Wednesday , April 23 2025

‘Professional failures’ led to killing of Gaza medics: IDF

23-04-2025

JERUSALEM: The Israeli military has said “professional failures” led to the killing of 15 emergency workers in Gaza last month.

An inquiry into the incident by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) found a series of failings, including an “operational misunderstanding” and a “breach of orders”.

The deputy commander of the unit involved has been dismissed “for providing an incomplete and inaccurate report during the brief”.

A spokeswoman for the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) said the report was “invalid” as it “justifies and shifts the responsibility to a personal error in the field command when the truth is quite different”.

Fourteen emergency workers and a UN worker were killed on 23 March after a convoy of PRCS ambulances, a UN car and a fire truck came under fire by the Israeli military.

In a statement, the IDF said its troops opened fire believing they were facing a threat from enemy forces.

The IDF said its investigation found six of the casualties were Hamas members, and rejected that there had been summary executions.

In an on-the-record briefing, Major General Yoav Har-Even who investigated the incident, told journalists that the Israeli military maintained that six of the emergency workers were Hamas operatives and said they would later be named.

The report said the incident took place in what it called a “hostile and dangerous combat zone”, and that the commander on the ground perceived an immediate and tangible threat after vehicles approached rapidly.

It blamed “poor night visibility”, which the IDF said meant the commander did not identify the vehicles as ambulances. Another commanding officer “will receive a reprimand” for “his overall responsibility for the incident”, the report added.

Journalists invited to Sunday’s military briefing were shown aerial footage, shot in the early hours of 23 March, which showed the attacks. The footage also showed several other vehicles, including an ambulance, passed by in the hour or so between the first and second Israeli attack, without being shot at.

Israeli officials said this proved troops in Gaza did not open fire on medical vehicles unless they felt threatened.

A UN official in Gaza suggested the IDF investigation did not go far enough. “A lack of real accountability undermines international law and makes the world a more dangerous place,” said Jonathan Whittall.

“Without accountability, we risk continuing to watch atrocities unfolding, and the norms designed to protect us all, eroding.”

Israel originally claimed troops opened fire because the convoy approached “suspiciously” in darkness without headlights or flashing lights. It said movement of the vehicles had not been previously coordinated or agreed with the army but it later said that account was “mistaken” after a video found on the mobile phone of a medic who was killed showed the vehicles with their lights on and their emergency signals flashing. The footage shows the vehicles pulling up on the road when shooting begins just before dawn.

The video continues for more than five minutes, with the paramedic saying his last prayers before the voices of Israeli soldiers are heard approaching the vehicles.

It also shows the vehicles were clearly marked and the paramedics wearing reflective hi-vis uniform.

The bodies of the 15 dead workers were buried in sand. They were not uncovered until a week after the incident because international agencies, including the UN, could not organize safe passage to the area or locate the spot. (Int’l News Desk)

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