Kamis 20 Nov 2014 20:20 WIB

Israel says to cooperate with UN Gaza war inquiry

Palestinians look at a damaged classroom in a United Nation-run school sheltering Palestinians displaced by an Israeli ground offensive, that witnesses said was hit by Israeli shelling, in Jebalya refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip July 30, 2014.
Foto: Reuters/ Muhammed Salem
Palestinians look at a damaged classroom in a United Nation-run school sheltering Palestinians displaced by an Israeli ground offensive, that witnesses said was hit by Israeli shelling, in Jebalya refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip July 30, 2014.

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, JERUSALEM -- Israel said on Thursday it would cooperate with a United Nations investigation into Israeli attacks on UN facilities during last summer's Gaza war and the use of UN sites by Palestinian militants to store weapons.

Last week, Israel announced it would not cooperate with a separate UN Human Rights Council investigation into alleged war crimes committed during the July-August conflict, saying its findings were predetermined and accusing its chairman, Canadian academic William Schabas, of anti-Israeli bias.

Foreign ministry spokesman Paul Hirschson said that unlike that probe, the inquiry established by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was "an authentic investigation with potential for us to improve our performance in the course of conflict and learn from our mistakes."

During the war at least six UN-run facilities were hit by Israeli fire, killing at least two dozen people. Ban, in a statement on July 23, condemned the discovery of rockets at a UN-administered school.

Israel has cited the use of UN facilities in Gaza to store rockets as a reason for targeting them. It says that in some cases UN institutions were hit by mistake or by Hamas projectiles.

Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said the group welcomed the dispatch of any UN committee to Gaza. But he did not say whether Hamas would cooperate with an investigation into the storage of weapons at UN sites.

"No contact had been made with us regarding such a request. We will look into a request when it is made," he said.

More than 2,100 Palestinians, most of them civilians, were killed during the Gaza war. Sixty-seven Israeli soldiers and six civilians in Israel were killed by rockets and attacks by Hamas and other militant groups.

Ban this month named Patrick Cammaert, a retired Dutch general and former force commander of the UN peacekeeping mission in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, to head the investigation.

Israel's military in September opened five criminal investigations into its Gaza war operations, including attacks that killed four Palestinian children on a beach and 17 people taking shelter at a UN school.

sumber : Reuters
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