Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Friday, April 1, 2016

Israeli soldier filmed shooting Palestinian placed under arrest

01 April 2016 - 20H45


    © AFP/File | Israeli citizens hold banners reading in Hebrew: "fighters the people are with you" (L) and "the people want the liberation of the soldier" during a demonstration in Tel Aviv on March 31, 2016 to support Israeli soldier who shot a wounded Palestinian

    JERUSALEM - 


             
    An Israeli soldier caught on video shooting and killing a wounded Palestinian assailant will be kept under arrest at his base until his next court appearance, a military court ruled Friday.
    A new hearing of a military appeals court is scheduled for Tuesday, the army said in a statement.
    The decision to place the soldier under arrest at his base is seen as less serious than holding him in a military prison.
    It follows a favourable ruling on Thursday, when military prosecutors announced that the 19-year-old soldier would be investigated for manslaughter, rather than murder.
    Under Israeli law, manslaughter signifies an intentional but not premeditated killing.
    Video of the soldier, whose identity is under a gag order, shooting the Palestinian in the flashpoint West Bank city of Hebron on March 24 spread widely online.
    Filmed by a Palestinian volunteer for Israeli rights group B'Tselem, it showed 21-year-old Abdul Fatah al-Sharif -- who along with another man had allegedly stabbed a soldier minutes earlier -- lying on the ground, apparently after being shot.
    The soldier then shoots Sharif in the head without any apparent provocation.
    Israel's supreme court on Thursday ruled the family of the slain Palestinian would be allowed to have a pathologist of their choosing present at his autopsy, which is expected in the coming days.
    Top military and government officials have strongly condemned the soldier's behaviour, but far-right politicians and protesters have reacted angrily to his arrest and demanded his release.
    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, a former special forces officer, appeared on Thursday evening to walk a line between backing the military justice system and showing some empathy for the tough conditions soldiers face.


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