Israel-Hamas war: Benjamin Netanyahu's office says hostage gave birth in Gaza captivity
Jerusalem: A woman abducted into Gaza by Hamas militants on October 7 has given birth in captivity, the wife of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a letter released by his office Wednesday.
"One of the kidnapped women was pregnant. She gave birth to her baby in Hamas captivity," Sara Netanyahu said in a letter addressed to US First Lady Jill Biden.
"You can only imagine, as I do, what must be going through that young mother's mind as she is being held with her newborn by these murderers," Sarah Netanyahu wrote.
"We must call for the immediate release of them and all those being held ... The nightmare that began over a month ago must end."
read more on Israel-Hamas war
- Israel-Hamas war: Israeli troops storm Gaza's Al Shifa hospital
- Gaza’s embattled main hospital buries patients in mass grave
- ‘You slowly kill them’: Too close and too cold, premature babies in grave peril at Gaza’s Al Shifa hospital
- Israel sharpens warning to Lebanon as cross-border hostilities spike
Israeli officials say about 240 people were taken to Gaza after Hamas militants stormed southern Israel in the deadliest attack in the country's history, killing 1,200 people, mostly civilians.
In retaliatory strikes Israel has killed more than 11,300 people in Gaza, mostly civilians too, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run Palestinian territory.
Sarah Netanyahu also wrote that among the hostages was a 10-month-old baby.
"He became kidnapped even before he learned how to walk or talk," she said.
A baby boy of that age was one of 206 people AFP has identified based on interviews with relatives and Israeli media reports, who are believed to be held by Hamas or other groups inside the Gaza Strip.
On Tuesday, US President Joe Biden said he believed a deal with Hamas to free the hostages was "going to happen" but did not offer specifics.
Qatar, which is leading negotiations for the release of hostages, has called on Israel and Hamas to reach an agreement to facilitate freeing of the captives.