The Sydney nurse brother stopped after she and her colleagues were recorded and said his sister was “established.”
“She’s bored,” said Mohamed Abu Lebde, of her younger sister Sarah Abu Lebde, who worked at Bankstown Hospital in Sydney, Australia.
That’s because Israeli media responded to the nurse’s shocking remarks and subsequent apology. I questioned whether the pair were actually “Sorry, sorry?”
Sarah and fellow nurse Ahmad “Rashad” Nadir were documented by Israeli influencer Max Veifer.
He frequently uses ChatRuletka and Omegle, an online platform that combines users with random video chats to expose instances of anti-Semitism and learn English, he argues.
The two nurses were wearing New South Wales health scrubs when they were to talk to Veifer.
“I hope you will eventually be killed because you are so angry at the Israelites,” Nadir told the Israelite man.
Sarah appears on screen when Veifer asks why he is being killed.
“It’s not your country, it’s a country of Palestine. It’s a part of you,” Sarah said.
“One day your time will come and you will die the most… Listen to me when your time comes, I want you to remember my face, so you will be the most disgusting It will help you understand that death is dying.”
Veifer questioned whether they would treat Israelites, but Sarah said, “I will not treat them, I will kill them… I hope to God, not forbid him.” He cut him off.
The statement sparked a fire as NSW health conditions have stopped staff and barred them from working in healthcare again.
NSW Police Commissioner Karen Webb said Pearl’s investigation is “going smoothly.” Police have shown that they can claim a pair.
Sarah is believed to have graduated from her nursing diploma five years ago and has been working at NSW Health since February 2021.
The man who identified herself as her uncle told the Australian on Wednesday that Sarah was “sorry” for her remarks.
“I’m trying to calm her down and see what happened with F-K,” he said outside her house.
Her uncle claimed she had no threat to her Israeli patients.
“She’s having a panic attack so you can’t speak to her now. We may be calling an ambulance for her.”
“She’s set up.”
However, another man who identified himself as Sarah’s brother said that the video of his sister was edited and pushed him to make inherently horrifying comments.
Mohammed told the Daily Mail that his sister “helped” people rather than “harmed.”
“The video was a setup. You can see that it’s edited. You can see the jump cut.
“Sara said these things, but she was pushed. She was baited.”
Mohammed claimed that 70 families were lost in Palestine, and that she explained in the video.
“To hear them. It’s too much, but he cut out the part and made it look like she just said it,” he insisted.
“She was provoked. She snapped. Anyone would.”
Police confirmed that the video was edited and asked Veifer for the full version without cuts as part of their investigation into the case.
“I was kidding.”
In Videonadir, another nurse answered a question created by Veifer about whether Israelis would be treated by them.
“I don’t know how many Israelis… dogs have come to this hospital. I literally sent them (to the afterlife),” Nadir, wearing a scrub, put his hand around his neck. He said as he said.
It is not clear what Nadir meant in this comment.
Nadir’s lawyers said they gave “an sincere apology” to Veifer and the wider Jewish community.
“He understands what happened. He is trying to make up for what happened. He has never appeared in court on criminal matters. He is a good-natured person from before. ” Sakuru said.
“He apologised for this behavior and he apologised for his words. It’s a matter of court whether he had mental capacity at the time of his alleged crime.”
Speaking to the Daily Telegraph, Nadir said: “It was a joke and a misunderstanding… I’ll apologise for anything, social media, but I’ll have to go and see the detective first.”
Israeli newspapers say to nurses, “I’m sorry, are you sorry?”
The nurse’s comments have caused waves around the world, including Israel.
Israel Hayom, the country’s largest newspaper, characterized the pair as trying to “play” the turmoil and pushing the line that it was merely “misunderstanding.”
In the headline, the nurse asked, “I’m sorry, sorry?”
News website Ynet said Australia’s Amir Maimon spoke with NSW Prime Minister Chris Minds and called for Nadir and Sarah to be fired.
Israeli vice minister Sharen Haskell said anti-Semitism is a “sickness that spreads in Australia.”
“This action must be addressed to the fullest extent of the law, and at least they should be fired,” Ynet reported telling her.
“They violated Hippocrates’ oath, murdered Jews and exposed the real racism and hatred that the Australian Jewish community faces today.”
NSW Health Minister Ryan Park spoke to journalist and commentator Shari Markson on Sky News on Wednesday, saying he was “literally unbelievable” what he saw on the video when he first showed it.
He said, “These people will never work in NSW health again and have been deemed not to be held responsible for the patients again.”
Park added that while Bankstown Hospital had not previously detected any adverse patient outcomes due to the two nurses, the health records show a deeper perspective.