INTERNACIONAL
UN official denies seeing ‘a shred of evidence’ showing staff in Gaza held hostages
The United Nations’ top humanitarian aid official told Fox News Digital he has «not seen a shred of evidence» of the U.N.’s involvement, either through the use of its facilities or its staff, in the holding of hostages in Gaza.
When asked about former Hamas hostages’ claims that they were held in U.N. facilities or by U.N. staff, Tom Fletcher, under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator, Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), denied seeing any evidence of the claims.
«I have not seen a shred of evidence so far, and I have asked for it, that suggests that U.N. – that there was any U.N. acquiescence in there or involvement in using U.N. buildings or U.N. staff being involved in holding those hostages,» Fletcher said during a news conference.
The U.N.’s Tom Fletcher attends a press conference in Geneva, Switzerland, Dec. 3, 2024. (Reuters/Denis Balibouse)
NETANYAHU SLAMS ‘TERRORIST-SUPPORTING’ UN COUNCIL THAT ACCUSED ISRAEL OF COMMITTING SEXUAL CRIMES
He also said that «if we get evidence of a U.N. worker involved in an act of terrorism or hostage-taking, yes of course we’re going to investigate.» Fletcher offered to lead the investigation himself.
Emily Damari, a former Hamas hostage who was released in the most recent ceasefire deal, alleged she was held at a United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) facility while in captivity. Damari, who holds British and Israeli citizenships, told British Prime Minister Keir Starmer that she was denied proper medical care while being held at an UNRWA school.
Fletcher said the facility was «a shelter that had been used by the U.N. before we were bombed out of it by the Israelis.» He acknowledged that Hamas may have then used the facility, but said it was when the U.N. was not «there to stop them from doing that.»
Emily Damari and her mother Mandy are seen near kibbutz Reim, southern Israel, after Emily was released from captivity by Hamas terrorists in Gaza, on Jan. 19. (AP/Israeli Army)
DAYS BEFORE TRUMP HALTED FUNDING, AN EX-ISRAELI HOSTAGE WAS HELD AT UNRWA SCHOOL IN GAZA, SHE REVEALS
In a statement to Fox News Digital, Israeli U.N. Ambassador Danny Danon called on the U.N. to investigate «these very serious claims.»
«We believe the testimonies of the Israeli hostages who went through hell in Hamas captivity. Rather than dedicating ample resources and efforts to demonizing Israel, the U.N. should be thoroughly investigating these very serious claims about U.N. complicity in depraved Hamas terrorism,» Danon said in the statement.
Anne Bayefsky, director of the Touro Institute on Human Rights and the Holocaust and president of Human Rights Voices, slammed the U.N. over its «singular pattern of behavior when confronted with the truth about UNRWA and the involvement of U.N. actors in terrorism against Jews: deny, deflect and carry on.»
«Israel has presented mountains of evidence of UNRWA’s participation in the Oct. 7 atrocities, and its ongoing attempts to save Hamas – which the U.N. denies is a terrorist organization,» Bayefsky added. «The ‘see no evil, hear no evil response’ – again – in the face of this gut-wrenching information from a hostage is quite simply, despicable.»
Israeli and U.N. flags outside the United Nations headquarters in New York.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
Bayefsky said that «as far as the U.N. misinformation machine is concerned, the evidence is never enough.»
While Fletcher says he has not seen «a shred of evidence,» the U.N. Office of Oversight Services (OIOS), which reviewed Israel’s claims, said, «UNRWA staff members may have been involved in the 7 October attacks.»
The OIOS examined evidence of U.N. workers’ involvement in the attacks and found there was «insufficient» evidence of nine workers taking part in the massacre. However, it did not completely discount the possibility. In fact, UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini issued a statement on the probe and determined that the employees in question «cannot work for UNRWA.»
Fox News reached out to a representative for Damari’s family, but did not receive a response to what Fletcher said.
INTERNACIONAL
Cómo un dron barato perforó el escudo de 40.000 toneladas de Chernóbil
Incidente
Informes
Sarcófago
INTERNACIONAL
His brother’s keeper: Ilay David warns his brother, Hamas hostage Evyatar, is running out of time
Evyatar David, a music lover who dreams of working in the industry, is languishing in a Hamas tunnel, according to his brother, Ilay David.
In a recent conversation with Fox News Digital, Ilay warned that his brother and all the hostages are running out of time.
