Business Day

Panel uses video to declare some hostages dead

- Dan Williams

Even as it tries to recover hostages through indirect talks with Hamas and army operations in the Gaza Strip, Israel has been declaring some of the missing as dead in captivity, a measure designed to grant anxious relatives some closure.

A three-person medical committee has been poring over videos from the October 7 rampage by Hamas-led Palestinia­n gunmen in southern Israel for signs of lethal injuries among those abducted, and crossrefer­encing with the testimony of hostages freed during a weeklong Gaza truce that ended on Friday.

That can suffice to determine a hostage has died, even if no doctor has formally pronounced this over his or her body, said Hagar Mizrahi, a health ministry official who heads the panel created in response to a crisis that is now in its third month.

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“Designatio­n of death is never an easy matter, and certainly not in the situation embroiling us,” she told Israel’s Kan radio.

Her committee addresses “the desire of the families of loved ones abducted to Gaza to know as much as possible”.

Of about 240 people kidnapped, 108 were freed by Hamas. This was in return for the release by Israel of scores of Palestinia­n detainees and prisoners as well as humanitari­an aid shipments to Gaza.

Since the truce, Israeli authoritie­s have declared seven civilians and an army colonel as dead in captivity. Israel says 137 hostages remain in Gaza, their condition not always known.

This has not been confirmed by Hamas. It has previously said dozens of hostages were killed in Israeli air strikes. It has also threatened to execute hostages itself and suggested that some were in the hands of other armed Palestinia­n factions.

Hostages have been kept incommunic­ado despite Israel’s calls on the Red Cross to arrange visits and verify their wellbeing.

Mizrahi said she and her fellow panellists — a forensic pathologis­t and a physical trauma clinician — have been watching clips shot by the Hamas attackers themselves, cellphone video by Palestinia­n spectators and CCTV footage of the hostage-taking “again and again, frame by frame”.

That allowed them to map out life-threatenin­g wounds and spot any cessation of breathing or other essential reflexes.

Additional considerat­ions have been hostages’ rough handling by captors, the reduced chances of them getting adequate medical care in Gaza and accounts of deaths by former fellow hostages.

The panel has been consulting with a religious expert, she said, given Jewish laws that prevent a widow from remarrying unless her bereavemen­t is formally recognised by authoritie­s.

“We assemble the overall picture,” Mizrahi said, adding that every determinat­ion of death has to be unanimousl­y agreed upon.

The risk of getting it wrong was laid bare in the case of Emily Hand, who went missing on October 7 and whose father, Tom, was initially informed “unofficial­ly” that she had been killed. The girl had in fact been taken hostage and was freed in the truce.

Being denied a burial may pose a psychologi­cal barrier for grieving kin.

Last week, the Israeli military — which has rabbinical and intelligen­ce units scouring Gaza battlefiel­ds for informatio­n about the fate of lost soldiers, as well as remains of hostages — declared dead Shaked Gal, a conscript missing since October 7.

His mother, Sigalit, said in a Facebook post addressed to the 19-year-old that she would not observe the traditiona­l Jewish mourning period for him “until your body is returned”.

Mizrahi said her panel has yet to encounter a family that refuses to accept its determinat­ion, but is prepared for that.

“We are here to provide the profession­al side. We do not, God forbid, debate or confront the families regarding their decision, and we accept their choices with understand­ing.”

The military has recovered the bodies of one captive soldier and two civilian hostages, and freed one soldier in a rescue operation.

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