Ref: 74/2008
Date: 14 August 2008
Time: 09:30 GMT
Israeli Response to Death of Reuters
Cameraman Makes Journalists Legitimate IOF Targets
The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) strongly
condemns the official response of the Israeli military Advocate-General
to the death of a Reuters cameraman and three other civilians, including
two children, who were killed in Juhor al-Dik in the central Gaza Strip,
on April 16, 2008. The cameraman, Fadel Shana’a, and the other civilians
were killed by an Israeli tank crew, who, according to Israeli military
advocate-general, Brigadier General Avihai Mendelblit, acted properly
and will therefore not face any legal action for killing these four
unarmed civilians.
PCHR believes this response once again underlines the
chronic failure of the State of Israel and its Occupation Forces to
conducts proper investigations into the hundreds of crimes they have
committed against Palestinian civilians in the Occupied Palestinian
Territory (OPT). This willful failure increases the urgent need to
prosecute suspected perpetrators internationally, and reinforces the
importance of PCHR’s efforts to utilize universal jurisdiction. PCHR
notes with concern that since the beginning of the Second Intifada in
September 2000, Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) have killed 9
journalists, including 2 international journalists, and in addition have
injured at least 170 journalists and other media workers who were
reporting on the OPT.
On Tuesday, 12 August, Reuters news agency received a
letter from Brigadier General Avihai Mendelblit, in which he stated that
the Israeli troops in Juhor Al-Dik could not see whether Fadel Shana’a
was operating a camera or brandishing a weapon. In his letter to
Reuters, Mendelblit claimed that “The tank crew was unable to determine
the nature of the object mounted on the tripod, and positively identify
it as [either] an anti-tank missile, a mortar or a television camera.”
Mendelblit also wrote that “In light of the reasonable conclusion
reached by the tank crew and its superiors that the characters were
hostile, and were carrying an object most likely to be a weapon, the
decision to fire at the target… was sound…”
Investigations conducted by PCHR immediately after the 16
April attack in Juhor Al-Dik strongly refute these claims, and proved
beyond all reasonable doubt that Israeli Occupation Forces willfully
killed journalist Shana’a and the three other civilians who died
alongside him. In addition, another nine unarmed civilians, including
six children, died in Juhor al-Dik village in an IOF missile attack that
was launched earlier the same day. A total of 13 unarmed Palestinian
civilians, including 8 children, were killed in the area of Juhor Al-Dik
on 16 April. In addition, thirty two civilians, including seventeen
children, were injured.
The letter from Brigadier General Avihai Mendelblit to
Reuters concerned the second attack in Juhor al-Dik, which killed Fadel
Shan’a, two children and a second adult civilian. According to
investigations conducted by PCHR, Fadel Shana’a and his colleague, Wafa
Abu Mezyed, a Reuters soundman, arrived at Juhor al-Din area at 17:00,
an hour after an IOF missile attack in the village had killed 9
Palestinian civilians, including 6 children. The two men were wearing
bullet proof vests emblazoned with the word “PRESS.” In his eye-witness
testimony to PCHR, Wafa Abu Mezyed stated:
“When we arrived at Juhor al-Dik area at 5pm, the dead
children had just been evacuated by ambulances… We filmed the site of
the attack and then got back into our vehicle, which was daubed with the
word REUTERS, and drove out of the village. We could see two tanks and a
bulldozer, and we deliberately parked more than one and a half
kilometers away from them for our own safety. Fadel got out of the jeep
in order to continue filming… A small crowd of children gathered around
us wanting to know what we were filming, and Fadel asked me to get out
of the jeep too and shoo them away. I started to move the children out
of his way. Fadel and I were standing just three meters apart when I
heard an explosion. I saw Fadel and two of the boys fall to the ground.
I threw myself on the ground too. From where I lay, I could see that
Fadel and the two boys were dead and bleeding.”
Fadel Shana’a, 14-year-old Ahmed ‘Aaref Farajallah and
17-year-old Ghassan Khaled Abu ‘Otaiwi, were all killed by the shell
fired by the IOF tank. Less than a minute later, the IOF tank fired a
second shell that completely destroyed the REUTERS vehicle. Wafa Abu
Mezyed saw two children flung into the air by the force of the second
explosion, which killed another civilian, 22-year-old Khalil Isma’il
Dughmosh.
PCHR condemns the Israeli Advocate-General’s response:
1)
However, PCHR was not
surprised by this response, which further reflects the chronic failure
of the State of Israel and its occupation forces to properly investigate
hundreds of crimes they have committed against civilians in the OPT,
including dozens of crimes against journalists.
2)
PCHR reiterates its
position that there is absolutely no trust in military investigations
conducted by IOF, who themselves commit war crimes against the
Palestinian people. The Centre stresses that an Independent
Investigation Commission must be established immediately.
3)
PCHR reiterates its
position that current investigations, which lack all minimum standards
of transparency and impartiality, are a means to cover war crimes and
provide legal protection and impunity to those suspected of perpetrating
such crimes.
4)
PCHR believes that this
case further increases the need to prosecute Israeli war criminals using
universal jurisdiction.
5)
PCHR believes the response
of the Israeli Advocate-General response renders local and international
journalists easy and legitimate targets for IOF, especially whilst
journalists are reporting on incursions and military operation in the
OPT. This decision indicates that journalists can be fired on by IOF
troops simply based on an apparent suspicion concerning the filming
equipment they may be carrying.