June 8, 2024 - Israel-Gaza news | CNN

June 8, 2024 - Israel-Gaza news

Israeli hostage release
Video shows moment Israeli hostages exit helicopter after being rescued
2:27 • Source: CNN
Israeli hostage release
2:27

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Today’s live coverage of Israel’s war on Hamas in Gaza has now ended.

Death toll rises to at least 236 from Israeli operation in central Gaza, hospital officials say

The death toll in central Gaza has risen to at least 236 following Saturday’s Israeli security forces operation to rescue four hostages from the Nuseirat refugee camp, according to hospital officials in the enclave.

Al-Awda Hospital director Dr. Marwan Abu Nasser told CNN that 142 bodies had been counted at the medical facility by late Saturday following Israel’s raid, which was accompanied by heavy artillery fire and shelling.

Meanwhile, officials at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah had counted 94 bodies at their medical facility, spokesperson Khalil al-Dikran told CNN.

CNN has no way of verifying casualty numbers reported by Palestinian officials in Gaza, due to the lack of international media access to the strip. Medical records in the war-torn enclave do not differentiate between civilians and militants killed.

Palestinian civilians described scenes of horror during the Israeli military operation, telling journalists that children had been “torn apart and scattered in the streets” by heavy bombardment. CNN video from Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital showed many people carrying wounded children in their arms, covered in blood, and patients crowding the floor of the emergency room.

Israel’s military said Hamas, which took the hostages during the deadly October 7 attacks on Israel, had been keeping the captives in multistory civilian buildings.

Israel rescues 4 hostages in raid that Gaza authorities say left at least 200 Palestinians dead. Catch up here

Palestinians mourn their relatives who were killed by an Israeli bombardment at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah, Gaza, on June 8.

The Israeli military rescued four hostages held in central Gaza on Saturday in a major daytime operation.

The strip’s government media office said at least 210 Palestinians were killed and more than 400 injured by the Israeli bombardment as it carried out the hostage rescue operation.

Here’s what we know.

A rare rescue: Noa Argamani, Almog Meir Jan, Andrey Kozlov, and Shlomi Ziv were freed from captivity by the Israeli military, intelligence and special forces in two separate locations in the Nuseirat refugee camp, the Israel Defense Forces said Saturday. All four were kidnapped from the Nova music festival on October 7. This is only the third such successful operation since the war began.

Over 200 Palestinians dead:

  • At least 210 people have been killed and more than 400 injured as a result of the Israeli operation, the enclave’s government media office said. CNN is not able to independently verify the media office numbers, and there is no clarity on the breakdown of civilian and militant casualties.
  • Earlier Saturday, a CNN producer at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah said dozens of injured people were arriving at the medical center. A hospital spokesperson had said the number of injured was so high that it was difficult to confirm the exact toll.
  • Gazans on the ground said the scene in Nuseirat was “hell on earth,” with “children torn apart and scattered in the streets.”
  • Hamas accused Israel of committing a “horrific massacre,” saying the rescue operation would not change Israel’s “strategic failure in the Gaza Strip.”

How the operation happened: Israeli forces prepared for weeks for Saturday’s special military raid. IDF spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said the hostages had been locked in rooms of apartments in multistory civilian buildings. The IDF opted for a daytime operation for the element of surprise, and similar raids had been called off at the last minute several times, he said. Hagari estimated the number of casualties from the operation to be “under 100.” The raid also resulted in the death of an Israeli police officer who served in a special counterterrorism unit, according to Israeli police. 

Families reunited, but still call for action: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with rescued hostages and their families at Sheba Hospital in the city of Ramat Gan. Argamani was transferred to Ichilov Hospital in Tel Aviv so she can be treated there alongside her mother, who has late-stage brain cancer. Family members expressed joy at being reunited with their loved ones but also called for the Israeli government to bring back all the hostages still held in Gaza.

US response: An American cell in Israel supported the rescue efforts, working with Israeli forces on the operation, a US official told CNN — referencing a team that’s been in place supporting Israel since October 7 with information gathering about the hostages. US President Joe Biden said Saturday he welcomed news of the rescue, and the White House said it is “supporting all efforts” to get the remaining hostages released.

Gantz postpones remarks: Israeli war cabinet member Benny Gantz, who is viewed as Netanyahu’s primary political rival, postponed a Saturday news conference in which he was expected to announce his withdrawal from the country’s emergency government. Netanyahu called on Gantz to remain, saying now is a time for unity.

