By Eugenia Yosef, Samantha Waldenberg, Kathleen Magramo and Oren Liebermann, CNN
Families of Israelis held hostage in Gaza and supporters protest for the release of hostages held in Gaza outside the home of Minister of Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer in Jerusalem, Israel, on April 13, 2025. Photo: AFP / NurPhoto / Saeed Qaq
Families of 7 October hostages held in Gaza demanded any new information from the Israeli government after US President Donald Trump said three more captives had died.
"As of today, it's 21. Three have died. So, this is a terrible situation," Trump said on Tuesday (US time).
The remark was a shock to the families of the hostages.
"We demand once again from the Israeli government - if there is new information that has been hidden from us, pass it on to us immediately," the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said on Wednesday.
"The headquarters once again calls on the Prime Minister [Benjamin Netanyahu] to stop the war until the last abductee is returned. This is the most urgent and important national task."
Israel's public and official position, reiterated on Tuesday by Israel's Coordinator for the Captives and the Missing Gal Hirsch, is that 24 hostages are alive. "The Hamas terror organization is currently holding 59 hostages," Hirsch said on social media several hours after Trump's comments. "24 of them are on the list of living hostages."
But there have been clear indications that Israel has reason to believe the true number is fewer, even beyond Trump's comments.
On Wednesday, Netanyahu published a video statement in which he made the clearest acknowledgement yet that Israel believes not all 24 are alive.
"We know for certain that there are 21 alive. There's no argument about this. There's three where there is doubt about whether they are alive," he said in the prerecorded video. "We're not giving up on anyone."
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Photo: AFP / Oliver Contreras
Earlier this week, Netanyahu approved an expansion of the war in Gaza and a plan to force the Palestinian population into a shrinking tract of land in the southern part of the besieged territory. Israel says its military operations are intended to put pressure on Hamas to make a ceasefire agreement, but prospects for an imminent deal are quickly dwindling, and with them the hope of bringing the remaining hostages out soon.
Even before the latest video statement, Netanyahu has recently been careful to say that "up to 24" hostages are being held alive in Gaza.
Last week, when Netanyahu said there were "up to 24" living, his wife, Sara, interrupted him and said: "Fewer."
The open mic moment sparked its own outcry from the families of the hostages. "If the wife of the prime minister has new information about the kidnapped who were killed, I demand from her to know if my Matan is still alive, or if he was murdered in captivity because your husband refuses to finish the war," Einav Zangauker, the mother of one of the hostages, said on social media.
Israeli officials have said there are "grave concerns" about three of the hostages but would not say whether Israel knows for certain that they are dead.
Trump's comments strongly suggest otherwise and appear to indicate that Israel has shared sensitive information about the condition of the hostages with the Trump administration.
More than 250 people were taken hostage when Hamas militants launched a surprise attack on Israel on October 7, 2023 - sparking the ongoing war in Gaza.
-CNN