1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
ConflictsIsrael

In Israel, frustration grows as hostages remain in captivity

03:23

This browser does not support the video element.

Tania Krämer in Tel Aviv, Israel
July 26, 2025

With 50 hostages still held in Gaza 22 months after the Hamas attacks on Israel, their relatives are growing more frustrated. Some are losing faith that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will ever strike a deal to bring them home, as DW’s Tania Krämer reports from Tel Aviv.

DW met Yehuda Cohen in front of the Likud party's Tel Aviv headquarters at a sit-in organized by families of hostages held by Hamas in Gaza. His son, Nimrod, has been held captive for 22 months.

Yehuda Cohen and other demonstrators are demanding a full withdrawal of the Israeli military from Gaza, arguing that only such a move would secure the release of all hostages.

Daphna, another protester, said around 85% of Israelis support ending the war to bring all hostages home. She accused the government of prolonging the conflict for political purposes.

Under the latest truce proposal, only half of the 20 hostages who are still alive would be freed, sparking painful debates about who gets to return.

Cohen, whose son was captured while serving as a soldier on October 7, 2023, is also frustrated with the lack of progress and claims that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly sabotaged potential deals.

The participants of the sit-in later joined a larger demonstration at Habima Square, where some acknowledged the plight of Palestinians in Gaza alongside calls for the release of the hostages. 

Tania Krämer DW correspondent, author and reporter, based in Jerusalem.
Skip next section DW's Top Story

DW's Top Story

Skip next section More stories from DW