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Horrifying new video footage has shown the missing Israeli father of 'Hamas's youngest hostage' covered in blood and being beaten by a crowd of Palestinians while cheering terrorists drive him away on a motorbike on October 7.
Yarden Bibas, the father of 10-month-old Kfir Bibas, is seen in the video covered in his own blood as the mob rains punches down on him - and also pose for selfies.
The video was shared on social media by Israeli president Isaac Herzog, who wrote: 'The world must not remain silent in the face of such crimes. Bring them home now!'
Baby Kfir and his four-year-old brother Ariel were kidnapped alongside their mother and Yarden's wife Shiri by Hamas terrorists during their assault into Israel last year.
Yarden is reported to have surrendered himself to the gunmen in the hope that they would take him and spare his wife and children. Yarden is thought to be be alive in Gaza, but the fate of his family is unclear.
Horrifying new video footage (pictured) has shown the missing Israeli father of 'Hamas 's youngest hostage' covered in blood and being beaten by a crowd of Palestinians while cheering terrorists drive him away on a motorbike on October 7
Yarden Bibas, the father of 10-month-old Kfir Bibas (centre), is seen in the video covered in his own blood as the mob rains punches down on him
The video was shared on social media by Israeli president Isaac Herzog, who wrote: 'The world must not remain silent in the face of such crimes. Bring them home now!'
The Bibas family, father Yarden, mother Shiri, baby Kfir and four-year-old Ariel, were taken captive by Hamas terrorists on October 7, 2023 from Kibbutz Nir Oz
Hamas and Islamic Jihad, militant groups backed by Iran, carried out the cross-border terror attack on October 7, killing 1,200 people and kidnapping 250 others.
Israel responded with an offensive in Gaza that has caused widespread devastation and killed over 33,900 people, according to local health officials.
Since October 7, some hostages have been released by Hamas in exchange for Palestinian prisoners held by Israel. Some have also died in captivity.
Several hostages remain alive in Gaza, although the true figure is a mystery.
Israel says it believes around 130 remain in the coastal enclave.
In November, the al-Qassam Brigades - Hamas's military wing - claimed that Kfir, Ariel and Shiri had been killed in an Israeli airstrike.
These claims were never verified, and their fate remains unknown.
It was believed that the mother and her two children had been taken into Khan Younis by a Palestinian group separate from Hamas, possibly the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
Israel later attacked Khan Younis in its mission to wipe out Hamas.
Nili Margalit, a hostage who spent 50 days in Hamas captivity before being released, revealed that she was with Yarden when Hamas told him his family had been killed.
They then ordered him to film a video in which he lay the blame for their bodies not returning to Israel at the feet of the country's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have since said that the claims made by Hamas regarding the fate of Shiri and her sons has not been verified.
The IDF described the claim as 'psychological terror.'
In a second video filmed with another camera, Yarden is seen again. It appears he is now covered in blood, suggesting the second clip is actually from before the first
At one point, the man driving the motorbike pulls a small handgun from his trousers as people surrounding Yarden and his captives take selfies
Yarden Bibas is pictured on October 7 during his capture by Hamas in a picture that emerged before the latest video of him. He is bleeding from a head wound and has blood on his hands. His family members have not heard from him since
Now, Yarden has been seen again - this time in footage filmed on October 7.
He is seen sitting on the back of a motorcycle being driven by a man presumed to be a Hamas terrorist. Another man sits behind him, sandwiching him in.
The motorbike has come to a shop, and an angry mop of men are seen trying to reach the father - some succeeding - raining blows down on his head.
The two men sitting on the bike with Yarden and a couple of others standing next to it angrily attempt to protect him from the onslaught, shouting at the mob.
Yarden's head and hands, meanwhile, are seen covered in blood.
In a second video filmed with another camera, Yarden is seen again. It appears he is now covered in blood, suggesting the second clip is actually from before the first.
At one point, the man driving the motorbike pulls a small handgun from his trousers as people surrounding Yarden and his captives take selfies.
