(Washington) The American-Palestinian journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, killed on May 11 in the occupied West Bank, was “likely” the victim of a shooting from an Israeli position, the American experts having “no reason” to believe that he it was an intentional shooting, the State Department said Monday.
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The American analysis, however, could not reach a definitive conclusion as to the origin of the bullet that killed the correspondent of Al-Jazeera, who was covering an Israeli military operation in Jenin that day, the projectile being “very damaged,” the statement said.
The death of M.me Abu Akleh, a well-regarded and well-known journalist from the Qatari channel, shook the Middle East. Both the Palestinian Authority and Al Jazeera and Al Jazeera-funding country Qatar immediately accused the Israeli army of killing her.
Ramallah had entrusted the projectile – a 556 mm caliber bullet fired by a Ruger Mini-14 semi-automatic rifle, according to the Palestinian prosecutor – to the Americans for expertise, the latter having undertaken to return it to the Palestinians.
Israel continues to claim that it is impossible to know the exact origin of the shooting, Israeli or Palestinian, and continues to rule out a deliberate shooting in any case.
The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights concluded on June 24 that the Israeli army was responsible, an investigation dismissed as “unfounded” by the Israeli Minister of Defense Benny Gantz.
” United States […] continue to encourage cooperation between Israel and the Palestinian Authority in this important matter” and “urge that accounts be rendered” in the matter, added Monday the spokesman of the American diplomacy, Ned Price.
These latest developments come less than ten days before a visit by US President Joe Biden to Israel and the West Bank, Palestinian territory occupied by Israel since 1967, as part of his first tour of the Middle East since his accession to the White House.