Airwars assessment
In a series of deadly shootings starting in the early hours of Sunday, March 23, 2025, and continuing till at least 5:45 AM, eight Palestinian paramedics and an UNRWA employee were allegedly shot dead in the Al-Hashashin area in the Tal al-Sultan neighbourhood of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, while one paramedic was arrested by the Israeli military.
All but one of the victims represented the Palestine Red Crescent Society, and the incident happened after a number of ambulances were reportedly besieged by the Israeli military. Afterwards, they were buried in sand with their destroyed vehicles. The victims’ bodies were found on March 30, 2025, after a week of ongoing search efforts.
Airwars has also documented separately the deaths of six additional paramedics who were reportedly also shot by Israeli forces after being dispatched to help those who had gone missing and are detailed in this incident. Their deaths are detailed in ISPT230325za.
Israeli officials claimed that both incidents targeted Hamas militants, though no evidence was found of militants present among the victims. The IDF later dismissed the deputy commander responsible for the incident for inaccurate reporting after inconsistencies were proven in the IDF’s public narrative of events, but did not admit to wrongdoing in relation to the killings of the paramedics.
The paramedics killed in the first ambulance at around 4 AM were 50-year-old Mustafa Khafaga and 51-year-old Ezz El-Din Ahmed Shaath, survived by their 27-year-old colleague Abed Munter who was reported to have been detained and interrogated by Israeli soldiers but later released.
According to a Sky News report, their ambulance set out around 3:52 AM to evacuate Palestinian civilians wounded by Israeli shelling in the Al-Hashashin area of Rafah, but the ambulance and its crew had been hit on the way. At 3:56 AM, the PRSC lost contact with this ambulance, as reported by Sky News.
As recounted by Watan News and Sky News, 42-year-old PRCS paramedic Saleh Muammar also responded to the call about injuries and assessed the destruction, called for backup, evacuated the wounded, and returned to base. Then, he learned that the ambulance led by his colleague, Mustafa Khafaja, had lost radio contact. Before sunrise, at 4:39 AM, Saleh returned to the site and saw the abandoned ambulance in sand dunes known locally as al-Hashasheen. On board with him were 32-year-old Ashraf Abu Labda and 25-year-old Raed al Sharif, and all three were later killed.
Saleh organized a rescue convoy: multiple Red Crescent ambulances, a fire truck, and a UN vehicle. Among those paramedics who followed Saleh’s call were 36-year-old Mohamed Sobhi Bahloul, 24-year-old Refaat Radwan, 23-year-old Mohamed Hassan Al-Hila, and 47-year-old Assad Al-Nassasrah, all of whom were killed. The body of an UNRWA (United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees) employee named Kamal Muhammad Shahtout was found buried along with the PRCS paramedics.
According to the detailed investigation by Sky News, at 5:10 AM, Saleh called the dispatcher and told them that they were under attack. His colleague Ashraf Abu Labda, who was with him in the ambulance, also called the PRCS dispatch center at 5:13 AM as the convoy came under fire. An audio recording of the 99-second call, obtained by CNN and Sky News, captured him repeating the “shahada”, a prayer that Muslims recite when facing death, for the first 33 seconds, as heavy gunfire continued. Suddenly, the shooting stopped, and Ashraf fell silent for several seconds. Then he was heard saying, “There are soldiers, there are soldiers here.” A soldier can be heard in the background, saying “Come, come, come” in Hebrew.
The PRSC dispatcher was also able to successfully call Saleh Muammar as late as 5.45 AM, 37 minutes after the attack began, according to Nibal Farsakh, a spokesperson for PRCS. Saleh was still alive at that time and said he had been injured amidst the sounds of heavy gunfire.
As per Sky News, shortly before 5 AM, another ambulance with Refaat Radwan and Assad Al-Nassassrah on board departed from PRCS’s Rafah headquarters to search for three colleagues who had disappeared while on a rescue mission. This ambulance was followed by the ambulance with Mohamed Sobhi Bahloul and Mohamed Hassan Al-Hila on board.
At 4:55 AM, the video being filmed by Refaat on his mobile phone started. The paramedics were driving slowly through dark streets, manoeuvring around the rubble of destroyed buildings. “I feel like I’m suffocating,” Refaat reportedly told Assad as per Sky News. “Mate, I am calling them on their mobiles, no answer.” At 5 AM, they drove right past the ambulance they were searching for, but did not notice it. There were reportedly no roadblocks, checkpoints, or any other signs that the area had become a combat zone.
At 5:02, they spotted an ambulance heading in the other direction. It was their colleague, Saleh Muammar. They asked him if he knew where the missing ambulance was. “What do you mean you didn’t see the ambulance?” Saleh asked. “I myself saw the leg of one of them under the ambulance.” After talking to Saleh, Refaat and Assad turned around. As they set off again, Assad tells Refaat to put away the camera. “These moments need to be documented,” Refaat replied.
At 5:07, Refaat and Assad were overtaken by a Civil Defence fire engine, which was also searching for the missing ambulance.
At 5:08 AM, they reached the site and saw the bodies of the missing paramedics. According to an Al Jazeera report, a voice of Refaat said seeing the killed paramedics: “They’re scattered on the ground! Look, look!” and Refaat ran out of the vehicle with other medics to check on the fallen aid workers. According to Sky News, those words were said by Assad instead.
