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Israeli security forces successfully rescued four hostages, including Noa Argamani, who became a symbol of the abductees from October 7th, during a daytime raid in central Gaza on Saturday.
The operation, according to enclave officials, resulted in the deaths of numerous Palestinians.
The rescued hostages are Noa Argamani, 26; Almog Meir Jan, 21; Andrey Kozlov, 27; and Shlomi Ziv, 40, as stated by the Israel Defense Forces, the Israel Securities Authority, and the Israel Police.
They were taken to the Sheba Tel-HaShomer Medical Center near Tel Aviv, where authorities reported they are in 'good medical condition.
' The United States provided intelligence support for the operation, according to a U.
S.
official familiar with the matter.
The rescue occurred amid an attack on the central Gaza town of Nuseirat, which houses a refugee camp and the community where the hostages were held, according to the Israel Defense Forces.
Gaza’s Ministry of Health reported that 210 people were killed and another 400 were injured during the assault and rescue operation.
It is unclear how many of the casualties were civilians.
Observers and organizations outside the war zone generally condemned the bloodshed.
The news of the hostages' liberation was met with jubilation in Israel.
On a beach in Tel Aviv, crowds cheered as lifeguards announced the news over a loudspeaker, reading the names of the rescued hostages one by one.
A video circulating on social media showed Argamani reuniting with her father.
She also spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a phone conversation following her rescue.
'I'm very excited,' she said.
'I haven't spoken Hebrew in such a long time.
' Yan Gorjaltsan, a friend of Argamani's from their hometown of Be'er Sheva, told NBC News that he and a group of friends were on their way to Tel Aviv to see her.
'This is the happiest day of our lives,' he said.
'You can't believe how we're feeling.
'United Nations Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese said in a statement that the rescues 'should not have come at the expense of at least 200 Palestinians, including children, killed and over 400 injured.
' The Washington, D.
C.
-based Council on American-Islamic Relations condemned the wider attack by Israeli forces as a 'horrific massacre' at a refugee camp.
Video from an NBC News crew on the ground captured the aftermath in Nuseirat, showing a rush of wounded at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir Al-Balah, including the bodies of surviving children wrapped in gauze soaked in blood.
In the wake of the rescues, the bloodied and burned bodies of Palestinian adults and children were scattered on the town's streets.
Video footage showed bodies piled up near the doorway of one home.
Cars smoldered, with the charred bodies of their passengers marking the time they were attacked, as people wandered Nuseirat's streets in search of missing loved ones and children carried dead peers away.
Hospitals, already short on supplies, were overwhelmed.
In a statement, Doctors Without Borders called the situation at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital 'a nightmare.
' The organization said its physicians were at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital and Nasser Hospital 'to treat an overwhelming number of severely injured patients, many of whom are women and children.
' Chris Hook, a Doctors Without Borders official in Nasser, said in the statement that the facility where he is based saw 50 casualties from the attack in one hour.
The organization Medical Corps said in a statement that the attack has left it 'overwhelmed,' as it has received 220 cases, 40 described as critical, 'with patients arriving every minute,' at its field hospital in central Gaza.
In a briefing, Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Daniel Hagari said they are aware of 'about under 100' Palestinian casualties, but he does not know 'how many of them are terrorists,' Reuters reported.
The IDF said its forces came under fire during the operation, and one officer was injured and later died.
The rescue came as pressure was building for Netanyahu to strike a deal for the release of the hostages, with thousands of people protesting regularly in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.
The Hostages and Missing Families Forum, which advocates for the release of the hostages, called the rescue a 'miraculous' triumph, adding that the government should 'bring back all 120 hostages still held by Hamas,' and called on Hamas to accept the proposal by President Joe Biden that would include the release of the hostages remaining in Gaza.
Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid called the rescue 'a great light in a terrible darkness' and welcomed the hostages back.
Argamani, a data science engineering student, was captured on video screaming as she was carried away on the back of a motorcycle, in a roughly 10-second clip.
For her loved ones, efforts to free her felt like a race against time, as her mother, Liora, has terminal brain cancer.
Argamani turned 26 while in captivity.
Her boyfriend is believed to remain in Gaza.
Almog Meir Jan was released from military service months before the attack, according to the Times of Israel.
He tried to flee the festival with a friend but was captured after a short distance.
Shlomi Ziv was working as a security guard at Nova and had called his sisters while attempting to flee.
Andrey Kozlov recently moved to Israel from Russia and had also been working as a security guard at the festival.
Saturday's operation is the second time the IDF has rescued hostages alive from Gaza since October 7th.
In February, hostages were rescued from the southern city of Rafah during an overnight mission.
Hamas captured some 240 hostages during the October 7th attacks that ended with roughly 1,200 dead inside Israel.
About half of the hostages were released during a weeklong cease-fire in November, and Israel says more than 120 remain, with about a quarter of those believed dead.
Israel declared war in the wake of the October 7th incursion by Hamas militants that ended with 240 people abducted and roughly 1,200 dead inside the country.
Israel has taken the war to Hamas' strongholds in Gaza, displacing 2 million people, most of the territory's population, and contributing to the deaths of 36,731 people in Gaza, according to Gaza's Ministry of Health.
Israel has been under increasing pressure from the United States and other countries to increase the precision of its warfare, often conducted with American hardware, and reduce civilian casualties.