about. i haven't. i didn't plan on doing a second season of all there is, but in the last few months i have come to realize how little i understand my own grief and how much more there is to learn. if you haven't listened to the first season, it's available. the new season starts tomorrow. i have interesting guests coming up, including president biden. you can find season two of all there is tomorrow morning on i tunes, spotify or where you get your podcasts. i hope you like it and find it helpful. good evening. this is "the source." i'm kaitlan collins live from tel aviv. israel has gotten the list of the sixth group of hostages expected to be released tomorrow. we are told the families right now are being notified. the major question that still stands tonight is what happens on night seven when this truce is set to expire? cia director bill burns was in qatar for meetings today where i'm told he pushed for an expanded hostage deal that would include men and potentially idf soldiers. we don't know where that is going to lead. what we know right now is that ten more israelis who are being held hostage for more than 52 days are back home tonight as well as two thai citizens who are being held hostage have been released. we saw them being handed over in rafah earlier tonight. in the video, large crowds are lining the street and cheering as the hostages are paraded through members of hamas. some could be heard chanting while an elderly woman was being transferred in a wheelchair. today's freed hostages are adult women, except one. 17-year-old mia. she was released along with her mother. and it turns out their family dog was with them. no americans are a part of the group. white house says they are hopeful some could be released tomorrow on day six when this truce is set to expire. also, not released, the youngest hostage, a 10-month-old, a hostage for 53 days now along with his 4-year-old brother. 53 days. we have an emotional interfere with their relative who is worried the baby could starve. you will see that in a moment. i want to start with the latest with matthew chance. we are seeing this video. can you walk us through what -- break down what we are seeing in the video. >> it's interesting. this is hamas being filmed, filming them releasing the latest group of hostages. you can see the video equipment they are using. you can see how they are tracking the wheelchair being pushed with one elderly woman being taken to the red cross ambulances. you can see the crowds. they have been told to come there and they are heckling the hostages as they are handed over to the red cross. it's interesting in that sense. we have seen videos like this every night. i think hamas is obviously releasing its own version of this. it plays well, i think, to the supporters of hamas in the region and around the world. it shows them as magnanimous. >> it's jarring to see elderly women being jeered by the people in this crowd. i think that's what -- it's hard to watch almost. >> hard for us to watch. imagine what it must be like for those hostages. they don't know what's happening to them. they must be absolutely terrified. we have spoken to relatives of people who have gone through this. they spoke to us about how their car was being shaken by the crowds outside. it must have been absolutely terrifying. it's part of this ordeal the people have been going through and continue to go through even though they are back this israel. >> one woman's relatives told me, she didn't know if she was going to be executed when she was released or if she was being released until she saw the red cross cars. we did get good news. emily han is reunited with her father. that's a story everyone has followed for 50 days. we are hearing from the father tonight. >> he gave a very emotional interview to clarissa ward where he spoke about his joy, holding his daughter once more. he had some really emotional and fascinating detail about how she's coping. she had this trauma october 7th and being held as a captive. it does not end once you get home. take a listen. >> beautiful. just like i imagined it, running together. i squeezed -- i probably squeezed too hard. certainly, when she stepped back a little, i could see her face was chiselled, like mine. before she left it was chubby, girly, young, kid. it was shocking, disturbing part of meeting her was she was just whispering. i couldn't hear her. i had to put my ear on her lips like this close and say, what did you say? i thought you were kidnapped. >> incredible. how damaged must that young child be? her family as well. the 12 hostages released today, they are now in israel hospitals. they will be starting as well this careful process of rehabilitation. all 81 hostages who have been released so far are undergoing. >> waiting to see who could potentially join them tomorrow. matthew chance, thank you for that report. it's a question. i mentioned the 10-month-old. he and his 4-year-old brother as well as both of their parents kidnapped on october 7th. we saw a video early on that seemed to indicate they had been separated. we have heard from the idf who says hamas is not holding them but still says it is their responsibility to return them. the question of which group, which terror group in gaza is potentially holding them is an open question. no one seems to know. i spoke with a cousin of the family earlier tonight. >> really, really worried about them. we have no information at all about their condition. we know that these are not can bes -- conditions to raise a baby. every day he is staying there is a real, real danger for his life and his development. we don't want to get him or the family bad. it's really, really -- we are afraid about them. >> he gets a bottle. he is in diapers. this tiny baby. >> exactly. we don't know if they nourish, if they give him what he needs. he is not even -- when he got kidnapped, he is not entirely be able to eat solid food. he needs baby formula. unfortunately, she can't breast feed. really worried that he will starve to death, in lack of better words. also, he is a fragile child. he has medical conditions. he has a skin condition that he can bleed from if he doesn't get special treatment. we are so worried about them. >> he is just 4 years old. you were telling me how much he loves tractors. >> such a lively child. he really likes cars and tractors. >> you were telling me you remember when the baby was born. you met him when he was two weeks old, a tiny baby. >> yeah. it wasn't so long ago. he is only not 11 months old right now. he was two weeks old. i held him in my arms, very gently. i was shocked