Then the sound of bullets began as Israeli soldiers shot at uniformed medics who were running to assist the medics they had already killed. The video captured how two paramedics were running towards the missing ambulance from the fire engine.
The video went dark, but the audio recording continued for another five minutes. Refaat was heard repeatedly saying “shahada,” and said he knew he was going to die. At 5:15 AM, Refaat said: “Forgive me mom, this is the path I chose – to help people – I swear I didn’t choose this path, but to help people.” The voices of others in the convoy can also be heard, as well as those of people shouting commands in Hebrew. It’s unclear who they were or what they were saying.
At 5.54 AM, the dispatch centre managed to get through to Assad Al-Nassassrah – the paramedic who was sitting next to Refaat in his ambulance. “He was scared,” the spokesperson of the PRSC, Nibal Farsakh, said. “He was talking about his children – please look after my children, please get me out of here.” Nibal said that the dispatcher stayed on the line with Assad for an hour-and-a-half, calling back each time the signal cut out.
At around 7 AM, the dispatcher said that she heard Assad being arrested by the Israelis. At 7.25 AM, the dispatcher heard the soldiers telling Assad to empty his pockets. Fearing the soldiers would find out he had been recording them, the dispatcher hung up. It was not until 13 April, three weeks after the attack, that Israel confirmed Assad was alive and in Israeli detention.
According to multiple sources, the paramedics were killed by gunfire and/or executed with bullets from short range. According to Sky News, the Israeli troops continued to fire at the unarmed medics for five-and-a-half minutes.
The survivor of the incident, Abed Munther, told Sky News that he witnessed the crushing of the vehicles with his own eyes, corroborating Sky’s finding that the vehicles were crushed only after being moved to the side of the road. After the heavy machinery arrived at dawn, Munther says, the Israelis dug a large hole on one side of the road and several smaller holes on the other side.
“In the large hole, they put all the ambulances and the Civil Defence vehicles,” he said. “The heavy machinery climbed over all the vehicles. Then they buried them with some earth.”
Timeline of the consequent events – from the disappearance of the ambulances to the recovery of bodies
The Palestinian Information Center was the first to report the incident on its Twitter/X account @PalinfoAr at 6:59 AM, informing about the injury of the two paramedics from the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) and the loss of contact with others after they had been besieged by the Israeli military in the Al-Hashashin area of Rafah. Twitter/X account @RassdNewsN corroborated this information by posting the statement of the Palestine Red Crescent Society, which read, “The [Israeli] forces besieged a number of our ambulances while they were in an area that was targeted in Rafah. A number of the society’s paramedics were injured, and contact with the crew, which has been under siege for hours, has been lost.”
The next day, the PRSC informed that ten crew members and four vehicles (ambulances) were besieged by the Israeli military in the Hashashin area of Rafah, and some of the paramedics were injured. It also added that the Israeli forces “deliberately targeted” the PRSC crew.
For a week, the fate of 10 Palestine Red Crescent ambulance crews remained unknown. The Palestinian Red Crescent Society repeatedly condemned the Israeli military’s deliberate obstruction of the search for the crews in its statements. The PRSC “held Israeli forces fully responsible for the crews’ lives, especially since initial information from the crew at the time of the incident confirmed that they were subjected to heavy fire from Israeli forces, resulting in several injuries.” The organization also repeatedly called on the international community “to pressure the [Israeli] authorities to reveal the fate of the missing crews” and “to take serious steps to provide protection for medical personnel.”
According to the Facebook post by Wakalt Quds net llanbaa, one of the PRCS ambulances managed to leave the site before Israeli forces surrounded the remaining four vehicles in the Hashashin area of Rafah, and a number of paramedics were injured. The post contained an image where holes from the gunfire in the ambulance can be seen.
On March 25, 2025, many social media posts contained the names of the nine missing PRSC paramedics.
On March 27, 2025, the Palestinian Red Crescent Society announced its entry into the Tal al-Sultan area of Rafah, in coordination with UN OCHA (United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs), and the recovery of the body of one civil defense worker.
As reported by the Twitter/X posts by @esml97 and other users, on March 30, 2025, the Palestinian Red Crescent Society announced the recovery of the bodies of eight paramedics, seven days after they lost contact and were besieged in the Tal al-Sultan area of Rafah. A Twitter/X post by @Meemmag corroborated that the ninth paramedic was missing and could have been arrested by the Israeli military. The post contained a photo collage of the victims, all men, with their names: Mustafa Khafaga, Ezz El-Din Ahmed Shaath, Mohamed Sobhi Bahloul, Refaat Radwan, Mohamed Hassan Al-Hila, Saleh Muammar, Ashraf Abu Labda, and Raed Al-Sharif.
CGTN Arabic reported on its Facebook that Ahmed al-Sousi, one of the paramedics who participated in the search operations, wiped away his tears and told Xinhua: “We found the bodies buried in the sand, some of which had begun to decompose. It was clear that they had been executed in the field.”
The Palestine Red Crescent Society was “shocked” by the killing of eight of its paramedics in Rafah, as reported by @mustafaibr on Twitter/X. According to the PRSC, the paramedics were hit by the Israeli military while performing their humanitarian duty – they were heading to the Hashashin area in Rafah to provide first aid to a number of people injured by Israeli shelling in the area. A ninth paramedic remained missing. In its statement, the organization called the incident “a tragedy not only for us at the Palestinian Red Crescent, but also for humanitarian work and humanity”:
“This massacre of our crews is a tragedy not only for us at the Palestine Red Crescent, but also for humanitarian work and humanity. The [Israeli] targeting of Red Crescent paramedics and their protected international emblem can only be considered a war crime punishable under international humanitarian law, which [Israel] continues to violate in full view of the entire world. The world has thus far failed to take serious steps to prevent [Israel] from continuing these flagrant violations of international conventions against health and humanitarian workers.”
