The IDF Spokesperson's Unit released a video showing boxes of medications discovered late last week at Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis, intended for kidnapped Israelis.
These medications, along with vitamins, arrived at the hospital in cardboard boxes with the names of the abducted Israelis handwritten on them. Some of the drugs were found in the hospital's pharmacy cabinet, with each package labeled with the recipient's name. Medications intended for Tamar Metzger, Ada Saga, and Yaffa Adar (all women released in the initial deal with Hamas) were located in the first aid kit.
It's worth noting that medicine designated for 79-year-old Chaim Peri, still held by terrorists in the Gaza Strip, was also found in the first aid kit.
An IDF press service representative, displaying the medication packages, pointed out attempts by either doctors or Hamas militants to remove Hebrew stickers from some of them.
Furthermore, additional cardboard boxes containing medications, labeled with the names of the hostages, were discovered on one of the hospital's premises.
None of the medication was opened, indicating that it did not reach the Israeli hostages.
The previous day, Keshet-12 TV channel reported that the drugs found in Nasser Hospital were not transferred to Gaza by the Israeli government or intermediaries but rather by the community of Kibbutz Nir-Oz and relatives of the abducted.
According to the senders, the parcel crossed the Rafah checkpoint back in November.