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Visual Forensics


PALESTINIAN PARAMEDICS SAID ISRAEL GAVE THEM SAFE PASSAGE TO SAVE A 6-YEAR-OLD
GIRL IN GAZA. THEY WERE ALL KILLED.


(Obtained by the Washington Post)
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By Meg Kelly, 
Hajar Harb, 
Louisa Loveluck, 
Miriam Berger and 
Cate Brown
April 16, 2024 at 5:00 a.m.

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For three-and-a-half long hours on Jan. 29, the cellphone in 6-year old Hind
Rajab’s hands was the closest thing she had to a lifeline. Alone in the back
seat of a car outside a Gaza City gas station, she was drifting in and out of
consciousness, surrounded by bodies, as she told emergency dispatchers that
Israeli tanks were rumbling closer.

From the operations room of the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS), roughly
50 miles away in the city of Ramallah, the team on duty had done their best to
save the child. Paramedics were on their way, the dispatchers kept telling her:
Hold on.

The paramedics were driving to their deaths.

From left: Hind Rajab, 6, Bashar Hamada, 44, and his daughter Layan, 13, were
killed, along with four other family members, as well as paramedics Yusuf Zeino
and Ahmed Al-Madhoun. (Mohammed Hamada and Palestine Red Crescent Society )

Twelve days later, when a Palestinian civil defense crew finally reached the
area, they found Hind’s body in a car riddled with bullets, according to her
uncle, Samir Hamada, who also arrived at the scene early that morning. The
ambulance lay charred roughly 50 meters away (about 164 feet) from the car, its
destruction consistent with the use of a round fired by Israeli tanks, according
to six munitions experts.

In a statement, the Israel Defense Forces said they conducted a preliminary
investigation and that its forces were “not present near the vehicle or within
the firing range” of the Hamada family car. Nor, they said, had they been
required to provide the ambulance permission to enter the area. The State
Department said it has raised the case repeatedly with the Israelis. “The
Israelis told us there had, in fact, been IDF units in the area, but the IDF had
no knowledge of or involvement in the type of strike described,” said spokesman
Matt Miller.

A Washington Post investigation found that Israeli armored vehicles were present
in the area in the afternoon, and that gunfire audible as Hind and her cousin
Layan begged for help, as well as extensive damage caused to the ambulance, are
consistent with Israeli weapons. The analysis is based on satellite imagery,
contemporaneous dispatcher recordings, photos and videos of the aftermath,
interviews with 13 dispatchers, family members and rescue workers, and more than
a dozen military, satellite, munitions and audio experts who reviewed the
evidence, as well as the IDF’s own statements.

PRCS as well as representatives from Euro-Med Monitor and the Civil Defense who
visited the scene on Feb. 10 provided visuals to The Post, which it verified by
independently confirming the location using satellite imagery, open-source maps
and eyewitness interviews.


(Euro-Med Monitor)

The Post’s review also found that the ambulance was discovered along a route
provided by COGAT, an arm of the Israeli Defense Ministry that generally
coordinates safe passage for medical vehicles with the IDF. COGAT initially
referred specific questions about the ambulance to the IDF. In mid-March, Elad
Goren, head of Coordination and Liaison Administration at COGAT, told The Post
that the agency “coordinated everything … including the ambulance that wanted to
go and find Hind,” but said he was “not aware” of the specifics. COGAT did not
respond to repeated requests to clarify.

The IDF denied that any coordination had taken place, repeating its assertion
that its forces were not in the area. It did not comment on two detailed
timelines of the incident, or on the expert findings, provided by The Washington
Post.

It was not possible to reach Hamas’s military wing for comment on the incident.

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Humanitarian officials have warned that a system of coordination with Israel’s
military, designed to protect their aid deliveries and lifesaving ambulance
maneuvers, is broken. Israeli strikes on a World Central Kitchen convoy that
killed seven aid workers in Gaza on April 1 and stirred global outrage came
after failed deconfliction efforts.

More than 33,000 Palestinians have been killed during Israeli military
operations in Gaza, according to local health authorities. Amid a war of
unyielding horror, Hind’s case touched a nerve around the world, in large part
because her recorded cries for help offered a glimpse into the terrors faced by
civilians.


9:32 A.M.

Generations of the Hamada family had lived on al-Wahda Street in the northern
part of Gaza City for decades. Everything changed on Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas
militants stormed border communities in southern Israel, killing about 1,200
people, including civilians in their homes and young people at a concert, and
taking about 240 hostages back to Gaza. The assault drew a punishing response
from Israel which insists its campaign is necessary to destroy Hamas’s military
capabilities.

