Jonathan Sacerdoti Jonathan Sacerdoti

Hamas doesn’t hold a monopoly on Palestinian terror

a blood handprint inside a bedroom at the Thai workers' residence at Kibbutz Nir Oz in southern Israel, after the October 7 attack (Getty images)

Israeli forces operating inside Gaza have retrieved the body of Thai agricultural worker Nattapong Pinta, bringing to a close one of the many grim and unresolved chapters from the October 7th atrocities. In a joint operation by the Shin Bet and the IDF, based on intelligence gleaned from captured militants, the body was recovered in Rafah. Pinta had been abducted alive from Kibbutz Nir Oz during the Hamas-led assault, only to be murdered in captivity by a lesser-known but no less brutal Palestinian terror group: Kataeb al-Mujahideen.

Among the cascade of horrors unleashed that day, one of the most harrowing sights remains etched in my memory

Among the cascade of horrors unleashed that day, one of the most harrowing sights remains etched in my memory. It was a real-time video, circulated by Palestinian terrorists themselves, showing two men in civilian clothes from Gaza, jostling to capture the perfect angle as they filmed the slow, grotesque beheading of a barely living Thai worker writhing on the ground.

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