Killed by the IDF: head of the Civil Defense mission in Rafah

No.

16274

Date

28 March, 2025

Location

Original Social Media Post

"The body of Anwar Al-Attar, head of the Civil Defense mission in Rafah, was transferred to Nasser Medical Complex after he was confirmed martyred. This comes after the Palestinian Red Crescent Society, coordinated and escorted by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), managed to enter the Tal al-Sultan area in Rafah yesterday following five days of attempting to gain access. The mission aimed to determine the fate of nine paramedics and five civil defense workers who went missing after being besieged and targeted by Israeli occupation forces. According to the latest update from the Palestinian Red Crescent Society, the remaining 14 individuals from both teams are still missing. Source: @hassaneslayeh" - Source

Tags

Archivist Notes: Rafah displacement and massacre of rescue team

Forced displacement:

Around 8 am, the IDF issued a forced displacement order covering the Tal al-Sultan area, in southwest Rafah.

Israel prohibited displacement by vehicles, forcing people, ailing, elderly to walk long distances under Israeli gunfire, as was documented by journalists on the ground.

Field executions

Multiple eyewitnesses recounted that the IDF shot at people during the forced displacement, and struck a bus full of people.

A father, displaced from the Saudi neighborhood, also recounted seeing two people being shot dead on the coastal road, and found his own son killed lying on the ground in the "barracks" area.

A mother, also reported her son was killed but could not take his body as the tanks were in front of her.

Rescue vehicles struck and crew missing

At dawn, hours before the forced displacement announcement, the IDF had struck a PRCS ambulance north of Rafah. Palestinian sources reported hours later, around 8 am, that IDF troops had surrounded five ambulances and a fire truck, and people in Rafah, including some injured by Israeli attacks. The vehicles were transporting 16 first responders (10 PRCS paramedics and 6 Civil Defense crews) responding to the aftermath of Israeli strikes in Al-Hashashin area of Rafah.

Around 10 am, journalists reported that contact was lost with Civil Defense crews who were sent to rescue PRCS crews targeted by the IDF.

On March 28, a joint mission involving Civil Defense, Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) and UNOCHA reached the area and found the PRCS and Civil Defense vehicles bombed and completely destroyed, along with a UN vehicle. Moreover the head of the Civil Defense mission to Rafah, Anwar al-Attar was found killed.

On March 30, another mission to search for the missing crew found most of the missing crew members killed, including a UN employee.

Al-Jazeera's fact checking agency, Sanad, obtained and analyzed satellite imagery which clearly showed IDF vehicles surrounding the rescue vehicles. The IDF confirmed that its troops had opened fire on several vehicles “advancing suspiciously toward IDF troops without headlights or emergency signals”.

The victims and the wrecked vehicles were buried collectively under the sand, as evidenced in UNOCHA footage of the search operations.

According to the Mnistry of Health and the Civil Defense spokesperson, the rescue crews were buried only a few metere away from their vehicles, meaning that they were taken out. He added that one of them had his clothes removed and another one was beheaded. Their bodies had marking of having been zip-tied, and benig shot by a hail of bullets.

Account of events by Jonathan Whittall, UNOCHA head of Gaza and West Bank office:

First responders should never be a target. Yet today UNOCHA supported @PalestineRCS and Civil Defense to retrieve colleagues from a mass grave in Rafah that was marked with the emergency light from one of their crushed ambulances.

Seven days ago, as Israeli forces advanced on Rafah, 10 PRCS and 6 Civil Defense first responders were dispatched to collect injured. All five ambulances and one fire-truck were struck, along with a UN vehicle that arrived later. Contact was lost with all.

One survivor said Israeli forces had killed both of the crew in his ambulance. For days, OCHA coordinated to reach the site but our access was only granted 5days later.

While traveling to the area on the fifth day we encountered hundreds of civilians fleeing under gunfire. We witnessed a woman shot in the back of the head. When a young man tried to retrieve her, he too was shot. We were able to recover her body using our UN vehicle.

Returning the next day, we were finally able to reach the site and discovered a devastating scene: ambulances, the UN vehicle, and fire truck had been crushed and partially buried. After hours of digging, we recovered one body - a Civil Defense worker beneath his fire truck.

Today, on the first day of Eid, we returned and recovered the buried bodies of 8 PRCS, 6 Civil Defense and 1 UN staff. They were killed in their uniforms. Driving their clearly marked vehicles. Wearing their gloves. On their way to save lives. This should never have happened

List of the members of the rescue mission:

  1. Mustafa Khafaja (Red Crescent, killed)
  2. Ezz El-Din Shaat (Red Crescent, killed)
  3. Saleh Muammar (Red Crescent, killed)
  4. Muhammad Bahloul (Red Crescent, killed)
  5. Muhammad Al-Hila (Red Crescent, killed)
  6. Ashraf Abu Libda (Red Crescent, killed)
  7. Raed Al-Sharif (Red Crescent, killed)
  8. Refaat Radwan (Red Crescent, killed)
  9. Asaad Al-Nsasra (Red Crescent, missing)
  10. Anwar Al-Attar (Civil Defense, killed)
  11. Fouad Al-Jammal (Civil Defense, killed)
  12. Yousef Khalifa (Civil Defense, killed)
  13. Zuhayr Al-Farra (Civil Defense, killed)
  14. Sameer Al-Bahabsa (Civil Defense, killed)
  15. Ibrahim Al-Mughari (Civil Defense, killed)
  16. unnamed United Nations staff member (killed)

The details for each video come from social media. None of it has been verified.