It came after a night of air strikes which killed at least 50 people
The Israeli military says it has rescued two hostages from captivity in the Gaza Strip after a night of air strikes which killed at least 50 people.
It identified the freed hostages as Fernando Simon Marman, 60, and Louis Har, 70.
It said both men were kidnapped by Hamas militants from Kibbutz Nir Yizhak in the October 7 cross-border attack that started the four-month Israel-Hamas war.
The two men were rescued from a residential building in the southern border town of Rafah in a raid that also killed at least seven people, according to Palestinian officials.
The army says both men are in good medical condition.
They are just the second and third hostages to be rescued safely and were among the 136 hostages Israel claims still remain in Hamas captivity.
Lt Col Richard Hecht said the operation was based on “precise intelligence” and that the site, on the second floor of a building, had been watched for “some time”.
He said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu joined Israel’s military chief and other top officials as the raid unfolded.
It comes after a series of Israeli strikes hit Rafah on Monday morning, despite warnings from US President Joe Biden not to conduct a military operation in the Gaza border town without a plan to protect civilians.
The Israeli military said it struck “terror targets in the area of Shaboura”, a district in Rafah.
Hospital officials in the southern Gaza town of Rafah say at least 50 people were killed in airstrikes that accompanied an Israeli hostage rescue operation.
Director of Abu Youssef al-Najjar Hospital Dr Marwan al-Hams said the bodies include women and children.
An Associated Press journalist in Rafah said strikes hit around Kuwait Hospital, where some of those wounded in the strikes had been brought.
Published: by Radio NewsHub