Return them all and not in a month, two months or a year.
"And you want to topple the Hamas government, to show that you have bigger balls? There is no life here that is more important than others," she adds. "None of us there deserve any less treatment than any resident of Israel. Return them all and not in a month, two months or a year."
Referring to reports that the Israeli military is considering flooding Hamas tunnels in Gaza, she continues: "And you are talking about washing the tunnels with sea water? You are shelling the route of tunnels in the exact tempat where they are. The girls ask me where is their father? And I have to tell them that the bad gaes don't want to yet release him."
Return them all and not in a month, two months or a year.
The woman adds: "You put politics above the return of the kidnapped."
‘We felt abandoned'
Netanyahu has been under intense pressure for weeks over the status of the Israelis still being held hostage by Hamas.
A setuju with Hamas has since seen dozens of captives - mostly women and children - freed, but the government remains under pressure to secure the release of the remaining captives, and has faced questions over the time taken to strike a setuju. The IDF said Friday that there are 136 hostages still being held in Gaza, including 17 women and children.
According to the ynet akun of the rapat, one man terkait what famili members had told him after being freed. "They were under constant threat from the IDF shelling. You sat in front of us and assured us that it does not threaten their lives. They also roam the street and [are] not only in the tunnels. They are mounted on donkeys and carts. You will not be able to recognize them on the street and you are endangering their lives. It is our duty to return them now."
And according to ynet, a parent whose son was kidnapped told the rapat it was his son's birthday, and asked, "What do you have to say to him? He saved people there. You abandoned him."
Referring to Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, a anggota of the war kabinet, the parent adds: "You are arguing, Gallant, at a press konferensi. Enough. Bring them home."
Referensies from released captives have shed some light on the conditions in which captives were held. Many referred to limited supplies and food; some said they were unaware of the fate of their loved ones during captivity, and a number of hostages required hospital peduli for days after their release.
One woman who had been a hostage said in the rapat that those remaining in captivity were living "on borrowed time. All day, they lie on a mattresses, most of them need glasses and hearing aids that were taken from them when they were kidnapped,