
My hostage son is chained up alone & going blind in Gaza dungeons while sick Hamas captors are CELEBRATED at Glastonbury
Scroll down to read more about the horrific treatment of hostages being held by vile Hamas
FORGOTTEN PLIGHT My hostage son is chained up alone & going blind in Gaza dungeons while sick Hamas captors are CELEBRATED at Glastonbury
THEY both set out to celebrate peace and love.
But while Glastonbury was this weekend awash with support for Palestine, there was little if any recognition of the 378 people massacred by Hamas at the Nova music festival in Israel on October 7, 2023.
Advertisement
19
While Glastonbury was awash with Palestine support, there was little recognition of the 378 people killed by Hamas at the Nova music festival in Israel on October 7 2023
Credit: Alamy
19
Hostage Elkana Bohbot, right, with sibling Uriel before the October 7 attacks
Credit: Doug Seeburg
Amid a sea of Palestine flags waved by the crowds at Worthy Farm, punk performers Bob Vylan chanted, 'Death to the IDF' and Northern Irish rappers Kneecap led a chorus of 'F*** Keir Starmer'.
The victims of the atrocity nearly two years ago — which marked the onset of full-scale war — were all but forgotten.
Instead, here in the UK, its perpetrators were held up as heroes.
You would have had to look hard to spot a flag at Glastonbury honouring those killed or taken hostage at the Nova festival.
Advertisement
Unsuspecting party-goers there were slain amid a hail of bullets and rockets as waves of Hamas fighters swarmed across the border from Gaza.
Rockets blasted across the border from Gaza.
It became the scene of the biggest massacre at a music event in history.
Incredibly, festivals held since then have not only failed to acknowledge what happened at the Israel gig, but have at times celebrated the terrorists behind the devastation.
Advertisement
The attack on the event, as well as small villages and towns near the Gaza border on that same day, led to a conflict that has seen thousands of Palestinians killed as Israel continues in its quest to dismantle Hamas and return its hostages.
Lebanon and Syria have become different countries with the weakening of Hezbollah.
Fury as Glastonbury crowd chants 'death to the IDF' during Bob Vylan set aired live on BBC
One member of the band Kneecap faces terror charges for allegedly waving the group's flag at a London gig.
And the recent 12-day war between Iran and Israel has brought more death and destruction to both nations, yet Israel seems no closer to getting its hostages back.
Advertisement
'Grief and pain'
The taken no longer feel like a key focus amid the fighting.
Of the approximately 250 people who were originally taken captive by Hamas, around 50 are still believed to remain in war-stricken Gaza over 600 days later.
Twenty of them are thought to be alive — nine were from the Nova Festival.
We want to emphasise that bringing back the remaining 50 hostages is the key to achieving complete Israeli victory. There will be no victory until the last hostage returns
Israel's Hostages And Missing Families Forum
Slowly, as the Israeli army takes over increasing tranches of the territory, it is finding bodies of dead hostages.
Advertisement
Eight have been recovered so far this month.
On June 21, a military operation retrieved the remains of three people who had been taken captive — Yonatan Samerano, 21, Ofra Keidar, 71, and Sgt Shai Levinson, 19.
Israel's Hostages And Missing Families Forum — which represents some of the hostages' relatives — said: 'Alongside the grief and pain, their return provides some comfort to the families who have waited in agony, uncertainty and doubt.
'We want to emphasise that bringing back the remaining 50 hostages is the key to achieving complete Israeli victory. There will be no victory until the last hostage returns.'
Advertisement
One of those caged in the tunnels is Alon Ohel, who is in desperate need of medical attention as shrapnel in his eye is slowly blinding him.
Throughout his ordeal, it is music that has kept him going, his mother Idit tells The Sun.
Alon started playing the piano when he was nine, with Elton John a particular hero and inspiration.
The British pop star's music is likely being sung by the gentle 24-year-old in the tunnel dungeons of Gaza as he tries to keep himself sane.
Advertisement
Sir Elton has previously declared himself a fan of Kneecap — admitting he 'loves everything about them'.
Alon was held with three other hostages, who were released in previous ceasefire deals.
They have told his mother about the nightmare he is enduring.
