Families fear for hostages after Israel’s strike on Hamas in Doha

Relatives and supporters of hostages held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip calling for their immediate release and an end of the ongoing war, in Jerusalem, Sept. 9, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 10 September 2025
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Families fear for hostages after Israel’s strike on Hamas in Doha

  • Einav Zangauker said she was trembling with fear that her son’s fate has now been sealed
  • Matan Zangauker is one of 20 hostages believed to still be alive after almost two years in captivity

JERUSALEM: The families of Israeli hostages held in Gaza said they were fearful for the fate of their loved ones after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s decision to launch strikes on the Hamas leadership in Qatar, just as a new ceasefire push was underway.
Qatar has been hosting leaders of the Palestinian militant group which is still holding 48 hostages in Gaza, and is one of the mediators, along with the United States, trying to secure a ceasefire deal that would include the captives’ release.
Some hostage families said they were outraged by Tuesday’s assassination attempt in Doha, fearing Hamas could take retribution against their loved ones.
Einav Zangauker, whose son Matan was kidnapped from his Kibbutz in the Hamas-led October 7, 2023 attacks that triggered the war in Gaza, said she was trembling with fear that her son’s fate has now been sealed.
“Why does the prime minister insist on blowing up every small chance for a deal? Why?” she said in a video she sent to journalists. “The people of Israel are tired of this war. End it already and bring everyone back.”
Matan Zangauker is one of 20 hostages believed to still be alive after almost two years in captivity. Families of those believed to have died in Gaza are fearful they will never have the chance to bury their loved ones if their remains are lost forever in the shattered enclave.
“I’m horrified at the idea that when we finally had an American-led deal that could have led to the release of our hostages, this is the action that took place,” Udi Goren, whose cousin Tal Haimi’s body is still in Gaza, told Reuters.
“I have no regret in seeing these people punished. They are all a part of the people that massacred, that planned what happened on October 7. However, the only way that my cousin Tal will be back for burial is by a negotiated deal,” said Goren.
Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid said on Tuesday: “The Israeli government must explain how the IDF (Israel Defense Forces) operation will not lead to the killing of the hostages, and whether the risk to their lives was taken into account in the decision.”

END OF THE WAR?
Hours after the attack in Doha, Netanyahu said the strike could speed up the war’s end. A message by his hostage liaison Gal Hirsch to the families said that the Hamas leadership abroad has been an obstacle to reaching a ceasefire agreement.
In Gaza on Wednesday, Palestinian families continued to stream out of Gaza City along the coastal road in anticipation of a major Israeli offensive.
While some critics say that the attack in Doha points to Netanyahu not wanting to end the war any time soon, others say it may actually mark the beginning of the war’s conclusion.
Amos Nadan, director of the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies, said that Tuesday’s strike could be a similar move to the assassination of Hassan Nasrallah, leader of Lebanese militia and Hamas ally Hezbollah a year ago, which was followed by an Israel-Lebanon ceasefire two months later.
“In Israel we have to remember that the vast majority of the people now are in favor of ending the war and bringing back the hostages,” Nadan told Reuters. “So that might look like the concluding remarks of the war.”


Seven killed in drone strike on Sudan hospital: medical source

Updated 11 sec ago
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Seven killed in drone strike on Sudan hospital: medical source

PORT SUDAN: A drone strike Sunday on an army hospital in the besieged southern Sudan city of Dilling left “seven civilians dead and 12 injured,” a health worker at the facility told AFP.
The victims included patients and their companions, the medic said on condition of anonymity, explaining that the army hospital “serves the residents of the city and its surroundings, in addition to military personnel.”
Dilling, in the flashpoint state of South Kordofan, is controlled by the Sudanese army but has been under siege by rival paramilitary forces.
Since April 2023, the army has been at war with the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), who control swathes of the greater Kordofan region along with their allies, the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N) faction led by Abdelaziz Al-Hilu.
Sunday’s strike comes a day after a drone strike on a United Nations peacekeeping base killed six Bangladeshi troops in the similarly besieged South Kordofan state capital of Kadugli, some 120 kilometers (75 miles) south of Dilling.
According to the UN, civilians in Dilling are suffering famine conditions, but a lack of access to data has prevented an official declaration.
Across the country, the war has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced 12 million and created the world’s largest hunger and displacement crises.