Credit...Saher Alghorra for The New York Times
Israel Says It Killed a Hamas Militant Involved in Yarden Bibas Kidnapping
Mr. Bibas, his wife and their two small children were abducted and taken to Gaza. Only he survived.
by https://www.nytimes.com/by/ephrat-livni · NY TimesFew of the Israelis taken hostage in the Hamas-led attack on Oct. 7, 2023, have drawn as much attention as the Bibas family — two parents and two small children. For many Israelis, their abductions came to symbolize the brutality of the assault.
On Tuesday, the Israeli authorities said they had killed a Hamas fighter who they said had been involved in kidnapping of the father, Yarden Bibas. His wife and children were abducted separately and killed in captivity.
The Israeli military and the Shin Bet, the domestic security agency, said in a statement that on Aug. 10, they “struck and eliminated” Jihad Kamal Salem Najjar, whom they identified as a member of Hamas’ military wing. According to the statement, Mr. Najjar “infiltrated Kibbutz Nir Oz during the brutal October 7th massacre and took part in the abduction of Yarden Bibas.”
The announcement was accompanied by an image showing Mr. Bibas during his kidnapping, bleeding in what appears to be the back of a pickup truck, along with someone the Israeli authorities identified as Mr. Najjar.
The New York Times could not independently verify that the person in the picture was Mr. Najjar, nor that Mr. Najjar was a Hamas fighter. Hamas seldom comments on such announcements, and there does not appear to be any past mention of Mr. Najjar in Israeli or Arab news media.
Mr. Bibas and his family, on the other hand, are very well known.
Shiri Bibas was 32 when she was kidnapped with the couple’s two boys — Ariel, 4, and Kfir, who was about 9 months old, the youngest of the hostages. Her parents were killed in the same kibbutz.
Video circulated worldwide of a terrified Ms. Bibas clutching her children as the three of them were taken to Gaza. Yarden Bibas, then 34, was captured separately.
In November 2023, Hamas said Ms. Bibas and the two children had been killed in an Israeli airstrike. Israeli authorities later said after a forensic analysis of their bodies that they had been murdered by their captors.
As part of a temporary cease-fire deal in February, Mr. Bibas was released, and the bodies of his wife and children were returned to Israel.
Responding to the news that Mr. Najjar had been killed, Mr. Bibas thanked the Israeli authorities, saying in a statement “a small part of my closure happened today.”
“I am waiting for full closure with the return of my friends David and Ariel, and the remaining 48 hostages,” he added, referring to David and Ariel Cunio, who grew up with Mr. Bibas in the Kibbutz Nir Oz community. The Cunio brothers are still being held in Gaza.
The Israeli announcement came as a humanitarian crisis grips Gaza, drawing international condemnation of Israel, and as pressure mounts within Israel on the government to end the war. On Sunday, an estimated 400,000 Israelis gathered in Tel Aviv to call for cease-fire and a deal for the release of the remaining hostages, of whom about 20 are believed to still be alive.
Many relatives of the hostages, and those who already have been released from Gaza, have called on Israel not to intensify military operations in the enclave, saying it would endanger the remaining captives.
Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, is facing competing pressures from some in the Israeli public who want a negotiated cease-fire and members of his far-right governing coalition who staunchly oppose a truce. Israel’s security cabinet earlier this month approved a contentious plan to take over Gaza City, which would displace hundreds of thousands of Palestinians sheltering there.
Hamas said on Monday that it had agreed to the terms of a deal presented by Qatari and Egyptian mediators. Some Israeli leaders said Hamas’ approval of the proposal came as a direct result of the Netanyahu government announcing it would expand the military offensive in Gaza. At the same time, some far-right members of Mr. Netanyahu’s coalition have indicated he could lose their support if accepts the proposal.
On Tuesday, Israel’s defense minister, Israel Katz, said that the government had approved a major expansion of the defense budget, raising it $8 billion, an increase of more than 25 percent, according to Yehuda Amrani, a finance ministry spokesman.
The defense ministry on Tuesday evening said in a separate statement that Mr. Katz was in talks with senior defense officials “to approve offensive plans in Gaza.”
About 1,200 people were killed and 250 abducted from Israel in the Oct. 7 attack. In the ensuing war, more than 62,000 Palestinians in Gaza have been killed, according to the Gaza health ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants.
Johnatan Reiss and Abu Bakr Bashir contributed reporting.