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Israel says Hamas is starving hostages; Security Council members say Israel is starving Palestinians

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Israel says Hamas is starving hostages; Security Council members say Israel is starving Palestinians
News

News

Israel says Hamas is starving hostages; Security Council members say Israel is starving Palestinians

2025-08-06 09:42 Last Updated At:10:00

Israel called an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday to demand the release of its emaciated hostages, including one seen digging his own grave. Their plight drew widespread sympathy — but the 2 million Palestinians starving in Gaza got even more.

Not only the Palestinians but most council members blamed the Israeli government and military for the two-month blockade of Gaza and failure to allow enough food into the conflict-wracked territory, where its health ministry has reported over 100 deaths from starvation, including many children.

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar, who flew to New York to attend the council meeting, accused Russia and other unnamed council members as well as the international media of perpetuating “so many lies.” He pointed to Hamas and Islamic Jihad’s starvation of hostages taken during the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks in southern Israel “while the terrorists enjoy meat, fish and vegetables."

Saar insisted that Israel is facilitating “huge amounts of aid into Gaza,” accusing Hamas of looting the food and other items and using it as “a financial tool” to sell and make money. U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric has said there is no evidence of this.

Israel’s top diplomat also accused the Palestinians of inventing terrorism, and Hamas of wanting to continue the war against Israel instead of reaching a ceasefire.

“The world has been turned upside down while Hamas runs its propaganda machine,” Saar said. It’s “a world in which Israel is put on a bench of the accused while it fights for its survival. There is a name for it. It’s called antisemitism.”

Itay David, the older brother of emaciated hostage Evyatar David, who was pictured over the weekend in a Gaza tunnel saying he was digging his own grave, urged the Security Council: “Do not let them die. We don’t have time. Do not let them spend another minute in darkness.”

Calling his brother “a living skeleton,” Itay urged the 15 council members in a video briefing to get humanitarian aid to the hostages, saying they are being broken psychologically and physically by Hamas and denied “the most basic necessities of life.”

British U.N. Ambassador Barbara Woodward reiterated the country’s support for the immediate release of all hostages and condemned parading them for propaganda purposes as a “depraved" act. “Hamas and its terrorist ideologies can have no place in the future governance of Gaza and should never again threaten Israel’s security,” she said.

Woodward recalled the hopeful ceasefire earlier this year when hostages were released and the U.N. was able to send large amounts of aid into Gaza. “Since the ceasefire ended, the suffering of the hostages and Palestinian civilians has plumbed to new and shocking depths,” she said. “Israel’s aid restrictions have led to famine now unfolding in Gaza,” as reported by international experts who monitor famine globally.

Woodward said she spoke to doctors last week who had served in Gaza. “They had seen children so malnourished that their wounds festered for months without healing,” she said, and saw baby formula confiscated by the Israeli military.

“I call on Israel now to act to alleviate the horrendous suffering,” she said.

Sierra Leone’s U.N. ambassador, Michael Imran Kanu, commended Itay David’s advocacy for his brother and the hostages, condemned their “inhumane treatment,” and said Hamas’ hostage-taking is a war crime that must be prosecuted. But, said Kanu, “One atrocity cannot justify another.”

“While we express deep concern for the hostages, we cannot ignore the wider humanitarian catastrophe that has engulfed Gaza,” he said. “The people of Gaza have been subjected to a blockade and siege that deprived them of food, water, fuel and medical supplies,” which could also constitute a war crime.

Acting U.S. Ambassador Dorothy Shea said President Donald Trump has recognized “real starvation” in Gaza and the United States is working to get assistance to civilians. She urged “those who have professed concern about the reported risk of famine” to support the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, an Israeli-backed American contractor, which she said reported delivering more than 1.5 million meals on Sunday. Hundreds of Palestinians have been killed trying to get to its four food distribution sites.

Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian U.N. ambassador, acknowledged “the distressing, unacceptable video” of 24-year-old Evyatar David, saying “We reject all inhumane and degrading treatment against anyone, especially persons held in captivity.”

But in a strong rebuke, he said, “Israel is demanding the world to take a stance against starvation when it is actually starving an entire civilian population, when it is shooting at them while they seek water and food.”

