Army Closes Investigation Into A-Samuni Family Killings
Army Closes Investigation Into The Killing Of 21
Members Of The A-Samuni Family In
Gaza
B'Tselem - The Israeli
Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied
Territories
1 May 2012
The MAG (Military Advocate's General) Corps informed B'Tselem today that it has closed the Military Police investigation file in the complaint submitted by B'Tselem into the killing of 21 members of the a-Samuni family in the Gaza Strip. The file was closed without taking any measures against those responsible. In a letter sent to B'Tselem and the Palestinian Center for Human Rights in Gaza (PCHR) that filed a complaint into the matter as well, major Dorit Tuval, from the MAG Corps for operational matters wrote that the investigation completely disproved any claim about deliberate harm to civilians, as well as haste and recklessness regarding possible harm to civilians, or criminal negligence. The military's response does not detail the findings of the investigation, nor does it provide the reasons behind the decision to close the file or any new information about the circumstances.
In response, Adv.
Yael Stein, B'Tselem's head of research, said: it is
unacceptable that no one is found responsible for an action
of the army that led to the killing of 21 uninvolved
civilians, inside the building they entered under soldiers'
orders, even if this was not done deliberately. The way the
army has exempted itself of responsibility for this event,
even if only to acknowledge its severity and clarify its
circumstances, is intolerable. Shirking the responsibility
for the deaths of hundreds of other civilians and the
immense damage caused by operation Cast Lead demonstrates
yet again the need for an Israeli investigation mechanism
that is external to the army.
Removal of bodies from the
house of Wa'el a-Samuni, in Gaza City. Photo: B'Tselem, 18
Jan. '09.
The a-Samuni
Family
On 4 January 2009,
soldiers gathered about 100 members of the extended a-Samuni
family in the house of Wael a-Samuni, in the a-Zeitun
neighborhood of Gaza City. The next morning, at 6:30 A.M.,
when a few members of the family tried to leave the house,
the military fired a missile or shell at them, killing one
person and wounding two other persons. A few seconds later,
the military fired two more shells or missiles that hit the
house directly. The house collapsed on its occupants,
killing 21 persons, including 9 children and many women, and
injuring dozens of other family members. Despite repeated
requests by the Red Cross, B'Tselem, and other human rights
organization, the army prevented removal of the injured
people for two days, until 7 January. After the wounded
persons were evacuated, the army demolished the house with
the dead bodies inside. It was only possible to remove them
from under the debris after the army withdrew, about two
weeks later.
No accountability for the
military’s actions during Operation Cast
Lead
Three years after the
end of the operation, the dozens of MPIU investigations
opened into cases of harm to civilians have yet to yield
results. The Military Advocate General Corps has created a
haze around them, preventing any possibility of examining
their effectiveness. The Corps' responses to B'Tselem,
combined with media reports, indicate that three indictments
have been filed against soldiers who took part in the
operation: for theft of a credit card from a Palestinian
civilian, for use of a nine-year-old Palestinian child as a
human shield, and for “manslaughter of an anonymous
person.” In three other cases, disciplinary action alone
was taken. Two officers were disciplined for firing
explosive shells that struck an UNRWA facility; three officers were
disciplined for shelling the al-Maqadmeh Mosque, in which 15
Palestinians were killed, nine of them civilians; and one
officer was disciplined for the use of Palestinian civilian
as a human shield,
These meager results are not surprising. The investigations were all opened at a very late stage – the first, to B'Tselem knowledge, in October 2009, a full ten months after the operation had ended. At present, three years after the operation, there is hardly a chance that investigations will lead to further indictments.
There has never been a serious investigation into the suspicions raised by B'Tselem and additional Israeli, Palestinian and international organizations regarding breaches of international humanitarian law by the military during the operation. Most of B'Tselem’s demands for investigation were not met. The investigations that were opened did not, to B'Tselem's knowledge, address the responsibility of high-ranking commanders, but rather focused on the conduct of individual soldiers.
ENDS