logo
Israel jails soldiers for refusing to return to Gaza after they killed children

Israel jails soldiers for refusing to return to Gaza after they killed children

Middle East Eye28-07-2025
The Israeli military has jailed three soldiers who refused to return to the Gaza Strip after they killed Palestinian children.
According to the Israeli outlet Kan, four soldiers from the 931st Battalion in the Nahal Brigade were removed from combat and punished after informing their commanders that they would not return to fight.
The four had fought for several rounds in the Gaza Strip, spending between 13 and 17 months in the enclave during the ongoing war. Kan cited the soldiers as saying they were suffering from a "deep internal crisis" during the fighting.
One of the soldiers imprisoned told Kan that he felt unable to return after killing children and a mother.
"We were in an extermination area, we saw three figures entering the area and, as instructed, we shot. Later it turned out - these were 12-13 year old children and their mother. We didn't know. We followed orders," they told the outlet.
New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch
Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters
"After this incident, we had three soldiers leave because of post-traumatic stress disorder who suffered from dreams at night, insomnia, they would see these children. They didn't talk to us, they didn't bring us a psychologist, everything continued as usual."
Three of the four soldiers received prison sentences ranging from one week to 12 days. The fourth has not yet been tried.
One of the jailed soldiers had been wounded last year during fighting along the Gaza border and had returned voluntarily to fight after recovering.
According to an AFP tally based on figures from the Israeli military, 462 Israeli soldiers have been killed since the war on Gaza began in October 2023.
Twenty-three have been killed in the past month alone.
Since the war began nearly 22 months ago, Israeli forces have killed over 59,800 Palestinians, including at least 17,000 children. More than 144,000 people have been wounded.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israeli forces have killed 17 Palestinians in Gaza since Thursday morning
Israeli forces have killed 17 Palestinians in Gaza since Thursday morning

Middle East Eye

time2 hours ago

  • Middle East Eye

Israeli forces have killed 17 Palestinians in Gaza since Thursday morning

At least 17 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces in the Gaza Strip since Thursday morning, medical sources have confirmed to Al Jazeera Arabic. The deaths mark yet another deadly day in Israel's months-long assault on the besieged enclave, where air and ground attacks have devastated entire neighbourhoods and displaced hundreds of thousands. Hospitals, already on the brink of collapse, continue to struggle under the weight of mounting casualties and dwindling supplies.

From stage to hospital bed: Gaza dabke dancer shot in head while collecting food
From stage to hospital bed: Gaza dabke dancer shot in head while collecting food

The National

time5 hours ago

  • The National

From stage to hospital bed: Gaza dabke dancer shot in head while collecting food

Performing on stage brought Ahmed Abo El Khair immense joy. Ever since he was 10, he had been passionate about dabke, the Palestinian folk dance recognised by Unesco as an intangible cultural heritage. Ahmed was a proud and active member of a dabke troupe in Gaza, performing regularly in public. But after being shot in the head while collecting aid at a distribution centre, he was forced off the stage and into a hospital bed. The university student, 20, who was known and loved for his bubbly personality, now lies helpless and frail, staring into the ceiling, almost in disbelief at his current state. The smile on his face and spark in his eyes have vanished. His visible ribs are a testament to his malnutrition. Without proper food and medical treatment, Ahmed cannot recover, his family says. After weeks of near-total starvation, all that remains of him is skin and bones. 'Doctors tell us Ahmed needs proper nutrition to recover, and for his memory to get better, as he has some memory loss, but what can I feed him when there's no food?", his mother, Rana Abo El Khair, told The National. The young Gazan had ventured to an aid centre run by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation in Netzarim to secure food for his family, when he was shot in the head. With deteriorating health centres, the bullet remains lodged in his skull, causing a fracture and internal bleeding. The GHF has faced global criticism and condemnation for its food delivery system. Since May, at least 1,373 Palestinians have been killed while seeking food; 859 in the vicinity of the GHF sites and 514 along the routes of food convoys, the UN said last week. He had made the perilous trip in desperation, amid severe food shortages in the enclave. Aid organisations, human rights groups and a global hunger monitor have warned of mass starvation and famine spreading in Gaza, forcing Palestinians to risk their lives for the smallest amounts of food. Although Ahmed miraculously survived, his condition has deteriorated under Israel's blockade of Gaza. His life has been turned upside down. 'Every passing day, his situation gets worse,' his father, Iyad Abo El Khair, told The National. At least 193 people have now died of starvation – 96 of them children – under Israel 's blockade of the coastal territory, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. International efforts have included food being dropped from the air and aid supplies from the UAE and Jordan, but starvation is increasingly being used as a weapon of war in Gaza, according to the UN. The agency's secretary general Antonio Guterres has described the search for food in the enclave as a ' death sentence '. 'He loved food the most, he loved kaak and maftoul [Palestinian food], and he told me to prepare these foods for him once he got back from the aid centre,' Ahmed's mother said. Instead, his mother received a call at 3am to say her son had been injured. Ahmed was immediately admitted into the intensive care unit and later taken into surgery. Gaza's health sector has been significantly crippled by Israeli attacks and bombardment. UN reports have detailed Israel's deliberate and widespread attacking of Gaza's medical sector and medical staff. 'It was shocking to see my son like this, I have no words to describe it,' his mother said. Despite his circumstances, Ahmed has one word on his lips at all times: 'Alhamdulillah', or thank God, his sister, Doha Abo El Khair, told The National. 'Ahmed loved his life, he was happy, he was content, but he also had plans to travel and study abroad after working hard in school,' his sister said. 'But now his future has gone to waste because of his situation,' she added.

