Hamas vows to avenge Gaza deaths
Israel denies deliberately targeting journalists after tank shell kills cameraman.

Ehud Olmert, Israel’s prime minister, said that Hamas was “responsible” for the violence.
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“We consider that Hamas bears sole, direct responsibility for what happened in Gaza and it will pay the price,” he said in an interview with Israel’s Maariv newspaper.
The surge in violence came after a relatively quiet month and threatened to unravel an Egyptian effort to mediate a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.
The body of Fadl Shanaa, who worked for the Reuters news agency, was wrapped in a bloodied Palestinian flag on Thursday, as fellow journalists marched alongside carrying his broken camera and bloodstained flak jacket.
He was killed with two Palestinian civilians when a missile hit his vehicle on Wednesday.
The marchers waved Palestinian flags and carried posters of Shanaa posing with his camera.
‘Victim of truth’
Shanaa had been travelling to the al-Bureij camp to cover the aftermath of an air raid that killed at least 12 Palestinians, including five children aged between 12 and 15.
An Israeli helicopter had fired four missiles at targets near the camp in central Gaza.
Israeli denial
Reuters released the video taken by Shanaa in the seconds before his death.
Israeli weaponry |
![]() Arms row over cameraman’s death |
The footage shows a tank on a distant hilltop open fire. A tank shell is seen flying toward the camera followed by a large explosion before the screen goes black.
Pictures taken by his colleagues after the attack showed that the vehicle was clearly marked as a media vehicle.
Major Avital Leibowitz, an Israeli military spokeswoman, told Al Jazeera that the army had “no intention whatsoever” of targeting journalists.
Security stepped up
Security has been stepped up across Israel for the week-long Jewish Passover holiday beginning on Saturday, with restrictions on the occupied West Bank tightened and police reinforcements deployed throughout the country.
“Over the next ten days thousands of policemen will be deployed in the whole country in all sorts of places, streets and commercial centres,” Micky Rosenfeld, Israeli police spokesman, told the AFP news agency.
“There is no concrete threat for the holidays, but the usual threats that we are used to.”
Meanwhile on Thursday, two Islamic Jihad fighters died during an exchange of fire with Israeli troops during an incursion in the West Bank town of Qabatiya.
Islamic Jihad said that the men killed were Bilal Komel, a commander long-wanted by Israel, and 19-year-old Ayed Zakarna.