Israel

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Omer Wenkert, a freed hostage, described the brutal conditions he endured during his time in Hamas terrorist captivity, stating that his treatment worsened significantly after Israel launched its offensive on Rafah in May 2024.

“They intentionally starved me,” he told attendees at the Israel Bar Association conference, explaining that for two to three weeks he survived on just half a pita a day.

Wenkert said the abuse became more deliberate and life-threatening near the time of the Rafah operation. “Around the entry to Rafah, [there was] intentional starvation, and intentional abuse,” he stated. “They did things that seriously endangered my life, for fun.”

“One of them brought insect repellent, stood me up at the end of the corridor, and sprayed me in the face, with my eyes open,” Wenkert recounted. He added that the same captor sprayed any object he might touch and also beat him with an iron rod.

He revealed he was isolated for six and a half months, during which his captors interacted with him only occasionally.

Wenkert was eventually relocated to a different section of Hamas’s tunnel system around his 80th day in captivity. He described the new space as “a dark room with a little lamp.”

“They tried to drive me crazy — to damage my sense of time,” he said. “When they put down food for me, they told me to turn around, so they could leave. Bathing was once in 50 days, with a little bottle. Only after nine and a half months did I bathe for real.”

He recalled that the tunnel where he spent most of his time measured roughly 90 centimeters (35 inches) in width and 9–10 meters (29–32 feet) in length. A small hole served as a toilet. “I was on a small mattress, with my back against the wall. I was there for 420 days, I think,” he said.

On June 13, 2024, Wenkert was joined by two other hostages, Evyatar David and Guy Gilboa-Dalal, in the same tunnel corridor. Both men remain in Hamas custody after 597 days since their abduction on October 7, 2023.

“My mental situation settled down [with their arrival], but it became more crowded; we split food and water, the physical conditions worsened — but the abuse stopped,” Wenkert shared.

He was released on February 22, 2025, after 505 days in captivity as part of a temporary ceasefire and hostage-prisoner exchange deal between Israel and Hamas, which later collapsed after its first phase.