close
KHAN YOUNIS: One of the Palestinian prisoners released in the fifth hostage-prisoner swap under the Gaza ceasefire deal rushes to embrace his mother upon arrival at the European Hospital in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on February 8, 2025. — AFP photos
KHAN YOUNIS: One of the Palestinian prisoners released in the fifth hostage-prisoner swap under the Gaza ceasefire deal rushes to embrace his mother upon arrival at the European Hospital in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on February 8, 2025. — AFP photos

Prisoners released in Gaza return to land destroyed by war

KHAN YOUNIS: More than 100 Palestinians freed into Gaza on Saturday returned to the territory to find it rendered unrecognizable by 15 months of war, while for many the fate of their loved ones was unknown. “How is my family? Are they still alive?” one prisoner asked, calling out from a bus window as prisoners arrived in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip. “Have there been martyrs in my family?” he shouted again before a voice in the crowd responded. “They are all ok,” came the reply.

In total, 183 Palestinians were released from the Zionist entity’s prisons on Saturday in exchange for three Zionist entity citizens held in Gaza in the fifth such swap as part of an ongoing ceasefire in Gaza. Of those released, 41 returned to the West Bank city of Ramallah, four were released in East Jerusalem, seven were deported to Egypt and 131 were sent to Gaza.

Stepping off the Red Cross chartered coaches in the Palestinian territory, some looked weary and weak, while others exulted, looking to catch a glimpse of a familiar face. Family members, friends and loved ones in the crowd surged towards the returning prisoners, wanting to touch them, shake their hands or film the scene on their phones.

In the background, loudspeakers blasted political chants, sometimes echoed by the crowd. Khadra Al-Daghma, on the verge of collapse, struggled to make her way to her son before falling into his arms as he kissed her forehead.

“I’m so happy”, she said, struggling to find words. “I waited for this day to come for 15 years”. All around her, teary-eyed relatives and freed prisoners, some of whom had not seen each other in decades, were hugging and crying. “He’s changed so much”, Al-Daghma said after holding her son Amar, who was arrested in 2009, in her arms. The contrast between the land they left and the one they are returning to is stark for returning prisoners.

The Zionist entity’s army relentlessly bombarded Gaza for more than 15 months, leaving much of the area in ruins. With over 48,000 dead and 111,000 wounded, according to the territory’s Ministry of Health, the population has been left drained and traumatized by the relentless violence. Over 90 percent of Palestinians in Gaza were displaced at least once during the war, according to the UN. Of those who returned home after a ceasefire took effect on Jan 19, many have had to pitch tents next to their old homes, which they found destroyed.

“During our six months of detention, we were completely cut off from the world, we got no information on the war in Gaza”, Mohammed, a freed prisoner who declined to share his last name, said. “The scale of the destruction shocked us, Gaza is in ruins, there is rubble everywhere”, he said. “With the (Zionist) occupation of Gaza, I’m afraid they’ll arrest us again at any moment,” the recently freed prisoner added. — AFP

By Farah AlHashem The ceasefire agreement between the Zionist entity and Hamas, brokered in January 2025, marks a pivotal moment in the ongoing conflict that has shaped the Zionist entity’s future. Following the Oct 7 attacks, known as the “Al-A...
There is no doubt that Gulf leaders are striving hard to unite the region. This great effort is due to the belief in the unity of Gulf nations and also to create a model for others. All Gulf institutions need to seek ways to remove any obstacle to G...
MORE STORIES