The Palestinian group says it has informed intermediaries of its plan to release some foreigners held captive in Gaza.
Qassam Brigades spokesman Abu Obeida announced the decision in a video address on Tuesday, in which he also promised to turn Gaza into a “graveyard” and a “quagmire” for Israeli forces amid increased ground operations.
“We have informed intermediaries that we will release a certain number of foreigners in the next few days,” Obeida said.
More than 230 people, including Israeli soldiers and civilians, as well as foreigners from numerous countries, were taken captive by Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups during a deadly assault on Israel on October 7 that Israeli authorities say killed more than 1,400 people, most of them civilians.
Israel, human rights groups and the United Nations have called for the immediate release of the hostages, and those with loved ones held captive have called on the Israeli government to secure their release.
“Hamas and Islamic Jihad are committing war crimes by holding scores of Israelis and others as hostages in Gaza,” the rights group Human Rights Watch said in an earlier statement. “No grievance can justify holding anyone hostage,” it added.
Five hostages have been released thus far, most of them following negotiations through diplomatic channels with assistance from countries including Qatar and Egypt, and one after a ground raid by Israeli forces inside Gaza.
On Tuesday, Israeli families of those killed on October 7 called on the International Criminal Court (ICC), the jurisdiction of which Israel does not recognise, to investigate the killings and abductions.
Tel Aviv-based international lawyer Yael Vias Gvirsman, representing the families of more than 34 victims, filed an “article 15 communication” with the ICC, urging ICC prosecutor Karim Khan to focus an ongoing investigation into alleged crimes within its jurisdiction on the Hamas attack.
The news outlet Reuters confirmed that the ICC prosecutor’s office has received the filing and is assessing the request.
Israel is not a party to the ICC, whose jurisdiction it has refused to recognise. Palestinian authorities joined the court in 2015 and were granted UN observer state status, allowing the ICC to begin a continuing investigation into alleged crimes committed on Palestinian territory and by Palestinians on Israeli territory.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called that decision a “perversion of justice” at the time.
During a visit to the Rafah crossing between Egypt and Gaza over the weekend, Khan said that impeding aid access to Gaza could constitute a crime under ICC jurisdiction.
He also said that he had tried to enter Gaza and Israel to meet with families of victims, but had not been able to do so.