After releasing three videos Israel accuses Hamas of psychological torture

Hamas says two Israeli hostages dead, while IDF calls videos 'mental torture' for prisoners' families – CNN

CNN –

Israel said on Monday that Hamas was carrying out “psychological torture” as the militant group released a third video in 24 hours showing the same three hostages being held in Gaza. The final video appears to show two of the hostages dead.

“Hamas is being hit hard by the IDF and all it can do is inflict psychological torture on families [of the hostages]“It leaves the IDF to sort things out for the families later,” Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant told reporters on Monday.

The first video released on Sunday showed clips of the three hostages – Noa Argamani, Itai Svirsky and Yossi Sharabi – speaking into a camera. It ended with the headline: “Tomorrow we will inform you of their fate.”

A second video released on Monday – apparently an attempt by Hamas to stoke concerns – reiterated the message that the fate of the three hostages would soon be made public.

The third video, released later Monday, appeared to show the bodies of two of the hostages, Svirsky and Sharabi. Noa Argamani also said both men were killed by Israeli bombing.

Yossi Sharabi, 53

It is not clear whether Argamani spoke under duress. The video is also heavily edited, with audio effects and the looping of some of her words.

IDF chief spokesman Daniel Hagari addressed the videos in his briefing Monday evening, saying Itai Svirsky was not hit by Israeli forces, as claimed in the third video. He said the IDF did not attack the building where the three were being held, as the video also claimed, but nearby.

“We don’t strike in places where we know there might be hostages,” Hagari said. “In hindsight, we know we hit targets close to where they were being held. We are investigating the incident and its circumstances and are reviewing the images disseminated by Hamas and other information available to us.”

The army spokesman added that IDF officials met with the families of the three hostages and briefed them on the latest information, adding that the IDF expressed “great concern” about the fate of two of the prisoners.

CNN is not airing the videos and it is not immediately possible to verify when and where they were filmed.

Noa Argamani.  In a video that went viral, an Israeli woman and her boyfriend - identified as Noa Argamani and Avinatan Or, who had attended the festival - were shown being kidnapped.  Music festival-goers heard rockets, then Gaza militants shot at them and took hostages.

Hamas and other groups took around 240 hostages in the Gaza Strip on October 7. More than 100 Israeli and foreign hostages were released during a week-long ceasefire in late November, with Palestinians held in Israeli prisons released in exchange for the Israelis.

Israel believes there are 132 hostages still in the Gaza Strip, of which around 107 are believed to still be alive.

Argamani, 26, who appeared in two of the videos, was kidnapped from the Nova festival along with her boyfriend Avinatan Or. In a video released by Hamas at the time, Argamani was seen being dragged away on a motorcycle.

Her mother Leora suffers from stage four brain cancer and in a video she recorded late last year she pleads for her daughter's safe return, saying: “Noa, this is what I want to tell you when I don't see you.” please know that I love you very much.”

Svirsky was kidnapped while visiting his family on Kibbutz Be'eri from his home in Tel Aviv. The 38-year-old Israeli-German dual citizen had been at the house of his mother Orit Svirsky, a committed peace activist.

Orit was shot in front of him and it later emerged that, in addition to his three dogs, her ex-husband Rafi – Svirsky's father – was also murdered. Svirsky's 97-year-old maternal grandmother, Aviva Sela, survived the attack, but her Filipino caregiver Grace Cabrera, 45, was killed.

Svirsky has degrees in psychology and economics and recently began working as a life coach, his family told CNN. According to his family, one of the hostages released in November contacted his sister to tell her he was still alive after remembering her phone number. This was the family’s last “proof of life”.

Sharabi, 53, was “a loving and devoted father and husband, a true family man with a big heart,” the Kibbutz Be'eri where he lived said in a statement shared by the Hostages and Missing Persons Families Forum. “He had a kind soul, was caring and was known for his commitment to everyone around him.”

Originally from Tel Aviv, Sharabi moved to Kibbutz Be'eri 30 years ago, “following in his brother Eli's footsteps as he wanted to embrace the communal lifestyle there,” the kibbutz said.

He leaves behind a wife and three daughters. Sharabi's brother Eli was also kidnapped from his home on Kibbutz Be'eri and is still being held captive by Hamas. According to the kibbutz, Eli's wife and daughters were murdered on October 7.

Sharabi's body is still being held by Hamas, the kibbutz said. It called on the Israeli government to “do everything possible to return the Sharabi family and the other hostages home.”

This story has been updated to reflect the IDF's naming of the third hostage shown in the videos, Yossi Sharabi.

CNN's Amir Tal and Ivana Kottasová contributed to this report.