Israeli army admits error over Gaza attack that killed nine
Jerusalem - The Israeli army said on Tuesday that a strike in Gaza that killed nine members of the same family had been due to a faulty assessment of the risk to civilians.
The November 14 airstrike targeted the home of Rasmi Abu Malhous, described by Israel as a commander in Islamic Jihad, the militant Palestinian movement against which Israel had launched a three-day campaign.
He and eight members of his family were killed by the attack, including five children.
A statement from the army said that intelligence collected ahead of the attack had indicated that the residence ‘was designated as an Islamic Jihad terror organisation military compound’.
The army had ‘estimated’ that ‘civilians would not be harmed as a result of an attack’ on the site, which was not believed to be accessible to members of the public.
An army inquiry later found ‘that even though military activity was conducted in the compound, it was not a closed compound, and in reality civilians were present there’, it said.
The army said it would learn from its ‘mistakes’ to reduce ‘the recurrence of similar irregular events’.
It stressed it had made ‘considerable efforts... to reduce the damage to non-combatants’.
The military report also blamed Islamic Jihad for exploiting and endangering non-combatants ‘by placing its military assets in the heart of the civilian population and by deliberately acting from within densely populated civilian areas’.