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Netanyahu visits missing Israeli’s family

Published: 11 Jul 2015 - 12:38 am | Last Updated: 12 Jan 2022 - 12:11 pm

Jerusalem: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday visited relatives of a citizen reportedly held captive by Hamas after a top aide apologised for telling them he would suffer if they went public.
Avraham Mengistu is one of two Israelis whose suspected detention in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip was revealed on Thursday after a gag order was lifted.
The defence ministry confirmed that Mengistu, of Ethiopian descent, was missing, presumed held captive, since crossing into the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip last September.
The lifting of a 10-month gag order allowed private Channel 10 television to air audio of Lior Lotan — coordinator of prisoner of war and missing in action affairs in Netanyahu’s office —haranguing Mengistu’s family.
“He has apologised for both the tone and content of the conversation,” an official said.
Netanyahu’s office said the premier had an hour-long meeting with the family at their Ashkelon home.
“We are doing everything in our ability to return Avra to Israel, just as we are in contact with the family of the other Israeli citizen in order to bring him back to Israel as well,” Netanyahu said afterwards.
Israel does not allow its citizens to enter Gaza, partly over fears that they may be used as bargaining chips to demand concessions including the release of prisoners.
Israel strove to keep the pair’s plight secret to the extent that then foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman and members of the parliamentary defence and foreign affairs committee said they had been kept totally unaware.
Parliament admitted a failure in its intelligence oversight subcommittee.
“In this case it appears that there was a specific failure. We shall study the case and ensure that it is not repeated,” it said late on Thursday.
The second Israeli believed held captive in Gaza is an Arab, about whom details are still under court-imposed restrictions.
Mengistu belongs to Israel’s 135,000-strong ethnic Ethiopian community which says it suffers from racism and discrimination.
Members have staged several rallies against alleged police brutality and racism in recent months, some of which turned violent.
AFP