Gazan activist recounts escape from ‘human slaughterhouse’ where he was tortured by Hamas: ‘I came out broken, hopeless’

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Leaving Hamas in power is “dangerous” for Israel and Gazans, said a young Palestinian from Gaza who narrowly escaped three days of torture in a “human slaughterhouse” at the hands of the terror group following his arrest on charges of spying for the Jewish state.

The 24-year-old from Gaza City told The Post he was left battered and bloodied following days of physical and psychological torture that included interrogators hanging him, flogging his entire body with iron ropes, beating his feet with hammers and using his own phone as a weapon against him.

A young Palestinian from Gaza told The Post of being tortured for days in a “human slaughterhouse” by Hamas. The man asked for anonymity out of fear of retribution by the terrorist group.

“Because I didn’t confess to anything the way they wanted .. they smashed my phone over my head,” said the man, who was left with several fractured bones and asked that The Post not reveal his name for fear of retaliation against him and his family. “[They] accused me of inciting systematic campaigns against Hamas” in addition to receiving aid from Mossad and collaborating with Egypt, Jordan and the rival Palestinian Authority.

Last Monday, he was filming protests in Central Gaza exposing dissent against Hamas when four militants captured him. They forced him into a white Jeep and drove him to a grim prison compound.

While jailed, the dissenter thought he would be killed one way or another. 

“They were armed and they threatened me many times,” he recalled to The Post through a translator from the Center for Peace Communications.

He constantly feared being shot in the feet or legs, a common practice in Hamas’s torture playbook.

“This is what they do with those who oppose them — shoot them on feet and legs to paralyze them forever,” said the man, who was only released after militants failed to get a confession out of him. “I came out broken, hopeless, scared, and hungry. Even now, I still feel fear.”

The man said he was captured by Hamas militants and forced into a white Jeep. AP

This past Monday, Israel officials announced that unless Hamas releases the hostages, it will move forward with the next phase of war with military plans to expand its Gaza invasion to ensure the full eradication of Hamas and the return of the 59 remaining hostages. The Jewish state has called up 10,000 reservists in what is expected to be a months-long campaign

The dissenter agrees with Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s plan.

“If Hamas returns to power, it will certainly launch another attack on Israel — a new October 7 — just as Netanyahu predicted,” he said. “Hamas survives on wars, and they cannot stop waging wars if Israel keeps them in Gaza.”

The man said that if Hamas returns to power it will launch another October 7-like attack on Israel. Here, Hamas weapons found by IDF troops are shown. IDF

Though he had never previously actively protested, the activist said he’s always resisted attempts at recruitment by Hamas, especially in the past few years while studying law and sharia at Egypt’s Al-Azhar university.

He reminisces about the life he had before 2005, when Israel unilaterally withdrew from Gaza. His father, then a “wealthy merchant” with clothing manufacturing factories, regularly conducted business with Israel.

But two years after Israel’s complete withdrawal, instead of a flourishing independent Palestine, Hamas rose to power and created an oppressive state. His father was strangled financially as the regime “disturbed” his factories.

This past Monday, Israel officials announced that unless Hamas releases the hostages, it will move forward with the next phase of war with military plans to expand its Gaza invasion to ensure the full eradication of Hamas and the return of the 59 remaining hostages. IDF

Just months before the attacks on October 7, his family was finally on the cusp of financial recovery thanks to the increased workflow between Israel and Gaza.

Now, the activist, who is single and lives at home with his parents, said he’s one “of many Gazans” who want to leave the de facto Palestinian state — and the threat of constant surveillance by Hamas.

He believes Trump’s relocation plan to have the roughly 1.8 million remaining Gazans rebuild elsewhere makes sense and says “everyone” is rooting for it.

The Gaza native said that he agrees with Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s plan. REUTERS

“We want Israel to occupy Gaza … Let us not see Gaza forever,” he said. “It’s a basic human right that neighboring countries should open their borders during a war” like they did with the Syrians, he noted. 

He added that Hamas steals aid as leverage to recruit youngsters.  

“Aid is only for families who send their kids to be recruited by Hamas,” he said resignedly.

He told The Post that Hamas often steals aid as leverage to recruit youngsters.  AFP via Getty Images
“All I want is to escape the prison of Gaza and tell the world the truth about Hamas,” the man said. AFP via Getty Images

Despite his brutal capture and torture, he said he won’t be intimidated by Hamas.

“I’m not going to stop protesting — Hamas cannot oppress us anymore,” he said. “All I want is to escape the prison of Gaza and tell the world the truth about Hamas.”

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