
Hamas says open to ICRC delivering food to Israeli captives in Gaza
The statements from Hamas and Netanyahu came after Palestinian groups last week released videos showing two emaciated Israeli captives held in Gaza, where some 2 million Palestinians are struggling to survive the Israeli-induced starvation crisis.
Netanyahu said on Sunday he had spoken to Julian Larson, the head of the ICRC delegation to Israel, requesting the group's 'immediate involvement' in providing food and medical treatment to captives still held in Gaza.
In a post on X, Netanyahu wrote in Hebrew that he told Larson that Hamas was propagating a 'lie of starvation' in the enclave, but the reality was that 'systematic starvation is being carried out against our hostages'.
Later on Sunday, the spokesman for the Qassam Brigades, Hamas's armed wing, said in a statement that Israeli captives held in Gaza 'eat what our fighters and all our people eat'.
'They will not receive any special privilege amid the crime of starvation and siege,' the spokesman, known as Abu Obeida, said.
But, he added, the group is 'ready to act positively and respond to any request from the Red Cross to deliver food and medicine to enemy prisoners'.
In order for requests to aid captives to be accepted, 'humanitarian corridors must be opened in a normal and permanent manner for the passage of food and medicine to all our people in all areas of the Gaza Strip', Abu Obeida said.
Israeli attacks 'of all forms must cease during the receipt of packages for the prisoners', he added.
The ICRC said in a statement on Sunday that it was 'appalled by the harrowing videos' of the captives held in Gaza and reiterated its call to be 'granted access to the hostages.'
'These videos are stark evidence of the life-threatening conditions in which the hostages are being held,' the ICRC said in the statement shared on X.
'We know families watching these videos are horrified and heartbroken by the conditions they see their loved ones held in,' the ICRC added.
On its website, the ICRC says that 'securing access requires the cooperation of all parties involved'. The ICRC also says on its website that it 'has not been able to visit any Palestinian detainees held in Israeli places of detention since 7 October 2023.'
In a separate statement on Sunday, the ICRC said it was also 'appalled' that a Palestine Red Crescent Society staff member had been killed in a 'clearly marked Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) building' in Khan Younis, in southern Gaza.
The PRCS had earlier said the attack was perpetrated by Israeli forces, but the ICRC statement did not refer to who was responsible.
One million women and girls starving
Meanwhile, the families of Israeli captives held in Gaza said on Sunday that Netanyahu's continued insistence that a 'military resolution' was the only solution was 'a direct danger to the lives of our sons, who live in the hell of tunnels and are threatened by starvation and immediate death'.
'For 22 months, the public has been sold the illusion that military pressure will bring back the hostages, and today, even before reaching a comprehensive draft agreement, it is said that an agreement is futile,' the families said in a statement.
There are about 50 captives still in Gaza. Fewer than half are believed to be still alive.
The latest developments come as the Government Media Office in Gaza said that Israeli authorities allowed just 36 aid trucks to enter the Gaza Strip on Saturday, while 22,000 aid trucks continue to sit outside the Strip waiting to bring much-needed food to Palestinians there.
The United Nations office in Geneva on Sunday also warned that 1 million women and girls in Gaza are now starving.
In a post on X, the UN said: 'One million. That's how many women and girls are starving in Gaza. This horrific situation is unacceptable and must end.
We continue to demand the delivery of lifesaving aid for all women and girls, an immediate ceasefire, and the release of all hostages.'
At least 175 people, including 93 children, have now been confirmed dead from forced starvation, according to the territory's Ministry of Health, including 17-year-old Atef Abu Khater, whose weight had dropped to just 25kg (55lbs) before he died on Saturday.
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