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Medic survived Gaza shootings by pleading in Hebrew, Palestinian Red Crescent says

Medic survived Gaza shootings by pleading in Hebrew, Palestinian Red Crescent says

Reuters22-05-2025
GENEVA, May 22 (Reuters) - The head of the Palestinian Red Crescent said on Thursday that a paramedic who survived an attack that killed 15 aid workers was spared because he asked Israeli soldiers for mercy in Hebrew, adding that he hoped the man's testimony would help win justice.
Assad Al-Nassasrah, a Red Crescent paramedic, survived shootings that killed 15 emergency and aid workers on March 23 in southern Gaza in an incident that drew international condemnation. Their bodies were found buried in a shallow grave a week later by Red Crescent and U.N. officials who accused Israeli forces of killing them.
Al-Nassasrah went missing and then was freed from Israeli detention on April 29 and has not yet publicly commented. One other paramedic survived.
Younis Al-Khatib, president of the Palestine Red Crescent Society, told reporters in Geneva that Al-Nassasrah was spared after he pleaded in Hebrew and said his mother was a Palestinian citizen of Israel.
"What does Assad say in Hebrew? 'Don't shoot. I am Israeli.' And the soldier got a bit confused," he told reporters. "That confusion ... made him survive."
"Assad will be a witness that can put all the Israeli stories in shambles," he added.
Israel's prime minister's office and its diplomatic mission in Geneva did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Israeli military initially said its soldiers had opened fire on vehicles that approached their position "suspiciously" in the dark without lights or markings. It said they killed six militants from Hamas and Islamic Jihad who were travelling in Red Crescent vehicles.
But video recovered from the mobile phone of one of the dead men and published by the PRCS showed emergency workers in their uniforms and clearly marked ambulances and fire trucks, with their lights on, being fired on by soldiers.
On April 20, the Israeli military said a review into the incident had found there had been "several professional failures". It said a deputy commander, a reservist who was the field commander, would be dismissed.
The military advocate general is conducting its own investigation and criminal charges could be pursued, according to the military.
Asked how Al-Nassasrah was treated in custody, Al-Khatib said: "like a Palestinian". He said Al-Nassasrah had been interrogated and that he had mental health issues, but did not elaborate further.
Social media footage shared by the Palestinian Red Crescent dated the day after his release showed Al-Nassasrah crying as he hugged medics and looking dazed while being examined in a Gaza hospital. Eight of those killed were from the PRCS, which provides medical aid in Gaza and is part of the world's largest humanitarian network.
Al-Khatib said the organisation was working with lawyers and considering formal submissions to international courts and to the U.N. Security Council.
"We think the international community is responsible to provide justice to those killed," he said. "We don't train our people to go and die."
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The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

With sanctions lifted, Syria looks to solar power as more than a patchwork fix to its energy crisis

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time2 hours ago

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Cautious optimism for Gaza ceasefire breakthrough as Netanyahu visits US

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How UK media are covering up British spy flights for Israel
How UK media are covering up British spy flights for Israel

The National

time3 hours ago

  • The National

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This is in direct contravention of a significant public interest in covering the flights as an ongoing controversy. Even Google's AI overview acknowledges this. Based on search results for 'surveillance flights, Gaza AND Cyprus', Google's conclusion is that 'it appears there has been considerable discussion and concern surrounding British surveillance flights operating out of RAF Akrotiri, a military base in Cyprus, and flying over Gaza'. Despite the fact that independent sources such as The National, Declassified UK and Middle East Eye have repeatedly drawn attention to the flights and the implications of supplying intelligence to Israeli forces, mainstream news media have refused to amplify this 'discussion and concern'. The vast majority of stories that reference Akrotiri are instead in relation to its role as a base for attacks on Houthi rebels in Yemen in January 2024 ('Brits hits Houthis' was the headline in The Sun), the repatriation of UK citizens from Lebanon in summer 2024 and the surveillance of the base by an alleged Iranian spy in June 2025. Hard news THIS lack of coverage is certainly not because the flights exist only in the imaginations of Declassified UK journalists or pro-Palestine activists. When pressed, the Ministry of Defence admits they are taking place. For example, on December 2, 2023, the BBC acknowledged the launch of surveillance flights to Gaza in order to 'search for Hamas hostage locations', still the official MoD narrative. The following October, the BBC reported that the UK was willing to hand over 'Gaza intelligence' to the International Criminal Court, if requested, as part of the ICC's investigation into alleged war crimes carried out by Israel. 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In hard news, however, the newspaper has barely acknowledged the existence of the flights: confined to one line in a Patrick Wintour story on Foreign Office staff being told to resign after challenging UK policy on Gaza, and a mention of '500 surveillance flights' in response to the activities of Palestine Action. The i paper ran a single story in October 2024 stating that 'British military aircraft have reportedly flown hundreds of reconnaissance missions over Gaza in the past year to gather intelligence for Israel' but, like so many other news outlets, has not returned in any meaningful way to the topic since. Deafening silence DESPITE official acknowledgement that the flights continue to take place, and despite multiple questions raised in Parliament by concerned MPs such as Jeremy Corbyn, Shockat Adam, Scott Arthur, Brendan O'Hara and Calvin Bailey, the silence on the intelligence-gathering nature of the spy flights has been deafening. It's hard to reconcile this silence with the energy with which mainstream media have investigated Russian spy planes flying over Ukraine and other military manoeuvres related to Putin's invasion. It is all the more hypocritical considering their claim to be watchdogs scrutinising Government actions. Only recently, Katharine Viner, the editor of The Guardian, wrote about her paper's record in 'scrutinising power with complete independence for decades'. In reality, it's precisely the opposite. Leading news organisations are amplifying MoD talking points and Foreign Office priorities but then remaining quiet and toeing the line when it comes to identifying potential military support for Israel's genocide. This is similar to the total lack of critical voices in their reporting of the defence review announced last month by Keir Starmer. READ MORE: 111 BBC journalists demand change at top as Israel-Palestine reporting 'crippled' Out of 993 stories on the 'defence review' in UK media on June 2, a tiny handful took the time even to acknowledge the existence of significant public opposition to increases in defence spending, particularly at the expense of cuts to public services. The vast majority of published criticism of Labour's defence plans come from the Conservatives, or military voices arguing 'this is too little, too late' or that it isn't clear where the money will come from. There is, apparently, no space for hard news content that investigates whether increased defence spending is either effective or necessary. Meanwhile, the mainstream media's continuing silence on RAF spy flights over Gaza is a flagrant abdication of their stated responsibility to ask tough questions of military planners. Far from holding power to account, mainstream media – through their silence and meekness – are allowing the UK Government to get away with murder in Gaza. Des Freedman is a professor of media and communications at Goldsmiths, University of London and a founding member of the Media Reform Coalition

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