Video refutes occupation’s claims on the assassination of 15 aid workers in Rafah

A video captured on a mobile phone by a paramedic, who was later found dead in a mass grave with the bodies of 15 other aid workers killed by the occupation forces on March 23 in Rafah, refutes the Zionist occupation’s claims that they did not target ambulances randomly and that they failed to identify them due to a lack of lights or emergency signals, according to WAFA, citing The New York Times.
According to the newspaper, the footage clearly shows that the ambulances and fire trucks, carrying paramedics and civil defense crews, were visibly marked and had their emergency lights on when they were shot at by “Israeli” forces.
The New York Times clarified that the video, obtained from a senior diplomat at the United Nations, shows ambulances and a fire truck transporting 14 paramedics and civil defense personnel. The emergency lights on these vehicles were on when they came under fire, directly contradicting “Israeli” claims that the vehicles were “moving suspiciously” without lights or warning signals.
The New York Times confirmed it had verified both the time and location of the video, in which the voice of one of the paramedics can be heard reciting the shahada (testimony of faith) amid the gunfire.



