Mother of rescued Gaza hostage recounts ‘hard and joyful’ reunion

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Evgeniia Kozlova, mother of Andrey Kozlov, and Jenifer Master, the girlfriend of Andrey Kozlov, who was taken hostage during the deadly October 7 attack by Hamas, hold a poster with Andrey's picture during an interview with Reuters after Israeli special forces rescued him from Gaza, in Tel Aviv, Israel, June 11, 2024. REUTERS/Marko Djurica

Mrs Evgeniia Kozlova's (left) son Andrey Kozlov (pictured on poster) was one of 253 Israeli and foreign hostages abducted by Hamas-led gunmen on Oct 7.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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- The mother of one of the four hostages rescued from Gaza by Israeli commandos last week described the surge of emotions that she and her family have experienced since officials rang her to say that her son was safe.

“For a few minutes, I probably didn’t know how to react,” said Mrs Evgeniia Kozlova, whose son Andrey Kozlov was one of 253 Israeli and foreign hostages abducted by Hamas-led gunmen during their attack on Israel on Oct 7.

“But then I started laughing. And I’ve been laughing all the time ever since. I’m absolutely happy,” she told Reuters.

Mr Kozlov, 27, was rescued along with Mr Almog Meir Jan, 21, and Mr Shlomi Ziv, 40, by Israeli special forces who raided the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza on June 8 in an operation Israeli officials said took weeks of planning and preparation.

Another Israeli hostage, Ms Noa Argamani, 26, was rescued from a nearby building during the same operation, which ended in a dramatic raid during which more than 200 Palestinians were killed, according to the Gaza health authorities.

Mrs Kozlova said her first conversation with her son was an overwhelming mix of feelings that reflected the anguish they had suffered since his abduction from the Nova music festival ground just outside Gaza.

“It was both hard and joyful, and wonderful, and terrible, because he was in a huge emotional turmoil,” she said.

‘Flow of energy’

Mrs Kozlova said her son had told her that throughout the ordeal, during which he said he and his companions had been mistreated in various ways, he had been convinced that he would return.

“There was such a flow of energy from him, he was crying and laughing, and I was laughing too. We were comforting each other,” she said.

At least 120 Israeli hostages remain in Gaza, many of whom are dead, but talks aimed at agreeing a halt to the fighting and a deal under which they would be returned in exchange for Palestinian prisoners appear to have stalled.

The rescued hostages, who were taken directly to hospital from Gaza, have not spoken publicly about what happened to them.

“Andrey told us: ‘There are some things I will never tell you’. I don’t know what he didn’t tell us and what he doesn’t want to ever tell us,” Mrs Kozlova said, but did say that her son had given her a glimpse of the conditions they lived under.

“He told us that they were required to follow some very strange rules, like you can't sit with your legs towards these terrorists. You can't do this, and you can't do that,” she said.

“You could be punished for getting the wrong water or getting it from the wrong place.”

She said the guards had frequently abused the prisoners verbally.

“They liked to tell them: ‘You’re an animal, you’re a donkey, you’re a fool, you’re dirty’. Andrey now knows these words perfectly well in Arabic, everything about Arabic swear words he has learnt well.”

Hamas has denied mistreating the hostages. REUTERS

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