Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Friendly fire may have killed their relatives on Oct. 7; Israeli families want answers now

- By Julia Frankel and Alon Bernstein

KIBBUTZ BE'ERI, ISRAEL >> Relatives of civilians killed at a kibbutz in southern Israel during the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas are demanding the military immediatel­y investigat­e signs that some may have been killed by Israeli security forces as they battled fighters holding hostages.

The military has said it will conduct a thorough investigat­ion of everything that went wrong on Oct. 7 and the days that followed once its war on Hamas is over.

But that's not soon enough for some family members of 13 people killed during a violent standoff between Hamas and Israeli security forces at Kibbutz Be'eri, along the Gaza border. They fear valuable evidence could be lost as the war — now in its fourth month — drags on with no end in sight.

Representa­tives of eight bereaved families delivered a two-page letter to the army chief of staff and other officials late last week, demanding an immediate probe and a public release of the findings.

“In light of the seriousnes­s of the incident, we do not think it is right to wait to investigat­e the incident until the end of the war, when it is not clear when it will end,” the letter said. It prodded the military to “start it immediatel­y, when the memory is fresh for all those involved.”

Be'eri was one of the communitie­s attacked on Oct. 7, when thousands of Hamas and other fighters broke through the Gaza border barrier, rampaging through the small farming towns and cooperativ­es of southern Israel. By the end of the day, they had killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taken about 250 hostages.

The heavy death toll in Israel, the intelligen­ce failures preceding the attack and the slow response by security forces that day have shattered the public's faith in the country's leadership and fueled calls for an investigat­ion before the war is over.

A finding that Be'eri residents may have been harmed by Israeli security forces could add to that loss in faith — especially as the army deals with a growing number of friendlyfi­re deaths of soldiers fighting in Gaza. By the end of December — the most updated data provided by Israel's military — 18 soldiers in the Gaza ground offensive were killed by friendly fire, as well as two from “shooting irregulari­ties,” and nine from “accidents.”

Be'eri was among the hardest hit communitie­s on Oct. 7. More than 95 people were killed there and 30 were taken hostage, according to the community's spokespers­on.

The families demanding a military investigat­ion are focused on a standoff that took place at the home of Pesi Cohen, where Hamas fighters had taken 15 hostages.

At one point, a Hamas commander asked Yasmine Porat — one of only two hostages to make it out of the Cohen home alive — to call the Israeli police. The commander sought to negotiate safe passage to Gaza with the hostages, in exchange for keeping them alive. Porat communicat­ed with the commander with the help of an Arabic-speaking hostage, a Palestinia­n man from Jerusalem.

After seven or eight phone calls to the police, officers finally arrived outside the home, Porat said.

An hours-long gun battle ensued between some 40 fighters and the Israeli forces outside, said Porat. The Israelis attempted to get into the house without killing the hostages, some of whom the fighters had placed in the front yard. Porat said she was shot in the leg.

 ?? TSAFRIR ABAYOV — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A battle-scarred home in Kibbutz Be'eri, an Israeli communal farm on the Gaza border, is seen Thursday. Hamas held more than a dozen hostages in the home when it overran southern Israel on Oct. 7.
TSAFRIR ABAYOV — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A battle-scarred home in Kibbutz Be'eri, an Israeli communal farm on the Gaza border, is seen Thursday. Hamas held more than a dozen hostages in the home when it overran southern Israel on Oct. 7.

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