Hamas claims, without providing evidence, that Israel killed some hostages during rescue mission

Hamas on Saturday claimed some hostages had been killed during Israel’s rescue mission in central Gaza on Saturday, but provided no proof. 

Abu Obaida, the spokesperson for Hamas’ armed wing, the Al-Qassam Brigades, made the unverified claim, saying that “by committing horrific massacres,” Israel was “able to free some of its hostages, yet it killed some others during the operation.”

Obaida did not elaborate on the identities of who had died, or provide any evidence to back up his claim.

Obaida added that the rescue raid “posed a great danger” to the remaining hostages and “will have a devastating impact on their conditions and lives,” in his post on Telegram.

Reached for comment, the Israel Defense Forces said, “Hamas is a terrorist organization that uses psychological terrorism in order to achieve its goals, accordingly its statements should be taken with limited credibility.”

Israel’s military rescued four hostages in the special daylight operation, which Gazan authorities said killed at least 210 people and wounded more than 400 others. CNN cannot independently verify that figure, but journalists in central Gaza relayed scenes of horror and mass casualties from the ground.

US team that helped Israel with its rescue operation specializes in information gathering, official says

The American cell that assisted with Israel’s hostage rescue on Saturday is a team that’s been in place supporting the country since October 7 with information gathering about the hostages, a US official said.

There were no US boots on the ground in today’s mission, according to a source familiar with the matter. 

Some background: CNN previously reported that in the wake of the October 7 Hamas attack, the US offered Israel special operations planning and intelligence support as part of the effort to rescue hostages taken by Hamas, according to a US defense official.

The support would not entail US troops on the ground in Israel. Instead, the assistance would come in the form of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance.

CNN’s Arlette Saenz, Betsy Klein, MJ Lee and Kayla Tausche contributed to this report.

Demonstrations in Israel call for release of remaining hostages

People attend a protest calling for the release of Israeli hostages in Tel Aviv, Israel, on June 8.

Thousands of people are holding demonstrations across Israel, calling on the government to secure a deal to free the remaining hostages in Gaza.

In Tel Aviv, demonstrators gathered at a plaza informally known as Hostages Square, holding up pictures of the hostages along with signs that read, “Bring them home now.”

Earlier, the crowd also acknowledged Saturday’s rescue of four hostages from Gaza and cheered the Israeli military for securing their release.

Many are also demanding new elections, saying Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s current government must step down. Netanyahu faces growing domestic political pressure, including the possible resignation of a key member in the country’s emergency wartime government.

Netanyahu asks political rival Gantz not to leave Israel's emergency government

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during a press conference in Ramat Gan, Israel, on June 8.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has called on key war cabinet member Benny Gantz to stay in Israel’s emergency government, saying this is a time for unity, not division.

Some context: Gantz said last month that he and his National Unity party would withdraw from Israel’s wartime government by June 8 if Netanyahu did not lay out a plan to bring back the remaining hostages in Gaza and present a strategy for handling the enclave at the end of the war.

Gantz, who is viewed as Netanyahu’s primary political rival, postponed a Saturday news conference in which he was expected to announce his withdrawal, following news that Israel had rescued four hostages.

He later released a statement that did not address whether he would leave. And while his comments celebrated the rescue, they also noted Israel’s remaining challenges, including freeing the other hostages still held in Gaza.

Hamas says Israel committed "horrific massacre" against civilians in Nuseirat raid

Palestinians inspect a house hit by an Israeli strike in Gaza’s Nuseirat refugee camp on June 8.

Hamas on Saturday accused Israel of committing “a horrific massacre” after the Government Media Office in Gaza reported at least 210 people were killed and hundreds more injured in Israeli attacks on central Gaza.

In a written statement, the militant group said Israel’s killing of scores of people as it mounted a hostage rescue operation in the Nuseirat refugee camp was a “brutal crime, devoid of the values of civilization and humanity.”

Hamas said the rescuing of four hostages alive would not change Israel’s “strategic failure in the Gaza Strip,” as the group still holds a large number of other hostages after eight months of fighting.

In a separate statement, Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh said that the “resistance will continue” following the deadly fighting.

Hamas killed at least 1,200 people and took the hostages from Israel in the October 7 attacks that preceded the current Gaza invasion.

