Israel army reverses assertion on who killed Al Jazeera journalist
Israel's Military Chief Lieutenant General Aviv Kochavi has retracted the assertions made earlier that Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh may have been killed by stray bullets fired by Palestinian fighters.
According to news reports, he said it was now unclear who fired the shot that killed Abu Akleh on Wednesday in the occupied West Bank town of Jenin.
"At this stage, we cannot determine by whose fire she was harmed and we regret her death."
Initially, the Israeli army raised the possibility that the veteran Al Jazeera journalist might have been killed by Palestinian gunfire, saying armed fighters were also present in the area at the time the journalist was shot.
On Wednesday, they released a video showing Palestinians firing in an alley at the Jenin camp. The Israeli army said the video was meant to bolster its contention that armed Palestinians were firing in the area at the time.
Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett also shared a tweet with a video clip appearing to show armed Palestinian fighters who he said had claimed to have shot a soldier. Because no Israeli forces were hurt on Wednesday, he said that suggested the gunmen had shot a journalist instead.
"According to the data, we currently have, there is a considerable chance that armed Palestinians, who fired wildly, are what led to the unfortunate death of the journalist," the prime minister wrote in a tweet.
However, the Israeli human rights group B'Tselem conducted its own research into the claims and released a video on Wednesday that cast doubt on the Israeli army's narrative of the killing of the journalist.
B'Tselem wrote in a series of tweets that its field researcher in Jenin documented the exact locations in which the Palestinian fighter, depicted in a video distributed by the Israeli army, had fired the shots. The researcher also identified the exact location in which Abu Akleh was shot and killed.
"Documentation of Palestinian gunfire distributed by Israeli military cannot be the gunfire that killed Journalist Shireen Abu Akleh," the organisation wrote in a tweet.
The organisation provided coordinates for the two locations, which appeared to be about 300 metres (330 yards) apart and separated by walls and buildings.
Dror Sadot, a spokeswoman for the rights group, said its evidence shows "there is no way" that the gunfire shown in the video distributed by Israeli forces had killed Abu Akleh.
Israel's Defence Minister Benny Gantz said later on Wednesday that "the preliminary investigation conducted by the [Israeli army] in the last several hours indicate that no gunfire was directed at the journalist – however, the investigation is ongoing".
The European Union has called for an "independent" investigation into her death, while the US envoy to the UN, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, called for the killing to be "transparently investigated".
Asked about Israel's openness to an international investigation, army spokesman Amnon Shefler said the military's internal investigative systems were "robust" and that it would conduct its own probe.
Shefler told reporters that Israel "would never deliberately target non-combatants", calling the journalist's death "a tragedy that should not have occurred".
Speaking to Al Jazeera on Wednesday, Omar Shakir, Israel and Palestine director for Human Rights Watch, said the organisation is looking into the killing of Abu Akleh, but decried Israeli investigations as "mechanisms" for whitewashing.
"That is the assessment that's been reached by human rights organisations including Israeli's premier human rights organisation B'Tselem. Human Rights Watch has a similar diagnosis," he said.
"The reality is there is no accountability for those sorts of abuses when it comes to actions by the Israeli authorities".