that he was a redhead like his brother. unfortunately, now the redhead became a symbol of normal, beautiful life in front of very unbelievable evil came and shattered it to pieces. i can't believe these two redheads have to experience what they are going through. their grandparents were murdered. the mother probably don't know this. they were taken very violently. the home was -- it's fun of gunshots. the home itself. they drilled into the house and destroyed it. they left nothing. they left nothing there. the sister was there to check if there's anything left. they destroyed or took everything they could. they had to go through gunshots and shouting and blood and body parts in the street. this is the reality they had to go through. now 53 days, they are going through this nightmare. it doesn't make any sense. it doesn't make any sense that anyone can let this keep going. that a baby and 4 years old. they shouldn't be kept like this. it's inhumane. it's so scary. we can get -- we can't let it go on. just think about it. if this was your child, would you want them to be in terrorist hands in captivity? even not seeing them for 53 days is just -- is so hard. are these the enemies of anyone? should these children be used as bargaining chips? no, they shouldn't. this is the simple answer. they shouldn't be used as bargaining chip for any political or religious or whatever reason. no justify for using them like this. we just want them back really. sorry. >> it's okay. thank you so much for sharing that. it's agonizing for these families, what they are going through. getting more hostages out depends on the temporary truce between israel and hamas. does it stay temporary? as of now, the pause is slated to end tomorrow night, just 24 hours from now. that's why cea director bill burns was in doha meeting with the qatari, israeli, egyptian counterparts to see if a second extension is possible. i'm joined tonight by barack rabid. i'm happy to note, he is cnn's newest political analyst. on this matter tonight, how likely is an extension? what are sources saying about how long the extension could go on, if there is one? >> good evening. it's great to be here. i'm still under the impression of the previous interview you did. it's just very hard to watch this. this crazy situation. your question, i think is very much connected to this interview, because one of the things that bill burns, the director of the cia, and the prime minister and the egyptian intelligence chief, what they heard today from the director is that israel is not ready to discuss anything future deal on hostages, on men, on soldiers, on anything before all the women and children are released as part of this current deal. i think that one of the reasons he said that is because of the kids, that hamas gave -- according to israeli intelligence, hamas gave to another faction in gaza and pretends it doesn't know where they are. >> we spoke about that off camera. they feel like that's hamas trying to say, oops, sorry, it's not us. but they were saying, we do expect hamas to be responsible for bringing -- that just shows how complicated this is. if they do have this agreement, all women and children, obviously, their mother and those two babies would be included in that. if hamas can't produce them, then what happens? >> well, again, according to israeli officials and according to what the director said today in qatar, if hamas cannot produce this family and other women and children -- there are still, other than the brothers, there are seven children in gaza, still something like 25 women, aged 21 through 50 in gaza. if hamas cannot produce them, then the fighting will resume. there will be no more hostage deals. israel is being very clear here. i hear it from at least three israeli officials just today. i think israel is now putting a lot of pressure on hamas. it is willing to extend the pause by two days, three days. but it wants its hostages back. >> yeah. americans are still part of that. we haven't seen them get out. you mentioned if they don't come to an agreement -- you have been reporting on what israel's preparing to do next. it seems very clear that could involve going into the south. would that happen instantly if they don't agree to an extension to a truce by tomorrow night? >> i don't think it's going to happen instantly, because israel still has a few targets in the north that it still did not touch. several hamas targets in northern gaza. i think they will go there first. that's at least what i israel from israeli officials. then they will go to the south. the plans -- the operational plans for the south were approved by the cabinet and by the idf leadership. they are ready to go. this is why, by the way, you hear from u.s. officials that they are more and more concerned about such a move, because they feel that it might be coming. maybe not tomorrow, maybe not the day after, maybe the pause will be extended by a few days, but it's just a matter of time. another five days, another week, we will get there. >> the u.s. has been warning them to be surgical, has been the term that we are hearing from officials. is your sense that israel is heeding those warnings from the united states about how to conduct that next phase of the military operation? >> i think there's still going to be discussions about this this week. i think that when secretary of state blinken will arrive in tel aviv on thursday, the possibility of an operation in the south is going to be the main focus of his in those talks with netanyahu and the war cabinet. there will be a lot of discussions about it between the u.s. and israel. i gotta tell you, i don't know how you can operate surgically in rafah when you have 2 million people there. i just don't know how such a thing is possible. >> yeah. that's where they have truly sent everyone. where do they people go now? the north has been destroyed. a lot of great questions ahead. we will have a lot of your reporting. barack ravid, thank you. welcome to the cnn family. it's great to have you. >> thank you. good night. ahead, an update on the only american who has been freed so far as a part of the temporary truce. that's 4-year-old abigail. she was released from the hospital today here in israel. the world has been following her story. both of her parents were killed on that day. we will speak to someone who knows her very well about how she's doing now that she's out. 4-year-old abigail is back home with her family finally tonight. she was discharged from the hospital here in israel where she was receiving medical care after she was released on sunday. for 