CNN has no way of verifying casualty numbers reported by the government media office in Gaza. The office does not differentiate between civilians and militants killed.

Israeli military spokesperson says Hamas was holding hostages in civilian buildings

An Israeli military spokesperson said Hamas made it impossible for Israeli forces to reach hostages without entering civilian areas since the group was embedded there.

Speaking on Saturday after the rescue operation in which four Israeli hostages were freed, Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said the hostages had been locked in rooms of apartments in multistory buildings.

Hagari said they had been kept in two separate apartments, with Noa Argamani held in a different building around 200 meters (about 66 feet) away from the three male hostages.

The Israel Defense Forces opted for a daytime operation because of the element of surprise it would give them, he said. Israeli forces had prepared for Saturday’s hostage rescue operation by building models of the apartments, the spokesperson added.

Civilian deaths in Gaza: Hagari estimated the number of casualties from the operation in central Gaza was “under 100,” and he had no information on how many of the victims were civilians. Hagari said the IDF had come under intense fire, especially after withdrawing from the apartments. The spokesperson did not provide evidence for his claims.

At least 210 people were killed and more than 400 injured during the Israeli military operation in central Gaza, the Government Media Office in Gaza said Saturday. It did not specify how many were civilians and how many were combatants.

CNN cannot verify death tolls due to lack of international media access to the strip.

Details on raid: The first phase of Saturday’s operation saw the IDF target militant infrastructure in pre-planned strikes, Hagari said. The IDF had obtained intelligence on the location of the hostages through different avenues, according to Hagari. Hostages being held in Gaza are frequently moved to different locations.

Hagari also told journalists that similar raids had been called off at the last minute “more than three or four times” due to unfavorable conditions for Israeli special forces. Most of the other hostages still held in Gaza are not being held in conditions that would allow for similar operations, he said.

Families of rescued hostages express joy but call for deal to free more hostages

Orit Meir, left, Anna Kozlov, Rozi Ziv, Jennifer Master and Yaakov Argamani attend a news conference at the Sheba Medical Center in Ramat Gan, Israel, on June 8.

Relatives of the four rescued Israeli hostages said they feel happy and blessed to be reunited with their loved ones Saturday, but they also called on the Israeli government to bring back the remaining captives in Gaza. 

Orit Meir, the mother of Almog Meir Jan, said at a news conference Saturday that she is excited to hug her son again.

Meir also thanked the Israeli military and government for rescuing the hostages, but she stressed that dozens of captives are still in Gaza and urged the government to secure their release.

“We want a deal now. We want them to come back home as soon as possible,” she said.

Jennifer Master, the girlfriend of rescued hostage Andrey Kozlov, echoed those sentiments, saying, “Thank you for saving our loved ones. And we wish that all the loved ones will come back home safe and sound and there will be a deal soon.”

Yaakov Argamani, the father of Noa Argamani, added:

Rozi Ziv, the mother of Shlomi Ziv, said, “My dream came true. I wish for the other hostages that their dreams will come true, too.”

In photos: Palestinians say central Gaza is "hell on earth" during heavy Israeli bombardment

Palestinians watch smoke rise following Israeli attacks on Deir al-Balah, Gaza, on Saturday, June 8.

Israel unleashed heavy shelling and artillery fire on central Gaza during its operation to rescue four hostages Saturday.

Nidal Abdo says he was shopping in Nuseirat when a “crazy bombardment” hit.

“There are children torn apart and scattered in the streets. They wiped out Nuseirat. It is hell on earth,” he said.

The Gaza goverment media office says more than 200 Palestinians were killed, and over 400 others wounded, in the raid. CNN cannot independently confirm that figure, and there is no clarity on the breakdown of civilian and militant casualties.

CNN video from Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital showed many people carrying wounded children in their arms, covered in blood. More kids crowded the floor of the emergency room. People screamed and cried as they said goodbye to loved ones at the morgue.

Hamas, which took the hostages from Israel in the October 7 attacks that preceded the current Gaza invasion, described Saturday’s Israeli operation as a “horrific massacre against innocent civilians” in a statement.

The images below show more of the scenes from central Gaza today:

Palestinians walk through debris in Nuseirat refugee camp on June 8.
Palestinian women mourn the deaths of loved ones in Deir al-Balah, Gaza, on June 8.
Israeli armored vehicles drive through Deir al-Balah, Gaza, on June 8.
A man sits next to the covered bodies of Palestinians at the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital morgue in Deir al-Balah, Gaza on June 8.
Palestinians pack their belongings to migrate to safer areas following attacks in Deir al-Balah, Gaza, on June 8.

