clear

Creating new perspectives since 2009

Israeli military chief voices regrets to US over Palestinian-American's death

February 4, 2022 at 7:02 pm

Relatives mourn during the funeral ceremony held for 80-year-old Palestinian Omar As’ad, at Jiljilya village in Ramallah, West Bank on 13 January 2022 [Issam Rimawi/Anadolu Agency]

Israel’s top general told the US ambassador on Friday that he regrets the death of an elderly Palestinian-American detained by Israeli troops and that a military police investigation was underway, an Israeli statement said, and Reuters reports.

Washington said, on Tuesday, it continued to be “deeply concerned” over the 12 January death of 78-year-old Omar Abdalmajeed As’ad in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and expected a “thorough criminal investigation and full accountability”.

As’ad was left supine and unresponsive in a courtyard of his West Bank hometown of Jiljilya, where he had been stopped and detained by Israeli soldiers at a makeshift checkpoint.

A Palestinian autopsy found that As’ad, a former Milwaukee resident who had a history of heart problems, had suffered cardiac arrest. Palestinian officials attributed this to him having been manhandled.

READ: US expects full accountability for death of elderly Palestinian-American in West Bank

A military statement said that, at a meeting with US Ambassador, Tom Nides, the army Chief of Staff, Lieutenant-General, Aviv Kohavi, “expressed his regret over (As’ad’s) death” and called it “a very serious deviation” from the military’s values.

The statement, which echoed similar public remarks Kohavi has made since the incident, did not mention any time frame for the investigation’s conclusion. No statement on the meeting was immediately issued by the US Embassy.

The military has already reprimanded a battalion commander and dismissed two officers in a preliminary examination of the events, and the statement said Kochavi told the ambassador that a separate “military police investigation is still underway”.

It was their first meeting since Nides took up his post in December, the military said, and the two also “discussed common threats, primarily from Iran” and “opportunities to broaden security cooperation in the Middle East and the Gulf”.