Israeli court rejects appeal in deadly Gaza beach airstrike

Supreme Court upholds earlier decisions by Israeli military investigators and legal authorities determining incident was a tragic mistake; human rights groups protest ruling

Associated Press|
The Supreme Court on Sunday rejected a request to reopen an investigation into the deaths of four Palestinian children who were killed by an Israeli airstrike while playing on the beach in the Gaza Strip during a 2014 war.
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  • In its ruling, the court upheld earlier decisions by Israeli military investigators and legal authorities determining the incident was a tragic mistake.
    2 View gallery
    A Palestinian man inspects the damage at a police post following an Israeli missile strike that killed four boys from the same extended Bakr family, in Gaza City, July 16, 2014
    A Palestinian man inspects the damage at a police post following an Israeli missile strike that killed four boys from the same extended Bakr family, in Gaza City, July 16, 2014
    A Palestinian man inspects the damage at a police post following an Israeli missile strike that killed four boys from the same extended Bakr family, in Gaza City, July 16, 2014
    (Photo: AP)
    "With all of the sorrow and heartache over the tragic and difficult outcome of the event in this petition, I did not find that the petitioners pointed to a flaw in the decision of the attorney general," said Sunday's ruling, signed by the court's president, Esther Hayut, and approved unanimously with two other justices.
    The cousins from the Bakr family, all between 10 and 11 years old, were playing soccer on the beach when they were killed during the 2014 war between Israel and Gaza's Hamas rulers.
    The incident drew widespread international attention, in part because many foreign journalists staying in nearby hotels witnessed the incident. Images showed the children desperately running away from a jetty as a missile falls, and then the boys falling to the ground one after another.
    The appeal to the Supreme Court was filed by three human rights organizations — the Israeli group Adalah and the Gaza-based Al-Mezan and Palestinian Center for Human Rights — who were seeking a criminal investigation into the incident.
    2 View gallery
    Palestinians mourn over the lifeless bodies of four boys from the same extended Bakr family, covered with yellow flags of Fatah movement, in the mosque during their funeral in Gaza City, July 16, 2014
    Palestinians mourn over the lifeless bodies of four boys from the same extended Bakr family, covered with yellow flags of Fatah movement, in the mosque during their funeral in Gaza City, July 16, 2014
    Palestinians mourn over the lifeless bodies of four boys from the same extended Bakr family, covered with yellow flags of Fatah movement, in the mosque during their funeral in Gaza City, July 16, 2014
    (Photo: AP)
    In a joint statement, the groups said Sunday's decision "is further evidence that Israel is unable and unwilling to investigate and prosecute soldiers and commanders for war crimes against Palestinian civilians."
    Critics have long accused Israel and its military of whitewashing wrongdoing by its troops. Last year, the International Criminal Court opened an investigation into alleged Israeli crimes in the Palestinian territories, including actions during the 2014 war. Bakr family members delivered testimony to the court during a preliminary inquiry.
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