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Wednesday November 21, 2007

Is Mohammed al Dura alive?

by brett kline
jta

paris | The release of never-before-seen footage in the shooting of Mohammed al Dura at Gaza’s Netzarim Junction in 2000 is raising new questions about the authenticity of an incident long used to vilify Israel.

The video was ordered released by a French judge considering an appeal in a defamation lawsuit that France 2 TV, which filmed the incident, brought against a media watchdog who claimed the shooting was staged.

The video has not been released to the public, but many of those who saw it in court Nov. 14 said the footage showed that seconds after al Dura was seen lying motionless and apparently dead in the arms of his father after supposedly being shot, the boy lifted his arm and peered through his fingers at the camera.

“For me, the killing of al Dura does not exist anymore,” said Philippe Karsenty, the media watchdog who was the subject of France 2’s defamation suit. “The images furnished … by France 2 prove nothing.”

The controversial shooting became an instant icon for Palestinian suffering at the hands of Israeli brutality, with Palestinians claiming the 12-year-old al Dura was killed by Israeli troops during an exchange of gunfire with Palestinian militants. But Israel, after initially apologizing for the incident, said an investigation showed IDF troops could not have struck the boy from their positions.

Karsenty, director of Media Ratings, went so far as to claim the shooting was a hoax.

France 2 TV and the journalist who filed the report, Charles Enderlin, sued Karsenty for defamation and won, but Karsenty appealed the decision. In September a Paris judge ordered France 2 TV to release the raw footage of the shooting. Enderlin, a seasoned French journalist and a Jew, wasn’t at the site of the shooting on that fateful day, Sept. 30, 2000. Camera operator Talal Abu Rahma shot the exclusive footage, which was considered a major scoop at the time, and Enderlin filed his report from the West Bank.

On Nov. 15, France 2 TV showed approximately 18 of the 27 minutes of the raw footage — the other nine minutes were shot by a Reuters camera operator and were not available.

Witnesses said they were shocked when they saw al Dura lift his head up after allegedly being shot.

“Enderlin had cut that scene from the report that was originally broadcast in September 2000,” said the former editor of Le Monde, Luc Rosensweig. “But when everyone in the courtroom saw it, you could feel the tension and the surprise. I believe that this screening of the raw footage in court was very damaging for France 2 officials and Enderlin, largely because of that last scene.”

Observers and supporters of Karsenty and Enderlin packed the courtroom, and afterward Enderlin was mobbed by questions from the media. His lawyers shepherded him out of the court and Enderlin did not take any questions.

After the last court hearing in the case, in September, France 2 communications director Christine de la Vena said these “hearings are of little importance.”

“Enderlin is a top professional journalist and the images are real,” she said. “Everyone has forgotten about this case except this man in the hearing and a couple of others who refuse to give it up.”

Karsenty had complained his claims were being ignored by France’s major media outlets, but after last week’s hearing media outlets from Paris to Jerusalem carried stories about the shocking footage. He said the footage proves his case — and that al Dura may not even be dead.

“How much longer will French politicians and media bosses continue covering up for France 2 and for Enderlin?” Karsenty asked. “The claims of al Dura’s death have now become ridiculous.”




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