this post was submitted on 02 Aug 2025
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The family of Evyatar David, an Israeli held hostage in Gaza, saw him for the first time in months on Friday evening in a video circulated by his Hamas captors. He was emaciated and sallow in what appeared to be an underground tunnel.

Mr. David, 24, was abducted in one of the deadliest scenes of Oct. 7. at the Nova rave in southern Israel, where more than 350 people were killed. His family said in a statement that he had become a “living skeleton, buried alive” in Hamas tunnels.

Before the latest video, he was last seen in a video released by Hamas in March, in which militants filmed him watching from a distance while other Israeli hostages were freed during a two-month truce. Human rights experts say the videos — taken under extreme duress — could constitute a war crime.

“Our brothers are turning into skin and bones at this very moment,” Einav Zangauker, whose son Matan was one of about 250 people taken hostage during the Hamas assault, said at a rally on Saturday. His son is believed to still be alive.

“We tried everything — military pressure, displacing people, blocking food, conquering areas, eliminating Hamas commanders — none of that brought all of the hostages back,” Ms. Zangauker said. “The one thing we haven’t tried is a comprehensive agreement in exchange for ending the war.”

On Saturday, President Trump’s Middle East envoy, Steve Witkoff, met with the families of Israeli hostages in Tel Aviv. He reiterated Mr. Trump’s commitment to bringing home the remaining captives and said, “those who are alive must be kept alive,” according to the Hostage Families Forum, an advocacy group.

Mass hunger has spread through Gaza as Israel limits the amount of humanitarian aid going in and desperation breeds chaos around most of what does get through. More than one in three of Gaza’s two million people are not eating for multiple consecutive days, according to the World Food Program.

Israel is pressing ahead with its military campaign in Gaza, where more than 60,000 people have been killed since the war began, including thousands of children, according to Palestinian health officials, who do not distinguish between civilians and combatants.

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