The National - News

TEEN KILLED BY ISRAELI ‘BURIED IN GRAVE I’D SAVED FOR MYSELF’

▶ Father of Mohammed Al Jawawdeh, who was shot by a security guard outside an Israeli embassy residence in Amman, says he is still searching for an explanatio­n for his son’s death

- SUHA MAAYEH Amman

Zakaria Al Jawawdeh recalls the last phone conversati­on he had with his son Mohammed, perhaps minutes before four bullets struck him in the chest and killed him.

“He told me he had finished installing the bedroom furniture and that the driver went to get a cordless drill from the pickup truck. I then called the driver and told him that they needed to head to the showroom right away because I needed their help with work.”

But, Zakaria says, he still does not understand what happened to his 16-year-old son after he hung up on that fateful evening, July 23.

Not long before his death, his father says, Mohammed had said he wanted a wedding just like his brother’s, held three months ago. “He wanted everyone to hear about his wedding, but he got that in his funeral,” Zakaria says.

“He was buried in the grave that I had saved for myself.”

An Israeli security guard – Ziv Moyal – shot Mohammed Al Jawawdeh dead after the two men argued over the delivery and installati­on of furniture at a residentia­l building leased to the Israeli embassy in Amman.

According to a police report, Mohammed attacked and wounded the guard, who responded by shooting the teenager and also the Jordanian landlord of the property in the compound of the Israeli embassy, Bashar Hamarneh, who

was standing next to him. Hamarneh, an orthopaedi­c surgeon, died of his injuries in hospital.

Two hours after the last call with his son, Zakaria, 45, a father of seven, who owns a furniture showroom in east Amman, was worried sick.

He knew Mohammed had finished installing the set of bedroom furniture – a bed, a closet and two side tables worth 750 Jordanian dinars (Dh3,900) – at the apartment.

He said he sold the furniture to a Jordanian customer and did not know it was intended for a property linked to the Israeli diplomatic mission.

“I called my son and the driver, but their phones were turned off,” he says.

“I called the janitor of the building and asked him about them. He told me everything is chaotic. There was a shooting and killings and your son is in hospital. Then his phone was disconnect­ed.”

The shooting of the two men has angered Jordanians, many of whom are of Palestinia­n descent and remain opposed to a peace treaty the country signed with Israel in 1994.

The embassy incident also stoked tensions running high over Israeli security measures at Al Aqsa Mosque compound in Jerusalem, of which Jordan is the custodian.

“My son is a martyr,” Zakaria says, choking back tears. “Look at my son. He has a weak build. He did not even grow a moustache.

“It is true that all eyes are on Aqsa ... but my son would not do it,” he says in response to Israeli reports that his son attacked the guard with a screwdrive­r.

“He does not have an extremist ideology, he did not belong to any political party. I expect that when the guard saw the tool box he killed my son.

“Why did he shoot him four times in the chest? He could have shot him in his foot.

“But they are cowards, they fear for their souls as much as we love to die. Don’t you like martyrdom? They love life. There is a huge difference between them and us.”

The guard who killed Mohammed was allowed to leave Jordan with the rest of the embassy staff because he was covered by diplomatic immunity.

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s embrace of the shooter on his arrival in Israel added to Jordanian anger over the deaths.

It also drew a strong public response from Jordan’s King Abdullah, who criticised Mr Netanyahu on Thursday and demanded that the guard face justice.

King Abdullah offered his condolence­s to both families.

His strong criticism of Mr Netanyahu and insistence that justice be served have helped ease public anger over the shootings that might have spiralled into dangerous protests in a country already buffeted by violence in the region.

Internally, Jordanian public anger had already reached boiling point over Israel and its handling of the crisis at Al Aqsa.

The kingdom is also struggling with unemployme­nt peaking at a record high in 11 years.

Anger in its southern Bedouin tribes continues to simmer after a court ruling in which a soldier was sentenced to life in prison for killing three US special forces last November, despite footage showing that he stalked and shot them dead.

In his comments on the embassy shooting, King Abdullah insisted his country would not compromise the rights of its sons and he said: “We will devote every possible effort to ensure justice is served”.

Last week, the Jordanian foreign ministry handed Israel the findings of a public prosecutio­n investigat­ion into the incident, and asked for the guard to be prosecuted in Israel in line with article 31 of the Vienna Convention on diplomatic relations.

Jordan also charged him in absentia with two counts of murder and for possessing an unlicensed weapon.

Israeli media said the country’s internal security service, Shin Bet, was investigat­ing circumstan­ces of the shooting.

Zakaria said nothing would quench his sorrow and the unimaginab­le grief he is suffering.

“I am only asking for justice to be served,” he says. “The minimum is a life prison sentence.”

 ?? Salah Malkawi for The National ?? Zakaria Jawawdeh said nothing would quench the sorrow and grief he is suffering over his son’s death
Salah Malkawi for The National Zakaria Jawawdeh said nothing would quench the sorrow and grief he is suffering over his son’s death
 ??  ?? Mohammed Al Jawawdeh
Mohammed Al Jawawdeh

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