DOHA, February 14. /TASS/. Hamas will release Alexander Trufanov, a hostage with Russian and Israeli citizenship, during the first phase of the ceasefire in the Gaza Strip as a sign of respect to Russian President Vladimir Putin, Mousa Abu Marzouk, the Deputy Chairman of the Hamas Political Bureau, told TASS.
"Alexander Trufanov will be released at the request of the Russian side. We have agreed with our Islamic Jihad brothers that his release will take place on Saturday, February 15, as part of the first phase of the deal," he said. "This decision was made to demonstrate respect to President Putin for his position and for Russia’s support for the Palestinian people and their lawful rights."
According to the senior Hamas official, the first phase of the Gaza ceasefire agreement implementation is "humanitarian including basically [the release] of women, children, the elderly and the sick." "Initially, Trufanov was not supposed to be released during phase one but we agreed to include him on this list as a sign of respect to Russia and President Putin," he explained.
Abu Ubaida, spokesman for Hamas’ military wing Al-Qassam Brigades, said earlier on Friday that Hamas had decided to release Trufanov along with two other hostages, citizens of the United States and Israel, on February 15.
In mid-January, Israel and Hamas reached an Egypt-, Qatar-, and US-brokered agreement to release the hostages held in Gaza and declare a ceasefire in the enclave. The three-phase deal took effect on January 19. During the initial 42-day phase, Hamas is expected to release 33 Israeli hostages in exchange for the release of Palestinian prisoners from Israeli jails.
Ubaida said on February 10 that the movement had postponed the release of a new group of hostages held in the Gaza Strip, who were to return home on February 15, due to Israel's violations of the ceasefire agreement when it "delayed the return of displaced Palestinians from Gaza's south to the north, targeted them with airstrikes and gunfire, and failed to facilitate the entry of all types of humanitarian cargo in sufficient quantities." On the following day, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned that if Hamas did not free hostages as agreed Israel would resume combat operation in the enclave. On February 13, Hamas confirmed it would implement the terms of the deal and release hostages.