«Every week we used to play music together. That’s what I miss the most,» Ilay told Fox News Digital. He has been fighting for Evyatar’s release since Oct. 7, 2023. Ilay described his brother as «the kindest soul I know.»
On Oct. 7, 2023, Evyatar was at the Nova music festival with three other friends when Hamas’ attacks began. Two of Evyatar’s friends did not survive the attacks, while he and his best friend, Guy Gilboa-Dalal, were taken hostage.
Hamas hostage Evyatar David, left, stands next to his brother, Ilay David, in a photo taken prior to his kidnapping. ( )
TRUMP’S DOJ CRACKS DOWN ON HAMAS WITH NEW TASK FORCE
Like many other hostage families, Evyatar’s family set up a website to tell the world who he is and why securing his freedom is so crucial. On the website, his family laments that his «vibrant life» was forever changed. There are also videos showcasing Evyatar’s guitar skills.
In February, the David family received a sign of life that Ilay described as being «shocking and amazing and frightening.» Evyatar and Guy were forced to participate in a Hamas propaganda film, a practice the terror group has employed throughout the war. In the video, the two men in their 20s appear frail and tired as they beg for their lives while being forced to watch a hostage release ceremony in Gaza.
«When it was finished, I could breathe,» Ilay told Fox News Digital as he recalled watching the film for the first time. «I saw them alive. I saw that they are together.»
Ilay’s relief washed away when he watched the video a second time.
«I saw how starved they are. They are half the men they used to be. And you could see in their eyes that they are exhausted, and they are begging for their lives,» Ilay told Fox News Digital. «They are broken, both of them, broken men.»
«They saw freedom, and they shut the door in their faces. And they threw them back into the tunnels. And that’s cruelty.»
Hamas hostage Evyatar David before his kidnapping. ( )
ISRAELI HOSTAGES’ FAMILIES SUE MAHMOUD KHALIL, COLUMBIA ORGANIZERS AS ALLEGED ‘HAMAS’ PROPAGANDA ARM’ IN NYC
Ilay’s concerns about his brother have only grown since former hostages who were held with Evyatar detailed the conditions in which they were held. He told Fox News Digital that the former hostages said the two men have been underground in the tunnels for most of their captivity and were only able to see sunlight when they were taken to the ceremony. As is the case with most hostages, Evyatar and Guy are given very little to eat and have limited access to water.
«But it’s only a matter of time until — I don’t know — one of the terrorists would just… be angry or upset. So, he will decide that he wants to execute, execute Evyatar or Guy. And I don’t want to think about it, but it happened already,» Ilay told Fox News Digital, likely referring to the six hostages who were shot dead in late August 2024, just before Israeli troops were able to reach them.
A poster with a photograph of Evyatar David, who is held hostage in Gaza, is placed on a table in front of Ilay David, his brother, during a House Foreign Affairs Committee roundtable discussion with family members of hostages held in Gaza, amid a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., Feb. 12, 2025. (REUTERS/Nathan Howard)
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
Ilay told Fox News Digital he has done everything possible to tell his brother’s story and to make him «visible,» including going to Washington, D.C., to meet with American lawmakers. He believes President Donald Trump has a «very big role» to play in securing the release of Evyatar and the remaining hostages.
«[Trump], no kidding, may be sent by God to save these people,» Ilay said. He cited the release of 33 hostages over the course of the ceasefire deal that only recently fell apart, and said that if it weren’t for Trump, those people would still be in Gaza.
Ilay told Fox News Digital that, in his eyes, the atrocities of Oct. 7 have not ended — they are still happening for the people held by Hamas in Gaza.
INTERNACIONAL
¿Por qué quiere Trump Groenlandia? Esto es lo que hay que saber
Groenlandia está en un territorio de gran importancia estratégica
Groenlandia podría ser una rica fuente de minerales de tierras raras y energía
El cambio climático podría convertir pronto a Groenlandia en una mercancía candente
-
POLITICA2 días ago
La desclasificación de archivos, una revisión que apunta a proclamar los ataques de la guerrilla como crímenes de lesa humanidad
-
POLITICA2 días ago
«El pueblo bonaerense sabe que son 30 mil», la respuesta de Axel Kicillof al spot oficial del Gobierno por el Día de la Memoria
-
POLITICA2 días ago
Victoria Villarruel dijo que el golpe de Estado de 1976 fue fogoneado por Montoneros y el ERP