Twitter/X user @alngrey2010 posted an emotional video of the funeral of eight of the deceased paramedics. The video started with a collective prayer by dozens of men standing over eight corpses wrapped in white cloth with the PRSC emblem. Then it showed how the bodies were put in the PRSC ambulances on the way to their burial, and later featured the crying and grieving women and children bidding a farewell to their family members.
Circumstances of the shooting and allegations of execution
According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UN OCHA) and numerous social media sources, the Israeli military surrounded, arrested, and handcuffed the paramedics who came around after Mustafa Khafaga and Ezz El-Din Ahmed Shaath were killed. According to CNN, this happened around 5:40 AM as the video filmed from one of the ambulances showed the convoy arriving in darkness, with the first rays of sunlight visible on the horizon, indicating it was filmed before 6 a.m. – sunrise on March 23 in Gaza was at 5:42 AM.
According to some sources, the Israeli military executed the handcuffed crew and threw them into a mass grave while their vehicles were buried a few days later.
UN OCHA released a video featuring the excavation of the victims’ bodies. Jonathan Whittall, OCHA OPT Head of Office, said in the video,
“Health workers should never be a target. And yet, we are here today, digging up a mass grave of first responders and paramedics. Seven days ago, Civil Defense and PRSC ambulances arrived at the scene. One by one, they were hit, they were struck. Their bodies were gathered and buried in this mass grave. We are digging them out in uniforms, with their gloves still on. They were here to save lives. Instead, they ended up in a mass grave. Their vehicles, ambulances, civil defense vehicles, and UN vehicles are crushed and dumped, covered in sand next to us. It’s absolute horror what happened here. This should never happen. Health workers should never be a target”.
The Guardian also reported on the incident, quoting a forensic doctor who examined the bodies of 15 Palestinian Red Crescent and Civil Defense paramedics and aid workers besieged and killed by the Israeli army in Rafah. Ahmed Zaher (Dhair), a forensic consultant who examined five of the bodies at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, said there was evidence they were executed, based on the specific locations of the bullet wounds, which were deliberately shot at close range.
He added, “All of the cases had multiple bullet wounds, except for one, whose type could not be determined because the body had been mauled by animals such as dogs, leaving it looking like a skeleton.” Zaher added, “Initial analysis indicates that they were executed at close range, as the bullet wounds were specific and deliberate. One bullet hit the head of one, another the heart, and a third was hit by six or seven bullets in the upper body.”
Sky News reported that expert analysis of the audio in Rifaat’s recording showed some of the shots fired at the medics came from as little as 12m away.
A CNN report also mentioned a “forensic pathologist examining the bodies of the emergency responders,” without indicating his name, who told the media that their autopsies had shown bullet wounds.
The Guardian further added that witnesses who recovered the bodies said they saw bodies with their hands and feet bound, indicating that the workers had been detained before being killed. However, Ahmed Zaher noted that the five bodies he examined showed no signs of binding on their hands or feet due to their state of decomposition.
IDF statements
The Israeli military claimed to have killed a Hamas member, identified as Mohammed Amin Ibrahim al-Shoubaki, along with eight other members of “Hamas and Islamic Jihad.” Mohammed al-Shoubaki allegedly participated in the October 7th events.
In its press release on April 2, 2025, the IDF claimed that the ambulances were used by “terrorists”. The press release reads, “IDF troops operating in southern Gaza opened fire toward Hamas vehicles and eliminated several Hamas terrorists. A few minutes afterward, additional vehicles advanced suspiciously toward the troops. An initial inquiry indicates that the vehicles were moving without prior coordination, and without headlights or emergency signals.
The troops responded by firing toward the suspicious vehicles, eliminating a number of Hamas and Islamic Jihad terrorists. After an initial inquiry, it was determined that some of the suspicious vehicles that were moving towards the troops were ambulances and fire trucks. The IDF condemns the repeated use of civilian infrastructure by the terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip, including the use of medical facilities and ambulances for terrorist purposes.”
Mohammed al-Shoubaki was not among the bodies recovered from the mass grave, according to the report by the Guardian. According to the NYT report, the Red Crescent, the International Committee of the Red Cross, and the United Nations have previously said all of those killed were humanitarian workers who should never have come under attack. Also, the survivor of the incident, paramedic Munther Abed, told CNN that he does not know anybody by the name al-Shoubaki, nor had he heard it before.
On April 20, 2025, the IDF released another statement issued after the examination into the incident in which rescue teams and vehicles were struck in the Gaza Strip by IDF troops’ fire was conducted by the General Staff Fact Finding Mechanism, led by MG (res.) Yoav Har-Even and was presented to the Chief of the General Staff, LTG Eyal Zamir. According to the statement, “the findings show that the incident occurred in a hostile and dangerous combat zone, under a widespread threat to the operating troops.”
In its lengthy investigation, Sky News dismissed the IDF’s claims that the place of the incident was a “combat zone.” The evacuation order for the area was only issued at 8.31 am, almost four-and-a-half hours after the first ambulance was attacked.
