Hamas releases first hostage video as senior figure says it has ‘what it needs’ to free all Palestinian prisoners

Hamas has released a video apparently showing an injured Israeli hostage, as a senior Hamas leader said the militant group “has what it needs” to free all Palestinians in Israel’s jails.

On Monday night, Hamas’s military wing, the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam brigades, released for the first time footage of a hostage, who identifies herself as 21-year-old Mia Schem from Shoham, in central Israel.

In the 78-second video, Schem’s injured arm is shown being treated by an unidentified medical worker. She says she is in Gaza, is being given medicine and wants to go home. It is unclear when it was filmed and if she was under duress during filming. Analysis by the New York Times suggests parts of it were filmed six days ago.

Schem, who reportedly has French citizenship, was abducted on 7 October from the Supernova festival, where hundreds were killed. Her family, which is one of a group of French families that publicly appealed last week to President Emmanuel Macron to help free their missing relatives, confirmed her identity to Reuters.

Early on Tuesday, the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) confirmed Schem had been abducted and that it had been in “continuous” contact with her family. The IDF said it was “deploying all intelligence and operational measures for the return of all hostages” and criticised Hamas for seeking to “portray themselves as humane”.

Schem’s family told Israeli media of their joy at seeing the video of her, with Schem’s aunt, named as Galit, calling it “a very significant step”. “She looks hurt and scared – but at least she’s alive,” she is quoted as saying.

Earlier, Khaled Meshaal, a former Hamas chief who now heads its diaspora office in Doha, spoke to AlAraby TV and said it will spare no effort in using its captives as leverage to free 6,000 Palestinians held in Israeli prisons.

The militant organisation said that a total of 250 people were being held hostage in Gaza, and that they would be released “when conditions are ripe”.

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The IDF said Hamas was holding 199 hostages in Gaza, and that all families had been notified of their identities.

Gunmen from Hamas took scores of hostages after rampaging through southern Israeli communities and military bases on 7 October, killing more than 1,300 people. Israel’s military says the group is holding 199 hostages in Gaza.

In a televised statement late on Monday, Abu Ubaida, the spokesperson for the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam brigades, said it had been holding 200 people captive, and that about 50 others were being held by other “resistance factions and in other places”. He claimed that at least 22 hostages had been killed in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza. The Izz ad-Din al-Qassam brigades said the non-Israelis who were abducted were “guests” who would be released “when circumstances allow”.

An Israeli military spokesperson, Daniel Hagari, said: “We are making valiant efforts to try to understand where the hostages are in Gaza, and we have such information.

“We will not carry out an attack that would endanger our people.”

The hostages are believed to be mostly civilians, ranging from babies to people in their 80s. Many have dual nationality. The UK has said 10 of its nationals are missing, although some of those are feared to be dead. There are thought to be about 20 US citizens held hostage in Gaza.

The presence of hostages in the strip has complicated Israel’s plans for a ground invasion of the narrow coastal territory that is home to 2.3 million people.

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Hamas has warned that it will kill hostages in response to unannounced Israeli strikes on civilian targets.

On Friday, it was reported that Israeli troops had retrieved an unspecified number of bodies of hostages during “localised raids”.

The Hostages and Missing Families Forum is supporting relatives and friends, publicising the plight of the hostages and demanding action. About 100 volunteers, including former diplomats, communications experts and former soldiers, are pooling their expertise.

The Israeli public has rallied behind hostages before, but never on this scale. The family of Gilad Shalit, a young soldier held hostage in Gaza for five years, camped outside the prime minister’s residence in Jerusalem.

Noam Shalit, the soldier’s father, who died last year, lobbied politicians relentlessly for his son’s release, going on hunger strikes, touring television studios, organising marches and protests, and distributing hundreds of thousands of car bumper stickers.

Campaigners for the hostages have posted pictures and biographies of the captives on social media and are demanding regular meetings with government and military officials.

The forum has asked the International Committee of the Red Cross to negotiate humanitarian access to the hostages.

The group has met Gal Hirsch, an Israeli army general put in charge of the hostage issue by the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. Some relatives have claimed that information has been withheld from them.

Among those believed to be held in Gaza are Vivian Silver, 74, a well-known peace activist, the co-founder of Women Wage Peace and a former board member of the human rights organisation B’Tselem, who lived in Be’eri, a kibbutz near the Gaza frontier.

Another is Oded Lifshitz, 83, a veteran journalist who worked for decades for peace and the recognition of Palestinian rights. He was taken with his wife, Yocheved, 85, from their home in the Nir Oz kibbutz.

Noam Alon, whose girlfriend, Inbar Haiman, went missing from the Supernova music festival on 7 October, said Israel’s political and military leaders “need to do all they can to free the hostages, alive and safe” before any ground invasion of Gaza.

Haiman, 27, had been seen being driven away on a motorbike. Hamas later posted a video showing her being held by four Hamas men, said Alon.

“Inbar is very clever and sensitive. I’m sure she will know that everyone is doing everything they can to get her out. She needs to stay strong and positive, and know this will end and she’ll be with us again.”

The memory of Gilad Shalit’s captivity was vivid for Israelis, he said. “We don’t know if she’s being held alone or with others, or if she can even see the sunlight. But we are trying to be optimistic and do everything we can to bring her home.”

Friends of Haiman, a graphic design and arts student in Haifa whose street art name is Pink, had created murals and graffiti to spread awareness of her plight. “Soon everyone will know about Inbar,” said Alon.

In Jerusalem, Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, Pope Francis’s representative in the Holy Land, said he was willing to exchange himself for Israeli children taken hostage by Hamas.

“I am ready for an exchange, anything, if this can lead to freedom, to bring the children home. No problem. There is total willingness on my part,” said Pizzaballa, the patriarch of Jerusalem.