Jordanian families of embassy shooting victims welcome Israeli climbdown

Mourners attend the funeral of Mohammed Jawawdeh, who was killed by an Israeli security guard at the Israeli Embassy compound in Amman. (AFP/file)
Updated 20 January 2018
Follow

Jordanian families of embassy shooting victims welcome Israeli climbdown

AMMAN: Family members of two Jordanians killed at the Israeli Embassy in Amman last year have welcomed the success of Jordan’s diplomatic efforts in extracting an apology and compensation from Israel.
Legal experts and political leaders also praised the government for not backing down over the shooting, which plunged relations between Jordan and Israel to their worst in years.
But among the warm words were acknowledgements that the current regional situation had played its part in Israel’s climb down, with the US keen to see two of its key allies improve relations.
In a letter to the Jordanian Foreign Ministry Israel also agreed to investigate the shooting, which took place in July. The letter offered a “deep apology and regret” from the Israeli government, government spokesman Mohammad Momani said on Thursday.
Anis F. Kassim, the editor of the Palestinian Yearbook of International Law, told Arab News that the letter had addressed “the three demands of Jordan.”
“Jordan had demanded that Israel seriously investigates the embassy guard, that Israel apologizes for the killing and that compensation be made to the victims,” Kassim, who said he had seen the details of the letter, said.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed Israel had “expressed regret” and had agreed to pay compensation to the government of Jordan.
Kassim said that it is normal in such international cases that the compensation is paid to the government representing its citizens and not directly to the families.
Khalil Attiyeh, deputy head of the Jordanian Parliament, told Arab News that the Israelis folded under pressure.
“The pressure from the King backed by the popular demands of our people forced the Zionists to accept the need to abide by international law and respect the wishes of the Jordanian people,” Attiyeh said.
“This is a victory for Jordan and for King Abdullah.”
Relatives also said they were pleased with the outcome.
The daughter of Dr. Bashar Hamarneh, a landlord of a house at the embassy compound who was killed in the shooting, thanked King Abdullah for securing the Israeli concession.
“We thank our Jordanian people for standing with us in this difficult case,” she told Al-Rai newspaper.
Other family victims appeared on Jordanian television with similar sentiments in their messages.
However, Muneer Hamarneh, another relative of the killed doctor and a left-wing political activist, said US President Donald Trump’s recognition last month of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, had played a part in Israel’s apology. The decision outraged Palestinians, who want Jerusalem as the capital of their future state, and angered Arab countries, particularly Jordan, which has a huge Palestinian population and which oversees the city’s Al-Aqsa Mosque compound.
“Since the Jerusalem announcement by the US, there has been an attempt to rectify the situation by way of mending some of the problems it has caused, especially the growing chasm between Jordan and Israel over the embassy incident,” Hamarneh told Arab News.
In the letter, Israel expressed its desire to renew relations with Jordan and Momani said the Jordanian government will take the appropriate steps in “the higher interests” of Jordan.
The shooting at the embassy also killed Mohammad Jawwadeh, a furniture repairer who was working at the compound.
The men were killed in July when an Israeli security guard at opened fire at Jawwadeh.
Jordan allowed the security guard and the embassy staff to leave Jordan because of diplomatic immunity and has not allowed them to return until Israeli met its demands.
The Israeli security guard claimed that the furniture repairman tried to stab him with a screwdriver and that the house landlord was killed by accident.
Israel also said it would compensate the family of Raed Zuietar, a Jordanian judge killed at the King Hussein bridge in March 2014.


January settler attacks cause record West Bank displacement since Oct 2023: UN

Updated 8 sec ago
Follow

January settler attacks cause record West Bank displacement since Oct 2023: UN

RAMALLAH: Israeli settler violence and harassment in the occupied West Bank displaced nearly 700 Palestinians in January, the United Nations said Thursday, the highest rate since the Gaza war erupted in October 2023.
At least 694 Palestinians were forcefully driven from their homes last month, according to figures from the UN’s humanitarian agency OCHA, which compiles data from various United Nations agencies.
The UN Human Rights Office (OHCHR) said in late January that settler violence has become a key driver of forced displacement in the West Bank.
January’s displacement numbers were particularly high in part due to the displacement of an entire herding community in the Jordan Valley, Ras Ein Al-Auja, whose 130 families left after months of harassment.
“What is happening today is the complete collapse of the community as a result of the settlers’ continuous and repeated attacks, day and night, for the past two years,” Farhan Jahaleen, a Bedouin resident, told AFP at the time.
Settlers in the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967, use herding to establish a presence on agricultural lands used by Palestinian communities and gradually deny them access to these areas, according to a 2025 report by Israeli NGO Peace Now.
To force Palestinians out, settlers resort to harassment, intimidation and violence, “with the backing of the Israeli government and military,” the settlement watchdog said.
“No one is putting the pressure on Israel or on the Israeli authorities to stop this and so the settlers feel it, they feel the complete impunity that they’re just free to continue to do this,” said Allegra Pacheco, director of the West Bank Protection Consortium, a group of NGOS working to support Palestinian communities against displacement.
She pointed to a lack of attention on the West Bank as another driving factor.
“All eyes are focused on Gaza when it comes to Palestine, while we have an ongoing ethnic cleansing in the West Bank and nobody’s paying attention,” she told AFP.
West Bank Palestinians are also displaced when Israel’s military destroys structures and dwellings it says are built without permits.
In January, 182 more Palestinians were displaced due to home demolitions, according to OCHA.
Excluding Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem, the West Bank is home to more than 500,000 Israelis living in settlements and outposts considered illegal under international law.
Around three million Palestinians live in the West Bank.