New video contradicts Israeli medic's account of 7 October sexual assault, report says
Video
seen by New York Times undermines account of unnamed military paramedic
whose testimony was key part of its own report alleging sexual assault
in Kibbutz Be'eri
German
President Frank-Walter Steinmeier (C) and his Israeli counterpart Isaac
Herzog (Center-L) visit Kibbutz Be'eri, where the New York Times
previously alleged that Hamas fighters had sexually assaulted three
women (AFP)
The New York
Times has cast doubt on its own reporting of an alleged episode of
sexual assault during the 7 October Hamas-led attacks by admitting that
new video footage appears to contradict the account of an Israeli paramedic quoted by the newspaper.
Footage taken from an Israeli soldier who was in Kibbutz Be'eri,
where the alleged assault was supposed to have taken place, shows the
bodies of three female victims, fully clothed and with no apparent signs
of sexual violence, according to the US paper.
The bodies are reportedly shown at a home where many of Be'eri's residents had believed the assaults occurred.
On 28 December, the New York Times published an article headlined,
"'Screams Without Words': How Hamas Weaponized Sexual Violence on Oct.
7," in which an unnamed paramedic, part of an Israeli commando unit,
said that he had discovered the bodies of two partially clothed teenage
girls who had been sexually assaulted.
The Associated Press, CNN and The Washington Post were among several
media outlets to publish similar accounts sourced to an anonymous
military paramedic.
Earlier this month, Michal Paikin, a spokesperson for the Kibbutz
Be'eri, denied that two of the girls, who were sisters, had been
sexually assaulted.
"You're talking about the Sharabi girls?" he told The Intercept. "No, they… were shot and were not subjected to sexual abuse."
Gillian Brisley, the girls' grandmother, also denied the allegations.
"They were just shot, nothing else had been done to them," she told
Israel's Channel 12.
Sexual abuse allegation in Kibbutz Be'eri on 7 October 'not true', says spokesperson
Read More »
Responding to the new video footage, residents of the kibbutz told
the New York Times that there was only one home in Be'eri in which two
teenage girls had been killed, and that because of this they had
concluded that the girls had not been sexually assaulted.
"This story is false," said Nili Bar Sinai, a member of the kibbutz
group that investigated claims of sexual assault at the house, said.
The unnamed paramedic, whose testimony formed a core part of the 28 December New York Times story, declined to tell the US paper whether he still stood by his account.
Later, an Israeli military spokesman said that the medic did stand by
his testimony, but that he might have misremembered the place where he
saw the teenage girls.
Anat Schwartz, one of the report's authors, is being investigated by the paper after it emerged that she had liked a social media post calling for Gaza to be turned into a "slaughterhouse".
Schwartz, who worked on the story with her 24-year-old nephew Adam Sella and veteran New York Times reporter Jeffrey Gettleman, also reportedly
liked social media posts calling on Israel to execute Palestinians if
hostages in Gaza were not released, and said that westerners had to be
"scared" into believing Hamas was like the Islamic State group.