
Israeli police officers charged at Palestinian mourners carrying the coffin of Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh on Friday, before thousands led her casket through Jerusalem's Old City in an outpouring of grief and anger over her killing.
Packed
around Abu Akleh's coffin, dozens of Palestinians, some waving Palestinian
flags and chanting, "with our soul and blood we will redeem you
Shireen," began walking toward the gates of St. Joseph's Hospital.
Israeli
police officers, in an apparent bid to stop them proceeding by foot rather than
taking the coffin by car, burst through the courtyard gates and charged at the
crowd, some beating pallbearers with batons and kicking them.
At one
point the group carrying her coffin backed against a wall and almost dropped
the casket, recovering it just before one end hit the ground as stun grenades
detonated.
The violent
scenes, which lasted only minutes, added to Palestinian outrage over Abu
Akleh's killing, which has threatened to fuel violence that has surged since
March.
Abu Akleh,
who had covered Palestinian affairs and the Middle East for more than two
decades, was shot while reporting on an Israeli raid in the occupied West Bank
on Wednesday.
Palestinian
authorities have described Abu Akleh's killing as an assassination by Israeli
forces. Israel's government initially suggested Palestinian fire might have
been to blame, but officials have also said they could not rule out it was
Israeli gunfire that killed her.
Israeli
police said a group of Palestinians outside the hospital, whom they described
as rioters, had begun throwing stones at officers.
"The
policemen were forced to act," they added.
The White
House found the images disturbing, press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters,
and U.S. officials will remain in close contact with Israeli and Palestinian
authorities in the aftermath of Akleh's funeral.
"Every
family deserves to be able to lay their loved ones to rest in a dignified and
unimpeded manner," U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said.
Egypt,
Qatar and Al Jazeera condemned the police's conduct. Deputy U.N. spokesperson
Farhan Haq said the scenes were "very shocking" and the EU said it
was appalled.
A few
minutes after police intervened, Abu Akleh's coffin was placed in a vehicle
that headed toward the Cathedral of the Annunciation of the Virgin in
Jerusalem's Walled Old City, where the funeral ceremony proceeded peacefully.
Crowds of
Palestinians lined the narrow alleyways of the Old City as the coffin was
carried to the Mount Zion Cemetery nearby.
Her grave
was covered in wreaths and the Palestinian flag draped over the grave cross as
mourners surrounded it solemnly, paying tribute to Abu Akleh.
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