The IDF listed three shooting incidents that occurred on March 23, 2025, where the first of them was shooting at the vehicle identified as a Hamas vehicle; the second one – at arriving ambulances; and the third – at the UN vehicle. The Israeli military admitted firing at five vehicles, which it allegedly did not recognize as ambulances in the episode of the second shooting, and killing 15 Palestinians as a result:
“Due to poor night visibility, the deputy commander did not initially recognize the vehicles as ambulances. Only later, after approaching the vehicles and scanning them, was it discovered that these were indeed rescue teams,” the statement said. It added, “Supporting surveillance had reported five vehicles approaching rapidly and stopping near the troops, with passengers quickly disembarking. The deputy battalion commander assessed the vehicles as employed by Hamas forces, who arrived to assist the first vehicle’s passengers. Under this impression and sense of threat, he ordered to open fire.”
The IDF also denied the allegations of executing the paramedics and dismissed them as “blood libels and false accusations against IDF soldiers.” According to the statement, the next day at dawn, the Israeli military decided to gather and cover the bodies in order “to prevent further harm and clear the vehicles from the route in preparation for civilian evacuation,” the task which was carried out by field commanders. The examination of the incident concluded that removing the bodies was reasonable under the circumstances, but the decision to crush the vehicles was wrong. In general, officials claimed that there was no attempt to conceal the event, which was discussed with international organizations and the UN, including coordination for the removal of bodies.
In its report of the incident released on April 7, 2025, CNN published a video discovered on the phone of one of the nine deceased paramedics, Refaat Radwan, capturing their final moments before being killed by the Israeli military. This video was initially received by the New York Times. After obtaining this video, the PRCS sent a copy of the footage to the UN Security Council. A UN diplomat leaked the footage to The New York Times, which was the first outlet to post it.
According to Al Jazeera, Refaat was filming from the third ambulance in a convoy, which included a fire truck, that had gone out to find a Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) ambulance that had lost contact with its base.
The video that began at 4:55 AM showed that contrary to the claims of the Israeli military, the ambulances and a fire truck had emergency lights on as Israeli forces unleashed their barrage. In particular, the NYT described the video in detail:
“Filmed from what appears to be the front interior of a moving vehicle, it shows a convoy of ambulances and a fire truck, clearly marked, with headlights and flashing lights turned on, driving south on a road to the north of Rafah in the early morning. The first rays of the sun can be seen, and birds are chirping. The convoy stops when it encounters a vehicle that has veered onto the side of the road — one ambulance had been sent earlier to aid wounded civilians and had come under attack. The new rescue vehicles detour to the side of the road.
Rescue workers, at least two of whom can be seen wearing uniforms, are seen exiting a fire truck and an ambulance marked with the emblem of the Red Crescent and approaching the ambulance derailed to the side. Then, sounds of intense gunfire break out.”
The IDF informed that as a result of the examination, the deputy commander of the Golani Reconnaissance Battalion will be dismissed from his position due to his responsibilities as the field commander in this incident and for providing an incomplete and inaccurate report during the debrief.
The IDF also regretted causing harm to “uninvolved civilians”. Still, even recognizing the civilian harm resulting from the shooting, the IDF continued to claim that six casualties were identified in a retrospective examination as “Hamas terrorists.” However, it failed to provide their names or any further evidence. A toll of 0-6 militants killed has been accounted for in this incident until further information is found.
According to CNN, family members and colleagues of the slain paramedics vehemently denied that any of the workers were militants and are calling for an independent investigation into the killings.
The investigation by Sky News also dismissed the false IDF claim that the first ambulance was a “Hamas vehicle.” The social media profiles of Mustafa Khafaja, Ezz El-Din Shaat and Munther Abed did not have any evidence that the paramedics were affiliated with Hamas. Ezz El-Din was photographed at a hospital wearing a PRCS uniform in October 2023. He was later pictured in February 2024 lifting an injured person out of a PRCS ambulance in Rafah. Mustafa, meanwhile, had extensively documented his paramedic career online in photos dating back to 2011. In one post, his young son is pictured at the wheel of a PRCS ambulance. “Mohammed insists on visiting me at work and sharing my working hours with patients,” he wrote.
Testimony of the surviving witness
The survivor of the shooting, a 27-year-old volunteer PRCS medic Munther Abed, who was in the first ambulance attacked, told the BBC his version of the events. According to him, the vehicles’ exterior and interior lights were on, and everything indicated they were ambulances, denying the presence of anyone from an armed group. He said he and his colleagues “received a signal about injuries in the Hashashin area in Tal al-Sultan, and immediately moved to assist.”
As CNN reported on April 7, 2025, Munther Abed was sitting in the back of the ambulance en route to the scene when the crew was suddenly targeted with heavy, direct gunfire by Israeli forces. Abed said he survived the attack by throwing himself to the floor of the vehicle for cover, hearing the pained yells of his colleagues in the front, both of whom were killed. “If I stood up, I would have been killed”, he said in the video.
“I couldn’t hear anything from my colleagues except the sound of death, the gasp of death, their last breath,” Abed told CNN. “A cry of pain, that’s all I heard from them.” His colleagues were Mustafa Khafaga and Ezz El-Din Ahmed Shaath.
The ambulance crashed into a power pole, coming to a stop along with the gunfire, according to Abed. He said Israeli soldiers opened the back doors of the vehicle and detained him outside, stripping him down to his underwear.