Relatives and friends of freed captives celebrate outside Israel medical facility

People celebrate outside Sheba Hospital in Ramat Gan, Israel, on Saturday.

Friends and family members of the freed hostages have been celebrating outside the Sheba Hospital in the city of Ramat Gan, where the hostages are being treated.

Video footage shows a large crowd chanting slogans, such as: “Hear Israel don’t be afraid” and, “The nation of Israel lives.”

After being rescued by an Israeli military operation from two locations in Nuiseirat, central Gaza, the four hostages were flown by helicopter to the Sheba Hospital, which is located about six miles outside Tel Aviv. 

Jubilant scenes of celebration were also seen on the beaches of Tel Aviv, where a lifeguard announced the news to the sunbathers below via loudspeaker. In a video shared by the Tel Aviv municipality, crowds can be heard clapping and screaming enthusiastically. 

Israelis living in Athens also gathered to celebrate on Saturday, Israel’s foreign ministry said, sharing a video on social media.

Meanwhile, in central Gaza, Palestinians have described scenes of total destruction in several communities where Israel launched heavy bombardment as it carried out the hostage rescue operation.

The Gaza goverment media office says more than 200 Palestinians were killed, and over 400 others wounded, in the raid. CNN cannot independently confirm that figure, and there is no clarity on the breakdown of civilian and militant casualties.

Parents of Russian hostage freed from Gaza will be reunited with son in Israel

Andrey Kozlov, center, walks off a military helicopter in Ramat Gan, Israel, on Saturday, June 8.

The parents of Andrey Kozlov, the Russian citizen freed from captivity in Gaza on Saturday, are set to be reunited with their son in Israel on Sunday, according to the Israeli foreign ministry.

Consul General Ran Gidor and Deputy Consul General Tal Shvartsman have been assisting Kozlov’s parents, who will land in Israel on Sunday morning, according to a foreign ministry spokesperson.

Kozlov immigrated to Israel one year ago and was working as a security guard at the Nova music festival on October 7 when he was kidnapped by Hamas, according to the Hostage and Missing Families Forum.

The 27-year-old has been receiving medical treatment at the Sheba Hospital in Ramat Gan, near Tel Aviv, after being freed. The head of the hospital’s returning hostages team, Itai Pessach, told journalists that Kozlov and his fellow hostages are all in a “stable condition.”

Russia’s ambassador to Israel rejoiced at the news of Kozlov’s release during an appearance on Russian state TV on Saturday. “We share the joy of the relatives and friends of all these released hostages, and especially, of course, Andrey Kozlov,” Anatoly Vikrotov told Russia 24.

Russian authorities had been in contact with Kozlov’s relatives for the past eight months, Vikrotov said.

Over 200 killed as result of Israeli operation to rescue 4 hostages, Gaza government media office says

Palestinians look at the aftermath of Israeli attacks in Nuseirat refugee camp, Gaza, on Saturday, June 8.

At least 210 people have been killed and more than 400 injured as a result of the Israeli operation to rescue four hostages in central Gaza, the enclave’s government media office said Saturday.

The Israeli security forces operation took place in the areas of Nuseirat, Deir al-Balah and al-Zawaideh. 

The killed and wounded are arriving at two hospitals in Gaza, Al-Awda Hospital in Nuseirat and Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah, the media office said. 

CNN is not able to independently verify the media office numbers, and there is no clarity on the breakdown of civilian and militant casualties.

Earlier, a CNN producer at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital said dozens of injured people were arriving at the medical center. A hospital spokesperson had said the number of injured was so high that it was difficult to confirm the exact toll.

Netanyahu meets with rescued hostages in hospital

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during a press conference at Sheba Hospital in Ramat Gan, Israel, on Saturday, June 8.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with rescued hostages and their families at Sheba Hospital in Ramat Gan, a city near Tel Aviv, on Saturday.

The prime minister said at a news conference that he celebrated with Noa Argamani and her family, including her father Yaakov, who is also marking his birthday today.

The prime minister said he also met with another rescued captive, Andrey Kozlov.

Netanyahu pledged that Israel is committed to bringing back the remaining hostages in Gaza.

