Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

New Oct. 7 video emerges of kidnapped Israeli women: ‘Even worse than we imagined’

The full video has not been shared with the public.

Hostage Photos Dizengoff Square
Israelis walk past candles and photos of the victims killed and held hostage by Hamas terrorists in Gaza since the Oct. 7 massacre, on Dizengoff Square in Tel Aviv on April 8, 2024. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90.

Newly emerged video shot by Hamas terrorists showing the capture of female Israeli soldiers on the Gaza border has been described as “hard to watch” by Israeli media.

In the video, parts of which have not been shared with the public, Hamas terrorists are initially seen with five female spotters with two more later being added.

“We will exchange you for our people,” the terrorists say.

Another terrorist forces one of the soldiers to show him how to dial a Gaza number from her cell phone. The terrorists later put the soldiers into stolen Israel Defense Forces vehicles for transport to Gaza.

Shira Elbag, the mother of the kidnapped soldier Liri Elbag, 19, watched it several weeks ago.

“I watched the video. They showed it to us three weeks ago. The IDF spokesman called us and showed us a video from the day of the kidnapping, something we had not seen and did not know about.

“We all only imagined what happened to the girls on Oct. 7, and unfortunately, this video proved to us that it was even worse than we imagined,” she said.

Albag said the families had demanded that Knesset members watch the video and were surprised to find out that they already had seen it, though hadn’t updated the families on its existence.

Israel estimates that about 100 of the 133 or so hostages still held by Hamas are still alive.

“It is in line with the U.N.’s attitude and obsession with Israel,” said the president of the World Jewish Congress-Israel.
Israel’s Home Front Command has implemented an advanced preliminary alert system for Lebanese rocket threats.
The completion of two new pipelines will enable Leviathan to maximize its production capacity for both domestic needs and exports.
The war with Iran strained the Gulf state’s relationship with Hamas, but the evidence points less to a real break than to a Qatari balancing act.
Developing technologies that can make a truck vanish from radar. The race to find a solution to the new drone threat.
“Only one president was willing to lay it out on the line and ensure after 47 years that Iran is not capable of having a nuclear weapon,” said the U.S. secretary of defense.