by David Horovitz and Mitch Ginsburg
The teenagers were shot dead in the backseat of the car within minutes of the abduction; the killers believed, erroneously, that the security forces were on their trail
Eyal Yifrach, 19, Naftali
Fraenkel, 16, and Gil-ad Shaar, 16, the three kidnapped Israeli
teenagers whose bodies were found on Monday, realized very quickly that
they had been abducted on the night of June 12.
The
three teens were waiting at Geva’ot Intersection, west of the
settlement of Alon Shvut in the Etzion Bloc south of Jerusalem, soon
after 10:15 p.m, looking to catch a ride heading west on Route 367
toward Beit Shemesh and from there to locations in central Israel where
each of them lived.
The prevailing assessment within the defense
establishment is that the kidnappers, at least at first, only saw one of
the hitchikers, perhaps Yifrach, who did not know Shaar and Fraenkel.
Only once the kidnappers’ Hyundai i35 came to a stop did the kidnappers
realize that they would be outnumbered by their hostages within the
small confines of the car. This may be what changed the nature of the
crime from kidnapping to murder, security sources suggested.
Inside the Hyundai, Israel alleges, were Hamas terrorists Amer Abu Aysha and Marwan Kawasme.
Recognizing, too late, that the car was not an
innocent Israeli vehicle, one of the teens called the police at 10:25
p.m. and whispered, “We’ve been kidnapped.” The call was transferred
immediately to a senior female officer, who continued to ask questions
but received no reply. The call lasted for 2:09 minutes and was then cut
off. The officer called the number eight more times, but received three
busy signals and reached voicemail five times.
The kidnappers, apparently realizing that a
call had been made, shot the three teens dead soon afterwards in the
backseat of the car, military sources said.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday night that they were murdered “in cold blood.”
Early assessments by some regarding the
professionalism of the terrorists appear to have been misplaced: the
killers seem to have panicked. The three teens did not fulfill the role
Hamas sought for them, security officials indicated, to serve as
bargaining chips that would free thousands of Palestinians prisoners and
promote the Hamas brand throughout the West Bank.
The killers then drove a further 10 minutes or
so before switching vehicles. They abandoned the Hyundai i35, a
relatively new vehicle, and set it on fire.
They transferred the bodies to the second
vehicle, and drove close to the field in the Halhul area where the three
corpses were ultimately discovered, bound, partially buried, and in
what eyewitnesses said was “in not good condition,” on Monday afternoon.
The land where the bodies were found belongs to the Kawasme family,
Channel 2 news reported.
Unbeknownst to the killers, the emergency call
had not prompted an alert by Israel’s security forces. The senior
officer did not pass on the information to her superiors or listen to
the recording for further evidence, concluding that it was a prank call.
The security forces realized there had been a kidnapping, and began
what became an 18-day search operation, only some seven hours later.
Assuming that they were being hunted down right away, the kidnappers quickly abandoned the three bodies, and made their escape.
Israeli security forces pinpointed Amer Abu
Aysha and Marwan Kawasme as prime suspects on June 13, and began a
series of searches of the family homes and the questioning and arrests
of relatives and other suspects. But the two alleged kidnappers were
still at large as of Monday night. Others allegedly involved were also
still being hunted.
David Horovitz and Mitch Ginsburg
Source: http://www.timesofisrael.com/what-happened-on-the-night-of-the-kidnapping/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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