ISRAELI POLICE FACING DIFFICULTIES ON ALLEGATIONS OF SEXUAL ASSAULT ON OCTOBER 7

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Fri 05 January 2024:

Police in Israel are facing difficulties locating victims of alleged sexual assault or witnesses to such claimed acts that Tel Aviv alleges took place on October 7 during attacks by Hamas fighters, according to a report by Haaretz.

The police have reportedly been unable to link evidence to alleged victims because they were killed, taken captive or are in a state of psychological distress, it said, also quoting an investigator as saying there are “circumstantial indications” that there are still victims who are alive and have not been contacted.

The police are now calling on Israeli citizens to come forward with any accounts.

The Israeli claims have been firmly rejected by Hamas, and Palestinians have also questioned the merits of a New York Times report last week that claimed to have found evidence of instances of sexual violence on October 7.

Adi Edri, an investigator in charge of investigating the alleged sexual crimes that occurred during the attack, told Haaretz police have “circumstantial indications” there are victims who are still alive that they have yet to make contact with.

The police are now appealing to the Israeli public to come forward with any evidence they may have of sexual-based violence conducted by Hamas and other groups from Gaza.

The announcement from the police comes a week after The New York Times published a lengthy investigative report detailing a pattern of sexual assault and rape allegedly committed by Palestinian fighters after they launched an attack on southern Israel on 7 October.

The New York Times story largely centres around the case of one woman, Gal Abdush, who the newspaper identified as “the woman in the black dress”, and said she was the individual in a video that showed evidence of a woman who had been raped.

However, following the report’s publication, Mondweiss reported that members of Abdush’s family contradicted the claims, saying it was not yet known whether she was raped or not. Some family members denied she was raped altogether, and said that the reporters working on the story manipulated them.

 The police told Haaretz they have so far collected a small number of eyewitness accounts of alleged sex crimes, along with many testimonies from military personnel, the Israeli search and rescue service Zaka, and other emergency response volunteers. 

Adri said that while there is documentation of bodies that appear to have been sexually assaulted, investigators are continuing to look for additional, reinforcing evidence.

“We’re looking for more than a single witness. For each scene we’re looking for support for what happened there,” she said.

Haaretz reported back in November that a lack of forensic evidence makes it difficult for investigators to understand the extent of what occurred on 7 October.

The November report detailed how unverified and inaccurate accounts of the 7 October Hamas attack led to the publication of stories that appeared to be false.

Some of the details behind these stories, which described atrocities purportedly committed by Palestinian fighters, were provided by Israeli officials and soldiers as well as search and rescue volunteers. 

After cross-referencing some of these allegations, Haaretz found they did not add up. 

The Israeli army admitted that mistakes were made by at least one soldier who fed one of the stories to media outlets. 

The Zaka rescue organisation, which worked at the scene of the attacks and provided testimonies to the media, also said some of its members may have “misinterpreted” what they saw and that they were not professional pathologists.

SOURCE: INDEPENDENT PRESS AND NEWS AGENCIES

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