A British-Israel woman has organized a mortgage by Hamas, with a pledge to identify a Palestinian kingdom, “does not stand to the right of history”.
Emily Damry, who was released in January after organizing Hamas for more than 15 months, said the Prime Minister of the UK said “Risks for Awarding Terror”.
Sir Kir announced on Tuesday that Britain would recognize a Palestinian kingdom in September until Israel fulfills certain conditions, including a ceasefire review and reviving the possibility of a two-state solution.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that Britain’s attitude rewarded “demonic terrorism of Hamas”.
Gaza is one of the increasing number of UK countries to worry about situations, where un-assured experts said that a famine landscape is currently playing out.
At a news conference held after an emergency cabinet meeting on Tuesday, Sir Kir said that he was announcing the plan due to “unbearable situation” in Gaza and worries that “a two-state solution is decreasing greatly”.
He said that his “primary objective” was to improve the situation on the ground in Gaza, but he also said that Hamas would immediately have to release all the hostages, signed a ceasefire, dismiss and accept that he would not play any role in Gaza’s government.
Ms. Damari, whose mother Mandy is originally from South London, was shot in the leg and hand, when she was dragged from her home on 7 October 2023 at Kibutz Kefer Az. Hamas also shot and killed his dog.
He was taken from his house safe room with his friends Ziv and Galley Burman.
The 27 -year -old twins are still being organized by Hamas and Ms. Damry said that she is doing all that she can achieve them and other 50 hostages – not all of them – back to her families in Israel.
In a post on social media, he wrote: “Prime Minister stormers are not standing on the right side of history. Was he in power during World War II, would he have advocated recognition for Nazi control of occupied countries like Holland, France or Poland?”
He later posted: “This step does not carry peace forward – it takes the risk of rewarding terror. It sends a dangerous message: that violence earns legitimacy. A state unit is legalized by legitimizing while Hamas still controls Gaza and continues his campaign of terror, the Prime Minister is not promoting a solution;
“Under these conditions recognition embraces extremists and reduces any hope for real peace. You are ashamed!”
His post followed a statement of lawyers who represented British families with relatives, who were, or still hostage, expressing their concerns about the Prime Minister’s statement.
He said: “We are worried that Britain’s proposal delayed the release of hostage.
“This is because the UK has said that it will recognize a Palestinian kingdom until Israel agrees to a ceasefire. But the risk is that Hamas will continue to deny a ceasefire because if it agrees with one, it will reduce the possibility of UK’s recognition.
“Family is deeply concerned because the UK’s approach is at risk of disintegrating Hamas from issuing hostages. This risk exactly that the Prime Minister’s statement says that Britain will not do: Award Hamas for his heinous and illegal acts.
“British hostage families do not take any situation on broad politics. Their concern is to bring their loved ones home, and time is running fast.
“Therefore they motivate the Prime Minister to give clarity and confirm, that Hamas will not be rewarded and that the UK will not take any concrete steps until all the hostages become independent.”
Steve Brisley’s British-Israeli sister and niece, Lian, Nohia and Yahel Sharabi were assassinated on 7 October.
His brother -in -law Eli Sharabi was released earlier this year as a hostage, which looked weak and weak. The body of Ellie’s brother is still hostage by Hamas.
Talking to Wales, Mr. Brisli said that he was “disappointed” with the Prime Minister’s statement and there should be no recognition of the Palestinian kingdom until the hostages are released.
“My concern about the statement is that it potentially encourages Hamas to continue to catch those hostages, just waiting until September, until a Palestinian state is recognized by the UK.
“There is a time limit for what is expected from Israel, but there is no equal time frame for what is expected from Hamas.”
He said: “I think we need clarity that the release of hostages will end it.”
Israel laid down a total blockade on assistance and commercial delivery to Gaza in early March and resumed his military aggressive against Hamas two weeks later, the two -month ceasefire collapsed.
It said that he wanted to pressurize Hamas to leave his Israeli hostages.
After the Israeli government came under pressure from its colleagues, the blockade was partially reduced after 11 weeks, but the lack of food, medicine and fuel has deteriorated.
While an alert issued by the Integrated Food Safety Phase Classification (IPC) formally reduced Gaza from being in famine, it said that the latest data indicated that “Most of the Gaza strips in Gaza city and famine threshold for food consumption for rapid malnutrition”.
United Nations agencies blame the crisis on Israel, which controls the region and the US and the Israeli-supported help group (Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, or GHF) all control the entry of all supply, which has distributed assistance since the end of May.
Foreign Secretary David Lami told the BBC that the world saw the “most frightening scene” in Gaza and the time came to end the pain of the Palestinian people “.
Speaking at the United Nations in New York, she told Tom Betman of BBC that Tuesday’s announcement “puts us on a route for recognition”.
He said: “It is my honest hope that the decision we have taken today affects the situation on the ground, and we reach for that ceasefire, we meet those hostages to come out as soon as possible.”