Israeli forces have recovered the bodies of three hostages from Gaza, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) say.
The bodies were those of Shani Louk, Amit Buskila, and Itzhak Gelerenter, it said. The IDF said they had been murdered on 7 October and their remains taken back to Gaza. Local media reported that the bodies were found in a Hamas tunnel. About 1,200 people were killed in an unprecedented attack when Hamas gunmen burst into Israel. They took 252 others back to Gaza as hostages.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the news "heart-breaking". "We will return all of our hostages, the living and the deceased alike," he said. In a statement, the IDF said the bodies had been recovered in an operation overnight. It said it had acted on intelligence gleaned from "interrogations of terrorists" who had been detained in Gaza. It said the three victims had been killed at an intersection near the site of the Nova festival massacre in southern Israel, before their bodies were taken to Gaza.
More than 360 people were killed at the festival. About 125 hostages remain unaccounted for, with the others having been released or rescued. In October, the mother of Shani Louk - a joint German-Israeli citizen - said the Israeli military had confirmed her daughter had died after a piece of her skull bone was found. However, it was hoped that Amit Buskila and Itzhak Gelerenter were still alive.
Ms Louk's father Nissim Louk told BBC Radio 4's Today programme on Saturday that the family were relieved they could now bury their "beautiful girl". “She brought light to the world," he said. Mr Louk added that the image of Shani being paraded through the streets by armed fighters on a flatbed truck - which was circulated on social media soon after the 7 October attacks - contrasted with photos of her smiling and being carefree.
He described this as the difference between "cruelty and love".
Ms Buskila was a fashion stylist and social media influencer, who had been on the phone to her uncle while trying to hide when she was kidnapped on 7 October.
Mr Gelerenter was a father and grandfather who arrived at the Nova festival only hours before the attacks began.