The Jerusalem Post

Nine teenagers killed in desert flash flood

One girl still missing, harsh conditions postpone nighttime search • Reports: Police probe why trip was allowed

- • By TAMARA ZIEVE

Nine youths, eight girls and a boy from a pre-military academy, were killed after they were carried off by a surge in the Tzafit stream west of the southern part of the Dead Sea amid intense storms that hit the South of Israel on Thursday.

One female student was still missing, and the search and rescue operation in the Judean Desert was expected to continue through the night, although it was halted around 8 p.m. due to danger posed to the team by the harsh weather conditions.

Two other students of the school, the Bnei Zion Academy in Tel Aviv, were moderately wounded and were taken to the Soroka-University Medical Center in Beersheba. Thirteen of the students were found by search and rescue teams and were uninjured.

According to a statement released by the IDF Spokespers­on’s Unit, a medical team from the co-ed Bardelas Battalion stationed in that area came to the scene.

Three teams of the IDF’s elite 669 Search and Rescue Unit, aided by their three Yasur and two Yanshuf helicopter­s, searched for the missing. In addition, teams from the IDF’s Oketz canine unit and Yahalom joint special-combat engineerin­g unit took part in the search.

The statement added that the commander of the 80th “Edom” Division was also deployed to the scene.

Police Spokesman Micky Rosenfeld confirmed that an inquiry into the tragedy had been opened. Media reports suggested that the head of Bnei Zion had been taken in for questionin­g.

Magen David Adom EMT Eitan Shlomo, who evacuated the two injured teenagers to Soroka Medical Center, said: “On the way to the scene we drove past large puddles and flooding on the road. With the help of 4X4 vehicles we were able to arrive. We joined the MDA crews at the scene next to the entrance to the river and we treated and evacuated two 17 year olds suffering from injuries to their faces, limbs and heads. They were rescued by air force helicopter­s. They were evacuated to Soroka hospital in light to moderate condition.”

“We were unable to escape the current and were swept away by the river,” a rescued youth said on Channel 10 News.

Police officers and IDF helicopter­s aided in the search. The diving unit of the Fire Brigade was on location and rescue teams used boats to search the water for the missing teenagers.

Magen David Adom CEO Eli Bin said in an interview with Israeli radio station 103 FM that the rescue teams were “racing against the clock to save lives.”

Police instructed people to stay away from the area.

After 8 p.m., the Negev police spokesman said that they had temporaril­y stopped the search efforts due to the danger posed to the team by the harsh weather conditions, and that they would resume the search as soon as it was possible. PRESIDENT REUVEN RIVLIN, in a statement on the tragedy, said: “Our prayers and thoughts are with our brothers, our children, and our loved ones who are in trouble. We are closely following the updates from the South and send a warm embrace to the worried families. We will strengthen all the security and rescue forces, who are in the process of search and rescue and medical treatment. I ask you all, please follow the instructio­ns of the police and rescue forces and be attentive to them.”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was closely following the rescue mission and was updated over the phone by IDF Operations Directorat­e head Maj.-Gen. Yoav Har-Even.

“I support the security and rescue forces that are currently working to save lives and to locate those missing in the severe disaster that occurred today in the Tzafit River,” said Netanyahu. “We are all praying for better news.”

“The State of Israel grieves for the promising young lives that were cut off by the grave disaster in the Arava. We embrace, with pain, the grieving families, and pray for the speedy recovery of the wounded,” he said later, after news of the casualties had been reported.

The Education Ministry said it had not been informed of the trip. “The trip was not reported to us, was not known by our situation room and was not approved by us,” it said in a statement.

The ministry added that it was following developmen­ts with concern, was in constant contact with the relevant parties, and would soon provide the necessary responses to educationa­l institutio­ns on the matter.

The Defense Ministry responded to that statement by saying that according to rules and regulation­s, the Education Ministry is the profession­al body responsibl­e for approving the educationa­l activities in pre-military preparator­y programs.

“The Defense Ministry is not responsibl­e for the curriculum, including trips,” the ministry said, adding that it “continues to monitor the severe disaster in the Arava with great concern. It is very unfortunat­e that on such a day, not only does the responsibl­e body not take responsibi­lity, but rather imposes it on another entity.”

Education Minister Naftali Bennett said that a heavy tragedy has struck.

“Our hearts are with the families of the teenagers who found their deaths in flash floods in the South,” he said. “The Ministry of Education will continue, over the coming hours and days, to work closely with the educationa­l staff in the schools the students attended. MEANWHILE, serious flooding was reported in several other parts of the country as the mega-storm ripped through.

MDA reported that a 40-yearold woman in the southern Galilee, near the Kinneret Junction, had been injured after a tree fell during the storm and crushed her car.

A bus carrying some 50 people was also knocked over near the Dead Sea due to the heavy rains, but all occupants were evacuated safely.

Parts of the security barrier near Shuafat collapsed due to the heavy downfall. Residents and rioters from Shuafat attempted to infiltrate through the broken security barrier and threw stones at security forces. However, the Border Police fired tear gas and managed to push the crowd back. Border Police and security forces remained on the scene to prevent any further infiltrati­on attempts.

Videos of rainwater streaming through other parts of Jerusalem, including the Old City, were also posted on social media. Debris, such as chairs, shopping carts and other items could be seen floating down streets near Ben Yehuda Pedestrian Mall and Zion Square as raging waters flooded the area.

Videos also emerged of the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron flooding with water, as people tried to move chairs, books and other items out of harm’s way and prevent further damage from taking place due to the heavy rain.

Palestinia­n news outlets also reported that streets in Bethlehem had been closed due to the downpour, while the entrance to the Isawiya neighborho­od, located on Mount Scopus near Hadassah Medical Center in Jerusalem, had been closed due to flooding.

Police and rescue services had to save 15 people who were trapped by flooding in their vehicles in a valley near Bethlehem.

Parts of the east Jerusalem neighborho­od of Silwan were also badly flooded, with cars in some streets submerged under water.

Anna Ahronheim, Ilanit Chernick, Ariane Mandell and Hagay Hacohen contribute­d to this report.

 ?? (Amir Cohen/Reuters) ?? ISRAELI RESCUE services operate near the site of where a group of Israeli teenagers were swept away in a flash flood yesterday south of the Dead Sea.
(Amir Cohen/Reuters) ISRAELI RESCUE services operate near the site of where a group of Israeli teenagers were swept away in a flash flood yesterday south of the Dead Sea.
 ?? (Miriam Alster/Flash90) ?? A WOMAN REACTS outside the Bnei Zion Pre-Military Academy in Tel Aviv yesterday after nine students were said to have died in the Judean Desert.
(Miriam Alster/Flash90) A WOMAN REACTS outside the Bnei Zion Pre-Military Academy in Tel Aviv yesterday after nine students were said to have died in the Judean Desert.

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