THE
USUAL WHITEWASH
Israeli
officer cleared in
murder of Palestinian girl
Israeli
officer cleared in murder of Palestinian girl
BBC News Friday, October 15, 2004
JERUSALEM—The
Israeli army has cleared an officer accused of repeatedly firing into
the lifeless body of a young Palestinian girl of "unethical"
behaviour.
But the officer remains suspended for poor relations with subordinates.
An inquiry began after soldiers told the story of 13-year-old Iman
al-Hams's death to the media. Hundreds of Palestinian children have
been killed by Israeli troops during the Palestinian uprising or intifada.
SHOOTING
AT THE FLOOR
The killing of Palestinian civilians does not always make much news
in Israel. And it is unusual for the army to launch an investigation
into the circumstances of such incidents, says the BBC's
James Reynolds in Jerusalem.
Without revealing their identities, soldiers from the Givati brigade
platoon told Israeli television how their officer sprayed Iman al-Hams
with automatic gunfire on 5 October in the Tel Sultan neighbourhood
of Rafah—a restricted area near Gaza's border with Egypt.
The investigation did not find that the company or the company commander
had acted unethically.
ISRAELI
ARMY STATEMENT
"We saw her from a distance of 70m. She was fired at ... from
the outpost. She fled and was wounded," a soldier said.
While Iman was lying, wounded or dead, about 70m from the Israeli
guard post, the platoon commander approached her and fired two bullets
from close range at her head, the soldiers said.
He then went back a second time, put his weapon on the automatic setting
and ignoring emptied his entire magazine into her body.
But the army says it accepts the commander's claim that he fired into
the ground near the girl after coming under fire in a dangerous area.
It has not explained why the officer shot into the ground rather than
at the source of the fire.
"The investigation did not find that the company or the company
commander had acted unethically," an army statement said.
A separate military police investigation into the incident is continuing.
"It is permissible for the Israel Defense
Forces to attack in the course of warfare a civilian population that
is ostensibly innocent of wrong-doing. The law of the Torah* is to
have mercy upon and save our civilians and our soldiers, and this
is the true morality of the Torah of Israel, and one should not feel
guilt out of the morality of unbelievers."
— Rabbi Dov Lior, Chairman
of the Council of Rabbis of Judea, Samaria and Gaza, issued May 18,
2004,as a formal ruling on Jewish rabbinic law. (Quoted in "Settler
Rabbi: Killing Civilians Permitted," Forward,
New York, May 28, 2004, p. 5)
*The
first five books of the Old Testament