JERUSALEM, Sept. 6 (Xinhua) -- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday asked International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to help bring back Israeli civilians held in Gaza.
He made the request in his meeting with ICRC President Peter Maurer in Jerusalem.
Netanyahu said Israel has been seeking information about two civilians, who voluntarily crossed into the Gaza Strip and are believed to be held captive by Hamas, the Islamist organization that controls the coastal enclave.
Hamas, however, refused to divulge any information, the prime minister added.
"You come at a time when Israel is concerned about the unbelievable cruelty as the bodies of its slain soldiers are kept, and even information about them is kept," Netanyahu told Maurer, according to a statement released by the Prime Minister's Office.
"No less important, innocent, defenseless civilians are being held in Gaza," he noted.
In response to Netanyahu's request, Maurer said the Red Cross has a mandate under international law but "also had a mandate to help people and find practical ways (to this end)."
The ICRC president added that he was looking forward to having "the opportunity to look into some of the challenges that everyone is currently confronted with and to see how the ICRC can eventually help with them."
Two Israeli civilians, identified as Avera Mengistu and Hisham al-Sayed, entered Gaza in 2014. Israel believes they have been held captive by Hamas since then.
Hamas has never officially acknowledged if the two Israelis are in the besieged Palestinian enclave.
In 2015, an anonymous senior Palestinian official told the Hebrew-language Ynet news site that Mengistu was held by Hamas' security forces which later released him after ensuring that he was not a soldier.
Maurer's meeting with Netanyahu came a day after he met in Gaza with Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar.
Maurer told reporters that they had a "good conversation" about several topics, including the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and international humanitarian law.
He also toured several devastated areas in the coastal enclave and met with several families.
His visit is aimed at checking the worsening humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip, which has been under an Israeli blockade for more than 10 years, according to an ICRC statement.













