A Spanish judge says he will move forward with a probe of top Israeli
military commanders linked to a 2002 Israeli bombing that killed 15
people in the Gaza Strip.
National Court Judge Fernando Andreu
announced his decision Monday, after rejecting assertions from
prosecutors that the bombing was already under investigation in
Israel. The judge said he could find no evidence of an Israeli probe.
Palestinian
militant Salah Shehade, who headed the military wing of Hamas, died in
the bombing along with 14 civilians, nine of them children in the
Palestinian territory.
Spain assumes universal jurisdiction over such allegations of criminal activity, and it began its investigation in January.
Meanwhile,
new Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman has begun a four-nation
tour of Europe aimed at easing European concerns about Israeli policy
toward the Palestinians.
Lieberman, head of a far-right party, is spending two days in Italy, before visiting France, Germany and the Czech Republic.
Separately,
United Nations investigators in Geneva are preparing for a fact-finding
mission into Israel's three-week military sweep into Gaza that ended in
January.
At least 1,300 Palestinians, including 300 children,
were killed in the offensive, launched by Israel to stop Hamas rocket
fire into border areas of southern Israel.
Israel had rejected
two earlier U.N. probes, including a Gaza investigation that was to
have been led by South African Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
Some information for this report was provided by AFP, AP and Reuters.
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