Sydney nurses stood down after claiming they would kill Israeli patients in social media video


Two New South Wales hospital workers who appeared in a social media video appearing to threaten to refuse to treat and to kill Israeli patients have been identified as nurses at a Sydney hospital and have been “stood down immediately”, the state’s health minister says.

The video has attracted widespread political condemnation, with the prime minister quickly labelling the footage “sickening and shameful.”

Health minister Ryan Park launched an investigation after a video was published by an Israeli content creator depicting an online conversation he had with two people in a NSW hospital on a version of the social media platform Chatroulette.

Max Veifer uses the platform, which allows users to have random video chats with other users around the world, to ask the people he speaks to about Israel.

In the video, Veifer begins a conversation with a man wearing scrubs with a NSW Health insignia who identifies himself as a doctor.

When Veifer identifies himself as from Israel, the man says “I’m going to be really honest with you… I’m so upset you’re Israeli. Eventually you’re going to get killed and go to Jahannam [hell].”

Veifer then asks the man and a woman sitting next to him what they would do if an Israeli were to come to their hospital, and the woman responds: “I won’t treat them, I will kill them.”

The man says “you have no idea how many [Israelis] came to this hospital, and I sent them to Jahannam. I literally sent them to Jahannam.”

Park called the behaviour in the video, “vile, disgusting and appalling.”

“The whole video, from start to finish, is a concern to me … the fact that they chose to do this in uniform, that they chose to do this while they should have been caring for patients,” Park said.

He said the pair, identified as nurses from Bankstown hospital, had been stood down and, subject to the investigation, will never work in a NSW hospital again.

“Obviously, investigative process now takes place. I don’t want to leave a sliver, a sliver of light to allow any of them to be able to think that they will ever work for New South Wales Health again,” Park said.

Park apologised to Jewish community and said he wanted to assure them “the care that you get in our hospitals will continue to be first class.”

“There is no place in our hospital and health system for this sort of view to ever, ever take place,” Park said.

“There is no place for this sort of perspective in our society, but hospitals are different in the fact that every single Australian and every single resident of this state should be able to go to their local hospital when they need care and attention and get high quality care that is safe and effective .”

Park said NSW police and NSW Healthcare Complaints Commission would both be investigating the incident.

Asked about what possible crimes they have referred to police, Park said “nurses have a board and a clinical standard that they are registered to. So firstly, that is obviously being completely breached.”

He added “issues around hate speech, vile offensive behaviour towards people based on their particular faith, and obviously through the investigation, there could be a range of other issues around their individual responsibilities as New South Wales Health employees.”

The NSW Health Secretary Susan Pearce, who was close to tears during parts of Wednesday’s press conference, said: “never in my wildest dreams did I think that I would be standing here with two staff of the New South Wales health system having said such horrendous feelings about our community, and particularly to our Jewish community, I offer my sincere apologies.”

Asked about claims they made in the video about their treatment of Israeli patients, Park said there was no evidence of that based on a rapid examination of patient incidents and patient safety issues over the last 12 months at the hospital.

“What we will now do through those agencies… conduct that thorough investigation to make sure, there are no adverse outcomes as a result of their behaviour,” he said.

The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, called the footage “sickening and shameful.”

The federal health minister, Mark Butler, and the minister for home affairs, Tony Burke, released a joint statement condemning the video they call “as chilling as it is vile.”

The shadow health minister, Anne Ruston, and shadow home affairs minister, James Patterson, also issued a joint statement that “NSW healthcare workers displaying vile antisemitic behaviour, is utterly disgraceful and deeply disturbing.”



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