The videos are the latest to show a member of the Bibas family on October 7.
Back in February the IDF released footage from inside the Gaza Strip that showed Hamas terrorists taking Kfir, Ariel and Shiri to a home in Khan Younis.
Grainy footage, released by the IDF with permission of the family and shared with MailOnline, showed a group the IDF identifies as Hamas members taking a woman out of a parked white car as she holds a young child or baby.
Grainy footage, released by the IDF with permission of the family and shared with MailOnline in February, shows a group the IDF identifies as Hamas members taking a woman out of a parked white car as she holds a young child or baby
The woman, believed to be Shiri, was made to wear a shawl or a blanket over her head
Several Hamas terrorists were seen putting a shawl over Shiri
The Bibas family were taken from their home in Kibbutz Nir Oz on October 7 when terrorists ambushed their community and other regions in the south
With his red hair and toothless smile, Kfir's (pictured) harrowing ordeal has become for many a symbol of the brutality of Hamas' attack on October 7
Another shot shows Hamas terrorists directing the woman, who the IDF says is Shiri, toward a series of buildings and throwing a blanket or a shawl over her head.
While only one child could be seen in the video, IDF spokesperson Daniel Hagari said that Israel believes Kfir was attached to his mother's body in a baby carrier.
MailOnline was unable to verify this claim.
Hagari added that the army was 'very concerned' about the family's well being, adding that the army found the videos in cameras seized during its Gaza offensive.
In a statement, the extended Bibas family said the videos 'tear our hearts out.'
They made a desperate plea for negotiations to release all of the hostages. In January, the family and hundreds of activists marked Kfir's first birthday in what his family called 'the saddest birthday party in the world.
Poignant images of an anguished Shiri clutching her two red-headed boys as she was kidnapped by Hamas turned her into the face of the Israeli hostages.
But friends and relatives of the 32-year-old say the unassuming woman they know and love would have been ill-at-ease at being thrust into the spotlight, in footage shot and aired by Hamas militants.
'If she knew she was so well-known, it would be very hard for her. She is a very reserved person,' said Dalit Ram Aharon, one of her best friends and a fellow resident of Nir Oz kibbutz, where around 100 people were killed or abducted.
Bibas's parents, Yossi and Margit Silberman, respectively from Argentina and Peru, were left-wingers who believed in co-existence with Palestinians.
They died in the attack when their Nir Oz house was set ablaze.
A relative of Shiri Bibas, an Israeli woman kidnaped during the October 7 attack, holds a snapshot of her and one of her two boys
Supporters hold pictures of the Bibas family in Tel Aviv
In comments ahead of International Women's Day last month, relatives like Yossi Shnaider, a cousin of Shiri Bibas, deplored a 'lack of mobilisation' on the part of groups that stand for the rights of women and children.
'Why are the women who are so active in the #MeToo movement silent when a mother and her two children, including a baby, have been held hostage by a terrorist organisation?' he asked.
Back in Nir Oz, Shiri Bibas worked as a childminder and accountant.
She and her welder husband Yarden lived 'a quiet, family life of simple kibbutzniks', said Shnaider, Bibas's cousin.
'Their 40-square-metre house was devoid of any embellishment, with toys that passed from one generation to the next, and a swing outside made of car tyres,' he recalled. 'You could see right away on Shiri's face something sincere and good.'
Bibas's sister-in-law, Ofri Bibas Levi, described how children gravitated to her.
'She was ... she is really a mother, not just for her own children,' she said, adding that she 'no longer knows' whether to speak of Bibas in the present or the past tense. 'In Nir Oz, all the children ran to her when they saw her.'
Despite the charms of their life in Nir Oz, the Bibas couple had plans to move this year to settle in northern Israel.
'Shiri was anxious about the alerts,' said Bibas Levi, referring to sirens announcing rocket fire coming from Gaza. 'It stressed Yarden a lot too and they didn't want to transmit this anxiety to the children.'
Bibas Levi can relate, having relocated with her family from Reim, near the Gaza border, to northern Israel last August.
