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CNN ignores new footage showing IDF deliberate firing on civilians
in Jenin market
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PMWATCH
- July 6, 2002 - New footage
obtained by the BBC shows clearly that the IDF deliberately
shot at fleeing civilians at close range in the Jenin market
attack by the IDF on June 21, 2002. As you well know, many of
the major media outlets, including CNN, have characterized the
attack as an honest "mistake" by the IDF, and almost all of
them downplayed it. (See PMWatch report http://www.pmwatch.org/pmw/reports/tally/).
The new
footage described in the BBC story below clearly contradicts
this rendering of events.
Please
give CNN a call and ask them if they are going to show the BBC
footage and if they are going to focus on the attack the way
they focus on suicide bombings.
Their number
is (404) 827 - 2030 - in the weekends, they don't start receiving
calls until 12:30 noon.
Palestine
Media Watch
http://www.pmwatch.org
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/middle_east/newsid_2102000/2102081.stm
Friday, 5 July,
2002, 23:46 GMT 00:46 UK
Jenin deaths video
implicates army
The boys' father
showed the tape to the BBC's Orla Guerin
The BBC has obtained
video footage which appears to show an incident in the West Bank city
of Jenin two weeks ago in which two Palestinian children were killed
by Israeli tank fire.
The Israeli army
has apologised for causing the deaths of six-year-old Ahmad Abu Aziz
and his 13-year-old brother Jamil, but said the tank crew opened fire
to deter Palestinians breaking a curfew and approaching them.
However, the footage
shows a tank firing the first of two shells, at close range, at a group
of civilians who are running away.
The dead boys'
father, Youssef Abu Aziz, told the BBC that they had gone outside to
buy chocolate, thinking the Israeli curfew imposed on their city had
been lifted.
The film of their
last moments begins with the two boys and a number of other civilians
running towards the camera along an otherwise deserted street in Jenin.
Filmed from high
building some distance away the footage is shaky, but clearly shows
the sequence of events.
A white car speeds
along the road, horn blaring, the driver - Dr Samer al-Ahmad - apparently
warning the people to run for their lives.
Now recovering
from his wounds, Dr al-Ahmad told the BBC that, moments earlier, an
Israeli officer had said to him that it was allowed for him to be on
the streets.
But then he said
the tank crew opened fire on him with a machine-gun "without warning...
I was hit but I drove on".
Soon afterwards
in the film, the Israeli tank appears at the end of the street. It stops
for a few seconds before firing in the direction of the retreating Palestinians,
the blast engulfing it in a ball of flame and smoke.
Questions to answer
"I thought there
was no danger," says Mr Abu Aziz.
"Ahmad asked me
for money because he wanted to buy a chocolate bar. I loved him and
his brother so much. Ahmad was buried with the chocolate in his hand."
The troops entered
Jenin and imposed a curfew as part of a massive security operation Israel
said was designed stamp out the militant cells which have launched dozens
of suicide attacks in the past two years.
Twenty-three suicide
bombers have come from Jenin alone, earning it the reputation in Israel
as the "capital of terrorism".
The Israeli army
says its still investigating what happened that day.
BBC correspondent
Orla Guerin, who viewed at first had the Abu Aziz tape, says the army
has many questions to answer, including:
If the soldiers
wanted to clear the street why didn't they fire warning shots? Why were
tank shells used in a crowded civilian area? Our correspondent says
Israel has a poor record in prosecuting its own soldiers when faced
with evidence like that seen in the tape.
When the Israeli
army was asked to comment on the footage, it refused.
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