Monday 7 July 2014

Palestinian boy Mohammed Abu Khdeir was burned alive, says official | World news | The Observer

Palestinian boy Mohammed Abu Khdeir was burned alive, says official | World news | The Observer


Palestinian boy Mohammed Abu Khdeir was burned alive, says official




Mohammed al-A'wewy, attorney general for Palestine, makes claims as violence continues in West Bank and East Jeruslaem


Clashes Break Out During Palestinian Teen's Funeral In Jerusalem
Relatives of Mohammed
Abu Khdeir's hold pictures of him outside his home in Jerusalem.
Photograph: AnnaFerensowicz/Pacific/Barcroft





Mohamed Abu Khdeir, the Palestinian teenager who was kidnapped
and murdered on Wednesday in a suspected revenge killing by Israeli
extremists, was burned alive after suffering a head injury, the
Palestinian attorney general has claimed


The allegation is said to
be based on initial postmortem findings that discovered soot deposits
in his lungs suggesting he was still breathing when he was set on fire.
The shocking details, if confirmed, would seem likely to exacerbate
already toxic tensions.


The reports emerged as Egypt tried to conclude a ceasefire deal between Hamas in Gaza and Israel. But it appeared not to have taken hold, with fresh reports of rocket fire into Israel from the coastal strip.

The
murder of 17-year-old Khdeir, who was buried on Friday in a highly
charged funeral after his abduction outside a mosque next to his home in
the early hours of Wednesday morning, has prompted days of serious
rioting in Palestinian neighbourhoods of East Jerusalem, which then
spread to Israeli-Arab towns.


"The direct cause of death was burns
as a result of fire and its complications," attorney general Mohammed
al-A'wewy told the Palestinian official news agency, Wafa, late on
Friday. Israeli officials have yet to release their findings from the
postmortem on the body.


Tensions have risen after three Israeli
teenagers were kidnapped on 12 June and later found dead in the occupied
West Bank. That has been followed by an outbreak of racist incitement
on Israeli social media sites, street attacks and Khdeir's murder, a
suspected revenge attack.


Saber al-Aloul, director of the
Palestinian forensic institute, attended the postmortem carried out by
Israeli doctors in Tel Aviv. A'wewy said Aloul had reported that
fire-dust material had been found in Khdeir's respiratory canal, which
meant "the boy had inhaled this material while he was burned alive".
Burns covered 90% of his body.


The discovery of the youth's body
in a forest on the outskirts of Jerusalem has prompted the worst riots
in the holy city in recent memory. The violence spread to northern Arab
towns on Saturday morning, an Israeli police spokeswoman, Luba Samri,
said. Protesters there threw stones at passing cars, burned tyres and
hurled fire bombs at police, who responded with teargas and stun
grenades. More than 20 people were arrested.


At Khdeir's funeral,
furious Palestinians chanted "Intifada! Intifada!", calling for a new
uprising against Israel. They clashed with Israeli police in one of the
most highly charged displays of enmity in Jerusalem in years.




Palestinian officials trying to calm tensions have said they would
prevent any intifada, or uprising, and seek a solution to the crisis
that began when the three Israeli teenagers were kidnapped.


The discovery of the young Israelis' bodies on Monday prompted an outpouring of national grief in Israel.

In
a separate incident, it was claimed by relatives that Abu Khdeir's
15-year-old cousin, Tariq, a US citizen who goes to school in Florida,
was beaten by police during clashes on Thursday ahead of the funeral.
His parents, Suha and Salah, said Tariq was detained but had been
treated at an Israeli hospital. The US State Department said it was
"profoundly troubled" by the reports and
demanded an urgent investigation.



Samri said Tariq had attacked police and resisted arrest. He was
detained with a slingshot in his possession used to hurl stones at
police, along with six other protesters, including some armed with
knives, she said. Tariq's father said he witnessed his son's arrest and
insisted that the boy was not involved in the violence, adding that
several officers were hurt in that specific protest, one of many that
day



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