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Jerusalem deputy mayor demands ‘proof of life’ of hostages, assurance before Biden humanitarian aide hits Gaza

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The deputy mayor of Jerusalem demanded «proof of life» for the more than 200 hostages estimated to have been taken from Israel by Hamas militants and other assurances before humanitarian aide promised by President Biden or any other government arrives in Gaza for Palestinians. 

«The first thing we need is proof of life. We haven’t had anything,» Jerusalem Deputy Mayor Fleur Hassan-Nahoum told Fox News Digital. «We haven’t had the Red Cross being able to see them. We haven’t had the U.N. even talking about the hostages. What happens to our hostages as 3- and 5-month-old babies, and their mothers, mothers with three children, young women serially raped, paraded down the street, an old lady with dementia in a wheelchair, people ridiculing her down the street and abusing her. Who are these people and why?»

«This is something that I think we cannot give up on the hostages,» she said, speaking from Israel via Zoom. «We need to demand, if you want humanitarian assistance, we understand that. But we need our hostages to be a priority for all governments and for our government. And any type of humanitarian assistance has to be conditional on the assurance that our hostages, especially the injured ones, will at least be having medical treatment. And we haven’t had any assurances of anything.» 

President Biden announced Wednesday that the U.S. is providing $100 million in humanitarian assistance for the Palestinian people in Gaza and the West Bank. 

«I’m all for humanitarian aid, but the problem is that the leadership in the West Bank is corrupt. So they steal from their people. They also pay terrorists pension, life pensions for every Jew they kill,» Hassan-Nahoum told Fox News Digital. «And that’s why in the United States, you guys passed the Taylor Force Act after a man called Taylor Force, who essentially was killed, murdered by Palestinian terrorists, and his killers are getting a life pension. And the American government passed a law that they wouldn’t give any money to the Palestinians until the ‘pay for slay’ policy was rescinded, which it never was. And so I understand that President Biden is doing this from a good place.»

AMERICAN SURVIVOR OF HAMAS ATTACK ON MUSIC FEST RETURNS TO SEE ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTS IN US: ‘I DON’T FEEL SAFE’

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Fleur Hassan-Nahoum Zoom interview

Deputy Mayor of Jerusalem Fleur Hassan-Nahoum tells Fox News Digital of the posture in Israel amid the war against Hamas.  (Fox News Digital/Danielle Wallace)

«It’s just very difficult to get decent accountability from the Palestinian leadership,» she said. «The most minimum thing I would ask for is to ensure that the money does not go to an educational system. Their educational system is basically teaching hatred and how to kill Jews, and Palestinian Authority funds, which they receive from around the world, are paying pensions to people who kill Jews, thereby incentivizing people to kill Jews. And the more you kill, the higher the pension. And so that’s my fear.»

«And as long as we can guarantee or the U.S. can guarantee through its different nonprofit arms here on the ground that it is actually going to humanitarian aid, then I’m in favor,» she said. «But very few people can actually give us those guarantees.» 

As for the educational system in Palestine and concern in the West over taking in Gazan refugees taught to hate Jews, Hassan-Nahoum added, «The irony is that the U.N., through their schools that are funded by the international community, are actually teaching this hatred curriculum. So, you know, it’s interesting. So you — we get, they get money for teaching hatred and then, of course, nobody wants to take them in as refugees. But why are you giving them the money to begin with?» 

Israeli police in Jerusalem

Policemen on Thursday stand guard as Israeli Jews pray in front of the Western Wall while attending a day of prayer in the Old City of Jerusalem for the safe return of hostages taken by Hamas militants.  (YURI CORTEZ/AFP via Getty Images)

David Satterfield, newly tapped as U.S. Special Envoy for Middle East Humanitarian Issues, met with Israeli and Egyptian officials Thursday «to develop the exact mechanisms to implement the framework» that Secretary of State Antony Blinken negotiated with Israel on Monday regarding the deliveries of humanitarian assistance and that Biden «cemented yesterday when he was able to secure commitments from both Israel and Egypt,» State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller told reporters. 

At a press conference, Miller declined to go into the details of the negotiations while admitting Israelis «have very serious concerns about the diversion of humanitarian assistance» and the potential of it being «diverted to Hamas.» He also said that «it’s important that the innocent civilians in Gaza who did not start this conflict have access to food and water and medicine.» 

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«Our work to secure the release of hostages continues to be a top priority,» Miller also said Thursday. «And of course, our message… to other countries and entities hostile to Israel continues to be clear: Do not enter this conflict.» 

