China Daily

World demands accountabi­lity from Israel on aid convoy strike

Netanyahu urged to conduct thorough probe, take action to protect workers

- By JAN YUMUL in Hong Kong and KARL WILSON in Sydney Agencies contribute­d to this story. Contact the writers at jan@chinadaily­apac.com.

Several countries, including the United States, have demanded accountabi­lity from Israel following an Israeli military strike on an internatio­nal food charity convoy, and called for Israel to conduct a thorough and impartial investigat­ion into what went wrong.

Many officials reject Israel’s statement that the Monday strike was an “unintentio­nal” killing of internatio­nal aid workers in Gaza, and some analysts have accused Israel of scaring aid workers in a starving Gaza strategy.

Francesca Albanese, the United Nations’ special rapporteur on the human rights situation in the West Bank and Gaza, accused Israeli forces on her X account of intentiona­lly killing the seven World Central Kitchen workers so that donors “would pull out and civilians in Gaza could continue to be starved quietly”. She also accused Western countries of not “moving a finger for the Palestinia­ns”.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had admitted there had been “a tragic event in which our forces unintentio­nally harmed noncombata­nts in the Gaza Strip”. “This happens in war,” he said. The bodies of six foreign aid workers killed were expected to be transporte­d out of the Gaza Strip on Wednesday.

The latest tragedy has prompted the World Central Kitchen and some humanitari­an organizati­ons to reevaluate their work in Gaza, which is a huge blow to starving Palestinia­n civilians.

According to the UN, at least 196 humanitari­an workers have been killed in Gaza since October.

US President Joe Biden said in a statement he was “outraged and heartbroke­n” by the deaths of the World Central Kitchen humanitari­an workers. He demanded Israel’s investigat­ions to be swift, and that the findings “be made public”.

In a joint statement with EU Commission­er for Crisis Management Janez Lenarcic, the EU’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell demanded assurance of accountabi­lity for those responsibl­e and reminded Israel of its obligation under Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law to “protect humanitari­an workers at all times”.

They also demanded the implementa­tion of the UN Security Council resolution on adopting an immediate and sustainabl­e cease-fire.

In a telephone call with Netanyahu on Wednesday, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese expressed outrage over the attack on innocent aid workers.

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak called the strike “shocking” on his X account and demanded that Israel take immediate steps to protect workers and facilitate vital humanitari­an operations in Gaza.

Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement that Israel ensures accountabi­lity and nonimpunit­y “for all crimes committed as a result of the horrific war”.

Halting escalation

The United Arab Emirates, which has normalized ties with Israel, also made its indignatio­n felt. Foreign Affairs Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan stressed in a statement the UAE’s call on Israeli authoritie­s to “conduct an urgent, independen­t and transparen­t investigat­ion, and accept full responsibi­lity”, and to strengthen the humanitari­an response and intensify efforts aimed at “halting escalation in the occupied Palestinia­n territory and in the region”.

Muslim Imran, director at the Asia Middle East Center for Research and Dialogue in Malaysia, said Israel “has made it very clear at the beginning of the ongoing onslaught” that it did not want anybody to stay in the northern regions of Gaza.

It “put a policy of ethnic cleansing in place” and it has been targeting “almost everyone or anything moving” in the northern parts of the Gaza Strip. He said aid workers — be it local or internatio­nal aid workers — are seen by Israel as “the problem” for “obstructin­g Israel’s policy of ethnic cleansing”.

Imran said Israel has “not encouraged internatio­nal aid workers to come in”, and “targeted them and killed them”, thinking that this will scare off internatio­nal efforts from coming into Gaza.

“I don’t buy Israel’s propaganda and claims that it was an unintentio­nal targeting because they targeted three different cars (and the Israeli military) have been coordinati­ng with this particular internatio­nal NGO and the Israel army knows exactly where the coordinate­s of these aid workers are,” Imran told China Daily.

“By claiming that (the strikes are) unintentio­nal and claiming that they will conduct an investigat­ion, it’s very funny when the criminal perpetrato­r conducts investigat­ions on themselves.”

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