Penticton Herald

Poland calls aid worker’s killing in Gaza a murder

-

WARSAW, Poland — Poland’s government on Friday called the killing of a Polish aid worker by Israeli airstrikes in Gaza a murder, and demanded Israel’s support for a Polish investigat­ion into the case.

Deputy Foreign Minister Władysław Teofil Bartoszews­ki told lawmakers in parliament that the April 1 death of Damian Soból, 35, and six other workers of the World Central Kitchen charity who were distributi­ng food in Gaza was “shocking and disturbing.”

Poland expects Israel’s “full cooperatio­n” in the investigat­ion opened by Polish prosecutor­s in Soból’s hometown of Przemyśl in Poland’s southeast, Bartoszews­ki said. The prosecutor­s “have classified it as a murder,” he said.

Israel conducted a speedy investigat­ion and took responsibi­lity for the deaths, but said the attack that killed the aid workers and their Palestinia­n driver was a tragic mistake. It shared the findings with the countries that lost citizens in the attack. The Israeli military dismissed two officers and reprimande­d three others, saying they violated the army’s rules of engagement.

Bartoszews­ki said that the dismissals and disciplina­ry measures were “inadequate,” and demanded that the case be tried by an independen­t court in Israel.

During a debate in the Polish parliament, many lawmakers said the killings should be considered a war crime.

Bartoszews­ki said Poland was working with other countries whose citizens were killed in the shelling – Australia, Britain, Canada and the United States – to jointly press for a detailed investigat­ion into how cars marked as humanitari­an convoy could have become targets of repeated shelling by the Israeli army.

He stressed that all internatio­nal rules of defense were violated by that attack.

Bartoszews­ki also said that Poland is demanding compensati­on for the family of Soból, whose body has been brought back to Poland.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada