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A group of prominent international war crimes experts is calling for an inquiry1 into the behavior of Israeli forces and Palestinian armed groups during the Jewish state's recent offensive in Gaza.
The group signing the open letter to U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and the U.N. Security Council includes Nobel Laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Richard Goldstone, a former chief prosecutor2 in Yugoslavia and Rwanda.
Palestinian woman walks past house destroyed during Israeli offensive in Jabalia in northern Gaza Strip, 15 Feb 2009
The letter urges the establishment of a U.N. commission to look into allegations that international humanitarian3 law was violated, by both sides, during the 23-day offensive. It calls for a prompt, impartial4 investigation5 that would set the record straight and make public any violation6 of international laws.
The attack, in which Israel targeted militants8 who have been firing rockets at civilian9 areas in Israel, killed an estimated 1,300 people, many of them civilians10, in Gaza.
The 16 judges and investigators11 include others who have led investigations12 in East Timor, Lebanon, Sierra Leone, and Darfur. The letter said they were "shocked to the core" by events in Gaza.
Israeli forces have come under criticism for their use of white phosphorus during their campaign in the densely-populated enclave.
When asked about the open letter, Israeli Prime Minister's office spokesman Mark Regev repeated Israel's assertions that its military followed all the international rules of conflict.
"We made every effort not to target innocent civilians," said Regev. "On the contrary, we tried to be as surgical13 as is humanly possible in a difficult combat situation targeting those Hamas extremists who are shooting rockets into Israel, trying to kill our citizens."
The letter came as Israel steps up indirect negotiations14 with Hamas to reopen Gaza's Israeli-controlled borders and reach a formal truce15. The militant7 Islamist group that controls Gaza wants Israel to release hundreds of Palestinian prisoners in exchange for Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier who was seized by Palestinian militants and taken to Gaza in 2006.
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's Cabinet has rescheduled a meeting to discuss the matter on Tuesday.
Mr. Olmert is due to leave office soon. Members of his centrist government have warned Hamas it may be the group's last chance to secure concessions16 before a harder-line government under hawkish17 former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu comes to power.
Officials with Mr. Netanyahu's Likud party say it has initialed a deal for the ultranationalist Israel Beitenu Party to join a Likud-led coalition18 - putting them one step closer to forming a new government.
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