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Kin of Hostages Shocked as Israel Cancels Mossad Chief’s Qatar Trip

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According to reports, David Barnea will not travel to Doha, where talks on the release of hostages held by Hamas militants in Gaza had taken place earlier.

The Hostages and Missing Families Forum of Israel has expressed shock at the government’s decision to cancel Mossad chief David Barnea’s planned trip to Qatar for the resumption of talks on a possible second hostage release deal.

According to a source, the 58-year-old, who became the Director of Israel’s foreign intelligence service on June 2021, will not travel to Doha, where talks on the release of hostages held by Hamas militants in Gaza had taken place earlier.

Israel’s Channel 13 first reported on Wednesday that the country’s war cabinet, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, had called off the trip.

It added that senior Israeli officials will not go to Qatar to restart negotiations.

The Mossad answers directly to the Prime Minister.

In a statement on late Wednesday, the Forum’s spokesperson Liat Bell Sommer demanded an immediate explanation from the Prime Minister and Cabinet members and called upon to break the deadlock in negotiations.

“The feeling is that every evening a Russian roulette of murdering hostages in Hamas captivity takes place. We are fed up with the indifference and deadlock.“

The Forum said in a statement that “the families were shocked by the report on the rejection of the Director of Mossad’s request to formulate an agreement for the release of the hostages”.

“This announcement comes in addition to the ignoring of the parents’ request to meet with the Prime Minister and the Defence Minister, which have not yet been answered,” it added.

Formal negotiations have not resumed since hostage talks that had been taking place in Doha broke down earlier this month.

Around 240 people, from infants to octogenarians, were taken hostage during the Hamas’ attack on Israel on October 7.

The Israeli Prime Minister’s office believes 135 hostages remain in Gaza, 116 of whom are alive.

During the now-collapsed humanitarian pause from November 24-30, 86 Israeli and 24 foreign national hostages were released.

On Wednesday, two additional hostages were declared as dead.

Before the pause, four civilian hostages had been released by Hamas, one Israeli soldier was rescued, and bodies of three hostages were retrieved.

ALSO READ: Hamas Leader Says Ready to Discuss Ceasefire With Israel

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