[ Ed. note – The body of Abdel Fattah al-Sharif, executed by an Israeli soldier on the Jewish holiday of Purim, was released on Friday by Israeli soldiers.
A video of Sharif’s execution, shot with a single bullet to the head as he lay unconscious on a Hebron street, went viral and resulted in the soldier’s arrest as well as widespread international condemnation. The killing took place on March 24. For the past two months and three days Sharif’s body has been kept by Israeli authorities, who refused to return it to his family.
Perhaps Matt Lee or some other enterprising journalist with access to US State Dept. briefings might one day give some thought to asking the following question:
“How does the president or secretary of state view the Israeli practice of withholding Palestinian bodies from family members, in some cases for months, and then releasing them only at night and only under condition that burial take place immediately? Is this something that’s viewed as reasonable and civilized?”
So far as I know, the question has never been asked publicly, and it would be interesting seeing one of the hack press secretaries attempt either to justify the repugnant practice or else scramble to sidestep the question altogether. The more I think about it, the more the idea appeals to me. In fact, it’s a question which ought to be asked not only at the State Department, but of every member of Congress who accepts contributions from pro-Israel PACs and professes their undying love for the Zionist state. ]
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HEBRON (Ma’an) — Israeli authorities on Friday evening released the body of Abd al-Fattah al-Sharif, the Palestinian whose brutal killing by an Israeli soldier in March was caught on film, sparking international outrage.The Palestinian Civil Affairs Committee said al-Sharif’s body was returned and taken to Hebron’s al-Ahli hospital.Al-Sharif’s family told Ma’an his funeral will be held on Saturday afternoon, and that they have rejected all Israeli authorities’ conditions for the release of his body.
Al-Sharif was shot alongside Ramzi Aziz al-Qasrawi after the two allegedly stabbed and moderately wounded an Israeli soldier at a military checkpoint in the Tel Rumeida area of Hebron on March 24.
Al-Qasrawi was killed immediately, while al-Sharif was left severely wounded for several minutes without treatment, before an Israeli soldier stepped forward and put a bullet through his head, killing him.
A graphic video released by B’Tselem capturing the incident was met with wide condemnation from rights groups and international bodies, with the UNdemanding an investigation into the soldier’s apparent “extrajudicial execution.”
A funeral was held for al-Qasrawi after his body was returned days after the incident, while Israeli authorities continued to hold al-Sharif, with his family demanding that a Palestinian coroner partake in the autopsy.
Israel’s top court subsequently refused the demand, though permitted a Palestinian doctor to observe the autopsy. The autopsy, performed by an Israeli coroner, confirmedal-Sharif was still alive before he was shot at point-blank range.
Following the autopsy, al-Sharif’s family said they would file legal procedures against the Israeli army in front of an Israeli court.Elor Azaria, the Israeli soldier who killed al-Sharif, was later charged with manslaughter rather than murder as had been widely expected. Azaria is being held on a military base in “open detention” where he is free to roam and has received visits from his family. Histrial opened earlier this month.
Israeli Minister of Public Security Gilad Erdan announced on Tuesday that he had ordered Israeli police to suspend the return of bodies of Palestinians killed by Israeli forces, after seeing footage of a crowd gathering outside the funeral of one such slain Palestinian, chanting “God is Great,” something Erdan deemed as “incitement.”
However earlier on Friday, and in spite of the order, Israeli authorities alsoreturned the body of a 17-year-old Palestinian girl shot dead by Israeli forces during an alleged stab attack on Monday. A spokesperson for the Israeli ministry of public security was not available for immediate comment on reasons for Mansour’s and al-Sharif’s bodies being returned during the suspension, or if the suspension had been removed.
Israel dramatically increased its policy of withholding bodies since the beginning of a wave of unrest across the occupied Palestinian territory since October, although it has scaled back on the policy in recent months.
A joint statement released in early April by Addameer and the Israeli minority rights group Adalah condemned Israel’s practice of withholding bodies as “a severe violation of international humanitarian law as well as international human rights law, including violations of the right to dignity, freedom of religion, and the right to practice culture.”
The statement said it appeared “many” of the Palestinians whose bodies Israel was holding had been “extrajudicially executed by Israeli forces during alleged attacks against Israelis, despite posing no danger.”
Israel currently holds the bodies of at least a dozen Palestinians, killed by Israeli forces since October while they were allegedly committing or attempting to commit attacks.
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