רעייתי שרה פגשה היום משפחות של חטופי חמאס-דאעש. היא הקשיבה בקשב רב לסיפורי המשפחות על הסבל הכבד שעובר עליהן בחודש האחרון. רעייתי שרה אמרה למשפחות: ״אני יודעת שאין לכם יום ואין לכם לילה. שכל יום שעובר בלי יקיריכם הוא כאב שאין לו סוף. הלב שלי אתכם, הלב של כולנו אתכם. אני מבטיחה לכם שאעביר את תחושותיכם ובקשותיכם לראש הממשלה ואני מבטיחה לכם שהוא עושה הכל כדי להחזיר את חטופינו, יקיריכם, הביתה בשלום״. (צילום: עמוס בן גרשום, לע״מ)

Nov 9, 2023 · 8:05 PM UTC

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Replying to @netanyahu
🇵🇸🇮🇱 “There is no more future. My future is over now. I have no future at all.” says 13-year-old Layan al-Bas after an Israeli bomb blew her legs off. 💔
Replying to @netanyahu
Israeli occupation soldiers use a Palestinian detainee as a human shield during confrontations in the Al-Arroub refugee camp, in the occupied West Bank.
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Replying to @netanyahu
Replying to @SamParkerSenate
Many of the civilian deaths came from Israeli Apache pilots not knowing who was Hamas & who were civilians so they just fired a huge amount of munitions at everyone fleeing the Nova festival: Israel’s two Apache helicopter squadrons had 8 choppers in the air, “and there was almost no intelligence to help make fateful decisions,” Mako reported. The squadrons did not reach full strength until noon. As the wave of infiltrations from Gaza drove chaos on the ground, discombobulated Israeli pilots unleashed a frenzy of missile and machine gun salvos: “The Apache pilots testify that they fired a huge amount of munitions, emptied the ‘belly of the helicopter’ in minutes, flew to re-arm and returned to the air, again and again. But it didn’t help and they understand it,” Mako reported. The Apache helicopters appear to have focused on vehicles streaming back into Gaza from the Nova electronic music festival and nearby kibbutzes, attacked cars  with apparent knowledge that Israeli captives could be inside. They also fired on unarmed people exiting cars or walking on foot through the fields on the periphery of Gaza. One Apache pilot reflected on the tortuous dilemma of whether to shoot at people and cars returning to Gaza. He knew that many of those vehicles may have contained Israeli captives. But he chose to open fire anyway. “I choose targets like that,” the pilot reflected, “where I tell myself that the chance that I am shooting here on hostages as well is low.” However, he admitted that his judgment “was not 100%.” “I understand that we have to shoot here and quickly,” the commander of the Apache unit, Lt. Col. E., told Mako in a separate report. “Shooting at people in our territory – this is something I never thought I would do.” Lt. Col. A., a reserve pilot in the same unit, described a fog of confusion: “I find myself in a dilemma as to what to shoot at, because there are so many of them.” A report on the Apache squadrons by the Israeli outlet Yedioth Aharanoth noted that “the pilots realized that there was tremendous difficulty in distinguishing within the occupied outposts and settlements who was a terrorist and who was a soldier or civilian… The rate of fire against the thousands of terrorists was tremendous at first, and only at a certain point did the pilots begin to slow down the attacks and carefully select the targets.”