Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas asked Hamas on Wednesday to release the remaining Israeli hostages. “Our people pay the price, not Israel (…),” he said. With the hostages, Hamas Israel only offers an excuse to “commit his crimes in the Gaza Strip”.
Abbas also asked the radical Islamic organization to transfer weapons to the Palestinian authority. She would rather do without becoming the armed fight and becoming a political party. According to the Palestinian information, more than 1,600 people have been killed since it broken -the fire on March 18. The Hamas initially did not comment on the statements.
On Wednesday she released a video of a kidnapped Israelian. “Our Omri is strong and will not break, but our hearts are broken,” said the 48-year-old family. She did not agree to spread the recordings. “On the eve of the Holocaust Memorial Day, to which we never ‘never’ say, an Israeli citizen from the Tunnels of Hamas calls for help. It is a moral failure for the state of Israel,” said a message from the forum of the hostages.
Here you can see the message from the forum:
According to the family, the two little daughters of the man “all my heart” wait to put their father back in their arms. The man was shown in a video from Hamas about a year ago. According to Israeli information, 24 hostages and 35 corpses of abductible are still caught in the Gaza Strip.
Conflicts between Fatah and Hamas
Abbas has been president of the authority and a leading politician of the Fatah party since 2005. In 2007 the conflicts between Fatah and Hamas openly opened. After Hamas won the 2006 parliamentary elections in the Gaza Strip, she designed the Fatah there after a short civil war and took over full control over the area. The moisture is still the determining force in the Israeli West Bank.
Source: Krone

I am Ida Scott, a journalist and content author with a passion for uncovering the truth. I have been writing professionally for Today Times Live since 2020 and specialize in political news. My career began when I was just 17; I had already developed a knack for research and an eye for detail which made me stand out from my peers.