Ynetnews > News
Search


   Israel News

Israel News
Israel Opinion
Israel Business
Israel Culture
Jewish
Israel Travel
Israel Activism
Shop
Fact-Finding Mission

Photo: Reuters
Desmond Tutu Photo: Reuters
 

 

Archbishop Tutu to Haniyeh: Stop Qassam fire

Head of UN committee probing 2006 death of 19 Palestinian civilians in Israeli artillery strike meets Hamas leader in Gaza, urges halt to rocket attacks on Israel

AFP
Published: 05.27.08, 21:55 / Israel News

Nobel peace laureate Desmond Tutu on Tuesday held talks with a senior Hamas leader in the Gaza Strip where he led a UN fact-finding mission into the killing of 19 Palestinian civilians in an 2006 Israeli artillery attack.

 

Tutu met Palestinian former prime minister Ismail Haniya, who was dismissed by moderate president Mahmud Abbas last June when Hamas seized control of Gaza from forces loyal to the president.

 

Sources close to Tutu's delegation said the Anglican former archbishop of Cape Town called during the talks for an end of rocket attacks on Israel, and stressed that all attacks against civilians - whether against Palestinians or against Israelis - should be condemned.

 

On Wednesday, the team led by Tutu was due to visit Beit Hanun, where the 2006 killings occurred, to interview witnesses and survivors of the attack.

 


Haniyeh and Tutu in Gaza (Photo: AFP) 

 

They will prepare a report to present to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, UN officials said.

 

The Israeli raid on Beit Hanun on November 8, 2006, was widely condemned by the international community for killing 19 civilians, including five women and eight children, in their homes.

 

In February, the Israeli army announced that no charges would be brought against Israeli soldiers over the attack. After conducting an internal investigation, Israel concluded that the bombing of the civilians' homes was "a rare and grave technical error of the artillery radar system."

 

The army said it had been aiming its artillery at an area from which Palestinian militants were firing rockets at Israel, but due to the technical problem the shells instead hit two homes.

 

The UN Human Rights Council had decided to send a team to Gaza to investigate the killings in 2006, but Israel refused to grant visas.

 

Tutu circumvented Israeli restrictions by driving to the Palestinian territory through Egypt on Tuesday. 

 

talkbacktalkback   PrintPrint  Send to friendSend to friend   
Tag with Del.icio.us Bookmark to del.icio.us

See MorePhoto: Gil YohananBarak in DC: Recruit Obama to peace processPhoto: Avihu Shapira3 Druze women cross into Syria to aid relatives

 

 

 
26 Talkbacks for this article   See all talkbacks
Please wait for the talkbacks to load

 

RSS RSS | About | Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Terms of use | Advertise with us

Site developed by  RealCommerce - content management experts Search Engine Marketing by  Search Engine Marketing