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Israel releases footage of rescue mission as commandos radioed ‘the diamonds have departed’ after saving hostages

Watch the video above as the hostages are led to safety

THIS is the moment two freed Israeli hostages were transferred from the Yaman counter-terrorist unit and ISA forces to the IDF.

Israeli forces launched a large-scale rescue mission, known as the “Arnon” Operation, to rescue four hostages who were being held by Hamas operatives.

The Paratrooper Reconnaissance Unit Combat Team led the rescue of the hostages and the Yamam and ISA forces continued to battle terrorists in Gaza after coming under fire.

The four hostages freed were: Noa Argamani, 26, Almog Meir Jan, 21, Andrey Kozlov, 27, and Shlomi Ziv, 40.

The footage shows two of the former hostages being helped away by IDF forces.

All four had been taken hostage by Hamas on October 7 last year, when the terror group launched a brutal attack on the Nova music festival in Israel.

In other footage from yesterday’s rescue operation in central Gaza’s Nuseirat, Southern Command chief Major General Yaron Finkelman is seen notifying the IDF chief of staff that three of the four hostages had been freed.

He said in Hebrew: “Chief of staff I want to report to you that the three diamonds have departed [by helicopter] from the helipad just now toward the country,”

The three hostages referred to were Almog Meir Jan, Andrey Kozlov, and Shlomi Ziv.

Noa had been rescued from a separate building in the area.

The hostages were taken to a makeshift helipad in Gaza and then airlifted to Israel.

The Israeli military said its forces came under heavy fire during the complex daytime operation deep in central Gaza.

Gaza’s Health Ministry said today at least 274 Palestinians, including dozens of children, were killed, and hundreds more were wounded, in the Israeli mission.

That figure has not been independently verified and the Ministry did not say how many of those killed or wounded were Hamas terrorists.

The operation in Nuseirat was the largest rescue since October 7, when Hamas and other militants stormed across the border, killing about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking about 250 hostages.

A relative of Noa told reporters that the military had banged on the door of where she was being held in Gaza and yelled they had come to rescue her.

Asaf Shaibi said: “She told me a little. It was 10am and they banged on the door and shouted ‘It’s the IDF and we’ve come to rescue you’.

He added: “She is strong. She has met with her family and the prime minister [Benjamin Netanyahu].”

Officers from the elite police counter-terrorism unit Yamam along with Shin Bet agents simultaneously raided two buildings in the heart of central Gaza.

The raid is said to be one of the deadliest carried out by Israel since the war started.

IDF spokesperson Daniel Hagari said their forces came under heavy fire during the rescue mission.

Commandos working to save the hostages responded by firing “from the air and from the street”, he said.

Hagari said: “We know about under 100 [Palestinian] casualties. I don’t know how many of them are terrorists.”

The IDF has said that the four hostages were being held by terrorists in the homes of Gaza families in two Hamas-controlled buildings.

Hamas has previously been accused of using civilians as human shields.

An Israeli special forces commander was killed during the operation, a police statement said.

Gazan paramedics and residents said the assault killed scores of people and left mangled bodies of men, women and children strewn around a marketplace and a mosque.

Noa’s plight became one of the most harrowing and recognisable images as the world came to terms with the atrocity on October 7.

She was seen being loaded onto a motorbike as she pleaded with them “don’t kill me”.

HOSTAGES HELD FOR EIGHT MONTHS

She and the other three hostages had spent 245 days in captivity since being kidnapped eight months ago.

Hours after being rescued from eight months captivity in Gaza, freed hostage Noa Argamani arrived at a hospital in Tel Aviv to see her terminally ill mother.

Argamani was one of the most recognised faces among the hostages abducted by Hamas.

Harrowing footage of her being taken into Gaza on the back of a motorcycle, pleading for her life and reaching desperately towards her boyfriend being marched alongside her on foot circulated across the globe.

Argamani’s boyfriend Avinatan Or is still in captivity.

“I’m so happy to be here,” she said in a phone call with Israel’s president upon her return, smiling and surrounded by friends and family.

She was later met with cheers upon arrival at Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Centre where her mother, Liora, was being treated for terminal brain cancer.

Back in October, shortly after her daughter was abducted from a music festival turned killing field in southern Israel, Liora, sitting in a wheelchair, was asked in an interview with a local television station how she imagined their reunion.

“At least to be able to hug her,” Liora answered.

Hospital CEO Ronni Gamzu said the mother’s condition was “complicated and tough”.

He said Argamani was able to communicate with her mother, who they believe understood that her daughter had come home.

“For the last eight months we are trying to keep her in a status that she can communicate,” Gamzu said.

Argamani’s father, Yaakov, first met her after a military helicopter carried her back to Israel.

“Today is my birthday, and a gift like this I never believed I would get,” he said.

More than 360 people were killed during the rampage at the Nova dance festival, and another 40 were taken hostage by Hamas, according to Israeli tallies.

Nearby the hospital in central Tel Aviv, at what has become known as hostage square, thousands of Israelis rallied to commemorate the rescue of the four hostages and to demand the release of more than 115 that remain in Gaza.

Earlier today, the Chief of the General Staff LTG Herzi Halevi conducted a tour in the eastern region of Deir al-Balah in the Gaza Strip.

He said: “Bringing home the hostages is a mission. It involves returning both the living and the fallen for burial in Israel.

“Dismantling Hamas is crucial to prevent another October 7th.

“Retrieving the hostages is our moral obligation, which we are committed to achieving.

“Yesterday, we completed a significant part of this mission. However, there is much more to be done.”

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