Video: Israeli Hostages Say Netanyahu ‘Abandoned Us’

An Israeli hostage said Hamas fighters moved him 10 times to protect him amid relentless Israeli bombardments of the Gaza Strip over a period of 11 months.

Alexander Lobanov made the claim in a video that was recorded before he was killed, and his body was found with the bodies of six other hostages and whose remains were recently recovered by the Israeli army in Gaza.

In the video released, Wednesday, by the Hamas al-Qassam Brigades, Lobanov described the dire conditions he and other hostages have been facing in the last months.

“We are being held under extremely difficult conditions with basic necessities like water, food, electricity, and cleaning supplies unavailable,” he said.

“There is constant bombing all the time by the Israeli army. We are scared and can barely sleep,” he added in the video.

He noted that the al-Qassam fighters which represent the Hamas military wing moved him “approximately 10 times in order to preserve” his life.

Lobanov directly addressed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his government in the videoclip. He accused them of long abandoning the mostly Israeli hostages who now stand at around 100 people.

“You have failed and abandoned us on 7 October,” he said. “And now, you continue to fail in every attempt to free us alive.”

He openly accused Netanyahu and his government of attempting to kill the hostages to avoid negotiating with Hamas over their release.

“You are trying to kill us to avoid making any deal,” he said in a firm but desperate tone.

Lobanov urged Israelis to protest and take to the streets to demand his release and the rest of the hostages and their return from Gaza alive.

The al-Qassam Brigades released the video featuring Lobanov alongside another hostage, Carmel Gat, who was also killed in Gaza in one of the underground tunnels in Rafah.

The Israeli military announced Sunday that their bodies, along with the bodies of four other hostages, had been recovered, according to Anadolu.

The video also showed Gat, from the Be’eri settlement near Gaza, speaking about the difficult conditions she was enduring. “The bombing [by Israel] doesn’t stop, and I don’t know if I will get out of here alive,” said Gat.

She pleaded with the Israeli government and Netanyahu, saying: “Please stop abandoning us, stop this bombing, and bring us home.”

Gat also urged Israelis to continue protesting as a way to increase pressure on the government to secure their release rather than undermine it.

“Don’t abandon us and don’t let anyone shut down negotiations for our release,” he said.

The army accused Hamas of killing the hostages, while Hamas said the Israeli military killed them through direct aerial bombardment.

Israel is holding at least 9,500 Palestinian prisoners in its jails and estimates that 101 Israeli hostages are being held in Gaza. Hamas has announced that dozens of the estimated 250 hostages have been killed in indiscriminate Israeli air strikes.

Since the discovery of the six captives’ bodies, there has been growing criticism in Israel, blaming Netanyahu for their deaths and urging him to move quickly to reach a deal to exchange the remaining captives.

Security officials, the opposition and the families of the captives have long accused Netanyahu of deliberatly obstructing a deal with Hamas.

But far-right ministers including National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich have threatened to withdraw from the government and bring it down if a deal to end the war is reached.

The US, Qatar and Egypt have been trying for months to reach an agreement between Israel and Hamas to ensure a prisoner exchange and a ceasefire deal and allow humanitarian aid to enter Gaza.

But mediation efforts have been stalled due to Netanyahu’s refusal to meet Hamas’ demands to stop the war.

Israel has continued its brutal offensive on Gaza since the 7 October, 2023 Hamas attack despite a UN Security Council resolution demanding an immediate ceasefire.

More than 40,800 Palestinians, mostly women and children, have since been killed and nearly 94,300 injured, according to local health authorities according to the Turkish news agency.

An ongoing blockade of the enclave has led to severe shortages of food, clean water and medicine, leaving much of the region in ruins.

Israel faces accusations of genocide for its actions in Gaza at the International Court of Justice.

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Jenin: ‘We Will Only Raise The Palestinian Flag Here’

The Israeli occupation forces have continued their onslaught on Jenin and its camp for the eighth consecutive day.

The onslaught resulted in the killing of 19 people, the injury and arrest of dozens with widespread destruction of citizens’ properties and infrastructure, including water and electricity networks, according to Wafa.

On Tuesday, 16-year-od Lujain Abdul Raouf was killed, and four journalists injured, including WAFA photojournalists Muhammad Mansour and Ayman Noubani, in an Israeli army siege of a house in the village of Kafr Dan, west of Jenin.

The occupation forces also raided several houses in the Al-Hadaf neighborhood on the outskirts of Jenin camp, tampered with their contents and destroyed their furniture.

The occupation forces stormed the Al-Zahraa neighborhood in the city and bulldozed the infrastructure and streets, while water continues to be cut off from most of the city’s neighborhoods and the camp.

Destroying streets

The occupation forces continue to destroy the center of Jenin city, as the occupation bulldozers razed Cinema Street and large parts of Hospitals Street to the vicinity of Al-Shifa Hospital, and destroyed shops in the Cinema Roundabout area and re-razed the Post Street.

The occupation bulldozers attacked a group of journalists while they were covering the destruction of the Cinema Roundabout and the surrounding shops, and opened fire directly at them, which resulted in their injury.

