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Family of Nepali hostage in Gaza clings to hope as they release video

The short clip of Bipin Joshi, recovered by the Israeli military, shows him introducing himself in English and is believed to have been filmed in November 2023.

Family of Nepali hostage in Gaza clings to hope as they release video

Pushpa Joshi, sister of Bipin Joshi, a Nepali man taken hostage by Hamas on Oct 7, 2023, shows photos of them together during an interview with The Associated Press in Kathmandu, Nepal, Thursday, June 12, 2025. (Photo: AP/Niranjan Shrestha)

JERUSALEM: The sister of a Nepali man held hostage in Gaza said Wednesday (Oct 8) she still hoped he was alive, as the family released a video showing him in captivity nearly two years ago.

The short clip of Bipin Joshi, recovered by the Israeli military, shows him introducing himself in English and is believed to have been filmed in November 2023.

It is the only sign of life received since Oct 7, 2023, when he was abducted from a kibbutz in southern Israel during Hamas's attack that triggered the Gaza war.

The video's release came as the Islamist movement and Israel held indirect talks aimed at ending the conflict and securing the release of remaining hostages.

US President Donald Trump said later on Wednesday that Israel and Hamas have reached a deal for a Gaza ceasefire and hostage release under his plan for ending the two-year-old war.

Joshi's teenage sister Pushpa said the family first saw the footage about a year ago and hoped its publication now would "create a little bit of pressure on (the negotiators), that they will be able to understand our feelings, our pain".

"It's too much for me, my family, and for other hostages' families and other hostages who are still in Gaza," she told journalists on a video call.

Joshi, an agriculture student who was 22 when kidnapped, had arrived in Israel to work on a farm in kibbutz Alumim just weeks before the Hamas attack.

Pushpa said her family "thanked God that we didn't see any injury on his face and over his body" when they first viewed the video.

"While seeing that video, my whole body was shaking, and I (couldn't) control my tears," she said.

NO FURTHER SIGNS OF LIFE

The family has received no further sign of life from him, but Pushpa said they continue to hope.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu did not mention Joshi when he read out at the UN in September the names of 20 hostages still believed alive.

The Israeli army has not said whether Joshi is among the hostages still alive.

"It's my humble request to every group who are in the negotiation table right now, please don't go back ... try to understand the pain of the hostages and the hostages' families and take good action for their safe release," Pushpa said.

The 18-year-old, who is currently in the United States to campaign for her brother, said she hoped to meet President Donald Trump and thanked his efforts to push for a ceasefire.

"Your action gives us hope, and we totally depend on you, and we are waiting for good news," she said.

During Hamas's October 2023 attack, militants took 251 hostages into Gaza, of whom 47 remain captive, including 25 the Israeli military says are dead.

Source: AFP/fs
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