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Hassan-Nahoum explained that while she and her husband moved to Israel in 2001 and have lived there through several conflicts — including about five wars in Gaza, a second Lebanon war, and an intifada with suicide bombers on buses, in cafés or public places — she has never before seen the level of «barbarity» or «ISIS-like behavior» seen when Hamas militants slaughtered more than 1,300 civilians, including at least 32 American citizens, and kidnapped at least 203 others, including about 30 children and 20 elderly people on Oct. 7. 

Protesters hold photos of hostages taken by Hamas

Relatives of missing Israelis lift portraits of their loved ones in front of the Western Wall on Thursday while attending a day of prayer in the Old City of Jerusalem for the safe return of hostages taken by Hamas.  (YURI CORTEZ/AFP via Getty Images)

«This is what happened in Afghanistan, in certain areas of Africa… with Boko Haram, the terrorist group. This never happened in Israeli territory, this type of level of barbarity and cruelty. And in fact, it’s the worst day, worst massacre on Jewish people since the Holocaust,» Hassan-Nahoum said. «We had a Yom Kippur War 50 years ago, which was also a war that put Israel unawares, it was surprise. But it was mainly… and there were a lot of casualties… too many casualties, but it was combatants. You know, in a war, you expect combatant casualties. You don’t expect 5-month-old babies to be decapitated and 5-month-old babies to be kidnapped. You don’t see that. Who does that?»

ISRAELI MILITARY SAYS HAMAS IS NOW HOLDING 203 HOSTAGES

«And so this is kind of the shock and trauma that we are continuously facing,» she said. «And it’s kind of an ongoing trauma because until the hostages are returned home, we’re not going to have any peace, not amongst ourselves, and we’re not going to be able to be in a place where we can even begin to start healing.» 

Hassan-Nahoum, who has four children who are teenagers and older, said she advised them to avoid going to the movies or remaining out at night amid concern over Muslim terror cells in Israel — but stressed that for the most part, she believes Arab Israelis too are «completely disgusted by the massacre and what was done.»

Israel protesters demands hostages released from Gaza

A woman holds a sign during a protest calling to bring back the hostages that were kidnapped by Hamas in Tel Aviv, Israel, on Thursday. (Amir Levy/Getty Images)

«Even within Israel, unfortunately, we have kind of these Hamas sleeper cells and radical groups, some Muslim Brotherhood activists and groups. And so we fear that maybe some of these terrorists remained here and managed to escape the army and are hiding somewhere. And that’s, that’s scary. In Jerusalem itself, we feared that the radical elements in East Jerusalem and honestly, most people in East Jerusalem are peace-loving people who just, we work together,» she said. 

«There’s good people here, but unfortunately, there’s the radicals and the radicalized and the genocidal, you know, terrorists and the people who don’t accept Israel’s right to exist at all, who are on, you know, who are rooting for the bad guys,» Hassan-Nahoum continued. «These people — you kill a baby, you get, you kidnapped a baby, you decapitate a baby, you’re a bad person. Simple as that. No buts, no excuses. And so I think that most people I’ve spoken to from the Arab community have been totally empathetic and sympathetic.» 

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The deputy mayor also had a stern message to the worldwide press after many outlets accepts claims at face value from Palestinian authorities that an Israeli strike hit a Gaza hospital, killing hundreds of people. Israel and even U.S. intelligence later came out asserting that in fact the hospital blast was caused by an Islamic jihadist rocket misfire. 

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«I think the press has a particular responsibility here, and that is that they really need to understand that Hamas is not exactly the reliable media source,» Hassan-Nahoum said. « Why is the press reporting and taking a statement from Hamas at face value when they say that at the same time they say they didn’t kill civilians? We know what they did. We know the massacre they did… You have huge anti-Semitic threats around the world. Jews become vulnerable [to] attack when you put out an uncorroborated statement from a terrorist group.»

Like the U.S. was on 9/11, she said Israel is under attack by the same «jihadi fundamentalists who want to take the world back 500 years.» 



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INTERNACIONAL

Hamas’ Gaza death toll questioned as new report says its led to ‘widespread inaccuracies and distortion’

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A new report cites a laundry list of alleged errors in the casualty tallies that the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health has issued during the conflict in Gaza, and found that worldwide media widely report the inflated numbers with little or no scrutiny.

The Henry Jackson Society (HJS), a U.K. based think tank, found «widespread inaccuracies and distortion in the data collection process» for the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health (MoH) which has resulted in a «misleading picture of the conflict.» The study also analyzed how journalists worldwide have spread misleading MoH data without noting its shortcomings or offering alternative information from Israeli sources.

The report’s author, Andrew Fox, a fellow at HJS said his team’s research is based on lists of casualty figures that the MoH has released through Telegram as well as lists released by the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Fox said he and his team have been able to examine segments of the reporting, despite changeable MoH data being «really hard to interrogate.» 

