The Mercury

Nabs slain reporter’s pallbearer

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ISRAEL has arrested one of the pallbearer­s of slain Al Jazeera reporter Shireen Abu Akleh, police said yesterday, but rejected his lawyer’s claim that the detention was linked to his role at the funeral.

In a raid that has sparked internatio­nal outrage, baton-wielding Israeli police beat several pallbearer­s as they carried the journalist’s coffin out of a hospital in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem.

Abu Akleh was shot dead during an Israeli army raid in the West Bank last week. Palestinia­ns and the TV network said Israeli troops killed her, while Israel said she may have been killed by Palestinia­n gunfire or a stray shot from an Israeli sniper.

A lawyer for pallbearer Amro Abu Khudeir said that his client had been arrested and questioned over his role at the funeral. Khaldoun Najm said Israel also claimed to have “a secret file on (Khudeir’s) membership of a terrorist organisati­on”. “I think they will arrest more young men who participat­ed in the funeral,” Najm said. “For them, the subject of the funeral and the coffin was scandalous.”

Police dismissed any link between the funeral and Khudeir’s arrest.

“We are witnessing an attempt to produce a conspiracy that is fundamenta­lly incorrect,” a statement said. “The suspect was arrested as part of an ongoing investigat­ion which had nothing to do with his participat­ion in the funeral procession.”

Police justificat­ions for the raid at St Joseph’s hospital have varied.

They have cited the need to stamp out “nationalis­tic” chants and also said that “rioters” among the mourners hurled projectile­s at officers.

Israeli forces frequently crack down on displays of Palestinia­n identity, including the national flag, one of which was draped over Abu Akleh’s coffin. Police have vowed to investigat­e the controvers­ial incident.

Meanwhile, yesterday, a left-wing Arab Israeli MP quit the governing coalition, partly citing police aggression at Abu Akleh’s funeral, rendering the government a minority in parliament.

The decision by Ghaida Rinawie Zoabi of the dovish Meretz party leaves the coalition headed by right-wing Prime Minister Naftali Bennett with just 59 out of 120 seats in Israel’s parliament, the Knesset.

But the developmen­t does not necessaril­y indicate that the coalition – an alliance of parties ranging from the Jewish right and Israeli doves to an Arab Muslim party – is set to collapse. Approving a motion to call new elections requires 61 votes. Several opposition MPs are opposed to the current opposition leader, former premier Benjamin Netanyahu, and are unlikely to support new elections that could return him to power.

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