From disaster zones in Thailand to missile impact sites in Israel, the technology developed by Camero-Tech in Kfar Netter, Israel gives rescuers the unprecedented ability to "see through walls."
From disaster zones in Thailand to missile impact sites in Israel, the technology developed by Camero-Tech in Kfar Netter, Israel gives rescuers the unprecedented ability to "see through walls." When radio waves and advanced algorithms meet the urgency of the “golden hour,” they create a decisive advantage one that can separate catastrophe from hope. In collaboration with Camero-Tech
The morning after the earthquake struck Thailand in March 2025 was gray, dusty, and eerily still. On one of the main streets, facing the collapsed shell of a residential building that had folded in on itself, international rescue teams stood in uncertainty. Amid the familiar chaos of roaring generators, shouted commands, and the heavy smell of concrete dust, one moment of tense quiet stood out: a rescue team member approached a cracked wall, pressed a compact black device against it, and looked at the screen.
“This device can tell us if there is a heartbeat or breathing under the rubble before we move a single stone,” said Huang, one of the senior rescuers on site, as he excitedly detected signs of life beyond the wall. “In our profession, where every minute counts, this can be the difference between recovering a body and saving a living person.”
The device Huang referred to is not a prop from a science-fiction film. It is the result of over two decades of Israeli engineering by Camero-Tech, part of the SK Group. The company has managed to solve one of the most challenging physical and operational problems in rescue activities: the ability to make solid walls “transparent” and detect human presence, movement, and even micro-respiration patterns through layers of reinforced concrete, brick, and debris.