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On Tuesday, Gaza health authorities updated its number of dead to what it said was more than 45,000.

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A man walks past shelter tents erected near collapsed buildings in the Bureij camp for Palestinian refugees in the central Gaza Strip on Oct. 1, 2024. (Eyad Baba/AFP via Getty Images)

The report said the ministry’s reporting long indicated that women and children made up more than half of the war dead, leading to accusations that Israel intentionally kills civilians in Gaza.

«If Israel was killing indiscriminately, you would expect deaths to roughly match the demographic proportions pre-war,» Fox said. At the time, adult men made up around 26% of the Gazan population. «The number of adult males that have died is vastly in excess of 26%,» he said.

Within accessible reporting, Fox and his team also found instances of casualty entries being recorded improperly, «artificially increas[ing] the numbers of women and children who are reported as killed.» This has included people with male names being listed as females, and grown adults being recorded as young children.

A Palestinian fighter from the armed wing of Hamas takes part in a military parade

A terrorist from Hamas takes part in a military parade. (Reuters/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/File Photo)

Analyzing data by category has further highlighted biases within reporting. There are three kinds of entries within MoH’s casualty figures: entries collected by hospitals prior to the breakdown of networks in November 2023, entries submitted by family members of the deceased, and entries collected through «media sources,» whose veracity researchers like Dr. David Adesnik, vice president of research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, has previously questioned. 

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Analysis of gender breakdowns among these groupings shows that hospital records «are distorted,» with a higher percentage of women and children among hospital-reported casualties than in those reported by family members.

UN ACCUSED OF DOWNPLAYING HAMAS TERRORISTS’ USE OF GAZA HOSPITALS AS NEW REPORT IGNORES IMPORTANT DETAILS

Hospital patients evacuated

Kamal Adwan hospital’s health team evacuate Palestinian patients after Israeli airstrikes damaged the hospital in Gaza Strip on May 21, 2024. (Karam Hassan/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Though around 5,000 natural deaths typically occur in Gaza each year, the study found that MoH casualty figures do not account for natural deaths. It claims that it also fails to exclude deaths unassociated with Israeli military action from its count. This includes individuals believed to have been killed by Hamas, like 13-year-old Ahmed Shaddad Halmy Brikeh, who appears on a casualty list from August despite reports indicating he had «been shot dead by Hamas» while trying to get food from an aid shipment in December 2023. The list also excludes individuals killed by Hamas’ rockets, about 1,750 of which «fell short within the Gaza strip» between October 2023 and July 2024.

Fox and his team also found individuals who died before the conflict began had been added to MoH casualty counts. In addition, at least three cancer patients whose names were included in lists to leave the Gaza Strip for treatment in April had been listed as dead during the month of March.

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Al Shifa Hospital

Ambulances carrying victims of Israeli strikes crowd the entrance to the emergency ward of the Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City on Oct. 15, 2023. (Dawood Nemer/AFP via Getty Images)

The ministry does not separate combatants and civilians in its casualty figures. Though the study states that Israeli forces have killed around 17,000 Hamas terrorists, Fox said that his research indicated the death toll may include as many as 22,000 members of Hamas. He said his research supports the fact that around 15,000 of the dead in Gaza are women and children, and 7,500 are non-combatant adult males.

«Collecting these sorts of lists in a war zone is a hugely challenging thing,» Fox admitted, but he stated that the MoH’s mistakes, whether innocent or deliberate, show that the institution is «really unreliable.» 

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Despite this unreliability, the Henry Jackson Society’s survey of reporting of the conflict found that 98% of media organizations it looked at utilized fatality data from MoH versus 5% who cited Israeli figures. Fox found that «fewer than one in every 50 articles [about the conflict] mentioned that the figures provided by the MoH were unverifiable or controversial,» though «Israeli statistics had their credibility questioned in half of the few articles that incorporated them.» 

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Plume of smoke

Smoke rises near the al-Wafa hospital from Israeli airstrike in Gaza City on Oct. 24, 2023. (Ali Jadallah/Anadolu via Getty Images)

As an illustration of the phenomenon witnessed in the survey, Fox pointed out what he called an «incredibly biased» article from a British broadcaster that recently emerged citing MoH data claiming that there have been more than 45,000 deaths in Gaza. Though its report mentions MoH data, it does not break down the numbers of combatants and civilians, and does not mention the questionable veracity of MoH reporting. Instead, it parrots MoH claims, reporting that women and children make up for over half of the fatalities.

«It’s just a great example of everything we’ve written in the report,» Fox said.


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