Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israel revises Oct. 7 death toll to 1,200

Officials believe most of the bodies yet to be identified are Hamas terrorists.

Shura Military Base
The forensic center at the IDF’s Shura military base near Ramle, where hundreds of corpses have arrived since the start of the war with Hamas in Gaza Strip, Oct. 24, 2023. Photo by Yossi Aloni/Flash90.

Israeli authorities on Friday revised the death toll from Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre from 1,400 to approximately 1,200 fatalities.

The updated figure was made public after the identification of most of the bodies has been completed, Israel’s Kan News public broadcaster said.

Hamas murdered at least 843 civilians and some 350 Israel Defense Forces soldiers, per Kan News.

Jerusalem did not provide a reason for the revised figures.

However, officials believe that most of the bodies yet to be identified belong to Hamas terrorists, the broadcaster reported.

Thousands of Palestinian terrorists launched a multi-pronged attack from the Gaza Strip on Oct. 7 that included the firing of thousands of rockets and the infiltration of the Jewish state by land, sea and air.

The terrorists butchered men, women, children, the elderly, the disabled and even babies. Some of the victims were decapitated while others were raped or burned alive.

According to the most recent Health Ministry update, 342 people remain hospitalized in Israel of whom 51 are in serious condition.

Hamas also took as many as 240 people captive to the Gaza Strip.

“Any award to Francesca Albanese only shames those who bestow it,” tweeted Amb. Mike Waltz.
A senior United Torah Judaism Party official told Channel 12 News, “The show is over.”
“Our connection with the city of Jerusalem is deep and meaningful,” said the chief of staff.
Olga Popyrina, who worked designing lighting fixtures and glassware for Ikea, collaborated on the project with Rabbi Alexander and Leah Namdar of Chabad-Lubavitch Sweden.
According to the indictment, Nazmi Abu Bakr murdered the Israeli soldier with a brick thrown from a rooftop in the northern Samaria village of Ya’bad.
The soldier posing with the statue was sentenced to 21 days in military prison, and the soldier who photographed it was sentenced to 14 days, according to the Israel Defense Forces.