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Israeli hostages tell of being drugged and abused

Hostages hauled into Gaza during Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel were drugged to keep them docile in captivity and subjected to psychological and sexual abuse, a specialist says.

Israeli 24-year-old Tomer Zadik, who has been receiving treatment at the Ichilov medical centre since being shot in the arm at the Supernova music festival on October 7. Picture: AFP
Israeli 24-year-old Tomer Zadik, who has been receiving treatment at the Ichilov medical centre since being shot in the arm at the Supernova music festival on October 7. Picture: AFP

Hostages hauled into Gaza during Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel were drugged to keep them docile in captivity and subjected to psychological and sexual abuse, a specialist says.

“I’ve never seen anything like that” in 20 years of treating trauma victims, leading psychiatrist Renana Eitan said on Monday.

“The physical, the sexual, the mental, the psychological abuse of these hostages that came back is just terrible. We have to rewrite the textbook.”

Dr Eitan, director of psychiatric division at the Tel Aviv Medical Centre-Ichilov, said the centre had received 14 ex-hostages released by Hamas, some of whom reported being drugged, including with what doctors believe were benzodiazepines, a class of depressants with a sedative effect that includes drugs like Valium.

“They wanted to control the kids, and sometimes it’s difficult to control young children, adolescents. And they know that if they drug them they will be quiet,” she said.

“One of the girls was given ketamine for a few weeks,” she said, referring to a powerful dissociative anaesthetic known for giving the recipient a sense of detachment from their environment. “It’s unbelievable to do this to a child.”

Dr Eitan said some former hostages had also described psychological torment at the hands of their captors.

Israeli soldier Ofer, injured in the Gaza Strip, gives an interview at the Ichilov medical centre in Tel Aviv on Monday. Picture: AFP
Israeli soldier Ofer, injured in the Gaza Strip, gives an interview at the Ichilov medical centre in Tel Aviv on Monday. Picture: AFP

One was told his wife was dead when in fact she was still alive back in Israel, while children were separated from their families and shown “brutal videos”.

One patient said she and others were held in total darkness for more than four days.

“They became psychotic, they had hallucinations,” Dr Eitan said.

“There were also reports of self-harm among hostages in ­captivity, she noted, while some returnees had since professed to having suicidal thoughts.  The centre has also treated hundreds of physically wounded patients, both victims of October 7 and soldiers injured in the ensuing war in the Gaza Strip.

Soldiers can be flown to Ichilov from the battlefield in about 15 minutes, according to vice-chief of trauma surgery Eyal Hashavia.

Tomer Zadik, 24, has been receiving treatment at Ichilov since being shot in the arm when Hamas fighters stormed the Supernova music festival on October 7.

He described hiding for hours as he listened to the voices of the attackers around him, before managing to escape and reunite with a group of festival-goers and a few soldiers.

“The atrocities over there, words really can’t describe,” he said, adding that he had nightmares about the attack, though “less and less with time”.

“They wanted to break us, not only physically. They wanted to mentally break the whole nation of Israel,” he said.

“But we won’t break.”

Under a one-week truce deal that ended on December 1, 105 hostages were released from Gaza, among them 80 Israelis – mostly women and children – freed in exchange for 240 Palestinians jailed by Israel.

Some former hostages continue to experience dissociative states, Dr Eitan said: “One minute they know that they are here at Ichilov medical centre, and the next they think they are back with Hamas,” she said.

Dr Eitan said the mental health toll was staggering, with about 5 per cent of Israel’s population – 400,000 people – expected to suffer some symptoms of post traumatic stress disorder.

The extreme situation puts doctors in a dilemma.

It is considered best practice not to debrief a survivor on their ordeal immediately, but Dr Eitan said there was also an urgent need to know about the condition of other hostages.

AFP

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/israeli-hostages-tell-of-being-drugged-abused/news-story/2b279386875b5e190c947a1564cae5ea