Yasmin Porat, a survivor of the bloodshed at Kibbutz Be’eri near the boundary with Gaza says scores of Israeli civilians were killed by Israeli forces themselves and not by Hamas.
Electronic Intifada
An Israeli woman who survived the Hamas assault on settlements near the Gaza boundary on 7 October says Israeli civilians were ‘undoubtedly’ killed by their own security forces.
It happened when Israeli forces engaged in fierce gun battles with Palestinian fighters in Kibbutz Be’eri and fired indiscriminately at both the fighters and their Israeli prisoners.
‘They eliminated everyone, including the hostages,’ she told Israeli radio.
The woman, 44-year-old mother of three Yasmin Porat, said that prior to that, she and other civilians had been held by the Palestinians for several hours and were ‘treated humanely.’
A recording of her interview, from the radio program Haboker Hazeh (‘This Morning’) hosted by Aryeh Golan on state broadcaster Kan, has been circulating on social media.
The interview has been translated by The Electronic Intifada. You can listen to it with English subtitles in this video and a transcript is at the end of this article:
Notably, the interview is not included in the online version of Haboker Hazeh for 15 October, the episode in which it aired, obviously censored due to its explosive nature.
Porat’s account undermines Israel’s official story of deliberate, wanton murder by the Palestinian fighters, and although it no longer appears on the Kan website, there can be little doubt about the recording’s authenticity.
At least one Hebrew-language account posted part of the interview on Twitter, now officially called X, and accused Kan of functioning as ‘media in the service of Hamas.’
Porat also gave her account to the Israeli newspaper Maariv.
However, the Maariv story, published on 9 October, makes no mention of civilians being killed by Israeli forces.
And in a half-hour interview with Israel’s Channel 12 on Thursday, Porat speaks of intense gunfire after Israeli forces arrived. Porat herself received a bullet in the thigh.
‘Treated humanely’
Not only does Porat tell Kan that Israelis were killed in the heavy counterattack by Israeli security forces, but she says she and other captive civilians were well-treated by the Palestinian fighters.
Porat had been attending the ‘Nova’ rave when the Hamas assault began with missiles and motorized paragliders. She and her partner Tal Katz escaped by car to nearby Kibbutz Be’eri where many of the events she describes in her media interviews took place.
According to Porat speaking to Maariv, she and Katz initially sought refuge in the house of a couple called Adi and Hadas Dagan. After the Palestinian fighters found them they were all taken to another house, where eight people were already being held captive and one person was dead.
Porat said that the wife of the dead man ‘told us that when the Hamas fighters tried to enter, the guy tried to prevent them from entering and grabbed the door. They shot at the door and he was killed. They did not execute them.’
‘They did not abuse us. They treated us very humanely,’ Porat explained to a surprised Golan in the Kan radio interview.
‘By that I mean they guard us,’ she said. ‘They give us something to drink here and there. When they see we are nervous they calm us down. It was very frightening but no one treated us violently. Luckily nothing happened to me like what I heard in the media.’
‘They were very humane towards us,’ Porat said in her Channel 12 interview. She recalled that one Palestinian fighter who spoke Hebrew told her ‘We’re not going to kill you. We want to take you to Gaza. We are not going to kill you. So be calm, you’re not going to die.’ That’s what he told me, in those words.’
‘I was calm because I knew nothing would happen to me,’ she added.
‘They told us that we would not die, that they wanted to take us to Gaza and that the next day they would return us to the border,’ Porat told Maariv.
In the Channel 12 interview, Porat elaborates that although the Palestinian fighters all had loaded weapons, she never saw them shoot captives or threaten them with their guns.
In addition to providing the captives with drinking water, she said the fighters let them go outside to the lawn because it was hot, especially as the electricity was cut.
Young and scared
About eight hours after the start of the Hamas attack and about half an hour after Porat’s calls to the police, Israeli forces arrived and chaos ensued, Porat told Kan.
‘At first there was no [Israeli] security force with us,’ Porat recalled, noting that her first call to the Israeli police went unanswered. ‘We were the ones who called the police, together with the abductors because the abductors wanted the police to arrive. Because their objective was to kidnap us to Gaza.’
‘They understand that soldiers will not kill hostages. So they want to come out with us alive and for the police to permit it,’ Porat told Channel 12.
