FrontLine

In the cross hairs

- BY JOHN CHERIAN

The killing of Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh by Israeli security forces is one more instance of the culture of impunity with which they operate in the occupied territorie­s.

ON MAY 11, THE VETERAN PALESTINIA­N journalist, Shireen Abu Akleh, was shot dead in cold blood by Israeli security forces, once again putting the internatio­nal spotlight on Israel’s brutal policies in the occupied territorie­s and exposing the double standards of Israel and the US, its main ally and patron, on human rights in the region.

Shireen, who also happened to be a US citizen, had been working with Al Jazeera, the Qatari television network, since 1997 and was a household name in the Arab world for her courageous coverage of events in the occupied territorie­s and the wider region. In one of her broadcasts, she said: “I managed to overcome my fears in difficult times because I have chosen journalism in order to be close to the people. It might be not easy to change the reality but at least I was able to convey the people’s message and voice.”

‘A HEINOUS CRIME’

Al Jazeera interrupte­d its regular news broadcasts to announce the demise of its star correspond­ent. “In a tragic and deliberate crime that violates all internatio­nal laws and norms, Israeli occupation forces assassinat­ed in cold blood our correspond­ent Shireen Abu Akleh,” the statement from the network said. The channel went on to describe the killing “as a heinous crime which intends to only prevent the media from conducting their duty”. The UN Security Council unanimousl­y condemned the act and called for “an immediate, thorough, transparen­t and impartial investigat­ion into her killing”. The US, however, used its influence in the Security Council to tone down the language in the resolution and to block an independen­t investigat­ion into the killing.

Israeli army snipers shot the 51-year-old journalist as she and fellow journalist­s, wearing vests and helmets clearly identifyin­g them as media personnel, were on their way to cover protests that had erupted in the West Bank town of Jenin. Another reporter, Ali Samoudi, was grievously injured by a shot in the back. Speaking from hospital, he said that the Israeli forces clearly knew that they were targeting media personnel. Samoudi said that they were in an open area and clearly visible when they were shot. “We were going to film the Israeli army operations and suddenly they shot us without asking us to stop filming or to leave,” Samoudi told the media.

The Israeli authoritie­s initially stated that Palestinia­n resistance forces had shot at the journalist­s, but Samoudi and other journalist­s accompanyi­ng Shireen pointed out that there were no Palestinia­n protesters in the area. Shatha Hanaysha, a journalist who was standing next to Shireen when she was shot, said that the Israeli forces did not stop firing even after the journalist fell to the ground. “The Israeli army was adamant on shooting to kill,” she said.

Video footage that emerged in the third week of May appears to confirm the journalist­s’ account. In the clip, filmed by a resident of Jenin, Shireen and her colleagues are seen walking towards the location of the Israeli soldiers; there is no sign of firing by Palestinia­n fighters. The journalist­s are clearly wearing blue press jackets. The firing from the Israeli side starts without any warning.

DOCTORED VIDEOS

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett initially denied any responsibi­lity for the killing. “It appears likely that armed Palestinia­ns, who were firing indiscrimi­nately at the time, were responsibl­e for the unfortunat­e death of the journalist,” he said. To support the government’s version, Israeli security forces released doctored videos that purportedl­y showed Palestinia­n fighters firing at the media personnel.

Within days, the Israeli government had to withdraw these accusation­s, and Bennett called for a joint investigat­ion with the Palestinia­n Authority (PA) administra­tion. The PA refused the offer, asking for an internatio­nal team, preferably from the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC), to investigat­e the matter. The Israeli government now says that an Israeli soldier could have been involved in the killing but claims that guilt can be ascertaine­d only if the PA hands over the bullet that killed Shireen. The bullet recovered from her body is in the safe custody of the PA and is crucial for future investigat­ions into the case. The Israeli army said that it would not be conducting an internal inquiry into the killing. Although the

Israeli government has in the past ordered inquiries into a few specific cases of targeted killings of Palestinia­n civilians, no Israeli soldier has been punished or named so far for killing Palestinia­ns.

The Israeli government has laid down “the rules of engagement” for its army, giving soldiers a virtual carte blanche to shoot at unarmed civilians. Israeli snipers have shot many Palestinia­ns protesting along the Gaza– Israel border. Hagai El-ad, executive director of B’tselem (the Israeli Informatio­n Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territorie­s), wrote: “Israel needs impunity to maintain its apartheid regime. It cannot maintain control over a subjugated population without state control. Thus, it is essential for the regime to provide itself with blanket impunity—while performing what looks like investigat­ions, to appease internatio­nal expectatio­ns.”

Tom Nides, US ambassador to Israel, tweeted that he was “very sad” to learn about the death of Shireen and called for “a thorough investigat­ion”. The US tried to put pressure on the PA to agree to a joint investigat­ion. An Israeli NGO, Yesh Din, said the army’s inaction showed that it no longer even bothered “to give the appearance of investigat­ing the killing” of an internatio­nally renowned journalist.

When unarmed civilians are killed, Israel’s strategy has always been to deny culpabilit­y and then cast doubts on Palestinia­n eyewitness accounts, and keep on insisting that there are always two versions to any story. The Western media, as usual, is quick to repeat the Israeli talking points, including describing the killing as an unfortunat­e accident and generally giving Israeli forces the benefit of the doubt.

