A Gaza doctor and hospital director who criticized Israel in two separate New York Times op-eds has been revealed to be a Hamas colonel.

Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya is a Palestinian pediatrician and the director of Gaza’s Kamal Adwan Hospital in Beit Lahiya. The IDF arrested him on December 27, 2024, and he has since been held in an Israeli prison.

Safiya’s arrest sparked scores of international campaigns calling for his release. Amnesty International, for example, has launched a campaign for his unconditional release in which it refers to him as an “arbitrarily detained Palestinian health worker.”

Multiple other activist groups have deemed him “the hero” of Gaza.

Last month, Safiya was even granted “honorary citizenship” by the city of Lyon, France. The city said, “Safiya is one of the leading figures in Gaza’s health system and embodies the courage of healthcare workers in the face of the unspeakable.”

Workers of the health sector protest in front of the Catalan health department after Israeli forces detained dozens of medical staff from Kamal Adwan Hospital in the Gaza Strip on Friday, among them its director Hussam Abu Safiya
Workers of the health sector protest in front of the Catalan health department after Israeli forces detained dozens of medical staff from Kamal Adwan Hospital in the Gaza Strip on Friday, among them its director Hussam Abu Safiya (credit: REUTERS/Bruna Casas)

Evidence of Safiya's Hamas involvement

Following Lyon’s announcement, a senior researcher at NGO Monitor – Vincent Chebat – began researching Safiya.

He soon discovered a 2016 photo of the doctor in his Hamas uniform “at a gathering of Hamas elites, including Gen. Abu Obaida al-Jarrah, the director of Military Medical Services Saeed Saoudi, and National Security Forces commander Col. Naeem al-Ghoul.”

Safiya was also referred to as “a colonel” in a 2020 Facebook post on the Gaza Medical Services page.

Moreover, NGO Monitor and other online researchers identified multiple Arabic-language sources that openly refer to Safiya as “Colonel Hussam Abu Safiya.”

Kamal Adwan Hospital itself is also considered to be a Hamas stronghold.

Additionally, researchers found Facebook posts by Safiya celebrating October 7 and calling for terror against “the Jews.” One read: “And they thought their fortresses would protect them from God, but God came upon them from where they did not expect, and cast terror into their hearts.” The text was accompanied by an image of terrorists parachuting into Israel on the day of the massacre.

An IDF spokesperson confirmed that Safiya is a ranking member of Hamas.

Despite his rank in Hamas being well known within Arab media circles, Safiya was nevertheless invited to write opinion pieces for the NYT. Since October 7, he has been invited to write two op-eds in which he blamed Israel for hospital crises, fuel shortages, civilian suffering, and “horrific” attacks on Gaza’s health system.

“We are suffering and paying the price of the genocide that is happening to our people here in the northern Gaza Strip,” he wrote in one.

Neither Safiya nor the NYT disclosed his reported affiliation with Hamas.

“Those who platformed Abu Safiya must do some serious soul-searching, and figure out how they ended up promoting the propaganda of a literal Hamas terrorist,” Chebat told the New York Post.

“A basic search of Google and social media enabled me to prove he is a colonel,” Chebat told The Jerusalem Post on Sunday. “So, if I can do that, anyone who wants to vet such a person can do the same.”

“Therefore, he should never have been granted the ‘honorary citizenship’ of Lyon. Similarly, all the NGOs campaigning for his release should also be aware of these facts.”

The translator of Safiya’s articles for the NYT, Max Weiss, has criticized the paper for its “deafening silence” on the situation in Gaza and Safiya’s so-called treatment.

Following the publication of the second piece, Weiss called for a global boycott of the New York Times asking it give “expanded coverage to the bloody and inhuman treatment of Palestinians in Israeli detention as well as to the unended genocidal war that is still being unleashed upon the Palestinian people of Gaza, the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, as well as the Lebanese and Syrian people, who continue to be subjected to ethnic cleansing and ecocidal violence throughout the borderlands.”

Weiss also accused the NYT of “burying” a “single sentence about the detainment of Safiya” after “an obedient paraphrase of the Israeli military’s video announcement” that “240 ‘militants’ had been swept up in the raid on the hospital.”