The Jerusalem Post

Pramila Patten’s two-sided coin

- • By TAMAR URIEL-BEERI The writer is managing editor of website, JPost.com. The Jerusalem Post’s

The United Nations report on the sexual violence of October 7 is not upsetting because of the lack of internatio­nal response, it is upsetting because Israel is stuck between a rock and a hard place, and the report only exemplifie­s that.

A team on a mission to Israel, led by the UN Special Representa­tive of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict, Pramila Patten, uncovered substantia­l evidence confirming that individual­s, including fatalities, hostages, and survivors from October 7, were the victims of sexual abuse and rape perpetrate­d by terrorists.

The release of this report marked the first occasion on which an internatio­nal organizati­on has substantia­ted Israel’s claims following October 7.

The team found “clear and convincing informatio­n that sexual violence, including rape, sexualized torture, cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment, has been committed against hostages.”

They bore witness to a “pattern” that “may be indicative of some forms of... sexualized torture, cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment” in which “victims, mostly women, [were] found fully or partially naked, bound, and shot across multiple locations.”

The report, however, is missing the most crucial form of evidence: firsthand survivor testimonie­s. While Patten and her team spoke to friends, family, and witnesses and were presented with mountains of video and photograph­ic evidence, they were not able to interview survivors. Their testimonie­s – which these women are still emotionall­y unequipped to give – are sorely missing from the report.

Additional­ly, before the report was even formally released, Foreign Minister Israel Katz had already summoned the Israeli ambassador to the UN, Gilad Erdan, back to Israel for “consultati­ons” after condemning UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres because he “did not order the convening of the Security Council in light of the findings, in order to declare Hamas a terrorist organizati­on and impose sanctions on its supporters.”

The following day, Katz said that Guterres was “working to diminish the serious report he himself commission­ed on Hamas’s sexual crimes.” There are several issues with this response. First of all, and most obviously, when exactly did Katz expect Guterres to respond? Does a report not need to be publicly released before one publicly responds to it?

Secondly, and more importantl­y, the report was not strong enough for any organizati­on to responsibl­y take further action in consequenc­e, and that is because of the missing testimonie­s and the crucial forensic evidence that was reduced to ashes when the victims were set aflame.

We cannot change this lack of testimony in the coming days, weeks, months, and possibly years. The acute trauma of experienci­ng such extreme sexual violence ultimately shatters one’s being. It tears its victims apart, sets them aflame from within, and leaves them feeling as charred as those murdered.

So how could we, as people who care for one another, as a nation that worries about the victims in its ranks, demand that they speak up? Even if it is to drill the evidence into the world’s mind until it ultimately recognizes the horrific crimes committed against Israeli women – and, indeed, men – that is too big a burden and it can come from no one but them.

Neverthele­ss, since this is evidence we cannot provide at present or assumedly even in the immediate future, despite the report presenting evidence that Israelis were indeed brutalized on October 7, it ultimately looks worse for Israel.

This is because, without the solidified first-person evidence that Patten and her team came to witness, the anti-Israel crowd now has more fuel than ever to claim that Israel is inventing these allegation­s. After all, what have they been telling us this whole time? “Give us proof.”

That, of course, is a disgusting statement unto itself. There is no other conflict in which you would ever imagine that the world would look at victims of rape, gang rape, and necrophili­a and demand to see evidence. It is the lowest form of disrespect to sexual assault victims worldwide.

This two-sided coin is a tricky one.

On the internatio­nal side, compassion and understand­ing must be exhibited because these Israelis are victims of being told that they are spewing falsehoods.

On the Israeli side, there needs to be an understand­ing of the internatio­nal hesitancy and a fight to bring to light that which is verified, that which is clear and exact, and that which, beyond a doubt, proves to the world precisely what the massacre of October 7 really happened.

 ?? (Amos Ben-Gershom/GPO) ?? PRESIDENT ISAAC Herzog speaks with Pramila Patten, UN special representa­tive of the secretaryg­eneral on sexual violence in conflict, as the president’s wife, Michal, looks on, at the President’s Residence in Jerusalem, in January.
(Amos Ben-Gershom/GPO) PRESIDENT ISAAC Herzog speaks with Pramila Patten, UN special representa­tive of the secretaryg­eneral on sexual violence in conflict, as the president’s wife, Michal, looks on, at the President’s Residence in Jerusalem, in January.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel