US envoy Steve Witkoff meets Israeli hostage families in Tel Aviv
US envoy Steve Witkoff (left) arriving on Aug 2 for a closed meeting with the families of Israeli hostages still being held by Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip.
TEL AVIV - US envoy Steve Witkoff met anguished relatives of Israeli hostages still held in Gaza on Aug 2, as fears for the captives' survival mounted almost 22 months into the war sparked by Hamas' October 2023 attack.
Mr Witkoff was greeted with some applause and pleas for assistance from hundreds of protesters gathered in Tel Aviv, before going into a closed meeting with the families.
The Hostages and Missing Families Forum confirmed the meeting was under way and videos shared online showed Mr Witkoff arriving as families chanted 'Bring them home!' and 'We need your help.'
The visit came one day after Mr Witkoff
visited a US-backed aid station in Gaza, to inspect efforts to get food into the devastated Palestinian territory.
Mr Yotam Cohen, brother of 21-year-old hostage Nimrod Cohen, told AFP: 'The war needs to end. The Israeli government will not end it willingly. It has refused to do so.
'The Israeli government must be stopped. For our sakes, for our soldiers' sakes, for our hostages' sakes, for our sons and for the future generations of everybody in the Middle East.'
Of the 251 hostages taken during the Hamas attack, 49 are still being held in Gaza, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead.
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After the meeting, the Forum released a statement saying that Mr Witkoff had given them a personal commitment that he and US President Donald Trump would work to return the remaining hostages.
'Horrifying acts'
Hamas attempted to maintain pressure on the families, releasing a video of one of the hostages – 24-year-old Mr Evyatar David – for the second time in two days, showing him looking emaciated in a tunnel.
The video called for a ceasefire and warned that time was running out for the hostages. Mr David's family said their son was the victim of a 'vile' propaganda campaign and accused Hamas of deliberately starving their son.
'The deliberate starvation of our son as part of a propaganda campaign is one of the most horrifying acts the world has seen. He is being starved purely to serve Hamas' propaganda,' the family said.
The United States, along with Egypt and Qatar, had been mediating ceasefire talks between Hamas and Israel that would allow the hostages to be released and humanitarian aid to flow more freely.
But
talks broke down in July and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government is under increasing domestic pressure to come up with another way to secure the missing hostages, alive and dead.
He is also
facing international calls to open Gaza's borders to more food aid, after UN and humanitarian agencies warned that more than two million Palestinian civilians are facing starvation.
'Without rest'
But Israel's top general warned that there would be no respite in fighting if the hostages were not released.
'I estimate that in the coming days we will know whether we can reach an agreement for the release of our hostages,' armed forces chief of staff Eyal Zamir said in a statement.
'If not, the combat will continue without rest.'
Lieutenant-General Zamir denied that there was widespread starvation in Gaza.
'The current campaign of false accusations of intentional starvation is a deliberate, timed, and deceitful attempt to accuse the IDF (Israeli military), a moral army, of war crimes,' he said.
Alongside reports from UN-mandated experts warning a 'famine is unfolding' in Gaza, more and more evidence is emerging of serious malnutrition and deaths among the most vulnerable Palestinian civilians.
Ms Modallala Dawwas, 33, living in a displacement camp in Gaza City told AFP her daughter Mariam had no known illnesses before the war but had now dropped from 25kg to 10kg and was seriously malnourished.
Hamas' 2023 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to a tally based on official figures.
Israel's campaign in Gaza has
killed at least 60,332 people, mostly civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory's health ministry, deemed reliable by the UN.
Gaza's civil defence agency said Israeli fire killed 34 people in the territory on Aug 2.
Civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal said five people were killed in an Israeli strike on an area of central Gaza where Palestinians were awaiting a food distribution by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
He added that the Aug 2 strikes mostly targeted areas near Gaza City in the north and Khan Younis in the south. AFP

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