More than 75 percent of Gaza’s 2.2 million population has been displaced by the
fighting, many of them multiple times, according to the United Nations Office
for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). The Hamada family fled
their houses; some went south, while others sheltered closer to home, in the
nearby Tel al-Hawa neighborhood in western Gaza City.

But late on Jan. 28, Israeli forces returned to western Gaza City in numbers.
Posts on social media show heavy gunfire and airstrikes in that part of the city
just after midnight local time. At 9:32 a.m., the IDF issued a call in Arabic on
X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, asking residents in the
west of Gaza City — including the Tel al-Hawa area — to evacuate immediately.

Hind’s uncle, Bashar, and his wife packed her into the car along with her four
cousins, Bashar’s brother Samir said. They planned to drive north, out of the
evacuation zone and back toward the family home in northern Gaza City.

The family stopped less than a quarter of a mile from where they started.

Around 1 p.m., Hind’s cousin, 15-year-old Layan, called Samir. She told him they
were surrounded and the Israeli army had opened fire on their car.

Everyone in the vehicle, except for Hind and Layan, were dead, she said. Samir
called another uncle, Mohammed, who eventually reached the PRCS.

A dispatcher, Omar al-Qam, first reached Layan around 2:30 p.m.




The girl screamed, and the call dropped. “Hello,” Qam shouted. “Hello?”

While Qam spoke to Layan, 62 gunshots are audible over six seconds in two bursts
of fire on a recording of the call, according to Earshot, a nonprofit that
conducts investigations using audio evidence.

Steven Beck, an acoustic analyst who consulted with the FBI for more than a
decade, examined the recording at the request of The Post, and found the number
of rounds per minute fired was faster than an automatic AK-patterned rifle,
which Hamas fighters often use. The rate, he said, was more akin to weapons
commonly issued to Israeli forces. Earshot also found the rate of fire to be
faster than an AK-patterned rifle.

The call, which began around 2:30 p.m., ended in less than a minute.

A satellite image captured by Planet Labs roughly an hour later, at 3:31 p.m.,
shows at least four Israeli armored vehicles around 300 meters up the road from
the girls.

Hind Map

3:31 pm: Israeli military vehicles pictured

Hind’s family car stop point

350 FEET

N

3:31 pm: Israeli military vehicles pictured

Hind’s family car stop point

350 FEET

N

Will Goodhind, an imagery analyst with Contested Ground — an open-access
satellite research group focused on military, humanitarian and international
affairs — who examined the satellite imagery at the request of The Post, said
the armored vehicles at the intersection closest to Hind are “tactically placed”
and appear to provide a “prominent, visible presence to deter (and respond to)
enemy attacks,” amid ongoing ground operations.

More than a dozen other Israeli armored vehicles are visible within a
quarter-mile of the Hamada family car, the image shows.

The vehicles match the approximate size and have turret-like structures similar
to at least four Israeli tracked vehicles, according to Goodhind. Of those, only
the Merkava tank has been seen in action in Gaza, according to Sonny
Butterworth, senior analyst with the defense intelligence firm Janes. The
similarly sized Namer armored personnel carrier and Puma combat engineering
vehicle have also been seen in action in Gaza, but lack the turret-like
structure.

The Merkava, the Namer and the Puma all have 7.62 caliber machine guns,
Butterworth said. The guns can fire at a rate consistent with what Beck and
Earshot concluded was heard in the audio of Layan’s last call.

After Qam’s call with Layan ended, the PRCS operations room called back
immediately and Hind answered. Layan was dead and tanks were moving toward the
car, she told another dispatcher, Rana Faqih. Hind described the presence of
tanks at least five more times throughout the call.

Hind describes the tanks moving closer
0:43

(Palestine Red Crescent Society)


5:40 P.M.

The Palestine Red Crescent routinely coordinates the passage of its ambulances
with Israeli authorities, in the hope of securing safe access to areas where the
situation on the ground is potentially dangerous.

Fathi Abu Warda — a liaison between the Palestinian Authority’s health ministry
in Ramallah and COGAT, an arm of the Israeli Defense Ministry that oversees the
Palestinian territories — said that permission for an ambulance to proceed to
Hind arrived in the form of a route map from COGAT. Abu Warda sent the map to
the PRCS dispatch team on WhatsApp at 5:40 p.m., according to messages reviewed
by The Post.

The map, reviewed by The Post, appears to have been made in Google Maps and has
a clear blue line, instructing the ambulance drivers to follow an indirect route
that avoided much of the evacuation area.