50 days, she was held captive by hamas. she's running home an orphan after hamas killed her parents in the october 7th attacks. i'm joined by her great aunt. it's great to have you on now that there is good news. the last time we spoke, abigail was still being held. how is she doing now that she's out of the hospital and back with her family? >> she's reblossoming. you think about it, she spent 50 days away from her family somewhere in the dark after being under her father's body after he was shot and murdered by hamas terrorists. where she's now is, she's left the hospital. when you say she's gone home, she didn't go home. her home was destroyed. people have to understand that this home was destroyed, the neighborhood was destroyed. when she goes home, she is now without her parents. she's with her family. she's with her siblings, which has been a blessing, because for 50 days, they -- all they wanted, the two little kids, was for their sister to come home. she's come home without a mother and father. she has an amazing aunt and uncle who will take care of her and her siblings. her grandparents are wonderful, truly part of her life day in, day out before this. she's not in her home and she's not in a home she lived in. she's in a home full of so much warmth and so much love, but when you ask that question, i want people to understand that coming home is so bittersweet. for us, it's like a blessing, because it's a miracle. this child is our hope. but she did not come to her home. she came to a new place with all new unmnavigated territory. >> it's a really good point. there's so many families that they have nowhere to go. elderly grandmothers who their homes that they lived in their entire lives are destroyed. liz, she's so young. that's why her story i think has stood out to so many. we heard stories from other families about noticing these changes in their children, in their grandchildren, they are crying, they don't want to be touched. emily whispering to her dad. have you noticed changes like that as well? >> what we see is that when she first came, she was just clinging to her aunt and to her grandmother. she still is very close to them. they are her comfort. when her siblings came in, her brother and sister, and her cousins, she lit up. she started to be -- smile and be joyful and laugh. one of the things that when she arrived, she was hungry. obviously, she had not been fed what we want a 3 who just turned 4-year-old on friday. she was telling them what she wanted. she wanted little pretzels. she wanted juice. she's been very clear about what she needs. she was sort of the littlest of three who was bossy and would tell everybody what to do and was always running the house. she's back to that, which is a beautiful sign. one of the things that i think about is that during these 50 days, we kept hope she was with this mother and her three kids when she was taken from the kibbutz, when they were abducted. we hoped that she was with this woman. she was. she was very much attached to her. that, i think, was also part of her ability to cope in such an atrocious, terrible situation. she's home with her new family in her new surroundings. she is, i think, each day going to be able to feel more comfortable and run around. my hope -- this is a very private family. they are not out there talking about the details. they have asked us to be thoughtful in how we talk about it. for them, privacy. abigail is turning -- she's 4 and she needs to go back to nursery school and go out and play soccer, which she loves to play. she was always playing with them. she was always at the ball, even with the 6 and 8 and 12-year-olds. we all think about, abigail is this beautiful 4-year-old. we can relate to her and want to give her a hug. we want to see she has a be beautiful life. she's a symbol of hope we have that she can grow up in a world that's kinder than it was to her as a child. those are the things that i think about at this time when i look at her and see her. we just want her to have a beautiful life, a healthy life. time is going to tell. to me, that is the goal of where we are with abigail and her story. >> yeah. i think everyone is rooting for that. l liz, it's great to have you on with this great news. thank you for that. thank you for the update on abigail. >> thank you for having me. up next, we will speak with an israeli government official. there are major questions about what is going to happen here next, whether this truce goes on beyond this two-day extension and expires tomorrow night. what is happening in the occupied west bank tonight 1234 we are hearing the sounds of heavy gunfire as the israeli military says it is conducting counterterror activities on the ground. that's an update next. amid the shaky truce between hamas and israel, there has been fighting today in the occupied west bank. the idf telling cnn it was conducting counterterrorism efforts. doctors without boards says two palestinians died after israeli military vehicles blocked the entrance to a hospital. here with me now tonight is a member of israel's knesset. what is the idf doing? what's the purpose of the operation? >> we are preventing terror attacks in israel. hamas is active in the west bank. they are pushing to produce terror attacks in israel. we prevent the attacks. almost every night, we send special troops into the area where we know we have intel about them getting ready to send attack into israel. we prevent those attacks. >> this will continue? >> absolutely. whenever we know about the threat to israel, we will be very active. sometimes we cooperate with the p.a. most of the time we do it ourselves. >> we heard reporting about whether or not there's going to be an extension to the truce. it's set to expire 24 hours from now. is there going to be an extension, do you believe? >> we want to see more hostages coming back. we see all the staged events in gaza. that's sickening. you spoke about it earlier. to see hamas producing a daily show. we are not happy about the show, but we are happy about the hostages coming back into israel. if they can provide more hostages, we will be willing to consider an extension. until the point that they will provide hostages. after that we are getting ready for the next stage. i don't see anyone who will stop us from continuing in the efforts. >> how many days could the extension go on for do you believe? >> the government decided it can automatically continue until next monday. after that, the government should meet again, have a vote and decide whether to extend it or not. >> on monday, the wartime cabinet would hav