According to the IDF’s version of the incident, the shooting killed two Hamas members and detained the third one, and claimed they were not “uniformed paramedics.” However, according to Munter, they were driving a well-lit ambulance and were wearing their uniforms.
In his interview to Anadolu agency, Munter said that after the gunfire hit the ambulances, Israeli soldiers pulled him from the wreckage, blindfolded him, and detained him for 15 hours of intense interrogation. “They beat me with the butts of rifles, tortured me, and repeatedly asked for my name, address, and details about my whereabouts on Oct. 7, 2023,” Abed recounted. “The more I answered, the harder they beat me. I wished for death from the pain.”
As the IDF military admitted the strike and the civilian harm resulting from it (even only partly), Airwars graded the incident’s strike status as “declared” and civilian harm status as “confirmed.”
Stories of the victims and tributes on social media
Following the recovery of the bodies, relatives and friends of the victims poured out their grief on social media. Al Jazeera also wrote a special report offering some insights into the lives, work, and individual characters of the deceased paramedics.
Refaat Radwan
Refaat Radwan was a 24-year-old paramedic whose videos on a mobile phone helped to shed light on what happened in that tragic moment. The video evidence was described in detail in the previous section of the assessment.
In an interview with Sky News, Refaat’s mother, Hajjah, said, “My son was very exhausted from this war. This should not have been his reward.”
Hajjah remembers the moment her son told her he wanted to become a paramedic. It was the night of his graduation party, and all the guests had left. “I want to do it in order to help people,” Rifaat had said. She called over Rifaat’s father, Anwar, and Rifaat began by reminding him how, from the age of five or six, he had always chased after ambulances in the street. “This is who Rifaat was,” says Anwar. “He had very beautiful ambitions.”
According to the report by Al Jazeera, Abu al-Kass, who knew Refaat, described him as a “gentle soul” who liked to help the elderly. “He especially made sure to help any elderly woman he came across. If he saw such a woman standing in line to collect her medicine from the hospital pharmacy, he would ask her to sit down and go fetch the medicines for her,” Abu al-Kaas said.
“Refaat, the ambitious and well-mannered young man, who helps and stands by people day and night after they were besieged and their traces disappeared in Tal al-Sultan, along with his colleagues in the Civil Defense, to rescue people and martyrs in the streets and roads. On the ground, it was proven that they were besieged, killed in cold blood, and buried in a hole together,” wrote the grieving relative of Refaat, Abo Malek Mohammed, shocked by the harrowing circumstances of his death. He added an image of Refaat – a smiling young man with dark hair dressed in a white T-shirt.
Muneer Suliman also mourned the death of his nephew Refaat, writing, “He was a martyr of national duty while carrying out a humanitarian mission to save lives. He worked for the Palestinian Red Crescent,” and shared the image of Refaat in his paramedic uniform smiling in an ambulance.
Raed Al-Sharif
The death of the 25-year-old man Raed Al-Sharif was mourned in a Facebook post by his brother, Haidara Al Sharief, who shared an image of Raed standing in front of the ambulance. He was a young man with dark hair wearing a black shirt with the PRCS emblem and red trousers. Ibraheim Abo Jamal offered condolences to his brother, Khalil Al-Sharif, who lost his brother Raed, whom he called “the martyr of humanity and duty.”
As reported by Al Jazeera, Raed began volunteering with the PRCS in 2018, when he was 18, during the Great March of Return protests. The youngest of five siblings, he was unmarried and loved to take pictures, hoping that one day the world would see his images and he would be able to convey the suffering of his people through his work.
Mustafa Kafaga
Mustafa Kafaga was a 50-year-old father of a 15-year-old son who was the “light of his life”, according to Al Jazeera. He loved his work and stayed at headquarters for days when the work required that.
According to the Al Jazeera report, Mustafa usually worked together with Mohamed Al-Hila. Their colleague, paramedic Abu Al-Kass, told a story about them to the reporters.
“One rainy day, those two were walking along when they saw an elderly woman trying to cross the road, but it was too wet and slippery,” Abu al-Kass said. “So they looked at each other. One said: ‘So, are we partners or what? No matter what the mission is?’ and the other said: ‘Of course we are!’” They went and got a chair and brought it up to the woman, asked her to sit down, and then lifted the chair and walked her carefully across the road, beaming the entire time.”
Mohamed Hassan Al-Hila
23-year-old Mohamed Hassan Al-Hila (Abu Hassan) was also among the victims of the incident. His death was mourned by Dev Yasser Jamal, who wrote, “Mohammed was not just a paramedic, he was our neighbor and brother. We knew him only for his kindness and chivalry. Today, we bid him farewell with tears preceding our words.”
His father, Hassan Hosni Al-Hila (Abo Mohammed), was lamenting the death of his beloved son, writing, “My son, my love, my comfort, and a soul of mine, the humanitarian fighter, Muhammad Hassan Al-Hayla, has ascended as a martyr. May God have mercy on your soul, my love. To a soul and basil and a Lord who is pleased and not angry.” Mohamed was a young man, in one of the images pictured smiling and wearing a white shirt and a brown jacket, holding a mobile phone in his hands.
According to the CNN report, Hassan Hosni Al-Hila, also a paramedic, felt too sick to continue his late-night assignment with the Palestine Red Crescent Society on March 23, and his son, Mohamed, gladly agreed to cover his shift. Within a few hours, while the young paramedic was dispatched with a convoy of emergency vehicles to find a missing ambulance crew in Rafah, southern Gaza, Mohammad called his father pleading for help amidst intense Israeli military gunfire. “Come to me, Dad, help me… we were targeted by the Israelis, and they are now shooting at us directly,” Al-Hila recalled his son telling him over the phone. The call ended after that.
