Horrific videos show Palestinians having their legs broken with iron bars and being kneecapped by Hamas enforcers as terror group tightens its grip on Gaza

Horrifying videos have emerged in Gaza showing Palestinians having their legs broken with iron bars and their knees being broken by Hamas enforcers.
In the images shared by the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs on the X channel, Israel claimed that ‘Hamas was brutalizing Palestinian civilians in order to regain control’ and called for the demilitarization of Gaza.
A disturbing video shows two men being brutally beaten after being dragged across the ground by what Israel alleges were masked Hamas militants.
They can be seen crying in pain as they hold their arms in front of their faces to protect themselves from being hit by the flying sticks.
A man who appears to have a black sack over his head is seen writhing on the ground in pain, with his hands tied behind his back with a rope, as the attackers forcefully break the bars on his kneecaps.
While he was writhing next to a vehicle on the dusty road, three men in black masks beat him repeatedly with sticks.
They drag him and throw him next to another civilian, who is also tied up, then beat them both and shoot them in the knees.
It is unclear whether any of the men suffered gunshot wounds, but a minute later one of the Hamas enforcers allegedly stepped on the head of one of the captives, burying his face in the ground.
Footage shared by the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs shows a shirtless man being dragged on the ground by what Israel claims are two Hamas officials.
An alleged Palestinian civilian is seen writing on the ground in pain as he is beaten by two masked men while his hands are tied behind his back.
A young civilian is seen crying in pain as he is beaten with iron rods by masked men.
In another clip, a shirtless man is seen being dragged face down in a crowd, then beaten by two masked men carrying bars.
The horrific images emerged just a week after disturbing images of scores of Palestinians being executed by Hamas went viral.
In the clip, which circulated on social media on October 14, a group of men can be seen kneeling on the ground with their hands behind their backs.
Armed militants, some wearing Hamas-style headbands, stand behind the victims, their faces covered, before gunshots are heard and seven kneeling men fall to the ground, apparently lifeless.
Cheering crowds shout ‘Allah Akbar’ or ‘Allah is great’ and brand the executed men ‘collaborators’ while filming the scenes on their phones.
A Hamas source confirmed the authenticity of the video.
Video of the execution, which emerged just days after the Trump-brokered peace deal came into force, sparked concern among observers.
The video was shared with the following title: ‘Hamas is taking advantage of the ceasefire with Israel to eliminate internal dissidents. Does anyone believe in this peace?’
The fragile ceasefire in Gaza is hanging by a thread after Israel bombed the area again on Sunday in response to Hamas killing two of its soldiers.
Israel also announced it was suspending the transfer of humanitarian aid to Gaza until further notice after Hamas ‘clearly violated the agreement’, but this was restored on Monday.
The BBC said Gaza hospital sources claimed that 44 people were killed in Israeli airstrikes on Sunday. However, Israel said it would continue to implement the ceasefire.
The bombings took place after Hamas attacked Israeli soldiers behind the agreed yellow line of control ‘at least three times’.
In one of these incidents in Rafah, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said that ‘a group of terrorist organizations came out of a tunnel and fired RPGs at an excavator clearing Hamas’ infrastructure’.
The two soldiers who died in the attack were Major Yaniv Kula (26) and Staff Sergeant Itay Yavetz (21). One soldier was also injured.
In the horrific footage, an alleged Palestinian civilian can be seen curled into a ball as they tried to protect themselves from brutal beatings.
The images were shared on X by the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Israel claimed that ‘Hamas was brutalizing Palestinian civilians in a bid to regain control’ and called for the demilitarization of Gaza.
In the clip, allegedly masked Hamas militants are seen shooting at two civilians tied on the ground after being beaten.
A masked man is seen stepping on the body of another man who was beaten on the ground in Gaza
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered ‘tough action’ in response to ceasefire violations.
Hamas later denied that it was responsible for these three incidents.
In an update on Sunday night, an IDF official said: ‘Hamas has repeatedly violated its terms, escalating its brutality against Gazans and continuing to retain the bodies of our 16 hostages. Videos circulated showing Hamas hunting down Gazans and executing them in broad daylight.
‘In accordance with the directive of the political level, humanitarian aid shipments to the Gaza Strip have been suspended until further notice.’
The ceasefire agreement promised that Israel would allow 600 aid trucks to enter Gaza every day. Even before the suspension on Sunday night, that number had already been halved due to Hamas’ failure to bring back all the dead hostages in time.
But the U.N. World Food Program said on Tuesday that supplies to Gaza increased after the ceasefire but were still well below the 2,000 tonnes daily target, with only two crossing points open and none going to the region’s famine-hit northern part.
About 750 metric tonnes of food currently enters the Gaza Strip per day, according to WFP, but this was still well below the scale of need after two years of conflict between Israel and Hamas that has left much of Gaza in ruins.
“To scale up this, we must use every border crossing point now,” WFP spokesman Abeer Etefa told a press conference in Geneva.
He said only two of the Israeli-controlled crossings into Gaza were operational: Kerem Shalom in the south and Kissufim in the centre.
The ceasefire plan brokered by US President Donald Trump envisages sending “full aid” to Gaza.
An Israeli security official, without naming names, said that humanitarian aid continues to enter through the Kerem Shalom crossing point and additional crossings in line with the plan.
Netanyahu said on Saturday that the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt will remain closed until further notice and that its reopening depends on Hamas handing over the bodies of the dead hostages.
Many Gazans were hiding the food they had received, fearing supplies might run out again.
“They are eating some of it and rationing and saving some supplies for emergencies because they are not quite sure how long the ceasefire will last and what will happen next,” Etefa said.




