'We collected his body instead of celebrating Eid,' says mother of Gaza medic killed by Israel
'We collected his body instead of celebrating Eid,'
says mother of Gaza medic killed by Israel
Rifaat Radwan filmed the incident in which he
and 14 other emergency workers were shot dead by Israeli troops
"My
heart and soul died when Rifaat was killed," says Hajjah Umm Mohammed, the
mother of a Palestinian paramedic who was one of 15 emergency workers killed by
Israeli troops in southern Gaza last month.
Rifaat
Radwan, 23, was travelling in a Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS)
ambulance in a convoy of emergency vehicles when it came under fire on the
outskirts of Rafah on 23 March.
"I
never expected him to be killed, especially since the area was classified as
'green', meaning safe and open to ambulances," she adds.
The
Israeli military initially claimed the troops opened fire because the convoy
approached them "suspiciously" in darkness without headlights or
flashing emergency lights.
However, video filmed by Rifaat and found on his phone after his body
was recovered, showed the vehicles' lights were on as they answered
a call to help wounded people.
"Forgive
me, mother... this is the path I chose to help people," Rifaat can be
heard saying in the video shortly before he was killed, amid the sound of heavy
gunfire.
Umm
Mohammed believes he was asking for her forgiveness because he knew she would
never see him again.
"I entrusted Rifaat
to God every time he went out to work," she says. "He was brave,
travelling across Gaza from north to south."
Rifaat
began volunteering with the PRCS after Israel launched a military campaign in
Gaza following Hamas's unprecedented cross-border attack on 7 October 2023.
Umm
Mohammed says her son enjoyed humanitarian work.
"He
even transported the wounded to cross into Egypt for treatment through the
Rafah crossing."
Umm
Mohammed explains that on the day he died, Rifaat had gone out with an
ambulance after reports of several killed in an Israeli air strike.
"I
didn't know he would be one of them [too]," she says.
It
was a week before his body and those of his colleagues were found buried in a
shallow grave on 30 March.
"Instead
of celebrating Eid al-Fitr with Rifaat, we went with the Red Cross to collect
his body from Nasser hospital in Khan Younis to bury him," she recalls.
"It
was badly decomposed and they wouldn't allow me to see it."
Umm Mohammed says he was
an "absolutely beautiful" human being and the sole supporter of her
and his father after all his siblings got married.
Israeli army
fired more than 100 shots in Gaza medics' killing, audio suggests
Red Crescent
calls for inquiry into Israel's killing of Gaza paramedics
Israel changes
account of Gaza medic killings after video showed deadly attack
Following
the discovery of the video footage, an Israeli military official changed its
initial account that claimed the vehicles approached without their lights on.
The official said the person who gave the account was "mistaken".
The
official also said the troops perceived the emergency workers as a threat
because of an earlier encounter in the area, and that at least six of those
killed were Hamas operatives, without providing any evidence.
The
troops buried the bodies, including Rifaat's, in sand to protect them from wild
animals, the official said.
They
were not uncovered until a week after the incident because international
agencies, including the UN, could not organise safe passage to the area or
locate the spot.
When
the UN-led team found the bodies they also discovered Rifaat's mobile phone
containing footage of the incident.
The
Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has promised a "thorough examination" of
the incident, saying it would "understand the sequence of events and the
handling of the situation".
The
PRCS has alleged that the emergency workers were targeted in a "series of
deliberate attacks" which constituted a "full-fledged war
crime", and demanded an independent international investigation.
"We
need justice for the victims. We need to ensure that all of those who are
responsible are held to account. Without this, the crimes will continue to
happen," PRCS spokeswoman Nebal Farsakh said on Wednesday.
"I have already
lost 27 PRCS colleagues. All of them were killed while doing their humanitarian
work. All of them were killed while wearing the Red Crescent emblem. This is
not acceptable. It should never, ever have happened. We are not targets. And
international humanitarian law is clear – humanitarians, medical personnel
should be respected and protected."

Rifaat's fellow medic, Munther Abed, said he
survived the attack by diving to the floor in the back of his ambulance
Munther
Abed, a paramedic who survived the incident, says he and his colleagues were
fired at without warning.
"I
dropped to the floor in the back of the vehicle and didn't hear any sound from
my colleagues except their death gasps," he told the BBC last week.
"Then,
Israeli special forces arrested me, pinning my head to the ground so I couldn't
see what happened to my team."
Holding
back tears, Munther added: "When I found out they were all martyred, it
crushed me. They were my second family... my brothers, my friends, my loved
ones.
"I
wished I had died from the horror of what I saw."
He
says his phone was confiscated when he was detained.
"They
interrogated me for 15 hours with beatings, insults, and both physical and
verbal torture," he adds.
The
BBC has put his claims to the IDF, but it is yet to respond.
The
PRCS said the area the emergency workers were in had not been classified by the
Israeli military as a "red zone", which meant no prior co-ordination
was required to access the site, and that the video showed that Israeli
military vehicles had not been visible in the area.
It
said preliminary forensic reports showed that the paramedics were killed by
"multiple gunshot wounds to the upper parts of the bodies", which it
described as "further evidence of deliberate killing".
It also dismissed the
IDF's internal inquiry and rejected the IDF's accusation that Hamas operatives
were among those killed.
Rifaat Radwan's father did not allow his mother,
Umm Mohammed, to see his body
The
IDF said in a statement on Monday that its Chief of Staff, Lt Gen Eyal Zamir,
had been presented with the findings of the initial inquiry into the incident
and instructed that it be "pursued in greater depth and completed in the
coming days by the general staff investigation mechanism".
"All
the claims raised regarding the incident will be examined through the mechanism
and presented in a detailed and thorough manner for a decision on how to handle
the event," it added.
About
1,200 people were killed and 251 were taken hostage in the Hamas attack on
Israel on 7 October 2023.
More
than 50,750 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the
territory's Hamas-run health ministry.
A ceasefire deal
announced in January collapsed in March and there are currently 59 hostages
still held in Gaza, 24 of whom are believed to be still alive.
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