
-
Convicted ex-Panama president Martinelli granted asylum in Colombia
-
IPL chiefs in talks about restart following ceasefire: reports
-
Navarrete beats Suarez on technical decision to keep title
-
Scans clear Wallabies fly-half Lolesio of serious back injury
-
Leo XIV to address faithful with St Peter's prayer
-
T-Wolves grab 2-1 NBA playoff series lead as Celtics get key win
-
Gaza war casts shadow over Cannes film festival
-
'Treasure hunt': tourists boost sales at Japan's Don Quijote stores
-
Cannes Festival: the films in competition
-
Cannes film festival: what to look out for
-
Jordan hospital treats war casualties from across Middle East
-
As Trump family's Gulf empire grows, rulers seek influence, arms, tech
-
S. Korea conservatives choose presidential candidate after last-minute chaos
-
Trump hails 'total reset' in US-China trade relations as talks continue
-
Film claims to name killer of slain journalist Shireen Abu Akleh
-
Under Trump pressure, Columbia University ends semester in turmoil
-
Putin proposes direct Ukraine talks but quiet on 30-day ceasefire
-
Trump hails US-China trade 'reset' after first day of talks
-
Jeeno leads Boutier by one at LPGA Americas Open
-
Lowry, Straka share lead at windy Truist
-
Messi suffers worst defeat in MLS as Miami fall again
-
Celtics overwhelm Knicks to pull within 2-1 in NBA playoff series
-
Toulouse crush Toulon to reach Top 14 semis as Castres pay tribute to Raisuqe
-
Marseille, Monaco clinch Champions League qualification from Ligue 1
-
'One of those days': Atletico record-breaker Sorloth hits four
-
Toulouse's Ntamack suffers concussion in Top 14, Willemse nears exit
-
Record-breaker Sorloth hits four as Atletico smash Real Sociedad
-
'Weight off my shoulders': Bayern's Kane toasts breakthrough title
-
Sinner grateful for 'amazing' support on Italian Open return from doping ban
-
Hamburg return to Bundesliga after seven-year absence
-
Toulouse's Ntamack suffers concussion in Top 14 clash
-
India, Pakistan reach ceasefire -- but trade claims of violations
-
'Long time coming': Bayern's Kane toasts breakthrough title
-
US, China conclude first day of trade talks in Geneva
-
Kane tastes first title as champions Bayern bid farewell to Mueller
-
Benfica deny Sporting to take Portuguese title race to wire
-
Sinner makes triumphant return from doping ban at Italian Open
-
Sinner wins at Italian Open in first match since doping ban
-
Leo XIV, new pope and 'humble servant of God', visits Francis's tomb
-
India claims Pakistan violated truce, says it is retaliating
-
Champions League race hots up as Man City held, Villa win
-
Kane tastes first title as champions Bayern see off Mueller
-
US envoy calls enrichment 'red line' ahead of new Iran talks
-
Hastoy lifts La Rochelle as Castres pay tribute to Raisuqe
-
Southampton avoid Premier League 'worst-ever' tag with Man City draw
-
Injury forces Saints quarterback Carr to retire
-
S.Korea conservative party reinstates candidate after day of turmoil
-
Verdict due Tuesday in Depardieu sexual assault trial
-
Man City held by Southampton as Brentford, Brighton win
-
Groundbreaking Cameroonian curator Kouoh dies: Cape Town art museum

Film claims to name killer of slain journalist Shireen Abu Akleh
A new documentary purports to name the Israeli soldier who killed Al Jazeera reporter Shireen Abu Akleh, who was gunned down in the West Bank while reporting in 2022.
Abu Akleh, a Palestinian-American journalist known for her coverage of the Arab-Israeli conflict, was shot dead in Jenin in the north of the occupied West Bank while she worked, wearing a bulletproof vest marked "press."
Al Jazeera and witnesses immediately blamed the Israeli army. Then Israeli prime minister Naftali Bennett said it was probable the shots had come from Palestinian militants.
In the weeks that followed, several journalistic investigations pointed the blame at Israeli gunfire.
Months later, Israel released an internal investigation that found a "high probability" that Abu Akleh was accidentally shot by the Israeli army, which claimed it was targeting armed Palestinians.
Produced by independent news site Zeteo, the documentary "Who killed Shireen?" names for the first time the suspect as Alon Scaggio, an elite soldier.
"Israel did everything it could to conceal the soldier's identity, they wouldn't provide the US with any information. They wouldn't let the US interview him. They wouldn't give the US his statement. And they wouldn't give his name," said Dion Nissenbaum, a journalist who worked on the film.
Assisted by producer Conor Powell and reporter Fatima AbdulKarim -- who worked for The New York Times in the West Bank -- Nissenbaum, a former Wall Street Journal correspondent, consulted testimony from two Israeli soldiers present in Jenin on May 11, 2022 as well as top US officials.
- 'Intentional killing' claim -
The documentary alleges that Scaggio, then 20, had completed training for the elite Duvdevan unit just three months prior.
"He shot her intentionally. There's no question about that. The question is did he know she was a journalist and did he know she was Shireen Abu Akleh? Was it an order from above?" Nissenbaum told AFP.
"Personally, I don't think it was an order. I don't think he knew it was Shireen. Nobody ever has indicated that he could tell that it was Shireen. But she was wearing the blue flak-jacket with the word 'press' on it."
"The evidence (suggests)... it was an intentional killing of Shireen Abu Akleh. Whether or not they knew it was her or not can very well be debated, but they would have absolutely known that it was a media person or a non-combatant at a minimum," said a senior official from the administration of then US president Joe Biden, speaking in the film anonymously.
Washington did not exert significant pressure on the issue, the documentary claims, for fear of antagonizing its ally.
Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen said he called on Biden to declassify documents about the killing -- but went unanswered.
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said "it is the first time that a potential suspect has been named in connection with an Israeli killing of a journalist" according to its records dating back to 1992.
Impunity in the case "has effectively given Israel permission to silence hundreds more" journalists, the CPJ said.
Reporters Without Borders estimates around 200 journalists were killed in the past 18 months of Israeli strikes on Gaza.
An Israeli army spokesman condemned the unauthorized disclosure of the suspect's name despite no "definitive determination" of who shot Abu Akleh.
The soldier in question "fell during an operational activity," the army added.
Nissenbaum had initially thought Scaggio died in Gaza, but ultimately concluded he was killed in Jenin on June 27, 2024 almost two years after Abu Akleh.
F.Schneider--AMWN