A year on, family and friends say no justice for slain Al Jazeera
journalist
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[May 11, 2023]
By Lara Afghani and Henriette Chacar
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - A year after Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu
Akleh was shot while covering an Israeli army raid, family and friends
say her killers are yet to be held responsible.
Abu Akleh, one of the most recognizable journalists covering
Israeli-occupied territories, was shot dead on May 11, 2022 during an
Israeli raid in the West Bank city of Jenin.
After changing its version of what happened several times, Israel's
military said Abu Akleh, who was wearing a clearly marked protective
press vest and helmet, was likely unintentionally shot by an Israeli
soldier but could have also been hit by Palestinian fire.
Witnesses have said there were no Palestinian fighters firing in the
area where Abu Akleh was standing, and her family and Palestinian
officials believe Israeli forces killed her deliberately.
"Shireen's killers are free, they haven't been held accountable. Nothing
was done to deter them from targeting journalists and killing them in
the same way," said journalist Najwan Simri, who was a close friend to
Abu Akleh.
A report by the Committee to Protect Journalists found that no one has
been charged or held accountable for the death of at least 20
journalists killed by Israeli gunfire over the past two decades.
"It is part of a pattern of response that seems designed to evade
responsibility," said Robert Mahoney, CPJ's director of special projects
and one of the report's editors.
Israel insists that its soldiers do not deliberately target journalists
and has refused to identify the soldier who probably shot Abu Akleh.
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Iraqi journalists stand in solidarity to
commemorate one year since killing of Al Jazeera reporter Shireen
Abu Akleh, who was killed in Jenin while on a reporting mission, in
Baghdad, Iraq May 11, 2023. REUTERS/Ahmed Saad
Naftali Bennett, who was Israel's prime minister when Abu Akleh was
killed, said last week that soldiers should not be prosecuted when
civilians are not killed deliberately.
"If there's a battle going on and there's collateral damage that is
not deliberate, then no. Otherwise, what you would do is shackle all
the hands of fighters," he said.
Abu Akleh's death stirred international outrage, especially after
Israeli police beat mourners at her funeral in Jerusalem. She was
one of 191 Palestinians killed by Israeli forces and Jewish settlers
in 2022, according to a UN tally.
Walid Omary, Al Jazeera's bureau chief in Jerusalem, said the
network submitted a formal request to the International Criminal
Court to investigate the shooting, adding that the obstacles to
prosecuting those responsible were "political".
On Sunday, dozens gathered in a modest Roman Catholic church to mark
the first anniversary of her killing. Some people wore pins of the
now-famous photo of Abu Akleh with the skyline of Jerusalem, where
she was from.
"She always lit up the room," said her niece Lina Abu Akleh.
(Reporting by Henriette Chacar and Lara Afghani; writing by
Henriette Chacar; editing by Mark Heinrich)
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