This image from an undated video released on August 1, 2025, by the armed wing of the Palestinian militant group Hamas, shows Israeli hostage Evyatar David marking a food log on a calendar inside the Gaza tunnel where he is being held. David was abducted during the Hamas attack on October 7, 2023. Top left reads in Arabic " The military media - Hamas." (Hamas via AP)

This image from an undated video released on August 1, 2025, by the armed wing of the Palestinian militant group Hamas, shows Israeli hostage Evyatar David marking a food log on a calendar inside the Gaza tunnel where he is being held. David was abducted during the Hamas attack on October 7, 2023. Top left reads in Arabic " The military media - Hamas." (Hamas via AP)

This screengrab from an undated video, released on July 31, 2025, by the Islamic Jihad militant group, shows Israeli hostage Rom Braslavsky while being filmed by his captors at an undisclosed location in the Gaza Strip. Braslavsky was abducted during the Hamas-led attack on October 7, 2023. Bottom left reads in Arabic "Al-Quds Brigades, war media."(Islamic Jihad via AP)

This screengrab from an undated video, released on July 31, 2025, by the Islamic Jihad militant group, shows Israeli hostage Rom Braslavsky while being filmed by his captors at an undisclosed location in the Gaza Strip. Braslavsky was abducted during the Hamas-led attack on October 7, 2023. Bottom left reads in Arabic "Al-Quds Brigades, war media."(Islamic Jihad via AP)

LONDON (AP) — Laws that will make it illegal to create online sexual images of someone without their consent are coming into force soon in the U.K., officials said Thursday, following a global backlash over the use of Elon Musk's artificial intelligence chatbot Grok to make sexualized deepfakes of women and children.

Musk's company, xAI, announced late Wednesday that it has introduced measures to prevent Grok from allowing the editing of photos of real people to portray them in revealing clothing in places where that is illegal.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer welcomed the move, and said X must “immediately” ensure full compliance with U.K. law. He stressed that his government will remain vigilant on any transgressions by Grok and its users.

“Free speech is not the freedom to violate consent," Starmer said Thursday. “I am glad that action has now been taken. But we’re not going to let this go. We will continue because this is a values argument.”

The chatbot, developed by Musk's company xAI and freely accessed through his social media platform X, has faced global scrutiny after it emerged that it was used in recent weeks to generate thousands of images that “undress” people without their consent. The digitally-altered pictures included nude images as well as depictions of women and children in bikinis or in sexually explicit poses.

Critics have said laws regulating generative AI tools are long overdue, and that the U.K. legal changes should have been brought into force much sooner.

A look at the problem and how the U.K. aims to tackle it:

Britain's media regulator has launched an investigation into whether X has breached U.K. laws over the Grok-generated images of children being sexualized or people being undressed. The watchdog, Ofcom, said such images — and similar productions made by other AI models — may amount to pornography or child sexual abuse material.

The problem stemmed from the launch last year of Grok Imagine, an AI image generator that allows users to create videos and pictures by typing in text prompts. It includes a so-called “spicy mode” that can generate adult content.

Technology Secretary Liz Kendall cited a report from the internet Watch Foundation saying the deepfake images included sexualization of 11-year-olds and women subjected to physical abuse.

“The content which has circulated on X is vile. It is not just an affront to decent society, it is illegal,” she said.

Authorities said they are making legal changes to criminalize those who use or supply “nudification” tools.

First, the government says it is fast-tracking provisions in the Data (Use and Access) Act making it a criminal offense to create or request deepfake images. The act was passed by Parliament last year, but had not yet been brought into force.

The legislation is set to come into effect on Feb. 6

“Let this be a clear message to every cowardly perpetrator hiding behind a screen: you will be stopped and when you are, make no mistake that you will face the full force of the law,” Justice Secretary David Lammy said

Separately, the government said it is also criminalizing “nudification” apps as part of the Crime and Policing Bill, which is currently going through Parliament.

The new criminal offense will make it illegal for companies to supply tools designed to create non-consensual intimate images. Kendall said this would “target the problem at its source.”

The investigation by Ofcom is ongoing. Kendall said X could face a fine of up to 10% of its qualifying global revenue depending on the investigation’s outcome and a possible court order blocking access to the site.

Starmer has faced calls for his government to stop using X. Downing Street said this week it was keeping its presence on the platform “under review."

Musk insisted Grok complied with the law. “When asked to generate images, it will refuse to produce anything illegal, as the operating principle for Grok is to obey the laws of any given country or state,” he posted on X. “There may be times when adversarial hacking of Grok prompts does something unexpected. If that happens, we fix the bug immediately.”

FILE - Workers install lighting on an "X" sign atop the company headquarters, formerly known as Twitter, in downtown San Francisco, July 28, 2023. (AP Photo/Noah Berger, File)

FILE - Workers install lighting on an "X" sign atop the company headquarters, formerly known as Twitter, in downtown San Francisco, July 28, 2023. (AP Photo/Noah Berger, File)

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