Family photos show Shiri Bibas looking serious and shy, with a gentle smile.
'Shiri is a mother wolf, with a very strong maternal instinct,' her friend Ram Aharon said. 'I'm sure she held her children in her arms all this time, despite the weight, from the kibbutz to protect them.'
The latest shocking video showing Yarden being beaten also comes after the Daily Mail released sickening new footage shows the moment Israeli hostage Noa Argamani - another face of the hostages - was seized by Hamas and driven to Gaza.
This sickening footage shows the moment Israeli hostage Noa Argamani was seized by Hamas and driven to Gaza on the back of a motorbike (pictured)
The chilling video shows Noa surrounded by at least ten gun-toting terrorists (pictured) who can be heard jeering and shouting at her
In the footage published last week, the woman can be heard wailing as she is manhandled by a Palestinian fighter, who holds her head down as he places a black bag over her face (pictured)
The 26-year-old student was snatched by the terror group during their murderous attack on the Nova desert festival on October 7. This picture of Noa - her arms outstretched toward her boyfriend as she screams for help - became one of the most recognisable images of the atrocities after it was published by The Mail on Sunday on October 8
The 26-year-old student was snatched by the terror group during their murderous attack on the Nova desert festival on October 7.
She too was taken into the coastal strip in the back of a motorcycle.
A picture of Noa - her arms outstretched toward her boyfriend as she screams for help - became one of the most recognisable images of the atrocities after it was published by The Mail on Sunday on October 8.
In footage published last week, the young woman can be heard wailing as she is manhandled by a Palestinian fighter, who holds her head down as he places a black bag over her face.
The chilling video shows Noa surrounded by at least ten gun-toting terrorists who can be heard jeering and shouting at her.
The highly-sensitive video is being hidden from Noa's mother Liora, who is dying from terminal brain cancer.
Late last year, the 61-year-old made a last ditch plea to US President Joe Biden begging him for the opportunity to 'hug' her daughter 'one last time' before she dies.
She said: 'I am terminally ill with Stage 4 brain cancer.
'All that's running through my mind before I part ways with my family forever is the chance to hug my daughter, my only child, one last time
'My daughter Noa is a contagiously happy and resilient young woman.
'She loves to dance, loves music, loves being with her friends and family.'
Noa Argamani is one of around 130 people that are still being held hostage in Gaza. She is one of just 19 women that are still being held by the terror group
Noa (pictured) was last seen alive in a hostage propaganda video which Hamas claims was filmed in January 2024
In March, she made another please to the President, saying in a video message: 'My heart really hurts. On one hand it's physical, it's not working the way it should. On the other hand, because my daughter is a hostage.
'Since the kidnapping, when I see her look in this picture, it chokes me up.
'How beautiful she is, how amazing she is. I want to see [my daughter] one more time. Talk to her one more time,' she pleaded.
'I am asking you President Joe Biden, I don't have a lot of time left in this world. It may be my last wish, I am really begging you.'
Speaking to the Daily Mail, Noa's childhood friend Yan Gorjaltsan said: 'It's been more than half a year [since Noa was kidnapped]. There hasn't been one day that I haven't thought about Noa. I think about her all the time.
'I think about her at work and at school. It's been so hard to live our life knowing Noa is in hell. And every day we hope she will be released.
'Noa must see and hug her mother one last time. No mother should die knowing that her child isn't in safe arms. It's not humane to die this way.'
Noa was last seen alive in a hostage propaganda video which Hamas claims was filmed in January 2024.
The highly-sensitive video is being hidden from Noa's mother Liora (pictured right with her daughter), who is dying from terminal brain cancer
In the disturbing video the terrified 26-year-old student is forced to announce the deaths of her fellow hostages Yossi Sharabi, 51, and Itay Svirsky, 38, both kidnapped from Kibbutz Be'eri.
The film includes graphic clips of their bruised and bloodied bodies.
Her current location is unknown.
Israel regards all hostage videos as a form of psychological warfare.