The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Netanyahu defends Israeli army after soldier shot wounded Palestinia­n

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JERUSALEM: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu defended the Israeli army Sunday as controvers­y gripped the country over a soldier caught on video shooting a Palestinia­n assailant in the head as he lay on the ground.

The issue reportedly sparked a bitter argument behind closed doors at the Israeli government’s weekly cabinet meeting on Sunday.

Thursday’s shooting incident led to the soldier’s arrest and strong condemnati­on from military officials, but some rightwing politician­s and their supporters have reacted angrily to the response.

Netanyahu on Thursday joined condemnati­ons of the soldier’s behaviour but appeared to back pedal slightly Sunday in remarks at the start of the cabinet meeting.

“Any challenge to the morality of the IDF (Israel Defence Forces) is outrageous and unacceptab­le,” he said.

“The soldiers of the IDF, our children, maintain high ethical values while courageous­ly fighting against bloodthirs­ty murderers under difficult operationa­l conditions.

“I am certain that in all cases, as in the current one, the inquiry takes into account all conditions. We must all support the IDF chief of staff, the IDF and our soldiers, who safeguard our security.”

Netanyahu leads one of the most rightwing government­s in Israeli history but holds only a one-seat majority in parliament.

Video from Thursday’s incident in Hebron in the occupied West Bank spread widely online and threatened to further inflame tensions amid a wave of violence that erupted in October.

Itshoweda2­1-year-oldPalesti­nian, who along with another man had allegedly stabbed a soldier minutes earlier, lying on the ground, apparently after being shot.

The soldier then shoots him again, in the head, without any apparent provocatio­n. The Palestinia­n, Abdul Fatah al-Sharif, was killed.

Sarit Michaeli, a spokeswoma­n for Israeli rights group B’Tselem, which posted the video, called it an “execution”.

The UN’s special coordinato­r for the Middle East peace process, Nickolay Mladenov, called it “a gruesome, immoral and unjust act”.

The soldier was detained, and Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon vowed that the incident would be treated with “utmost severity”.

But far-right politician­s, including Education Minister Naftali Bennett, have defended the soldier, while members of his family said he was being publicly “lynched” and would not receive a fair trial.

Bennett questioned whether the soldier thought the Palestinia­n had explosives on him, though there were reports that he had already been checked for a suicide belt before the shooting.

“The soldier is not a murderer,” Bennett wrote on his Facebook page.

 ??  ?? Benjamin Netanyahu
Benjamin Netanyahu

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