Search for Missing Bochur Enters Fifth Day as Efforts Expand into Deeper Waters Off Netanya
Search operations for a missing 17-year-old boy off the coast of Netanya intensified Tuesday, with rescue teams expanding their efforts into deeper sections of the sea as calmer conditions enabled more advanced underwater and coastal scans.
ZAKA officials said that on the fifth day of the search along Sanz Beach, teams have divided the area into sectors and extended operations northward. “Division of zones among the forces and expansion of the searches northward. The calm sea allows deepened scans both at depth and between the rocks.”
“Search efforts for the missing teenager Avraham Yeshayahu Spiegel, 17, who has been missing since last Friday at Sanz Beach in Netanya, continued throughout the night with intensified and reinforced activity by all forces,” the organization said.
Overnight, a local command post operated under the direction of Yirmi Blumenthal, head of logistics for ZAKA Netanya. “As volunteers from the local team, together with additional volunteers, including his friends from the Tifrach Yeshiva, carried out prolonged foot searches along the coastline. The teams were divided into defined sectors and operated with flashlights and specialized equipment in order to scan every possible segment.”
“As part of a joint situational assessment with all emergency agencies, a clear sector division was carried out this morning: the marine police and the Lehava Unit are focusing on the Tzanz Beach sector and southward, while ZAKA’s special units are concentrating on the northern sector, in the Blue Bay Beach area, while expanding the search radius to additional locations.”
Deputy Fire Commissioner Doron Almeshely, commander of the elite Lehava Unit of Fire and Rescue Services, who has been overseeing the search scene at Tzanz Beach since Shabbos, visited the ZAKA command post on site and reviewed the ongoing efforts.
“ZAKA volunteers are operating here with exceptional dedication, day and night, in full cooperation with all forces. This is professional, sensitive, and complex work, and we thank them for their important assistance in the search efforts.”
Relatively calm sea conditions on the fifth day allowed for a significant escalation in operations. Diving teams reached greater depths and conducted searches among the many rocks scattered throughout the area, amid concerns the missing boy may be trapped between them. At the same time, improved sea conditions enhanced aerial scanning capabilities, with drone units deploying advanced systems to detect movement and irregularities in the water.
Forces have also been significantly reinforced, with dozens of volunteers operating simultaneously across multiple zones, combining technological tools with foot patrols and marine searches along the shoreline and offshore.
ZAKA CEO Dovi Weisnshtern, who arrived to observe the efforts firsthand, said: “We are in the midst of the fifth day of a complex and ongoing operation, with reinforced forces working in multiple sectors simultaneously. The current sea conditions allow us to deepen the searches both in depth and in more complex areas. We continue to operate with determination and caution, with the goal of locating the missing person and bringing news to the family as soon as possible.”
Chaim Ottmezgin, commander of ZAKA’s special units, added: “The work is being carried out with a clear division of sectors among all forces, which enables maximum utilization of operational capabilities. We are now focusing also on deep-water searches and rocky areas, alongside the use of drones and advanced equipment, and we will not stop until the missing person is found.”
{Matzav.com}
