Two bereaved fathers — Eyal Ashel, father of observer Roni Ashel who fell at the Nahal Oz outpost on October 7, and Li'ad Bar'am, father of Staff Sgt. Neta Bar'am who fell that day — interrupted a security conference where former NSC head Maj. Gen. (res.) Yaakov Amidror was speaking, demanding he leave the stage. "This is my daughter and she is no longer here because of your son," Ashel told Amidror, according to Israeli media.
Two bereaved fathers who lost their daughters and sons on October 7 confronted retired Major General Yaakov Amidror at a security conference in Jerusalem on Tuesday, interrupting his remarks and demanding he step down from the podium. According to journalist Nir Dvori (N12), Eyal Ashel, father of observer Roni Ashel who fell at the Nahal Oz outpost, and Li'ad Bar'am, father of Staff Sgt. Neta Bar'am who died in the same battle, burst in on Amidror's lecture. "This is my daughter, and she is no longer here because of your son," Ashel told Amidror, who served as head of the National Security Council. The incident followed an earlier exchange at the same conference about a month ago, as The Zioneer previously reported (June 23, 12:19 Jerusalem), in which Amidror told Ashel "you should be ashamed." The context of the current confrontation was not detailed in the initial report; it is unclear what triggered the fathers' demand this time. The exchange reflects the continuing raw anger among bereaved families over the October 7 disaster and the perceived accountability of senior figures whose family members served in positions of responsibility.
3 developments
- StrongMichal Nageri identified as mother of fallen October 7 reservist Ro'i Nageri
- DevelopingA haunting image of 12-year-old Yagel Yaakov from Kibbutz Nir Oz is shared, reviving October 7 trauma
- DevelopingFallen soldier's father calls for immediate release of fellow soldier who accidentally shot his son in Lebanon
- DevelopingDozens of IDF soldier mothers protest outside chief of staff’s home over Lebanon policy
Source and signal
- Internal intake
