from their home. Photo: Supplied

Red Cross staff held up white screens in an attempt to conceal the coffins from the gaze of the large crowds as they were loaded into their vehicles.

The Red Cross said: “These operations should be done privately out of the utmost respect for the deceased and for those left grieving.”

Kfir Bibas was nine months old when the Bibas family, including their father Yarden, was abducted from their home in the Kibbutz Nir Oz community.

Hamas said in November 2023 that the boys and their mother had been killed in an Israeli air strike, but their deaths were never confirmed by Israeli authorities.

Their father was returned in exchange for prisoners this month.

Red Cross vehicles drove away from the handover site in the Gaza Strip with four black coffins that had been placed on a stage. Each of the caskets had a small picture of the hostages.

Armed Hamas militants in black and camouflage uniforms surrounded the area.

After the hostages were handed over by the Red Cross, the coffins were scanned for explosives, according to the military, before being transported to Israel.

Shiri Bibas

The four coffins on stage against a macabre backdrop. Photo: AAP

Israelis lined the road in the rain near the Gaza border to pay their respects as the convoy carrying the coffins drove by.

“We stand here together, with a broken heart, the sky is also crying with us and we pray to see better days,” said one woman, who gave her name only as Efrat.

In Tel Aviv, people gathered, some weeping, at what has come to be known as Hostages Square outside Israel’s defence headquarters.

“Agony. Pain. There are no words. Our hearts — the hearts of an entire nation — lie in tatters,” said President Isaac Herzog.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the country was “united in unbearable grief” and vowed to “eliminate” Hamas.

“Shiri and the kids became a symbol,” said Yiftach Cohen, of the Nir Oz kibbutz, which lost around a quarter of its residents, either killed or kidnapped, during the assault.

Some of those Israelis killed on October 7 were known peace activists.

Lifshitz was 83 when he was abducted from Nir Oz, the kibbutz he helped found. His wife, Yocheved, 85 at the time, was seized with him and released two weeks later, along with another woman.

“Our family’s healing process will begin now and will not end until the last hostage is returned,” the family said.

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The Hamas-led attack into Israel killed some 1200 people, according to Israeli tallies, with 251 kidnapped. Israel’s subsequent military campaign has killed some 48,000 people, Palestinian health authorities say, and left densely populated Gaza in ruins.

Thursday’s handover of bodies will be followed by the return of six living hostages on Saturday, in exchange for hundreds more Palestinians, expected to be women and minors detained by Israeli forces in Gaza during the war.

Negotiations for a second phase, expected to cover the return of around 60 remaining hostages, less than half of whom are believed to be alive, and a full withdrawal of Israeli troops from the Gaza Strip to allow an end to the war, are expected to begin in the coming days.

Buses explode in Israel in suspected militant attack

Central Israel has been rattled by a series of bus explosions in what authorities suspect was a militant attack.

No injuries were reported from the explosions on Thursday (local time).

The bus explosions were reminiscent of bombings during the Palestinian uprising of the 2000s, but such attacks are now rare.

Police spokesman Asi Aharoni told Channel 13 TV that explosives were found on two more buses.

Israeli police said the five bombs were identical and equipped with timers. They said bomb squads were defusing the unexploded bombs.

Bomb disposal units had finished searching buses and trains nationwide for additional bombs and police were on the scene Bat Yam, a city outside Tel Aviv, as they searched for suspects.

Police are investigating a series of explosions in empty buses outside Tel Aviv. Image: AAP

“We need to determine if a single suspect placed explosives on a number of buses, or if there were multiple suspects,” police spokesman Haim Sargrof told Israeli TV.

Tzvika Brot, mayor of Bat Yam, said it was a miracle no one was hurt.

The empty buses had finished their routes and had been parked, he said.

The Shin Bet internal security agency was taking over the investigation, police said. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said he was receiving updates from his military secretary and following the events.

Sargrof said the explosives matched explosives used in the West Bank, but he declined to elaborate.

Israel has repeatedly carried out military raids on suspected Palestinian militants in the West Bank since Hamas’s October 7, 2023, attack sparked the devastating war in Gaza.

As part of that crackdown, it has greatly restricted entry into Israel for Palestinians from the occupied territory.

A group identifying itself as a branch of Hamas’ military wing, Qassam Brigades, from the northern West Bank city of Tulkarem, posted on messaging app Telegram: “We will never forget to take vengeance for our martyrs as long as the occupation is on our lands.”

The city of Tulkarem and two refugee camps in the city have been a focus of recent Israeli army raids.

Since the ceasefire with Hamas in Gaza took effect on January 19, Israel has conducted a broad military offensive in the West Bank.

Brot, the mayor, urged the public to keep their routines, saying schools would be open on Friday and public transport would operate.

– with AAP

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