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Abbas demands US seek justice over Shireen Abu Akleh’s killing | United Nations News

Abbas demands US seek justice over Shireen Abu Akleh’s killing | United Nations News

Speaking at the UN General Assembly, the Palestinian president accused the UN and the US of double standards.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has demanded the United States pursue justice over the killing of Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh.

“As well as having Palestinian nationality, she was also an American citizen,” Abbas said in remarks at the 77th session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) on Friday. “I dare the United States to prosecute those who killed this American national, but they won’t. Why? Because they are Israelis.”

Israeli forces shot Abu Akleh in May while she was on assignment in Jenin, in the occupied West Bank.

Abu Akleh was wearing a press vest and was standing with other journalists when she was killed. The UN Human Rights Office (OHCHR) gathered evidence pointing to the Israeli forces’ culpability, dismissing claims of Palestinian fighters’ activity in the immediate vicinity of the journalist.

Israel initially said the journalist had been caught in the crossfire. Earlier this month, Israeli authorities released the results of an internal investigation that found there was a “high possibility” that she had been “accidentally hit” by Israeli army fire.

The report stated that there were no grounds for the launching of a military police investigation as there was “no suspicion of a criminal offence”.

Addressing the world leaders gathered at the UN headquarters in New York, Abbas said he was speaking “on behalf of more than 14 million Palestinians whose fathers and ancestors lived through the tragic Nakba 74 years ago and are still living the spillover of this Nakba, which is a humiliation for the whole of humanity, especially for those who have conspired, planned and executed this heinous crime”.

“Our trust in the possibility of achieving peace based on justice and international law unfortunately is waning due to the Israeli occupation policies,” he added.

The speech came a day after Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid told the UNGA he supported a two-state solution and called on Muslim nations to recognise and make peace with the Jewish nation.

“We need to understand history, respect it and learn from it but also to be willing and able to change. To choose the future over the past, peace over war,” he said. “Israeli Arabs are not our enemies; they are our partners in life.”

Abbas rejected Lapid’s conciliatory tone, saying Israel “has decided not to be our partner in…

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