Rizik ran. Next to him was a young man who spoke to Tel Aviv Tribune later, asking for the anonymity of his security.
He said Rizik fell on a stone wall, making him injured his legs, but that when they saw two boys who needed help, Rizik joined the young man to wear them safe.
But then Rizik and his friend found themselves surrounded by settlers.
They ran, but just when he plunged to cover himself in the bushes, the friend saw a colonum shooting in the chest.
“The colonists started to shout:” Yes! I got you! “”, He recalls, describing how several settlers gathered around Rizik while he was lying on the ground.
Above the shooting, Rizik called his family, but the family told others that the call only lasted a few seconds, without response from Rizik, although they heard in Hebrew in the background.
Rizik’s friend ran for his life on the side of the mountain, towards the east.
At 3:18 p.m., he sent a panicked voice message to local Whatsapp groups, begging help: “Someone was martyred!” He implored.
(Audio): Witness of the Muhammad Rizik Al-Shalabi shooting, believing that he had been killed and sending a voice message calling for help.
Subsequent reconstructions estimated that Rizik was perhaps still alive at the time, but he died when the research parties were able to access the region to search for it.
Meanwhile, Saif and others appeared for their life further south, headed for Ain al-Sarara.
As family members confirmed in Tel Aviv Tribune, one of these young men was taken along the way and attached by a gang of about nine settlers.
Witnesses say that the colonists broke the young man on the knee several times with their weapons, then dragged him, attached, in a car and pulled bullets all around him.
Then they threw him on the ground again and again, until the young man begs them to kill him.
“They said,” I’m not going to kill you “,” recalls a friend on Tiktok. “‘I’m going to cut you and your legs and throw you on the side of the road like a dog.'”
According to Sinjil’s activist, Ayed Ghafari, among the colonists was Yahariv Mangory, the chief of the manufacturers of Outost d’Al-Baten, who wore a M16 rifle.
Mangory then identified himself in an interview with Israel Channel 14 as the “owner” of the outposts Al-Baten.
Saif and the others had managed to set up a hill, but around 3.30 p.m., they were welcomed by a group of downhill settlers and attacked them from above, according to Ghafari, who spoke with the young men.
The colonists pelant the young men with rocks, with occasional bullets which passed them while they went down the hill.
A colonist struck Saif Square in the back with a rock, reversing it. He was instantly surrounded by a group of settlers who beat him with clubs and sticks everywhere, according to witnesses.
Hilly, Saif staggered on his feet after the colonists stopped beating him, heading south at the bottom of the hill until he falls on a big oak where a young Palestinian hid.
Beaten, he sank on the ground there during the next two and a half hours when the young man tried to reach out to the people of Mazraa, asking for help.
Saif vomited and struggled to breathe, his aggravating state in the minute.
It was at this point that Muhammad understood that his big brother was in difficulty.