Ismail al-Ghoul, a correspondent with the Al Jazeera news agency, said he was
sitting with the paramedics, Yousef Zeino and Ahmed al-Madhoun, at al-Ahli
hospital, when they received the map. The paramedics headed out quickly to the
location where Hind was trapped. It was roughly two miles away — down Beirut
street, then right, and onto al-Majdal Street.

“The details were completely clear,” Ghoul said.

The paramedics had just turned onto Al Majdal Street, the lights of the
ambulance flashing, when Zeino reported that a green laser was hovering just in
front of them.

The dispatcher told the ambulance to keep moving, slowly. Seconds later, the
line drops.



The ambulance was later found roughly 50 meters south of Hind’s family car and
about 350 meters south of where military vehicles had been captured in satellite
imagery just over two hours earlier.

In a statement posted at 9:02 p.m. local time, the IDF said its forces had “cut
off Gaza City, with one force arriving from the north towards the south, while a
second force arrived from the south to the north.” They traveled “through the
city center to Shifa hospital” the statement said.

Al-Shifa, which Israel has repeatedly targeted, alleging that Hamas fighters are
regrouping there, is roughly three-quarters of a mile from where the Hamada
family car stopped.

The green laser — known as a dazzler — would normally suggest that the ambulance
was identified but not necessarily targeted by a ground unit operating ahead of
the armed vehicles, according to Avihai Stollar, a researcher with Breaking the
Silence, an advocacy group composed of Israeli army veterans that oppose the
occupation that compiled testimonies from former soldiers.

The IDF, in response to questions from The Post, did not clarify if the green
dazzler belonged to its forces and what signal it may have been intended to
send.

Social media posts from 2018 suggest that Hamas and other Palestinian resistance
groups have also used green dazzlers to obscure Israeli soldiers’ eyesight.
Ashka Jhaveri, a researcher at the Institute for the Study of War, a group that
closely monitors conflicts, said she had not observed the use of green dazzlers
by either side in this conflict.


6 P.M.

As the call with the paramedics drops at 6 p.m., a bang is audible on the call
with Hind.

But the call with the girl continued, suggesting that cellphone service was not
cut.

Red Crescent dispatchers had managed to patch Hind’s mother, Wesam, into the
call in the hope that it might calm the child.

When the bang echoed out through the phone line, Wesam cried out: “Hanood, are
you okay?”

A moment later, Hind replied.

“Yes,” she said.

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By this point, everyone on the call with Hind — her family, the dispatchers —
were praying they would not lose her too. She was falling silent for long
periods. The team did what they could to keep her talking, but it was clear that
the child’s thoughts had begun to loop. She just kept saying, “Come get me,
quickly.”

If the phone ran out of battery, Faqih told her, she was to stay in the car,
where they could still find her. “If night comes and we don’t come, close your
eyes so that you don’t see the tanks.”

They lost contact with her soon after 6 p.m., spokeswoman Nebal Farsakh
recalled.

No one spoke much after that. The room felt muffled with shock. They tried to
call Hind again and again, Farsakh said, but no one answered.


TWELVE DAYS LATER

The ambulance had come to a stop where a dark spot resembling a scorch mark
first appeared in satellite imagery taken at 10:21 a.m. on Jan. 30 — the morning
after contact with the paramedics and Hind were lost.

When the IDF withdrew from the area nearly two weeks later on Feb. 10,
Palestinian residents, including Samir, Hind’s uncle, and a civil defense crew
found a haunting scene.

The door and pieces of the hood of the family car had been torn off. Samir
described his brother’s body as “dangling” from the driver’s seat. The stench of
decomposing corpses clung to the vehicle. He struggled to look at the bodies of
the five children sandwiched on the back seat. Hind sat to the right of Layan,
who was behind the driver. A page from what looks like a coloring book was
crumpled where their feet would have rested. The bodies were so decomposed that
it was not possible immediately see where the gunshots had hit them, Samir said.
“We were only able to deduce their identities,” he recalled.

Holes in the Hamada family car were probably made by a 7.62 caliber machine gun,
a weapon fixed to the Merkava, Namer and Puma, said Andrew Galer, head of the
land platform and weapons team at defense intelligence firm Janes, who examined
photos and video of the aftermath.

Armored vehicles, including some that roughly match the size of those seen in
the Jan. 29 satellite imagery, were also present in the same location multiple
times in the following 12 days.

Satellite imagery of an intersection just shy of 1000 feet from Hind that was
taken on Jan. 29, Feb. 7 and Feb. 8 shows armored vehicles.

