This is the disturbing moment a crowd of gun-wielding terrorists invade the Hamas truck holding three Israeli hostages.
The shocking clip was filmed inside Gaza as Hamas brought the three women to be transferred to the Red Cross and released to Israel.
Horrified footage shows victims can be seen swarmed by masked crowds with cameras, some brandishing guns and climbing onto the roof of the vehicle.
Footage captured by Al Jazeera television also shows a television reporter with a microphone caught in the crush.
It was the latest humiliation of the terrorist group after nearly 500 days of captivity for the victims.
The women are seen through the van door as groups of Hamas terrorists – and in the background, Palestinian civilians – appear and shout at the hostages.
But fortunately, after the carnage, the three women were released safely to Israel.
THE fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hamas finally entered into force after 15 months of bitter war, the first step being the exchange of hostages and prisoners.
Briton Emily Damari, 28, was released alongside two other women Romi Gonen, 24, and Doron Steinbrecher, 31.
The three victims were recovered by the International Committee of the Red Cross team in Gaza.
Briton Emily Damari, 28, was released alongside two other women Romi Gonen, 24, and Doron Steinbrecher, 31.
The three victims were recovered by the International Committee of the Red Cross team in Gaza.
The three women are to be received by medical teams and psychological support staff at three designated points along the Gaza border, in Erez, Re’im and Kerem Shalom.
They will soon be reunited with their families who have not seen or heard from these women since they were brutally captured by Hamas 470 days ago.
Emily Damari grew up in South East London before moving to Israel in her twenties.
The Spurs fan was shot in the hand and suffered shrapnel wounds to her leg when she was abducted from the kibbutz village of Kfar Aza on October 7.
Her London-born mother desperately campaigned for the release of her daughter who was kidnapped from her home by Hamas alongside her twin brothers Ziv and Gali Berman, 27.
This morning Emily’s family’s lawyer, Adam Rose, told The Sun they did not know whether the Brit was “alive or dead”.
He said this had “compounded the torture the family had suffered” since she was brutally kidnapped on October 7.
Mr Rose told The Sun: “Every minute is just another layer of torture.
“Emily’s name was on the list of three hostages scheduled to be released at 8:10 a.m., but we just don’t know if she’s alive or dead.
“You hope she’s alive, but until that exchange happens, we don’t know.
“The ongoing torture, ongoing emotional stress and tension associated with this situation are enormous.”
Palestinian prisoners are released today, including 95 individuals, many of whom have not been convicted or tried.
Four additional hostages will be returned on the seventh day and then every week for a period of four weeks.
Finally, 14 hostages will be returned during the sixth week from the group of 33 made up of 12 women and children, 10 men over 50 and 11 younger men.
Negotiations will resume to obtain the release of the 65 hostages still in Gaza on the 16th day of the ceasefire.
The Israeli occupation has killed more than 47,000 Palestinians since terrorists sparked the conflict by killing 1,200 on October 7, according to Hamas.
The path to implementing the ceasefire has been anything but easy.
Late Saturday night, the fragile deal appeared on the verge of collapse, with the Hamas terror group still failing to release the agreed list of hostages.
Netanyahu warned that the ceasefire agreement was in danger because Israel would not move forward until Hamas published the list of hostages to be released.
In a statement released Saturday, Netanyahu’s office highlighted Israel’s position.