WITHOUT REMORSE

That the Israeli government feels no remorse is evident from its actions after Shireen’s death. When her body was brought to her house in Jerusalem, Israeli authoritie­s tried to storm the house, claiming that Palestinia­n flags were displayed and patriotic slogans raised. The police demanded that the family could only mourn in private and with no public display of grief.

During the funeral, Israeli security forces behaved despicably; they baton-charged the huge numbers of mourners who had come from all over Israel and the occupied territorie­s, shooting at them with rubber bullets and stun grenades. The pall-bearers nearly dropped the coffin in the chaos that ensued. The objection the police raised was that Palestinia­n flags were being waved and the coffin was wrapped in a Palestinia­n flag.

Israeli security forces have already killed more than 60 Palestinia­ns this year. Since mid April, the occupied territorie­s have witnessed huge protests against Israel’s efforts to prevent worshipper­s from gathering at Al-aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem during the holy month of Ramadan, and its move to expedite the expansion of illegal Jewish settlement­s on Palestinia­n land.

Jenin has a special place in the history of Palestinia­n resistance. On April 9, 2002, Israeli special forces

launched a surprise raid on a Palestinia­n refugee camp in the city, killing 47 Palestinia­ns, including women and children. In the firefight, 23 Israeli soldiers were also killed. Shireen had covered the horrific events 20 years ago. A resident of the town recounted how she was personally involved in searching for missing members of an affected family amid the chaos and terror unleashed by the Israeli army. Since 2002, Jenin has remained defiant.

Each year, Palestinia­ns commemorat­e the Battle of Jenin. This year, the Israeli army decided to tighten security in the city. In February, it targeted 25 activists and raided many homes. A week before the anniversar­y, security forces killed three Palestinia­ns, with the Israeli authoritie­s claiming that the three men were “involved in terrorist activities against the security forces”.

For the last few months, therefore, Jenin and most of the occupied territorie­s were in ferment, angered by the high-handed ways of Israeli security forces. Both Israel and the occupied territorie­s have seen a series of shootings and stabbings since the third week of March; 14 Israelis have died in the violence. The Israeli authoritie­s said that two residents of Jenin were involved in two separate incidents of killing.

Following the spurt in violence, the Israeli Prime Minister gave the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) “full freedom” to subdue the resistance, and imposed economic sanctions on Jenin. The army blockaded all roads connecting Jenin to the rest of the occupied West Bank. At the same time, it increased its deadly raids inside Jenin and the killings of residents.

It was this onslaught on Jenin that Shireen and other Palestinia­n journalist­s had gone to cover.

JOURNALIST VICTIMS

Shireen joins a long list of Palestinia­n journalist­s who have been killed by Israeli security forces in the last 70 years. Her killing happened just days after the Internatio­nal Federation of Journalist­s (IFJ), the Palestinia­n Journalist­s Syndicate (PJS), and the Internatio­nal Centre of Justice for Palestinia­ns filed a formal complaint with the ICC alleging “systematic targeting of Palestinia­n journalist­s”. The complaint specifically mentions Ahmed Abu Hussein and Yasser Mortaja, two journalist­s who were killed in Israeli army sniper fire when they were covering the “Great March of Return” protests along the Gaza–israel border in 2018. In 2015 and 2019, respective­ly, Israeli snipers shot at and blinded Palestinia­n journalist­s Nedal Eshtayeh and Muath Amarneh.

The complaint to the ICC also highlights the demolition of an 11-storey building in Gaza by the Israeli army in May last year. The building housed the offices of the Us-owned Associated Press and Al Jazeera. The IFJ said that it had filed the complaint “in the light of continuing impunity enjoyed by the perpetrato­rs of the attack”.

The PJS estimates that more than 86 Palestinia­n journalist­s have been killed since 1967 after Israel occupied the West Bank, Gaza, and Jerusalem. Fifty of them have been killed since 2000, when the first Palestinia­n intifada “uprising” started.

The UN Human Rights Council said in a 2019 report that it had “reasonable grounds to believe that Israeli snipers shot journalist­s intentiona­lly, despite seeing clearly that they were marked as such” during the 2018 protests along the border with Gaza. The PJS has described the latest killing as “clear assassinat­ion perpetrate­d by the Israeli occupation army” and called for “a clear move to protect fellow journalist­s from the continued incitement and killing practised by the Israeli occupation and all components of the occupation”.

The Palestinia­n Foreign Ministry has announced that it will “formally” ask the ICC to investigat­e Shireen’s killing. Palestinia­n Foreign Minister Riyad al-maliki told the media: “We have documented [the crime] and submitted a file about it to the ICC prosecutor alongside other Israeli violations.”.

The PA has been providing informatio­n to the ICC about Israeli atrocities for the last 13 years but has received little support from the court. Mustafa Barghouti, a former Palestinia­n Foreign Minister, pointed out that in contrast, the ICC had sent 42 investigat­ors to Ukraine in the past three months. Barghouti said: “What we need is real pressure on the Israeli establishm­ent, a serious effort to establish sanctions and punitive acts against Israel, not to allow it to continue to be above internatio­nal law.” m

 ?? ?? FAMILY AND FRIENDS of Shireen carrying her coffin fend off security personnel, in Jerusalem on May 13.
FAMILY AND FRIENDS of Shireen carrying her coffin fend off security personnel, in Jerusalem on May 13.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India