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Israeli army begins criminal investigation over Gaza war

Five separate incidents of misconduct to be investigated, with more pending
Much of Gaza was levelled in the 50-day war (AFP)
By AFP
Israel's army has launched five criminal investigations into incidents involving its forces during the Gaza war, a top legal official said on Wednesday, two weeks after a truce took hold.
 

The United Nations and international rights groups have condemned Israel for numerous attacks which resulted in heavy civilian casualties, in a conflict that killed more than 2,140 Palestinians, nearly 70 percent of them civilians. On the Israeli side 73 people, including 67 soldiers, were also killed in the 50-day war. 

The army is already looking into five cases, with dozens of others pending investigation, a top army legal official told foreign journalists at the defence ministry in Tel Aviv, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Among the cases being investigated are the shelling on 24 July of a UN school in the northern town of Beit Hanun that medics said killed at least 15 people, and the 16 July bombing of a Gaza City beach where four children died.

Both attacks were condemned by the UN and Israel ally Washington, although the US refrained from placing the blame squarely on Israel.

Other incidents being probed include the killing of a woman in southern Gaza after troops coordinated her exit from a combat zone, the alleged beating in detention of a prisoner, and the alleged theft of money by a soldier from a home.

The army was "committed to examining all credible allegations of misconduct," the legal official said.

So far, the military has already dismissed seven other cases, two of which the official gave details on.

The first was an air strike that killed eight al-Kaware family members on 8 July , the first day of the war, and the second was a strike on a car the following day that reportedly killed a media worker.

"During armed conflict, the death of a civilian does not necessarily raise suspicion of misconduct, so when we receive complaints regarding these types of incidents... we need a more comprehensive factual understanding of the incident before we can decide whether to open a criminal investigation," the official said.

But Israeli rights group B'Tselem said such investigations lacked credibility.

"There is currently no official body in Israel capable of conducting independent investigations of suspected violations of international humanitarian law," B'Tselem said on its website.

The Palestinians have threatened Israel with action at the International Criminal Court over war crimes allegations, and Hamas has signed a proposal for Palestinians to join the body, potentially opening itself up to investigation.

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