Three elderly Israeli hostages held by Hamas have begged to be released from captivity, asking Israel: 'Don't let us grow old here.'
The
captives, all wearing dirty white t-shirts, said in a video published
by Hamas via Telegram on Monday that they had no idea why they have not
yet been rescued.
One man, who identified himself as
79-year-old Haiem Bery, from Kibbutz Nir Oz, was seated in the middle of
two others around the same age, spoke in Hebrew down the barrel of the
camera.
He said he was being held with
other elderly hostages with chronic illnesses, and that all of them
were living in very harsh conditions.
An injured Palestinians screams in agony after an Israeli airstrike
Qatar, Israel and the US have been discussing reopening negotiations on a temporary ceasefire in recent days
The three men are among the ten remaining
hostages over the age of 75, and the video is understood to be the first
time any of them have been seen alive since they were taken on Black
Saturday.
'We are the generation who
built the foundation for the creation of Israel. We are the ones who
started the IDF military. We don't understand why we have been abandoned
here,' he said.
'You have to release
us from here. It does not matter the cost. We don't want to be
casualties as a direct result of the IDF military airstrikes. Release us
with no conditions. Don't let us grow old here,' he added.
The video ends with all three men repeating the phrase in unison, 'Don't let us grow old here.'
An IDF spokesperson described the video as a 'criminal terrorist video.'
A
Hamas official in Beirut, Lebanon, said today that negotiations on the
release of hostages were off the table until Israel 'stops its war on
Gaza.'
Hamas and other militant groups are believed to still hold 129 foreign captives.
Smoke billows following Israeli bombardment in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip
The
comments come after it was confirmed that Qatar, Israel and the US have
been discussing reopening negotiations on a temporary ceasefire in
recent days, though it is not clear whether Hamas was invited to these
talks.
Hamas has released several
videos of captives held somewhere in Gaza in the two-and-a-half months
since it captured hundreds of hostages during its incursion on Black
Saturday.
Late last month, it shared a video of captive Yarden Bibas, an Israeli father whose family were killed in an IDF airstrike.
Yarden,
34, was seen distraught and weeping as he said: 'Bibi (Netanyahu) your
airstrike took away my beloved family, now do what you can to bring them
home so they can be buried at home.
'I'm begging you, bring me, my wife and my children back home. Please, I'm begging.'
More
than 19,400 Palestinians have been killed since Israel declared war on
Hamas, according to the Health Ministry in Gaza, which does not
differentiate between civilian and combatant deaths.
Thousands more lie buried under the rubble of Gaza, the UN estimates.
Israel
says 127 of its soldiers have died in its ground offensive after Hamas
raided southern Israel on October killing about 1,200 people - mostly
civilians - and taking about 240 hostages.
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