'Their legs were chained for many months, they were starved and sometimes they were badly beaten,' says Idit.
Advertisement
19
Hamas terrorists used motorised paragliders during the attack
19
Wrecked and burnt out vehicles at the festival site
Credit: EPA
'But at least they had each other. The three men Alon was held with have all been released.
'But we believe he is now on his own and, of course, we are so worried about it.
Advertisement
'The only thing that keeps me going is the hope that he will come out alive.'
MAKE THE DEAL IN GAZA. GET THE HOSTAGES BACK!!!
Donald Trump
There has been a new ceasefire deal on the table for many weeks, which could secure Alon's freedom, but Hamas has refused to sign it.
Even though it would put an end to the horrendous suffering of the Palestinian people, it would mean them losing their hold on Gaza.
Just want them home
Yesterday morning, US President Donald Trump, who has said he is hopeful a peace deal could be agreed in the next week, highlighted the plight of the hostages on Truth Social, writing in bold capital letters: 'MAKE THE DEAL IN GAZA. GET THE HOSTAGES BACK!!! DJT.'
Advertisement
The question for the Israeli PM, Benjamin Netanyahu, and his cabinet remains: Save the hostages and allow Hamas to keep hold of Gaza, or try to completely defeat Hamas and risk the loss of the hostages?
This is why the families of those still being held are so determined they never be forgotten.
They just want them home.
The hostages are rarely talked about any more in television coverage of the conflict.
Advertisement
In countries in the West, posters of them are torn down.
When Israeli forces took command of a Gaza-bound aid boat carrying climate campaigner Greta Thunberg, she claimed she had been 'kidnapped'.
It was alleged she and other activists declined to watch footage of the October 7 horrors.
But the hostages are an ever-present reminder of Hamas's cruelty and the fact that they are — whatever the BBC may or may not have called them — a terrorist group.
Advertisement
19
At Glastonbury this week, punk performers Bob Vylan chanted, 'Death to the IDF'
Credit: Getty
19
Northern Irish rappers Kneecap led a chorus of 'F*** Keir Starmer'
Credit: PA
Windsor MP Jack Rankin has raised the case of Nova hostage Avinatan Or, 31, whose mother Ditza is British, in Parliament.
He was twinned with Avinatan's family as part of the Hostages And Missing Families Forum UK, and met with them last December.
Advertisement
Avinatan's kidnap, alongside girlfriend Noa Argamani, became front page news as they were pulled away from each other by terrorists who filmed it and put it on social media.
The politician says he is disgusted that there is apparent support for Hamas at Glastonbury and a failure to remember those murdered at Nova.
'The juxtaposition is quite sick, to be honest, and I put a lot of it down to a huge degree of naivety on the part of Western society,' says Jack, who hosted Ditza at the House of Commons in March.
'The reality is that if Hamas had the ability to, it would do the same to Western people at Glastonbury as they did at Nova.'
Advertisement
Earlier this year, Hamas released a harrowing propaganda video featuring Nova hostage Elkana Bohbot.
In it, he addressed his brother, Uriel, asking him to go to the White House and ask US President Donald Trump to urgently get him out.
Evyatar David, 23, is another musician who was kidnapped at Nova and is believed to still be alive.
We know from the hostages that have returned that they are in a tiny space — about one-and-a-half metres wide — underground, sleeping next to a hole in the ground that they use for the toilet
Evyatar's brother Ilay
He was filmed alongside best friend and fellow hostage Guy Gilboa-Dalal in one of Hamas's sickest stunts.
Advertisement
The pair were videoed locked in a car surrounded by terrorists at a hostage release 'ceremony', pleading: 'Let us go.'
The footage was released to cause added torment to their desperate families.
In Gaza, captives have mainly been held underground, according to those who have now been freed.
'They sing together'
'We know from the hostages that have returned that they are in a tiny underground space — about one-and-a-half metres wide — sleeping next to a hole in the ground that they use for the toilet,' says Evyatar's brother Ilay.
Advertisement
'They have just enough food and water to keep them alive.
'I know that they sing together and talk about the festivals they have gone to and the ones they want to visit.
'Music is a big part of their survival in the tunnels because they have no stimulus at all.'
