Palestinian paramedic says he saw Israeli troops firing on emergency vehicles
A Palestinian paramedic who was present at an incident in which 15 of his colleagues were killed in southern Gaza last month said he saw Israeli troops firing at emergency vehicles that he later saw stained with blood.
After
several days of uncertainty about the whereabouts of the paramedics,
Red Crescent and U.N. officials found the bodies of the 15 emergency and
aid workers buried in a mass grave in southern Gaza, accusing Israeli forces of killing them. Another worker is still missing.
Munther
Abed, a volunteer for the Palestinian Red Crescent, said he was
responding to a call with two colleagues near Rafah in the south of the
Gaza Strip on March 23 when he was detained by the Israeli soldiers
shortly before they opened fire on other emergency vehicles.
He
said he had not been able to see exactly what happened when the
soldiers opened fire. But his account corresponds with assertions by
officials from the Palestinian Red Crescent and the United Nations that
the emergency workers from the Red Cross, Red Crescent, U.N. and
Palestinian Civil Emergency service were targeted by Israeli troops.
The
Israeli military has opened an investigation into the incident, which
by its account occurred when unmarked vehicles approached an Israeli
position in the dark without lights or special markings and without
previous coordination, factors it said had made the vehicles' advance
appear suspicious.
The
military said the soldiers who opened fire had killed a number of Hamas
and Islamic Jihad militants who were travelling in vehicles marked with
the Palestinian Red Crescent signs.
The
Palestinian Red Crescent describes Abed as "the lone survivor" of the
incident, with the fate of the missing paramedic still unclear.
Abed
said he and colleagues had received a call to go out to help wounded
people at around dawn following an air strike in the Al-Hashasheen area
in Rafah, close to the border with Egypt.
"We
moved right away, it was me and two other colleagues. As soon as we
arrived there, we came under fire and they detained us," he told Reuters
by phone from his house in Khan Younis, referring to shooting by
Israeli soldiers. After he was detained, he said he lost sight of his two colleagues.
As he was standing near the soldiers, he said he saw other emergency vehicles approaching the Israeli soldiers' position.
"I
could see the vehicle of the Civil Emergency. The soldiers began
shooting at the vehicles, they fired heavily," he said. "It was dark and
I couldn't see what happened to the people there, but they (the
soldiers) fired heavily. They asked me to duck down and they were firing
heavily. I felt as if the bullets were hitting me personally."
On
Saturday, the Red Crescent issued published a video obtained from the
cellphone of a paramedic found buried in the mass grave.
Filmed
from inside a moving vehicle, it appears to show a clearly marked
convoy of ambulances and a fire truck driving at dawn with their red
lights flashing. After they stop by a vehicle that had veered off the
road, two rescue workers and another man can be seen before a volley of
gunshots is heard.
Reuters was able to verify the location of the video near the Tal al-Sultan area west of Rafah city in Rafah governate.
The
Israeli military said in response to a request for comment about the
video that the event on March 23, 2025, was under thorough examination.
"All
claims, including the documentation circulating about the incident,
will be thoroughly and deeply examined to understand the sequence of
events and the handling of the situation," it said.
'BLOOD ON THE VEHICLES'
It
was only after daybreak that Abed, who remained held at the location
where he was initially detained, was able to get a clearer picture of
what had happened.
"With
the first light of the day, things become clearer, I saw the vehicles
of the Civil Emergency and the Red Crescent, the doors of all the
vehicles were open and there was blood on the vehicles," he said.
He said he saw a bulldozer dig four holes in the sandy ground before crushing the wrecked vehicles and burying them.
"At that time I had no clue about the fate of my colleagues," he said.
Abed
said he was held in detention by Israeli forces for about 15 hours
during which time he was interrogated and beaten. He said he saw the aid
worker who is still missing, detained by Israeli soldiers.
"They
asked me where I had been on October 7, they were saying Palestinians
are terrorists, and that we are all terrorists. They asked many personal
questions too about me and my family," he said. "I felt I was about to
die."
Eventually he said the soldiers made some checks on him before they decided to release him.
Nebal
Farsakh, spokesperson of the Palestinian Red Crescent confirmed that
Abed was working for the organization as a volunteer and was in Rafah
that day with the mission.
"He
is the lone survivor, the two colleagues who were with him were killed.
There is another colleague who is still missing," Farsakh told Reuters.
"He had no clue at that moment whether his colleagues were martyred or were wounded and saved."
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