Eight Hungarian Citizens Leave Gaza Strip

  • 3 Nov 2023 6:03 AM
  • Hungary Matters
Eight Hungarian Citizens Leave Gaza Strip
Of the fifteen Hungarian citizens in the Gaza Strip, eight have been able to leave the area, and contacts with the remaining seven persons will be maintained in order to evacuate them as soon as possible, the foreign minister said in Astana.

According to a statement issued by his ministry, Szijjártó said the armed conflict in Israel had put many Hungarians in danger, more than 550 people managed to escape from the country, but 15 people with Hungarian citizenship were stranded in Gaza, along with around 7,000 other foreigners.

“We tried to move every stone in order to evacuate them, but as you could see, no one had had the opportunity in recent weeks to leave the Gaza Strip for Egypt at the Rafah border crossing,” he said.

Szijjártó said the fifteen people basically comprised three families and including five Palestinian relatives, there were twenty people who were informed without delay when a possibility opened to leave the area.

“Two of the three families accepted the security challenges, which entailed having to travel a relatively long distance within the Gaza Strip in order to reach the border crossing. One family did not accept this,” he said.

“The two families, with a total of eight Hungarian citizens and two Palestinian family members, crossed the border at Rafah a few hours ago so they are all in Egypt now,” he said.

“Once again, I would like to express my gratitude to the Egyptian and Israeli foreign ministers for helping us … bring the Hungarian citizens out of the Gaza Strip,” Szijjártó said.

Szijjártó: Gov’t Unaware of Hungarian Fatalities in Israel

Hungary’s government remains unaware of any Hungarian citizens having died in Israel, and reports of Hungarian fatalities in the Middle Eastern country have proven to be untrue, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said.

The government knows of five hostages with Hungarian citizenship in Gaza, having been notified recently of another adult hostage, Szijjártó said, according to a ministry statement.

He said certain media outlets had blamed the government for having been unaware of the hostages until recently. Szijjártó called for “a minimal degree of fairness”, pointing out that the Hungarian authorities could only be made aware of the hostages if they are notified by the Israeli authorities or relatives.

There had been several cases, he said, of entire families being abducted, with no one left to alert the government, until their more distant relatives realised that they had been taken hostage.

“But there are also regrettable cases where the entire family of the individual taken hostage died,” he added. “So to expect us, in a situation like this, to be aware of someone having been taken hostage before they notify us, is unfair on the part of certain media outlets, to put it mildly,” Szijjártó said.

When lives are in danger, “attempts at such petty political gains, I think, can be considered unworthy, even at this level”, the minister said.

The government is in constant contact with the Israeli task force set up to free the hostages, he said, adding that all five Hungarian citizens were included on the list of people the Israeli authorities were trying to free.

Szijjártó said he had consulted last Friday with the foreign minister of a third country acting as a mediator between Israel and Hamas and working to have the hostages freed as soon as possible. “They are also aware of all five Hungarians now,” he added. The minister said his counterpart had promised to pay attention to the Hungarian hostages.

Meanwhile, Szijjártó noted that the government knows of 15 Hungarian citizens stranded in the Gaza Strip who are unable to leave the area for the time being.

The government is in constant contact with them, he said, adding however that this was becoming increasingly difficult because of power and internet connection cut-outs. “We last spoke to all of them yesterday, and they were doing fine.

 That’s the last update we have on them,” he said. The minister noted that at one point, the Hungarian nationals had managed to pass through two of the three checkpoints towards Egypt, before having to be turned back because of nearby airstrikes.

He also noted that he had spoken with his Egyptian counterpart last week, who had told him that the Hungarians would be allowed to enter the country once the security and legal conditions permitted this.

Related links

Four Hungarian Hostages In Gaza - Hungary Issues Warning on Middle East Situation

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