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Hamas hands over body of hostage Tal Haimi, killed and kidnapped on Oct. 7

Tuesday, October 21


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Palestinian Casualties and Ceasefire Violations

Israeli Military Response


Hamas on Monday night handed over to Israel the body of hostage Tal Haimi. Haimi, 41, was killed while defending Kibbutz Nir Yitzhak on October 7, 2023, and his body was taken to Gaza.

He and other members of the rapid response team battled the invading terrorists at the entrance to the kibbutz until he was shot dead. He was initially considered missing before authorities said he had likely been taken. In December 2023, Tal’s family was informed based on intelligence that he had been killed on October 7 and his body taken hostage. His family held a funeral, but awaited his body.

The Prime Minister’s Office confirmed that Haimi was handed over, shortly after the casket arrived at the Abu Kabir forensic institute in Tel Aviv for identification.

“The Government of Israel shares in the profound grief of the Haimi family and of all the families of the fallen hostages,” the PMO said.

Tal is survived by his wife, Ela, and their three children, Nir, Einav and Udi. In May 2024, his youngest son Lotan was born, seven months after he was killed.

“Tal was brought home after 745 days,” the Hostages and Missing Families Forum says. “Tal loved taking his family on nature trips and camping in the outdoors, was an enthusiastic tools hobbyist, and always knew how to find a solution to any problem that arose.

“On the morning of October 7, he went out to fight against dozens of terrorists in a battle at the gate of Kibbutz Nir Yitzhak. Tal and the rest of the quick-response team fought with extraordinary bravery for several hours, and during the battle, Tal fell and was abducted into Gaza.”

Hamas handed over a casket in the evening, saying it had located the body the day before. The casket was handed off to the Red Cross, which in turn transferred it to the Israel Defense Forces.

Inside Gaza, the IDF inspected the casket, draped it in an Israeli flag and held a short ceremony led by a military rabbi. After being moved from the Strip, the casket was escorted by police to Abu Kabir.

On Sunday, Hamas had said it had located the body of a hostage and would return it to Israel “if the field conditions are suitable.” That announcement came as a flareup of violence threatened the ceasefire, after a deadly attack on troops in southern Gaza in the morning led Israel to retaliate with a wave strikes. In the end, no remains were returned on Sunday.

People take part in a demonstration at Hostage Square in Tel Aviv on October 18, 2025, calling for the release of all the bodies of hostages held in Gaza by the Palestinian terror group Hamas. (FADEL SENNA / AFP)

The Abu Ali Mustafa Brigades, the military wing of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, said Monday that it had handed over the body of the hostage, implying it had been held by the PFLP. This appeared to contradict Hamas’s claim that the body was found on Sunday.

With Haimi’s return, the bodies of 15 hostages remain held in Gaza.

In accordance with the current ceasefire deal, Hamas released the last 20 living hostages on October 13, within 72 hours of Israel’s withdrawal to the so-called Yellow Line, to which the military withdrew under the terms of the ceasefire. Hamas has also returned the remains of 12 slain hostages so far since the start of the ceasefire.

Israel has accused Hamas of withholding at least some of the bodies deliberately, while the terror group insists that it has been unable to locate them due to the level of destruction in Gaza.

IDF forces clash with terror operatives, despite ceasefire

Monday saw several Palestinian terror operatives who crossed the Yellow Line and who opened fire on troops killed in a drone strike, the military said.

The incident took place Monday afternoon in Gaza City’s eastern Shejaiya neighborhood.

According to the IDF, the operatives were identified crossing the Yellow Line “in a way that posed an imminent threat” to troops. The gunmen then opened fire on the troops, without causing injuries, the army said.

The IDF said troops directed an Israeli Air Force drone that struck and killed the gunmen.

Palestinian media reported that two people were killed in the area.

It was the fourth such incident that day, according to the IDF, after two successive instances of terror operatives crossing the Yellow Line, and an incident in southern Gaza’s Khan Younis in which terror operatives approached troops.

Otherwise, the ceasefire appeared to be holding on Monday.

Army details Yellow Line barriers

The IDF provided additional details Monday on the physical markers demarcating the Yellow Line. The IDF began marking the line on Sunday, and the military said the effort will continue “in the coming period.”

The yellow-painted blocks, topped with a yellow metal sign, are 3.5 meters tall (nearly 11.5 feet), and are being placed at distances of some 200 meters from each other (650 feet) along the Yellow Line, the military said.

The Yellow Line, as drawn out by mediators, keeps the military in control of over half of the Strip’s territory, or 53 percent — most of which is outside of urban areas.

The ceasefire, meant to be the first phase of a larger plan for a permanent end to the wat on which talks have yet to be held, was brokered by the US earlier this month. It calls for an international monitoring mechanism to oversee its implementation.

PM said to appoint US-Israeli businessman to truce board

Channel 12 reported Monday that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has appointed Israeli-American businessman Michael Eisenberg as his representative to the US-led monitor. The network cited two senior Israeli officials and one senior American official familiar with the matter.

Eisenberg was previously involved with a group of businesspeople who helped establish the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the US- and Israel-backed mechanism that distributed food in the Strip between May and October of this year, and whose operations are being suspended under the ceasefire.

According to the TV report, Eisenberg will serve as Netanyahu’s representative in the American command center alongside Maj. Gen. Yaki Dolf, who represents the IDF and Israel’s defense establishment in the same forum.

It remains unclear how responsibilities will be divided between the two representatives, the network noted.

Michael Eisenberg, co-founder and partner at Israeli VC firm Aleph. (Courtesy of Aleph VC)

The Prime Minister’s Office declined to comment on the report, though it did not deny it.

Eisenberg also did not comment directly, saying only: “I prefer not to respond to discreet conversations, but it will always be an honor for me to answer any call-up the country asks of me.”

The report added that US Vice President JD Vance is expected to visit the command center after arriving in Israel Tuesday, and may even enter the Gaza Strip, though no final decision has yet been made.

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