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He said people risked their lives to speak out against Hamas, which has reportedly beaten and hanged dissidents.

Family members of Israeli hostages in Gaza and anti-government protesters rally outside the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem. Source: AAP / Atef Safadi / EPA
‘Fall of the fear barrier’
“I don’t know who organised the protest,” said Mohammed, a demonstrator who declined to give his last name for fear of reprisals.
A 2018 Human Rights Watch report found Hamas has routinely tortured, beaten, and arrested people in Gaza for criticising the group online or being part of opposing political movements.
“Protesters are in the north where the devastation is even worse, far worse than in the south, people coming back to their homes and finding no homes, just trouble,” he said.
What do Palestinians think of Hamas?
However, three months later, he estimated 35 per cent of Palestinians in Gaza said they supported Hamas, and 26 per cent said they supported Fatah, representing an increase of 6 per cent.
‘Things have gone from bad to worse’
“Every day without food inches Gaza closer to an acute hunger crisis,” the organisation said in a statement on Monday AEDT.
— With additional reporting by Agence-France Presse