He also said the Israeli government expects Hamas to release them all, but if they don’t, Israel will do “whatever it takes to get them all back home.”

Biden welcomes news of hostage rescue

US President Joe Biden delivers statements in Paris, on June 8.

US President Joe Biden made short remarks about the hostage operation in Gaza during a news conference with French President Emmanuel Macron at the Élysée Palace in Paris.

CNN earlier reported that an American cell in Israel supported the efforts to rescue the four hostages, working with Israeli forces on the operation, according to a US official.

Statement from the White House: The White House commends Israel for the operation, US national security adviser Jake Sullivan said in a statement. Sullivan added that the US is “supporting all efforts” to get the remaining hostages released including “through ongoing negotiations or other means.”

“The hostage release and ceasefire deal that is now on the table would secure the release of all the remaining hostages together with security assurances for Israel and relief for the innocent civilians in Gaza,” Sullivan added. 

CNN’s Samantha Waldenberg contributed reporting to this post.

Israeli counterterrorism police officer dies after being wounded in hostage rescue operation

Saturday’s hostage rescue operation resulted in the death of an Israeli police officer who served in a special counterterrorism unit, according to Israeli police. 

Arnon Zamora was wounded in the operation in which four Israeli hostages were freed in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, Israeli police said, and he died in the hospital. 

Zamora served as a commander in the Israeli Border Police’s Yamam unit, according to the police statement.

At least 107 people killed in Israeli military operation in central Gaza, according to hospital 

People mourn over the bodies of Palestinians killed in an Israeli attack in Deir al-Balah, Gaza, on June 8.

At least 107 people have been killed as a result of an Israeli military operation in the central Gaza areas of Nuseirat, Deir al-Balah and al-Zawaideh on Saturday, according to a spokesperson at the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital.

The bodies of 20 people that were brought to the hospital still need be identified, the spokesperson said. 

A CNN producer who is at the hospital says dozens of injured are arriving at the medical center. 

The hospital spokesperson earlier said the number of injured is so high that it is difficult to confirm the exact number.

Israel announced it was targeting “terrorist infrastructure” in Nuseirat shortly before saying it had rescued four hostages in the area.

This post has been updated with the number of dead at the hospital.

What we know about the hostages rescued from Gaza today

From left, Noa Argamani, Shlomi Ziv, Almog Meir Jan and Andrey Kozlov.

The group of hostages freed from Gaza on Saturday includes a student, security guards and a recent immigrant to Israel.

All four were at the Nova music festival on October 7 near the Israel-Gaza border when they were taken captive by Hamas on what many consider to be one of the darkest days in Israel’s history.

Here’s what to know about each of them, according to a hostage campaign group, the Hostage and Missing Families Forum:

Almog Meir Jan is a 22-year-old from the small city of Or Yehuda, outside Tel Aviv. Meir Jan had been due to start a new job at a technology company on October 8, the day after the Hamas attacks. The advocacy group described him as a “polite” and “helpful” young man with a “wide warm smile.”

Shlomi Ziv is a 41-year-old who was working as a security guard at the music festival when he was kidnapped. Ziv had lived in the local moshav, or agricultural settlement, for 17 years with his wife Miren. The group described him as a “big brother”-type figure who is “always the first to help” those in need.

Andrey Kozlov is a 27-year-old resident of Rishon LeZion, a city about 5 miles south of Tel Aviv. He was also working as a security guard at the Nova festival on October 7. He is a Russian citizen who immigrated to Israel one year ago. Back in January, senior Russian diplomat Mikhail Bogdanov called for the release of Kozlov and two other Russian citizens also being held by Hamas. 

Noa Argamani is a 25-year-old who had been studying information systems management at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel. She quickly became a symbol of the October 7 attacks after video surfaced of her being kidnapped by Hamas fighters on a motorbike. Argamani’s boyfriend, Avinatan Or, was also kidnapped from the festival and remains in Hamas captivity. According to the Hostage and Missing Families Forum, Argamani is a yoga and art enthusiast who enjoys hiking in her spare time.

US aided Israel in hostage rescue, official says

An American cell in Israel supported the efforts to rescue four Israeli hostages, working with Israeli forces on the operation, a US official told CNN. 

CNN previously reported that Israel prepared for weeks for Saturday’s operation, with hundreds of personnel from the Israeli military, the domestic intelligence service and a police special unit involved.

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