
In First, Amnesty Accuses Hamas of Crimes Against Humanity During Oct. 7 Attack and Gaza War
Amnesty International, which has often been sharply critical of Israel, formally stated for the first time that Hamas committed crimes against humanity during and after the October 7, 2023 massacre. The group’s assessment cites mass murder, abductions, and other grave abuses against civilians, and it urges accountability mechanisms that address violations by all parties. The statement marks a notable shift in Amnesty’s framing of Hamas’s culpability in the bloodshed that ignited the Gaza war.
The organization’s findings are likely to influence public debates, legal forums, and advocacy campaigns worldwide. Rights groups and diplomats have sparred for months over the application of international law in the conflict, but consensus has grown that hostage-taking and deliberate attacks on noncombatants—central to Hamas’s October 7 operation—are prohibited acts of the highest order.
Amnesty’s call for accountability adds pressure on Hamas’s political and military leadership while also fueling broader arguments for impartial investigations covering all violations. For families of hostages and victims, the recognition serves as an affirmation that the atrocities that day and since meet the most serious legal thresholds.
(TOI/VFI News)
“The Lord examines the righteous, but the wicked, those who love violence, he hates with a passion.” – Psalm 11:5