CNN further reported that on seeing his son’s body, which Hosni said was riddled with bullet holes, he apologized for not being beside him in his final moments, saying their ambulances would have been dispatched together. “I told him, ‘I’m sorry I couldn’t join you,’” Hosni recalls. “If I hadn’t returned home, [he] and I would have been together on the same mission.”
The video filmed by CNN showed a heartbroken father recalling how he identified the body of his son, Mohamed. “They did not let me wash dirt from his face, I don’t know why,” he told CNN. “He had a wound on his mouth here, another on his forehead, and another on his back, all from gunfire. God bless his soul,” added the father, wiping the tears and showing reporters the image of his smiling son on his mobile phone.
Ashraf Nasser Abu Labdeh
According to Al Jazeera’s report, the 32-year-old medic Ashraf Abu Labdeh had started volunteering with the PRCS in 2021. He quickly integrated into the PRCS community, making sure that all his colleagues had a meal for iftar during Ramadan. He would either cook it himself at the Red Crescent centre or bring some of his family’s food from home to share.
He was married in September 2023 and left behind his wife and their two-month-old baby girl, Wiam. Al Jazeera’s reporters called him “a quiet one” and added that Ashraf was always a reassuring presence for his colleagues.
Maysoon Diab Awad extended his condolences to the parents and other relatives of Ashraf, writing, “My dear aunt, Weam Al-Qatati, may God give you patience and strength, and patience to Uncle Nasser ?? My love, sister, and friend, Psy Dareen Naseer. My dear ones, Nermeen Naser, Nadeen Naser, Heleen Naser. May God give you patience and support, I am truly unable to tell you, may God reward you greatly.“ Bushra Ameen also extended condolences to the sister of the late Ahsraf, Nermin Nasser Abu Labdeh” calling Ashraf “the young, virtuous paramedic.”
Deema Mousa was among those grieving the death of Ashraf, her cousin’s husband. She wrote, “With deep sadness and sorrow, and in submission to God’s will and destiny, we received the news of the martyrdom of my cousin’s husband, may God have mercy on him ?, the paramedic in the Red Crescent Society, our martyr son / Ashraf Nasser Abu Labdeh “Abu Weam” while performing his humanitarian duty for the wounded besieged in the Rafah area.” The sources shared an image of the late Ashraf, a young man wearing glasses and dressed in a white T-shirt with an emblem of the PRCS.
Ezz El-Din Ahmed Shaat
51-year-old Ezz El-Din Ahmed Shaat was a father to six children. He joined the PRCS in 2000, and four years later, he married Nivine, with whom he had four boys and two girls.
According to Al Jazeera’s report, Ezz El-Din was a sort of caregiver, making sure his colleagues got at least a little rest every night and something to eat. He also had a great sense of humour, but the war on Gaza “stripped that away from him as he gradually stopped laughing.”
On social media, Ezz El-Din was remembered in the posts by his cousins, Yasser Mahmoud Shaath, Cr Fady Ameen Aeady, and Mohammed Shaat. Cr Fady Ameen Aeady called him a “generous, dutiful man, my cousin, the martyr Ezz El-Din Ahmed Shaat.”
Prof. Ousama Shaath wrote a heartfelt tribute to the late Ezz El-Din, “To the eternal gardens of paradise, my beloved cousin, Ezz El-Din Ahmed Shaat, and your martyred comrades. My sincere condolences to Uncle Abu El-Ezz, the entire family, the families of the martyrs, and their colleagues in the Red Crescent. {…} The treacherous [Israeli] army arrested them, shackled them, tortured them, then shot them and covered them with dirt.”
Ezz El-Din Ahmed Shaat Mahmoud Shaat was a man with grey hair and a grey beard wearing a green T-shirt in an image shared by sources.
Mohamed Sobhi Bahloul
Similarly to Ezz El-Din, 36-year-old Mohamed Sobhi Bahloul was also a father to five children, four boys and one girl, whose ages ranged from three months to 11 years. He was extremely dedicated to work, as reported by Al Jazeera. During crises, he would stay at the Red Crescent centre, only going home to see his wife and five children once a week.
He studied nursing at Al-Azhar, earned his ambulance license, trained as a medic, and was pursuing a health administration degree. Since 2018, he has volunteered nonstop, despite the absence of a salary. “His family remembers him as a hero, always answering a call for help. He would organize transport and shelter for families in need, treating them as his own,” wrote Al Jazeera.
His death was mourned by numerous sources on social media. Feras Abo Sharekh wrote a touching tribute to Mohamed:
“He was a lighthearted man with a beautiful spirit. He loved the camera and media appearances. He was always on the front lines serving the people, sacrificing his life at every moment to save others. Now, Mohamed has become the event and the image, and no one is capable of saving him. May God have mercy on you, Muhammad. Your presence was an everlasting light.”
Yazan Ahmed called him “the brave hero, the sacrificial paramedic” while Abo Asem Hussin praised him as “our friend, colleague, and beloved companion.”
Mohamed cousin Abeer Sabah emphasized the ruthless circumstances of his death, “A martyr of humanitarian duty, who was treacherously and cold-bloodedly killed, his hands bound. To the eternal gardens, my dear son of the dear ones. May God grant us all patience.”
