Israel security forces should face
justice for Gaza killings: U.N.
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[February 28, 2019]
By Stephanie Nebehay
GENEVA (Reuters) - United Nations
investigators said on Thursday Israeli security forces may have
committed war crimes and crimes against humanity in killing 189
Palestinians and wounding more than 6,100 at weekly protests in Gaza
last year.
The independent panel said it had confidential information about those
it believes to be responsible for the killings, including snipers and
commanders.
"The Israeli security forces killed and maimed Palestinian demonstrators
who did not pose an imminent threat of death or serious injury to others
when they were shot, nor were they directly participating in
hostilities," it said in its report.
Israel rejected the report as a "theater of the absurd".
In a statement, acting Foreign Minister Israel Katz called it "another
hostile, mendacious and slanted report against the State of Israel ...
No one can deny Israel the right of self-defense and the obligation to
defend its citizens and borders from violent attacks."
Protests have been held at the frontier between Israel and the Gaza
Strip since last year, calling for the easing of an Israeli blockade of
the territory and recognition of the right of Palestinian refugees there
to return to homes in Israel.
Israel has said its forces opened fire to protect the frontier from
incursions and attacks by armed militants.
The latest report, covering the period from March 30-December 31 2018,
to the U.N. Human Rights Council was based on hundreds of interviews
with victims and witnesses, as well as medical records, video and drone
footage, and photographs.
U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet should share
the findings with the International Criminal Court (ICC), it said. The
Hague-based court opened a preliminary investigation into allegations of
Israeli human rights abuses on Palestinian territory in 2015.
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A relative of Palestinian teenager Yousif al-Dayyah, 15, who was
killed at the Israel-Gaza border fence during a protest on Friday,
mourns during his funeral in Gaza City February 23, 2019. REUTERS/Suhaib
Salem/File Photo
The Gaza Strip is home to 2 million Palestinians, the majority of
them stateless descendants of people who fled or were driven out of
Israel on its founding in 1948.
The panel, led by Argentine legal expert Santiago Canton, said
individual members of the Israeli security forces killed and gravely
injured civilians who were "neither directly participating in
hostilities nor posing an imminent threat".
"Some of these violations may constitute war crimes or crimes
against humanity and must be immediately investigated by Israel,"
Canton said.
Thirty-five children, two journalists and three "clearly-marked"
paramedics were among those killed by Israeli forces, in violation
of international humanitarian law, it said.
In the ongoing border protests dubbed 'The Great March of Return',
Gazans are calling for the right to return to lands from which their
ancestors fled or were forced to flee.
Protesters are also calling for an end to a grinding Israeli-led
blockade of Gaza which the World Bank says has reduced the territory
to a state of economic collapse.
The coastal enclave is controlled by the Islamist group Hamas, which
is designated a terrorist group by the West and has fought three
wars with Israel.
(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Additional reporting by Dan
Williams in Jerusalem; Editing by Peter Graff and Raissa Kasolowsky)
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