Photo of Saudi Arabia's crown prince inside Jeffrey Epstein's mansion fuels criticism online
Photo of Saudi Arabia's crown prince inside Jeffrey Epstein's mansion fuels criticism online

Middle East Eye

time12 hours ago

  • Middle East Eye

Photo of Saudi Arabia's crown prince inside Jeffrey Epstein's mansion fuels criticism online

The New York Times on Tuesday ignited a wave of backlash after revealing a framed photograph of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman displayed inside the New York City mansion of convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The article, which takes readers inside the late convicted paedophile's seven-storey Manhattan home, features surveillance cameras positioned above his bed and in adjoining rooms, taxidermied animals, and provocative artwork, including a sculpture of a bride clutching a rope suspended from the ceiling in the atrium. Images from the home of Jeffrey Epstein show cameras in bedrooms and photos of him with: Donald Trump Steve Bannon Bill Clinton Elon Musk Larry Summers Mohammed bin Salman and more As well as memorabilia from Ehud Barak, Woody Allen, Bill Gates, and many others. Gift link 👇🏼 — Leah McElrath (@leahmcelrath) August 5, 2025 The revelation of the crown prince's photograph inside Epstein's mansion has sparked a storm of criticism on social media. Many social media users expressed their lack of surprise, with one remarking on another photograph of Mohammed bin Salman with George Nader, another convicted criminal and serial paedophile. 'Whenever Mohammed Bonesaw isn't orchestrating the murder of journalists (a reference to the Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi) and dissolving their remains in acid, he seems to enjoy posing for photos with pedophiles.' Another person commented, 'Personally, I think this is the least surprising one out of all of them.' New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Some questioned the public's reaction altogether. 'Is MBS considered a moral leader in any way?' one person asked, while others connected the scandal to Saudi Arabia's silence towards the ongoing war in Gaza, which several states, human rights scholars and institutions now qualify as a genocide. One Reddit user wrote, 'If this is true, it would explain a lot for why there's no coordinated military response to the genocide [in Gaza].' Another post on X added: 'This is why he supports 'Israel'.' Wonder why they're all working for Israel and against their people ? Saudi Arabia's King MBS, Pope, Emirati high level figure, Trump ... with their common pedophile friend Jeffrey Epstein. — MenchOsint (@MenchOsint) August 5, 2025 The criticism escalated as people connected the image to long-standing allegations of Gulf-Israeli collaboration. Sam Youssef, author and editor of American and International Affairs, asked: 'Do you now understand why Arab rulers kneel to Netanyahu and the Mossad?' Others saw the photograph as symbolic of regional betrayal. 'Basically, the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques was being managed by an Israeli agent. That's why Palestinians are helpless today. But not for long,' one person posted. Many expressed disbelief and concern over the Saudi crown prince's apparent proximity to Epstein. But the relationship between Epstein and Mohammed bin Salman isn't new. A year before his death, which was ruled a suicide in 2019, Epstein boasted of his ties to the crown prince during an interview with The New York Times. A 2019 report by The New York Times—Jeffrey Epstein claimed to have known Mohammed bin Salman (MBS), the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia. During a 2018 interview with journalist James B. Stewart, Epstein gestured to a framed photograph of MBS displayed prominently in his… — Levantine Logic (@SyriaRetold) August 6, 2025 The crown prince was not the only high-profile figure whose image was exposed from inside Epstein's mansion. Framed photos of US President Donald Trump; former President Bill Clinton; Pope John Paul II; Mick Jagger; Elon Musk; Fidel Castro; CEO of DP World, Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem from the United Arab Emirates; and former prime minister of Qatar, Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jabr al-Thani were also in his home. Framed photograph in Jeffrey Epstein's Manhattan home shows him with the UAE's Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem, the current group chairman & CEO of DP World (X) In 2008, Epstein was convicted in Florida for soliciting prostitution from a minor, serving just 13 months in jail under a controversial plea deal. A decade later, he was arrested again on federal charges of sex trafficking of minors, accused of abusing dozens of underage girls between 2002 and 2005 in his homes in New York and Palm Beach. On 6 July 2019, Epstein was arrested and held at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York City while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges. He died in his cell on 10 August 2019. Epstein's death has done little to quell public scrutiny. His connections to influential individuals, including former US presidents, royals, and billionaires, continue to fuel speculation about the extent of his network and whether justice was truly served.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store