Ilay says that wherever people stand on the Israel-Palestine conflict, they should be speaking up against hostage-taking.
Advertisement
'This is a humanitarian issue,' he insists.
'Anyone who says they are for human rights should be speaking about the hostages, too.
'It is sad to think that there are festivals going on which are filled with Palestine flags, but no one mentions what happened at Nova.
'They should talk about how people who were at a festival because they love music are being tortured in tunnels more than 600 days later.'
Advertisement
Hell of captivity
THEY danced in the desert until dawn at Israel's Nova music festival.
But then terror struck on October 7, 2023, and these innocent revellers never made it home.
Most remain missing after being captured by Hamas.
Advertisement
Three were reportedly murdered.
19
Alon Ohel
Credit: IDF
19
Guy Gilboa-Dalal and Evyatar David
Credit: Supplied
19
Avinatan Or
Credit: Supplied
Advertisement
19
Eitan Abraham Mor
Credit: Supplied
19
Guy Illouz (murdered)
Credit: Supplied
19
Bar Abraham Kupershtein
Credit: Supplied
19
Inbar Hayman (murdered)
Credit: Supplied
Advertisement
19
Maxim Herkin
Credit: Supplied
19
Uriel Baruch (murdered)
Credit: Supplied
19
Segev Kalfon
Credit: Supplied
19
Rom Braslavski
Credit: Supplied
Advertisement
19
Idan Shtivi (murdered)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Albanian burglar with almost 50 convictions wins the right to stay in the UK as 'his crimes weren't extreme enough to "revolt" the public'
An Albanian burglar with nearly 50 convictions has won the right to stay in the UK as 'his crimes were not extreme enough to "revolt" the public'. Zenel Beshi has been dubbed a 'genuine, present and sufficiently serious threat' to the UK by the Home Office, which said he should be deported. But upper immigration tribunal judge Leonie Hirst found his crimes were not of the 'very extreme' type that would cause 'deep public revulsion' - and let him stay. Shadow home secretary Chris Philp said the ruling was 'out of touch' as Beshi is 'clearly a danger to the British public', The Telegraph reports. 'It's time these judges started to prioritise protecting law-abiding British citizens instead of foreign criminals', he said. Mr Philp added foreign criminals, no matter where their crime was committed, should all be sent back to their country of origin, 'no ifs, no buts'. It comes as Home Secretary Yvette Cooper proposes to change the law to make it harder to allow foreign citizens to stay in the UK on a human rights claim. Her suggested scheme would oblige judges to consider public safety more in such decisions. Beshi came to the UK in August 2020 - three years after he received a six-year prison sentence in Turin, Italy. As well as robbery and false imprisonment, he had been jailed for 44 counts of burglary and theft. But he failed to disclose his previous convictions upon his arrival in Britain. The Albanian applied for a European Economic Area (EEA) residence card, on the grounds he was a spouse of an EEA national. He was granted this, after his application was initially refused and he appealed. While he waited to hear back on this appeal, he applied for leave to remain under the EU Settlement Scheme. The Home Office, though, decided to deport him as a threat to the British public. Beshi appealed, which was upheld by a first tier tribunal, after a psychologist said he did not in fact constitute a 'serious threat' to society. They also said he posed a 'low risk' of reoffending. Ms Cooper appealed this decision - but an upper tribunal has now found Beshi not disclosing his previous convictions is of 'little relevance'. Judge Hirst said the deportation threshold and notions of rehabilitation had been applied correctly. She also lauded the legal arguments behind the decision to allow Beshi to stay as 'detailed, clear and well-structured'. The judge found there was no legal mistake to require overturning the decision - and allowed the criminal to remain. Almost half of Brits have no confidence that the police will show up if their home was burgled, a poll revealed earlier this year. Some 46 per cent of adults said they did not believe a home burglary would be properly investigated, with 49 per cent saying the same for car thefts. When looking at pensioners, with 54 per cent of those aged 65 or older expressing a lack of confidence in officers attending their property. And fears are not unjustified, as police failed to solve 94 per cent of burglary cases in 2023/24, according to Home Office figures. Just 16,912 (six per cent) of 266,215 recorded burglaries resulted in a charge. In nearly three-quarters of cases police officers were unable to even identify a suspect, and a further 15 per cent ran into evidential difficulties after a suspect was identified. Reported burglaries have fallen in the past decade, from around 444,000 in 2013/14 to the more than 266,000 in 2023/24. Meanwhile, 13 per cent of people move house because they cannot bear to stay in their home after it has been burgled. A similar proportion have said they are unable to stand being home alone after their house has been invaded. A Home Office spokesperson has previously said: 'We do not agree with this judgment and are considering options for appeal. 'Foreign nationals who commit crime should be in no doubt that we will do everything to make sure they are not free on Britain's streets, including removal from the UK at the earliest opportunity.'


