Cameron urges Israel to follow aid strike dismissals with independent review
Three Britons were among the World Central Kitchen aid workers who died in airstrikes by the IDF on Monday.
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Your support makes all the difference.Israel must follow up its initial report into how three British aid workers were killed with āa wholly independent review to ensure the utmost transparencyā, Lord David Cameron has said.
The UK will carefully review findings of the initial Israeli Defence Forcesā (IDF) report into the incident released on Friday, the Foreign Secretary added.
Three Britons were among the seven World Central Kitchen (WCK) aid workers who died in airstrikes carried out by the IDF on Monday.
They were John Chapman, 57, James āJimā Henderson, 33, and James Kirby, 47.
Israeli officials have dismissed two officers over the strikes, which were described as a āgrave mistake stemming from a serious failureā.
Three other senior officers were also reprimanded for their roles in the strike, which took place in Gaza.
The attack on the WCK aid convoy has resulted in rebuke from Israelās allies, while MPs from across the political spectrum have questioned whether the UK should continue exporting arms to the Middle Eastern country.
Following the release of the report, Lord Cameron said: āWe are carefully reviewing the initial findings of Israelās investigations into the killing of WCK aid workers and welcome the suspension of two officers as a first step.
āThese findings must be published in full and followed up with a wholly independent review to ensure the utmost transparency and accountability.ā
He added: āLessons must be learnt from todayās initial findings from the IDF.
āItās clear major reform of Israelās deconfliction mechanism is badly needed to ensure the safety of aid workers.
āThe deaths of these brave heroes are a tragedy, and this must never happen again.ā
Britainās top diplomat to the UN, Barbara Woodward, meanwhile urged Israel to ensure aid workers are not targeted in future.
Speaking at the United Nations, the UKās permanent representative said: āAid workers should never be targeted. Over 200 have been killed in this conflict.
āIsrael must do much more to protect them and to ensure their safety so they can deliver urgently needed life-saving humanitarian assistance.ā
In its report, the IDF said it had identified a āgunmanā on one of the aid organisationās trucks, and assumed there were Hamas fighters in the vehicles.
The Israeli forces did not associate the vehicles with WCK and, as a result of āa misidentificationā, carried out the strikes.
This action was āin serious violation of the commands and IDF Standard Operating Proceduresā, the report found.
IDF spokesman Lt Col Peter Lerner told the BBC: āI think this incident, this very tragic incident, is a very important part of our process of how we conduct ourselves and how we are operating in order to improve in the very challenging and complex situation of the battleground in Gaza.ā
WCK founder Jose Andres claimed the Israeli military knew of his aid workersā movements and targeted them āsystematically, car by carā.
The charity described the IDFās actions following the initial report as āimportant steps forwardā.
But in a statement, it added: āWithout systemic change, there will be more military failures, more apologies and more grieving families.
āThe root cause of the unjustified rocket fire on our convoy is the severe lack of food in Gaza. Israel needs to dramatically increase the volume of food and medicine travelling by land if it is serious about supporting humanitarian aid.ā
Israel had earlier announced it would open more land-based aid routes into Gaza, following pressure from US President Joe Biden to address the humanitarian situation in the Palestinian territory.
Alicia Kearns, the Conservative chairwoman of the Foreign Affairs Select Committee, had said it was ādevastatingā that it had taken six months and the deaths of western aid workers for Israel to change course over the supply of international humanitarian aid.
Ms Kearns said she believed the Government had āno choice but to suspend arms salesā amid concerns about how Israel may be using British-made weapons.
Separately, Lib Dem foreign affairs spokeswoman Layla Moran has written to the Governmentās independent ethics adviser, asking for a probe into whether Lord Cameron and Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch could be in breach of the ministerial code over continued UK arms sales to Israel.
She suggested the two senior Cabinet ministers may have breached the ministerial code by not publishing legal advice regarding arms exports, if they have received it.