
U.S. Calls For 'Accountability' In Abu Akleh Case Ahead Of Biden Middle East Visit
GAZA: The United States called on Wednesday for 'accountability' over the death of Palestinian-American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, whose killing during an Israeli West Bank raid is expected to be a major issue during President Joe Biden's Middle East visit.
Abu Akleh, a Palestinian-American journalist working for the Al Jazeera network, was shot in the head on May 11 while reporting on an Israeli raid in the town of Jenin in the occupied West Bank.
Palestinians believe she was killed deliberately by Israeli troops. Israel denies its soldiers shot her on purpose, and say she may have been killed either by errant army fire or a shot fired by a Palestinian gunman.
Washington has so far concluded she was probably hit by an Israeli bullet, but says it has no reason to believe it was intentional. Speaking to reporters on board Air Force One with Biden flying to the region, U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan repeated that position, but said Washington did not consider the case closed.
'The administration, at the president's direction, has been very much engaged in helping try to determine what exactly happened around the tragic circumstances of her death,' he said.
'There will have to be efforts made in accountability and making sure that we find a way to conclude this chapter justly. This is someone who was a journalist, an American citizen. The President, the Secretary of State, the entire team grieves for the family,' he said.
He said Secretary of State Anthony Blinken had spoken with the family, and invited them to a meeting in Washington.
Palestinian journalists gathered in Gaza City on Wednesday to call for 'justice' for Abu Akleh, one of the most prominent journalists covering the conflict.
- A chance to witness supermoon in Qatar tonight
- Sardinian farmers suffer worst locust invasion in over 30 years
- US president embarks Middle East tour
'As President Biden visits the region for the first time we are here to demand protection for Palestinian journalists and hold the occupation accountable for the assassination of colleague Shireen Abu Akleh,' said Mohammad Yassin, chairman of the Forum of Palestinian Journalists.
Yassin said 50 Palestinian journalists had been killed by Israel since 2000.
Israel says Palestinian gunmen were clashing with its forces at the scene of Abu Akleh's death, making it difficult to determine the precise circumstances, but that its troops did not shoot her deliberately.
Palestinians say the gunshot wound to her head and other evidence shows she was deliberately targeted. They have vowed to pursue the case before the International Criminal Court.

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.
Most popular stories
Market Research

- Currency Relaunches Under New Leadership, Highlights 2025 Achievements
- SPAYZ.Io White Paper Explores Opportunities, Challenges And Ambitions In Payments Industry
- Alt.Town Introduces $TOWN Token Utility Across Platform Services And Launches Valuefi Deposit Event
- Grok AI Identifies MGC And The RZ Ecosystem As A Safe Haven For Crypto Investors Amid Global Market Crash
- Salvium Solves The Privacy Paradox: Salvium One Delivers Mica-Compliant Privacy That Exchanges Can List
- Luminadata Unveils GAAP & SOX-Trained AI Agents Achieving 99.8% Reconciliation Accuracy
Comments
No comment