In Al-Jabariyat neighborhood, the occupation forces stormed the house of the detainee Zakaria Al-Zubaidi and detained his brother Yahya after vandalizing and destroying the contents of the house.

The occupation forces also continued their large-scale detention campaigns of young men in the Jenin camp and the villages of Al-Silah Al-Harithiya, Al-Yamoun and Kafr Dan west of Jenin.

They stormed the town of Qabatiya fired at citizens’ houses, Tuesday night, and resulted in the shooting of a young man in the chest while he was inside his home.

The Israeli army also detained an ambulance crew while transporting an emergency medical case to the Khalil Suleiman Governmental Hospital in Jenin and assaulted a number of them.

The Israeli occupation forces stormed the village of Muthalath Al-Shuhada, south of Jenin, deployed snipers on the roofs of several houses, raided six houses, detained a number of citizens before withdrawing from the town according to the Palestinian news agency.

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Colombia Uni: First Protest Against Gaza Genocide

A large group of Columbia University students gathered at the university gates on the first day of the academic semester, reigniting protests that began last year in opposition to the ongoing genocide in Gaza. The students called for an academic and economic boycott of Israel and urged their peers to boycott the first day of classes in response to the destruction of universities in Gaza according to the Quds News Network.

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Displaced Palestinians Settle in Gaza Graveyards

Among the graves of the dead the Abu Samak family sleeps on the ground in the Al-Sawarha cemetery in the town of Al-Zawaida in the central Gaza Strip. They forcibly came here following the Israeli army’s decision to evict them from their homes east of Deir al-Balah, a few days ago according to the Palestinian Information Center.

Where to go?

Adham, head of the family, said “the decision to forcibly evict us fell like a thunderbolt, and the first thing that came our minds was where do we go?”

“All of the areas west of Deir al-Balah, which the Israeli occupation army asked us them to go to, were completely full, leaving us with few options, thus we settled here, sleeping on the ground between the graves of the dead,” Abu Samak added.

“We are dead while we are alive, the Israeli army continues to kill us – it’s been nearly a year now – and the world is watching us and does not care.

What happened to humanity, what law, or custom states that our children should sleep in the open and in fear among the graves of the dead,” he wounders.

On 24-25 August, the Israeli occupation forces issued evacuation orders to residents of many neighborhoods in Deir al-Balah, telling them to head to the so-called humanitarian zone they keep establishing but last Thursday, they asked some of them to return to their neighborhoods once again.

Most difficult war

Ibtisam Abu Amra’s situation is no better than that of Abu Samak: She was forced to flee from the Abu Areef area east of Deir al-Balah to the cemetery in the city center.

“This war is the most difficult, the army tells us to go to safe areas, then it bombs and targets civilians in them. Where is the security and safety the Israeli army claims to be providing,” she asked.

 “We were displaced to the cemeteries, which are not safe, the army has already invaded them, bulldozing them and wreaking havoc and destruction in them, neither the living nor the dead are safe.”

“Displacement is torment, asking you to collect what is left of your belongings, your children and even the elderly in your home to the unknown, is persecution,” She explained. “We found nothing but the cemetery, so here we are living among the dead.”

According to international reports, more than two million Palestinians are crowded into what is called the humanitarian zone, which is less than 11% of the entire Gaza Strip, in extremely harsh and tragic conditions.

Out of every 10 Palestinians, 9 have been forced to leave their homes and be displaced once or several times, according to reports from international organizations.

Hundreds of thousands of displaced people are patiently and hopefully waiting for the moment when the bloody war will stop so that their repeated displacement will stop and they can return, even to the ruins of their destroyed homes.

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Brik: ‘It is Not Hamas That is Collapsing But Israel’

Retired Israeli General Itzhak Brik said if the Israeli forces “continue fighting in Gaza by raiding and re-raiding the same targets, not only we won’t bring Hamas to collapse, but we will collapse ourselves”.

In an opinion piece published by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, titled, “It Is Not Hamas That Is Collapsing, but iIsrael,” Brik said every day, Israeli forces in Gaza grow weaker while Hamas, “in contrast, has already replenished its ranks with 17- and 18-year-olds”.

Brik also noted many Israeli reservists are “no longer consenting” to being “redrafted again and again” and “conscripted soldiers are exhausted and are losing professional skills for lack of training”.

“Some argue that withdrawing army forces from Gaza after signing a hostage deal with Hamas would be the same as being defeated and surrendering…but this claim is grounded in a fundamental misunderstanding of what is taking place in the Gaza Strip.

It is fueled by clichés spread by the political and military echelons to justify their actions and gain public support and legitimacy to continue a failed war… it is those very same people declaring that a cessation of hostilities means our defeat and surrender who are bringing the military closer to collapse and the state to its downfall,” he added.

“Israel’s economy, international relations and social cohesiveness are severely damaged by this war of attrition against both Hamas and Hezbollah,” he said, adding the Israeli military “does not have enough forces to fight a multi-front war”.

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