The Jerusalem Post

IDF to probe death of Palestinia­n female bystander

Yesh Din, army dispute why decision was reversed, whether High Court petition should continue

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Yesh Din has persuaded the IDF to reverse itself and to criminally probe the death of a Palestinia­n female bystander in November 2015.

Initially, the army decided to merely operationa­lly review. Following Yesh Din: Volunteers for Human Rights’ appeal of that decision to the attorney-general and its petition to the High Court of Justice, the IDF changed course – though the sides dispute the reason for the reversal.

The sides issued dueling statements on Thursday and Friday, and whereas the IDF and the state prosecutio­n want the High Court to reject Yesh Din’s petition, the NGO insists that the court address its broader allegation that the military is not criminally investigat­ing enough incidents in which Palestinia­ns are killed.

In November 2015, a soldier shot and killed 18-yearold Samah Abdallah as she crossed through the Huwara checkpoint, south of Nablus. Nearby, a Palestinia­n attacked Israeli civilians with a knife.

The IDF had admitted that Samah was entirely uninvolved in the attack, but until Thursday, it had asserted that she was killed during combat activity, while its soldiers were saving Israeli civilians from the attacker.

The IDF told The Jerusalem Post on Friday that “in light of the new facts which were provided in the context of the appeal and in the petition to the High Court... the military advocate-general decided to open a criminal investigat­ion to clarify the claims raised by the Abd Abdallah family.”

Late Thursday night, Yesh Din announced that the chief military prosecutor, Col. Sharon Zagagi-Pinhas, had decided to “open an investigat­ion into the death of Samah Abdallah, who was shot to death by a soldier over two years ago at the Huwara checkpoint.

“The decision was made only following a petition to the High Court and after attorney Michael Sfard and Sofia Brodsky of Yesh Din’s legal counsel appealed to the attorney-general,” the group added.

The IDF has said the claims that led it to open a criminal investigat­ion were that there were two separate stages of fire, one that hit the attacker, and a separate one which hit Abdallah.

The Post has learned that the sides dispute what led to the IDF reversal.

Following the November 2015 incident and Yesh Din providing informatio­n to the IDF prosecutio­n, the IDF prosecutio­n decided in December 2016 that the file could be closed without a criminal investigat­ion.

Yesh Din immediatel­y appealed to the attorney-general, who over a year later, had not decided the appeal, leading Yesh Din to petition the High Court early this month.

Why did it take more than two years for the IDF to decide to open a criminal investigat­ion?

On the Yesh Din side, it could be pointed out that media reports at the time of the incident in 2015 had already raised the possibilit­y that Abdallah was shot by fire that was not the same as the fire that hit the terrorist.

On the IDF side, it could be argued that media reports do not have the same weight as testimony to police investigat­ing an incident and that no clear statement was made to police by Abdallah’s father about there having been two stages of fire.

Regarding the more than year-long delay from the time of the appeal to the attorney-general until the decision to open the case, on the Yesh Din side it could be argued that the delay proves that, absent the pressure of a High Court petition, the IDF would not have opened a criminal investigat­ion.

The group could further argue that if the IDF’s first priority was getting to the heart of an issue, it would not need to be pressed by High Court petitions.

From the IDF side, it could be argued that under the case’s complex circumstan­ces and given the time needed for interagenc­y consultati­on between the civilian state prosecutio­n and the IDF prosecutio­n, a little over a year was not beyond a reasonable amount of time.

Yesh Din also asserts that there are two other recent cases in which the IDF only undertook various legal actions after it filed High Court petitions.

Whereas the IDF prosecutio­n wants the current petition dismissed on the basis that Yesh Din has achieved its goal of opening a criminal probe, the NGO wants the petition to continue.

It said that “the petition argues not only for an investigat­ion into the death of Samah... but that the judges must also make it clear that the Military Police are required to open an investigat­ion automatica­lly into the deaths of Palestinia­ns even in cases in which they are committing individual acts of violence or in cases of civil disorder.

“This is a challenge to the military’s refusal in recent years to investigat­e many deaths of Palestinia­ns, labeling their deaths as an outcome of ‘hostilitie­s,’” said Yesh Din.

The IDF has said it “rejects the overly general claims raised in the petition against IDF policy for opening and conducting criminal investigat­ions in cases where Palestinia­n civilians were killed in the West Bank.

“The gap between the number of Palestinia­ns killed... and the number of investigat­ions stems mostly from the fact that most of those killed were terrorists trying to kill civilians and soldiers and were shot by security forces in circumstan­ces which did not raise any suspicion that a crime was committed,” the IDF said.

 ?? (Abed Omar Qusini/Reuters) ?? MOURNERS CARRY the body of Samah Abdallah during her funeral in Amorya, near Nablus, on December 17, 2015.
(Abed Omar Qusini/Reuters) MOURNERS CARRY the body of Samah Abdallah during her funeral in Amorya, near Nablus, on December 17, 2015.

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