Though the Israeli captives numbered only a dozen, Porat was instructed to tell Israeli police that 40 of them were being held by the Hamas fighters, who themselves numbered between 40 and 50 men mostly in their 20s, by Porat’s estimate. They themselves were young and scared, she told Channel 12.
A fighter Porat described as a commander in his 30s asked to speak to the police and was put on with an Arabic-speaking Israeli officer.
After their brief conversation, the four dozen or so Palestinian fighters and their dozen Israeli prisoners awaited the arrival of the army, with some of the group spilling outside to the garden for relief from the afternoon heat.
Hails of bullets, mortars and tank shells
Israeli forces announced their arrival with a hail of gunfire, catching the fighters and their Israeli captives by surprise.
‘We were outside and suddenly there was a volley of bullets at us from the Israeli unit YAMAM. We all started running to find cover, Porat told Channel 12.’
Porat said she surrendered to the Israeli soldiers half an hour into the fierce gun battle that consisted of ‘tens and hundreds and thousands of bullets and mortars flying in the air’.
‘He starts to disrobe,’ Porat recalled to Kan’s Aryeh Golan. ‘He calls to me and he starts to leave the house with me, under fire. At that time I yell to the Israeli commandos and when they can hear me, to stop firing.’
‘And then they heard me and stopped firing,’ she added. ‘I see people from the kibbutz on the lawn. There are five or six hostages lying on the ground outside. Just like sheep to the slaughter, between the shooting of our commandos and the terrorists.’
‘The terrorists shot them?’ Golan asks.
‘No, they were killed by the crossfire,’ Porat responds. ‘Understand there was very, very heavy crossfire.’
Golan presses: ‘So our own forces may have shot them?’
‘Undoubtedly,’ the former captive responds, and adds, ‘They eliminated everyone, including the hostages.’
‘After insane crossfire, two tank shells were shot into the house. It’s a small kibbutz house, nothing big,’ Porat explains.
Porat and the man who took her captive both survived. The Palestinian was taken prisoner by Israeli forces. But according to Porat, almost everyone else in the settlement was killed, wounded or missing, believed to have been taken to Gaza.
Porat told Kan she lost dozens of friends who had been at the rave – people she would regularly see at parties in Israel’s trance scene.
‘I’m angry at the state, I’m angry at the army,’ Porat told Maariv. ‘For 10 hours the kibbutz was abandoned.’
The joint American-Israeli effort to paint Hamas as worse than ISIS in order to justify Israel’s unfolding genocide against the civilian population in Gaza depends on the international public not seeing or hearing accounts like Porat’s.
Israeli leaders, already under intense criticism for failing to anticipate and prevent the Hamas offensive, will also not want their catastrophic failures to be compounded by knowledge that many of the Israelis who died may well have been killed by ‘friendly fire’ in a disastrous Israeli counterattack.
Hannibal Directive?
Saleh al-Arouri, a senior Hamas military commander, has directly addressed Israel’s claims that his fighters set out to deliberately kill as many civilians as possible.
The Israeli propaganda campaign has included lurid atrocity tales – for which no evidence has been produced whatsoever – that Palestinians beheaded dozens of Israeli babies and that women were raped.
Al-Arouri said in an interview with Al Jazeera on Thursday that fighters of his organization’s military force, the Qassam Brigades, were under strict protocol to not harm civilians.
But al-Arouri said that after Israel’s Gaza division – the army unit that surrounds the Gaza Strip – collapsed much more quickly than expected, people in Gaza rushed to the boundary area after learning it had been opened, causing chaos. He said this may have included other armed persons who were not part of Qassam.
Al-Arouri said that this caused Qassam fighters to engage with soldiers, settlement guards and armed residents, which led to civilian deaths.
Al-Arouri also invoked the possibility Israel used the so-called Hannibal Directive – a protocol that allows Israeli forces to use overwhelming force to kill one of their own captured soldiers rather than allow them to be taken prisoner.
The rationale for the Hannibal Directive is to avoid allowing an enemy to have captives that can be used in prisoner exchange negotiations.
However in this case, if the directive was implemented by Israeli forces, it would have been used against civilians.
Al-Arouri told Al Jazeera, ‘We are certain that young men [fighters] were bombed along with the prisoners who were with them.’
Porat’s account, among others, underscores the need for an independent investigation, one which Israel is unlikely ever to permit.
The current propaganda narrative is simply too valuable to the genocidaires in Tel Aviv.