Hamas armed wing releases video of apparently injured Israeli hostage

A screengrab taken from a video released on Saturday by Hamas, showing what appeared to be an Israeli hostage injured in a strike on Gaza. (X/@clashreport)
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Updated 03 May 2025
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Hamas armed wing releases video of apparently injured Israeli hostage

  • Media identified the hostage as Russian-Israeli Maxim Herkin, who turns 37 at the end of May
  • He referred to himself only as “Prisoner 24” in the footage and was not identified by Hamas

JERUSALEM: The armed wing of Hamas, the Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, released a video Saturday showing an Israeli-Russian hostage who appeared to have been injured in a strike on the Palestinian territory.
In the undated four-minute video, the hostage, wearing bandages on his head and left arm spoke in Hebrew, implying he had been wounded in a recent Israeli bombardment.
AFP and Israeli media identified the hostage as Russian-Israeli Maxim Herkin, who turns 37 at the end of May. His family urged media not to disseminate the video.
He referred to himself only as “Prisoner 24” in the footage and was not identified by Hamas.
He was shown lying on the ground and referred to Israel’s Independence Day celebrations on Thursday as upcoming, suggesting the video was filmed shortly beforehand.
AFP was unable to determine the health of Herkin, who gave a similar message to other hostages shown in videos released by Hamas, urging pressure on the Israeli government to free the remaining captives.

Militants in the territory still hold 58 hostages seized in Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel. The army says 34 of them are dead. Hamas is also holding the remains of an Israeli soldier killed in a previous war in Gaza in 2014.
Herkin also appeared in a previous video released by Hamas in early April, wearing a small bandage on his right wrist and a bandage on his cheek and ear. In that video, he appeared alongside a second hostage Israeli media identified as soldier Bar Kuperstein.
Palestinian militants had abducted the two men from the Nova music festival during the Hamas attack which resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people on the Israeli side, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
A truce in Gaza between Israel and Hamas came into force on January 19, largely halting more than 15 months of fighting. During the six-week ceasefire militants handed over 33 hostages, eight of them dead.
Israel resumed major operations across Gaza on March 18 amid deadlock over next steps in the ceasefire.
The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said on Saturday that at least 2,396 people have been killed since Israel resumed its campaign in Gaza, bringing the overall death toll since the war broke out to 52,495.
The Israeli government says its renewed offensive aims to force Hamas to free the remaining captives, although critics charge that it puts them in mortal danger.
Since the end of the truce, Hamas has released several videos of hostages. The latest images come as efforts by mediators to broker a new truce have stalled.
Herkin, had emigrated to Israel from Ukraine with his mother.
Before being taken from the Nova festival, Herkin, father of a young girl, had written to his mother: “All is well. I’m coming home.”


Holdouts flee Lebanon border village after Israeli warning

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Holdouts flee Lebanon border village after Israeli warning

  • Some residents in Christian towns and villages refused to join a mass exodus, with dozens in the Alma Al-Shaab area staying put despite the violence.
  • Fears spiked however after an Israeli strike at the weekend killed one resident

NAQOURA, Lebanon: The last residents of a Christian village on Lebanon’s border with Israel fled the area on Tuesday, a UN source and an AFP correspondent said, after locals had for days defied an Israeli order to leave.
Fighting flared last week between Israel and Lebanese militant group Hezbollah as part of a wider regional war, prompting the Israeli military to warn people across swathes of southern Lebanon to flee.
But some residents in Christian towns and villages refused to join a mass exodus, with dozens in the Alma Al-Shaab area staying put despite the violence.
Fears spiked however after an Israeli strike at the weekend killed one resident.
On Tuesday, an AFP correspondent in the nearby Naqura area saw a convoy of vehicles transporting people who had left Alma Al-Shaab, including women, children and the elderly. Their cars were packed with belongings, some strapped to the roofs.
Vehicles from Lebanon’s United Nations peacekeeping force accompanied the convoy to a Lebanese army checkpoint further north, the correspondent said.
A source from the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) told AFP that more than 80 people had left and the village was now empty, saying they had been transported to areas outside the force’s operations.
UNIFIL had said on Monday that “at the request of the municipality” of Alma Al-Shaab, it was “ready to facilitate the safe movement of civilians who wish to leave.”
Last week, local mayor Shadi Sayah had told AFP that “it is our right to preserve and remain on our land.”
“We are pacifists... a danger to no one,” the mayor said.
The Israeli army announced last week its intention to establish a buffer zone in southern Lebanon, saying the goal was to protect residents of northern Israel from Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah.
The Lebanese army, which had maintained a post in Alma Al-Shaab, withdrew last Tuesday as Israeli forces started incursions into the country.
Many towns and villages along Lebanon’s border have been damaged or destroyed since October 2023, when hostilities erupted between Israel and Hezbollah over the Gaza war, but some predominantly Christian villages have gone relatively unscathed.
Farther east in the village of Qlayaa, a parish priest died on Monday of wounds sustained from Israeli tank fire, sparking anger and fear.
Qlayaa mayor Hanna Daher has urged Lebanese authorities to prevent any armed presence in or around the town, referring to Hezbollah.