Mohamed father, 63-year-old Sobhi Bahloul, wrote a heartfelt post about his son, “We belong to Allah and to Him we shall return. We mourn our son, Mohamed Sobhi Bahloul, a martyr of duty and humanitarian work. We belong to Allah and to Him we shall return. Praise be to Allah, Lord of the Worlds.” He added an image of the smiling Muhammad, a young man dressed in a red uniform.
According to the report by Watan News, when Sobhi found his son’s body, he was too shocked to cry. “They were still in their medical uniforms, covered in blood and dust.” He recognized Mohamed only after leaning close to his face and checking his ID card. Mohamed had gunshot wounds in his chest and wrist, indicating he may have raised his arm in defense. “Four bullets, all to the chest and heart,” Sobhi said. “I believe he died instantly.”
Saleh Muammar
42-year-old Saleh Muammar (according to Watan news, he was 45) was also a father to five children, three boys and two girls. His colleague Abu al-Kass commented to Al Jazeera, “Saleh was dedicated to helping, and used to say that wherever people were crying out for help, that’s where we should be, to respond to them.”
Saleh was originally a business student at Al-Azhar University. He joined the Red Crescent during the 2008–2009 Israeli invasion out of a desire to do something real and immediate to help. He loved his work and spent most of his time in the emergency department, according to his brother, who spoke to Watan News. After ambulance shifts, he would help in vehicle maintenance, deliver medicines, and visit injured patients at home. He searched for those in need.
According to the CNN report, Saleh Muammar had been previously shot while on duty, according to his wife, Hadeel. Two months earlier, in February, Saleh was shot in the chest by the IDF, Hadeel told CNN in an interview. She said that he survived the attack, getting “a new lease on life” and returned to work as a paramedic. “We bid him farewell every time he left. We expected that he would be martyred,” Hadeel said. “I felt that he would leave this world because the nature of his work is full of risks.”
Watan News wrote that the night of March 22, before his shift, Saleh bought a large amount of household supplies for his wife, five children, and two nephews he had been caring for since their father was killed in the war. “He said it would benefit them in the future,” his brother Bilal recalled, “as if he knew he wasn’t coming back.”
In a photo collage of the eight killed paramedics posted by many social media users, the image of Saleh is in the upper left corner. He was a young man with slightly grey hair and a broad smile.
Watan News wrote that when the tragic news about the recovery of the bodies came, Bilal and relatives rushed to Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, hoping Saleh wasn’t among the dead—but his body was there. “I was the one who uncovered his face,” Bilal said. “There were handcuff marks on his wrists. His fingers were broken.” They recognized him by his ring.
Assad Al-Nassasrah
The 47-year-old father of six children, Assad Al-Nassasrah, originally considered missing and later reported as arrested by the Israeli military by the New York Times.
Al-Jazeera’s report described him as one who used to “bribe” kids with sweets. The report said, “Whenever he saw children playing in the street, he would get to wheeling and dealing, offering them candy to get off the road and go play somewhere safe. The kids quickly figured him out, though, and would be playing in the street again the next time, giggling and saying: “We tricked you!” But Assad never minded, and simply kept handing over sweets.”
Kamal Muhammad Shahtout
Multiple sources, including the Palestinian Information Center, reported that in addition to the Civil Defense and PCRS victims, the body of UNRWA employee Kamal Muhammad Shahtout, a resident of the Al-Shaboura neighborhood in Rafah, was also found. Nasser Atallah offered condolences to the Shahtoot family in Rafah and the Qishta (Zarnoqa) family for the death of his dear friend, the honorable professor Kamal. Abood Ashour mourned Kamal, a “respectful man with a good heart” and Muhammad Sand, his nephew, mourned his uncle Kamal after initially reporting him missing and wishing four his safe return. Muhammad Sand’s posts included two images of Kamal, one where he is seen wearing a formal royal blue suit and tie smiling at the camera and another were he is sitting at a podium wearing an adidas zip-up.
The incident occured at approximately 3:56 am local time.
