Hamas won't release any more hostages until Gaza gets fuel, medicine
More than 200 hostages are being held two weeks after Hamas' surprise attack on Israel.
A Hamas official warned on Tuesday there would be no more hostage releases by the Islamist group unless medical supplies and fuel are allowed into the besieged Gaza Strip.
"For humanitarian reasons, we have released four (hostages) without conditions," Osama Hamdan, a Hamas politiburo member, and representative in Lebanon, told dpa.
"But if anyone seeks to have more releases, we have to insist that the international community exerts more pressure on Israel to open Rafah crossing to allow fuel and medical supplies to come inside Gaza," he added.
Hamdan, who is close to the hostage negotiations, stressed that it is a basic right of the Palestinian people to be allowed to have hospital treatment if they are subjected daily to Israeli air raids.
"The people in Gaza have the right to the minimum of humanitarian needs, which is to be able to be treated for the wounds Israel is inflicting on them” through airstrikes, he added.
"We need Israel to stop the raids on our people so we will be able to secure the release of people who were taken," Hamdan said.
At least 222 hostages were taken when attackers from the Islamist group, which controls Gaza, carried out a terrorist attack on Israeli communities on October 7. The attacks near the Gaza border killed over 1,400 people and left the country reeling in shock.
The subsequent Israeli air bombardment of Gaza has killed over 5,000 people, according to the Hamas-run Health Ministry there. These figures cannot be independently verified. Hamas is designated as a terrorist organisation by the U.S. and the European Union.
Since the attacks, the coastal Palestinian Territory, which has been ruled by Hamas since 2007, has been under a complete siege by Israel, with no food, water, or fuel entering the territory via Israel.
The only supplies reaching Gaza's population of some 2.2 million people are arriving via aid trucks through the Rafah border from Egypt.
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