Piers Morgan's Inflammatory Post on Hostage Video Ignites Fury
Piers Morgan is facing intense backlash after a tweet questioning pro-Israel voices who accept Hamas hostage videos but reject Gaza casualty figures. The post, made in response to a harrowing video of hostage Evyatar David, has been widely condemned as callous and hypocritical, reigniting grief and outrage within the Israeli community.


In the dim glow of screens scrolling through endless feeds of conflict and despair, a single post can reopen wounds that never truly heal. British journalist and TV personality Piers Morgan, once a vocal supporter of Israel in the wake of October 7, has again stirred outrage with a provocative tweet responding to the chilling video of kidnapped Israeli hostage Evyavtar David. Released by Hamas, the footage shows the emaciated young man forced to dig his own grave, a stark emblem of the terror still gripping families nearly two years after the attacks. Morgan's words, equating skepticism of Gaza casualty figures with acceptance of the video's authenticity, have left pro-Israel voices reeling, their responses a raw cry of betrayal amid ongoing grief.
The post that ignited the storm came late last night. Sharing the harrowing clip, Morgan first labeled it "indescribable evil."
But in a follow-up that drew immediate backlash, he wrote: "Interesting that all the prominent pro-Israel voices here who refuse to believe the Gaza casualty figures published by the Hamas-run Palestinian health ministry, accept the authenticity of hostage images/videos published by Hamas without hesitation." For many, this was a gut punch, a cynical equivalence that diminished the undeniable horror of a young man's suffering, captured by his captors, while casting doubt on the broader narrative of loss.
Reactions poured in like a torrent, each one laced with the pain of a community still mourning the 1,200 killed and 250 abducted on that fateful Simchat Torah. The satirical account "The Mossad" fired back with photos of released hostages Ohad Ben Ami, Eli Sharabi, and Or Levy, gaunt and frail upon their return, captioning: "This is how our hostages came out, Piers. What the hell were you thinking when you wrote that?" Morgan retorted: "That's how I see it with the hostages too, but I don't think the Gaza casualty numbers are fake either. Do you?"
Others were equally furious. "Are you not ashamed?" one commenter demanded. "The Palestinian Ministry of Health? Who are they? Where are they? You're just hypocritical." Another highlighted the manipulation: "The numbers are manipulative... First, there's no distinction between fighter and civilian deaths... That's a fact."
For Israelis and their supporters, the video of Evyatar, starved, haunted, a symbol of 50 hostages still held, is not propaganda but proof of barbarism. To see it weaponized in debate feels like salt in an open wound.
Morgan's post serves as a stark emblem: in the echo chamber of social media, the line between truth and provocation blurs, leaving hearts heavier and hopes dimmer. For the families waiting, like Evyatar's, each tweet is a dagger, twisting the knife of uncertainty, where redemption feels forever out of reach.