The victims were named as:
Summary
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Israeli Military Assessment:
Civilian casualty statements
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April 20, 2025 IDF: The examination into the incident in which rescue teams and vehicles were struck in the Gaza Strip by IDF troops’ fire was conducted by the General Staff Fact Finding Mechanism, led by MG (res.) Yoav Har-Even and was presented to the Chief of the General Staff, LTG Eyal Zamir. The examination included extensive data collection from operational systems, the forces on the ground, and along the entire chain of command. This included debriefings conducted by units in the field, in the division, and in the Southern Command, as well as relevant operational orders and directives, footage from various surveillance systems active during the event, and radio recordings. Additionally, the event was reconstructed in the field, and relevant operational personnel were questioned. The examination was conducted by a senior and professional team within the Mechanism, separate from the operational chain of command, with full backing from the Chief of the General Staff to perform all necessary actions to uncover the truth. The findings show that the incident occurred in a hostile and dangerous combat zone, under a widespread threat to the operating troops. The backdrop of the incident is the challenge and the responsibility of the IDF to respect and protect medical teams and facilities carrying out their duties, while also confronting Hamas' repeated use of such infrastructure for terrorism, including using ambulances to transport terrorists and weapons. The examination found no evidence to support claims of execution or that any of the deceased were bound before or after the shooting. Such claims are blood libels and false accusations against IDF soldiers. On the night of the incident, March 23, 2025, the troops were conducting a vital mission aimed at targeting terrorists. Throughout the operation, vehicles and ambulances moved along the route without obstruction, since the forces did not perceive any threat posed by them. The forces also apprehended two pedestrians who raised suspicion, and released them subsequently. This indicates that the troops did not engage in indiscriminate fire but remained alert to respond to real threats identified by them. There were three shooting incidents on that day: First incident – The troops fired at a vehicle identified as a Hamas vehicle. Following this, the troops remained on high alert for further potential threats. Second incident – Approximately an hour later, the troops opened fire on suspects emerging from a fire truck and ambulances very close to the area in which the troops were operating, after perceiving an immediate and tangible threat. Supporting surveillance had reported five vehicles approaching rapidly and stopping near the troops, with passengers quickly disembarking. The deputy battalion commander assessed the vehicles as employed by Hamas forces, who arrived to assist the first vehicle’s passengers. Under this impression and sense of threat, he ordered to open fire. Fifteen Palestinians were killed, six of whom were identified in a retrospective examination as Hamas terrorists . Due to poor night visibility, the deputy commander did not initially recognize the vehicles as ambulances. Only later, after approaching the vehicles and scanning them, was it discovered that these were indeed rescue teams. Third incident – About 15 minutes later, the troops fired at a Palestinian UN vehicle due to operational errors in breach of regulations The troops’ commander initially reported the event, and additional details emerged later in the examination. At dawn, it was decided to gather and cover the bodies to prevent further harm and clear the vehicles from the route in preparation for civilian evacuation. The body removal and vehicle crushing were carried out by field commanders. The examination concluded that removing the bodies was reasonable under the circumstances, but the decision to crush the vehicles was wrong . In general, there was no attempt to conceal the event, which was discussed with international organizations and the UN, including coordination for the removal of bodies. The examination determined that the fire in the first two incidents resulted from an operational misunderstanding by the troops, who believed they faced a tangible threat from enemy forces. The third incident involved a breach of orders during a combat setting. In its conclusion of the examination process, the Chief of the General Staff emphasized the commitment to continuing the fight against Hamas while upholding IDF values, operational discipline, and orders. He affirmed that the Golani Reconnaissance Battalion is a professional and high-quality battalion that has been operating with great distinction for a year and a half. Alongside this, the examination identified several professional failures, breaches of orders, and a failure to fully report the incident. The Chief of the General Staff and the Commanding Officer of the Southern Command accepted the examination’s findings. The Chief of the General Staff accepted the Commanding Officer of the Southern Command’s recommendation on the following command measures: The Commanding Officer of the 14th Brigade will receive a reprimand, which will be recorded in his personal file, for his overall responsibility for the incident, including the procedure of combat and management of the scene afterward. The deputy commander of the Golani Reconnaissance Battalion will be dismissed from his position due to his responsibilities as the field commander in this incident and for providing an incomplete and inaccurate report during the debrief. The commanders emphasized that the deputy commander of the Golani Reconnaissance Battalion is a highly respected officer, whose military service and personal story reflect a spirit of combat, volunteerism, and great dedication. Following October 7th, he returned from abroad to serve in reserve duty, continued to operate in Gaza until he was injured in the combat, and returned to service after his recovery. Over the past six months, he was on active reserve duty and served as the battalion’s deputy commander. The IDF regrets the harm caused to uninvolved civilians. The examination process also serves as part of an ongoing effort to learn from operational incidents and reduce the likelihood of similar occurrences in the future. Existing protocols have been clarified and reinforced - emphasizing the need for heightened caution when operating near rescue forces and medical personnel, even in high-intensity combat zones. The findings will be submitted to the Military Advocate General’s Office.
Original strike reports
April 2, 2025
1. On Sunday (23.3), IDF troops operating in southern Gaza opened fire toward Hamas vehicles and eliminated several Hamas terrorists.
A few minutes afterward, additional vehicles advanced suspiciously toward the troops. An initial inquiry indicates that the vehicles were moving without prior coordination, and without headlights or emergency signals.
The troops responded by firing toward the suspicious vehicles, eliminating a number of Hamas and Islamic Jihad terrorists.
After an initial inquiry, it was determined that some of the suspicious vehicles that were moving towards the troops were ambulances and fire trucks.
The IDF condemns the repeated use of civilian infrastructure by the terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip, including the use of medical facilities and ambulances for terrorist purposes
2. On Sunday (March 23, 2025), several vehicles were identified advancing suspiciously toward IDF troops without headlights, or emergency signals, their movement was not coordinated in advance. Thus IDF troops opened fire at the suspected vehicles.
Following an initial assessment, it was determined that the forces had eliminated a Hamas military operative, Mohammad Amin Ibrahim Shubaki, along with eight other terrorists from Hamas and the PIJ.
Following the strike, the IDF coordinated with international organizations to facilitate the evacuation of the bodies.
We wish to emphasize that this is an active combat zone.
Accordingly, the IDF is in contact with the organizations to enable evacuation as soon as possible, subject to the operational circumstances.
Additionally, we note that on Sunday (30.3), following coordination between the IDF and international organizations, evacuation of bodies was carried out.
3. The incident from March 23rd, 2025, in which IDF forces opened fire targeting terrorists advancing in ambulances, has been transferred to the General Staff’s Fact-Finding and Assessment Mechanism for investigation.
The IDF places utmost importance on maintaining communication with international organizations operating in Gaza and engages with them regularly.