A fragment of a U.S.-made 120mm round, which can be fired by the Merkava, was
visible in video and images after rescue crews searched the scenes.

The Post was not able to determine exactly where just north of the ambulance the
fragment was originally found or if it was directly connected to the ambulance
strike given the time elapsed and the ongoing fighting.

Bright yellow lot production codes on the munition identified it as a U.S. made
high explosive antitank round produced in November of 1996. (Obtained by the
Washington Post)

The ambulance was a burned-out shell, video shows, and almost nothing remained
of the paramedics’ bodies. There was a hole approximately 300 millimeters in
diameter adjacent to where the license plate would have been.

“The damage to the rear does look like the exit of a projectile,” Chris
Cobb-Smith, a security consultant and former artillery officer in the British
army, wrote in a message, noting that it appeared to be “targeted with a direct
fire munition” and was “approximately the size of a tank shell.”

N.R. Jenzen-Jones, the director of Armament Research Services, added it appeared
to exit “the vehicle relatively level to the ground,” which suggests it was
“fired from ground level on a fairly flat trajectory, rather than an
air-delivered or indirect-fire munition.”

A round fired by a tank is just one possibility, Jenzen-Jones and multiple other
experts cautioned, noting that there is little data on craft-produced Hamas
munitions and few tests have been done to predict what would happen if other
munitions were used against a thin-skinned vehicle. Common rocket launchers used
by Hamas are able to fire different antitank rounds, including the standard
PG-7, which could not create the observed damage, according to munitions
experts.


(Palestine Red Crescent Society)

None of the six munitions experts interviewed by The Post could say definitively
what munition caused the damage or killed the paramedics based on the ambulance
alone because of the time elapsed and the complexity of urban combat. They
agreed, however, the damage to the ambulance was consistent with the potential
use of a round fired from Israeli tanks that match the vehicles captured in
satellite imagery in the area that day.

The seven bodies of the Hamada family were buried at al-Shifa Hospital. There
was no medical report, Samir said.

“All that mattered to us at that moment was to retrieve them and bury them in a
decent way.”

ABOUT THIS STORY

John Hudson in Washington, Hazem Balousha in Amman, Sarah Dadouch in Beirut,
Jarrett Ley in New York and Imogen Piper in London contributed to this report.

Satellite imagery provided by Planet Labs. Graphics by Jarrett Ley. Design and
development by Irfan Uraizee.


ISRAEL-GAZA WAR

The Israel-Gaza war has gone on for six months, and tensions have spilled into
the surrounding region.

The war: On Oct. 7, Hamas militants launched an unprecedented cross-border
attack on Israel that included the taking of civilian hostages at a music
festival. (See photos and videos of how the deadly assault unfolded). Israel
declared war on Hamas in response, launching a ground invasion that fueled the
biggest displacement in the region since Israel’s creation in 1948.

Gaza crisis: In the Gaza Strip, Israel has waged one of this century’s most
destructive wars, killing tens of thousands and plunging at least half of the
population into “famine-like conditions.” For months, Israel has resisted
pressure from Western allies to allow more humanitarian aid into the enclave.

U.S. involvement: Despite tensions between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu and some U.S. politicians, including President Biden, the United
States supports Israel with weapons, funds aid packages, and has vetoed or
abstained from the United Nations’ cease-fire resolutions.

History: The roots of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and mistrust are deep and
complex, predating the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948. Read more
on the history of the Gaza Strip.

Show more

Israel-Gaza war

Hand-curated

Israel weighs response to Iranian attack

April 15, 2024

Why did Iran attack Israel? What to know about the strikes, U.S. response.

April 15, 2024

Mapping the wide-scale Iranian drone and missile attacks

April 14, 2024

View all 20 stories
Share
1669 Comments
Meg KellyMeg Kelly is a video reporter for The Washington Post's Visual
Forensics team. @mmkelly22
Louisa LoveluckLouisa Loveluck is a London-based correspondent, covering global
crises. She was the paper's Baghdad bureau chief from 2019-2023, and before
that, covered the war in Syria from Beirut. @leloveluck
Miriam BergerMiriam Berger is a staff writer reporting on foreign news for The
Washington Post from Washington, D.C. Before joining The Post in 2019 she was
based in Jerusalem and Cairo and freelance reported around the Middle East, as
well as parts of Africa and Central Asia. @MiriamABerger
Cate BrownCate Brown is a researcher for The Post's International Investigations
team. @catebrown12|
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