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Benjamin Netanyahu corruption trial delayed on diplomatic and security grounds
An Israeli court has cancelled this week's hearings in Benjamin Netanyahu's long-running corruption trial, accepting a request made by the prime minister on classified diplomatic and security grounds. 'Following the explanations given … we partially accept the request and cancel at this stage Mr Netanyahu's hearings scheduled' for this week, the Jerusalem district court said in its ruling, published online by Netanyahu's Likud party. The ruling said that new reasons provided by Netanyahu, the head of Israel's spy agency the Mossad and the military intelligence chief justified cancelling the hearings. It comes after Donald Trump last week called for the case to be thrown out. In remarks on social media, the US president suggested the trial could interfere with Netanyahu's ability to join negotiations with the Palestinian militant group Hamas and Iran, adding that the US was 'not going to stand' for the continued prosecution, prompting Netanyahu to thank him in a message on X. In a social media post, Trump described the case against the Israeli premier as a 'witch hunt', saying the trial 'should be CANCELLED, IMMEDIATELY, or a Pardon given to a Great Hero'. Netanyahu was indicted in 2019 on charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust – all of which he denies. He has cast the trial against him as an orchestrated leftwing witch-hunt meant to topple a democratically elected rightwing leader. In one of the cases, he and his wife, Sara, are accused of accepting more than $260,000 worth of luxury goods such as cigars, jewellery and champagne from billionaires in exchange for political favours. In two others, Netanyahu is accused of attempting to negotiate more favourable coverage from two Israeli media outlets. The prime minister has requested multiple postponements to the trial since it began in May 2020. Netanyahu's lawyers had asked the court to excuse him from testifying over the next two weeks so he could focus on security issues after a ceasefire with Iran and amid ongoing fighting in Gaza where Israeli hostages are held. They submitted the prime minister's schedule to the court to demonstrate 'the national need for the prime minister to devote all his time and energy to the political, national and security issues at hand'. The court initially rejected the lawyers' request, but said in its ruling on Sunday that it had changed its judgment after hearing arguments from the prime minister and other senior officials. A spokesperson for the Israeli prosecution declined to comment on Trump's post. Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid said last week that Trump 'should not interfere in a judicial trial in an independent country'. Trump said Netanyahu was 'right now' negotiating a deal with Hamas, though neither leader provided details, and officials from both sides have voiced scepticism over prospects for a ceasefire soon. On Friday, the Republican president told reporters he believed a ceasefire was close. With Reuters and Agence France-Presse


North Wales Chronicle
an hour ago
- North Wales Chronicle
British Israeli soldier killed in Gaza, reports say
He was named locally as 20-year-old Sergeant Yisrael Natan Rosenfeld from the city of Ra'anana. The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said it is 'looking into reports that an IDF soldier who died in combat in Gaza is a British national'. The IDF soldier, of the 601st Combat Engineering Battalion, was killed by an explosive device on Sunday, the Times of Israel reported. The paper said Mr Rosenfeld moved to Israel from London with his family 11 years ago. Israel has been operating in Gaza since the Hamas militant group's October 7 2023 attack on Israel. More than 860 Israeli soldiers have been killed since the war began, including more than 400 during the fighting in Gaza. US-led ceasefire efforts have repeatedly stalled. The Israeli offensive has devastated Gaza and killed more than 56,000 people, according to Gaza's Health Ministry, a branch of the Hamas government. The death toll is by far the highest in any round of Israeli-Palestinian fighting.