Israel frees Gaza medic who went missing after its attack on emergency workers

Asaad Al-Nsasrah and another paramedic survived the attack, which Israel described as a result of "several professional failures".

A man in a red jacket is being escorted by Red Crescent workers as two men take his pictures on their phones.

Assad al-Nsasrah, a paramedic with the Red Crescent whose colleagues were killed by the Israeli army in southern Gaza, has been released. Source: AAP / Abdel Kareem Hana

Key Points
  • A Palestinian medic who was detained during an Israeli military attack on an emergency convoy has been released.
  • Asaad Al-Nsasrah was one of only two survivors of the attack.
  • Israel has launched an investigation into the incident and admitted "professional failures" led to the killings.
Israeli authorities have freed a Palestinian medic who went missing in late March when 15 humanitarian workers were killed in Gaza by Israeli troops, in an incident that drew worldwide condemnation.

Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) staff member Asaad Al-Nsasrah went missing after the 15 paramedics and other rescue workers were shot dead on 23 March in three separate shootings at the same location near the southern Gaza city of Rafah.

The 15 emergency workers were buried in a shallow grave, close to their wrecked vehicles, where their bodies were found a week later by officials from the United Nations and the PRCS.

"The occupation forces have just released medic Asaad Al-Nsasrah, who was detained on March 23, 2025, while performing his humanitarian duty during the massacre of medical teams in the Tel Al-Sultan area of Rafah Governorate," the PRCS said in a post on X overnight.
The Israeli military has not commented on Al-Nsasrah's release.

The military initially said soldiers had opened fire on vehicles that approached their position "suspiciously" in the dark without lights or markings. It said they killed six militants from Hamas and Islamic Jihad who were travelling in Palestinian Red Crescent vehicles.
But video recovered from the mobile phone of one of the dead men and published by the PRCS showed emergency workers in their uniforms and clearly marked ambulances and fire trucks, with their lights on, being fired on by soldiers.

On 20 April, the Israeli military said a review into the killing of emergency responders in Gaza found there had been "several professional failures". It also confirmed that a deputy commander, a reservist who was the field commander, would be dismissed from his position for providing an incomplete and inaccurate report, and added that a commanding officer was to be reprimanded.


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Source: Reuters


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