Palestinian Red Crescent says Israeli probe into Gaza aid workers' killings not enough
The
Palestinian Red Crescent called on Monday for a "serious investigation"
into the killing of 15 aid workers in Gaza last month, a day after the
Israeli military admitted "professional failures" and disciplined two officers over the incident.
Younish
Al-Khatib, chairman of the Palestinian Red Crescent, said he did not
consider the measures taken by the Israeli military, which reprimanded
one officer and dismissed another from his position, as sufficient.
"This
looks like the management of a company taking administrative measures
against its employees who made some kind of a mistake," he told Reuters.
"When you kill 15 medical staff and civil defence personnel, these
can't be called 'measures'."
"There has to be proper accountability and a stop to impunity that Israel has taken for granted for so many years," he added.
On
Sunday, the Israeli military said members of a special forces unit in
Gaza had made a number of errors in three separate incidents on March
23, during which they fired on ambulances, a fire truck and a UN
vehicle.
It
issued a formal reprimand to a brigade commander and said the deputy
battalion commander who was on the ground when the incident occurred
would be relieved of his post over the mix of professional failures and
breaches of orders, as well as a failure to fully report the incident.
After
initially saying the soldiers opened fire on a number of unmarked
vehicles that approached their position, the military confirmed that
they were clearly marked as emergency vehicles. The investigation found,
however, that the soldiers had been unable to see clearly in the dark.
The
military advocate general's office may now take further action,
including possible criminal action against the soldiers, the military
said.
Killing
of the aid workers drew condemnation worldwide, piling pressure on the
military to clarify what had occurred and to hold those responsible to
account.
Al-Khatib
said the army's investigation, headed by former Major General Yoav
Har-Even did not match the seriousness of the incident, which added to a
toll of more than 400 Palestinian emergency and health workers killed
in the conflict, including 44 from the Red Crescent.
"We
don't look at it as a proper investigation," Al-Khatib said, urging an
independent international investigation. He said the Red Crescent would
continue to work in Gaza, the West Bank and Jerusalem.
Separately,
Hamas issued a statement saying the Israeli military investigation was
"nothing but a blatant attempt to evade full responsibility for this
heinous crime".
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