The terrorist group said it would free Edan Alexander, who holds U.S. citizenship, after the Trump administration signalled his importance
Hamas said on Friday that it was prepared to release Edan Alexander, 21, in an effort to jumpstart stalled ceasefire negotiations.
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It said it would make the release without ceremony. Hamas has been criticized by Israel and the U.S. for making propaganda spectacles of the prisoner releases.
The Trump administration’s special envoy Steve Witkoff told press on March 6 that the U.S. wants Hamas to free Alexander as a show of goodwill.
Alexander, from Tenafly, N.J., is the only one of five American hostages in Gaza believed to still be alive.
“Edan Alexander is very important to us — as all the hostages are — but Edan Alexander is an American, and he’s injured, so he’s a top priority for us,” Witkoff said.
“We feel that Hamas has not been forthright with us, and it’s time for them to be forthright with us,” Witkoff said. “Edan Alexander would be a very important show.”
Israel’s Channel 12 revealed on March 6 that former captives told Alexander’s family that he had been held in a tunnel for more than 500 days. He appeared severely malnourished and had been tortured and kept in chains for a long time, they said.
Alexander, who served in the Israel Defence Force’s Golani Brigade, was kidnapped in uniform from a post near Kibbutz Nirim on Oct. 7, 2023.
He is scheduled to be released in the second phase of negotiations, which Hamas is eager to start. According to the group’s Friday statement, it affirmed its “full readiness to start negotiations and reach a comprehensive agreement on the issues of the second phase, calling for the occupation to implement its obligations in full.”
The second phase calls for a permanent ceasefire and the return of the remaining hostages by Hamas. Israel estimates 59 hostages are still in Gaza, of whom 35 are believed to be dead.
Israel wanted to extend the first phase and not enter the second. Hamas rejected that plan.
Both sides have agreed to a bridging proposal from the U.S. whereby the ceasefire would be extended through the holidays of Ramadan and Passover.
Ramadan runs until March 29, while Passover begins on April 12 and ends on April 19.
Israel is reportedly planning to resume its war against Hamas at the end of that period. It has halted the flow of aid into the Gaza Strip.
Israel’s government has also approved a call-up of up to 400,000 Israel Defence Force reservists.
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