Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

British Filmmaker's Death in Gaza Continues to Resound

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • British Filmmaker's Death in Gaza Continues to Resound

    International Solidarity Movement, Palestinian Territories
    June 24 2006


    British Filmmaker's Death in Gaza Continues to Resound
    June 24th, 2006 | Posted in Press clippings, Gaza Region
    By Sarah Lyall
    Published in the New York Times

    LONDON, June 23 - Three years ago, in an incident that resonates now
    with the recent killing of seven members of a Palestinian family on a
    Gaza beach, a documentary filmmaker was shot to death in Gaza.

    Then as now, the victims' families blamed the Israeli military, which
    denied responsibility. A major difference is that the filmmaker,
    James Miller, was a British citizen, and after some prodding from his
    family, his government has taken up his cause.

    At first, about the only thing not in dispute in the Miller case was
    that he was dead, shot on May 2, 2003, in an area of the Gaza Strip
    thick with Israeli soldiers. The Israelis said he was a casualty of
    war. His colleagues said he had been killed in cold blood.

    His family fought to know more.

    A resolution of sorts came in April at a coroner's inquest here into
    the death of Mr. Miller, 34, an experienced filmmaker looking into
    the effects of violence on children for HBO. The jury's verdict was
    that he was murdered.

    The killer was identified as the commander of an armored personnel
    carrier in the Israeli Army who had admitted firing his gun that
    night, but no one in Israel has been charged, and many of the
    questions raised in the hours after the shooting have never been
    resolved.

    Suspecting that answers might not be forthcoming, the Miller family
    sent a private investigator to the scene the day after the killing to
    do forensic tests - tests, the investigator said, that the Israelis
    never conducted. In the next few days the army bulldozed the site,
    destroying much of the remaining evidence, the investigator said.

    The Israeli military's criminal investigation, including the basic
    task of confiscating and securing the soldiers' weapons for tests,
    did not begin until several weeks after the fact.

    Lt. Col. Jana Modzgvrishvily, the military advocate for the Israeli
    Army's southern command, said in an interview that after Mr. Miller's
    death, the army immediately began a standard field investigation,
    followed by a full military criminal investigation.

    She said nine soldiers in the two armored personnel carriers near the
    scene were repeatedly interviewed and subjected to lie detector
    tests. She confirmed that the weapons had not been secured for three
    weeks but said they had been subjected to extensive forensic tests.

    It is not just the Miller family who denies that the Israeli inquiry
    was thorough and comprehensive. So, too, does the coroner at the
    London inquest, who urged the British government to begin an
    international prosecution against the commander of the personnel
    carrier under the Geneva Conventions. So does the British government
    itself.

    The attorney general, Lord Goldsmith, raised the case last month with
    Israeli officials, including the defense and justice ministers. He
    also brought up another case, that of Tom Hurndall, 22, a British
    antiwar protester who was shot and killed by an Israeli soldier in
    February 2003, three weeks before and a mile away from where Mr.
    Miller died.

    In Mr. Hurndall's case, the soldier, Sgt. Taysir Hayb, is serving an
    eight-year sentence for manslaughter. Lord Goldsmith said he needed
    "to consider myself whether there ought to be prosecutions here in
    either of these cases." He said he did not want to raise expectations
    but was keeping an open mind.

    Speaking of the Miller case, a spokesman for the British Foreign
    Office, asking that his name not be used in accordance with
    government policy, said: "We have pressed the Israelis at every
    level, and at every stage, to agree to a full and transparent
    investigation. We are disappointed that the investigation wasn't
    carried out properly and hasn't resulted in an indictment, and that
    the I.D.F. has decided not to discipline the person alleged to have
    shot James Miller." The initials stand for the Israeli military's
    official name, the Israeli Defense Forces.

    Accounts of what happened diverged almost from the moment Mr. Miller
    was shot.

    It was late at night in the ruined town of Rafah, at the southern end
    of the Gaza Strip, and Mr. Miller was concluding his third visit for
    the film.

    He specialized in documentaries about the downtrodden and the
    oppressed; his past work included "Beneath the Veil" (2001), about
    the war in Afghanistan, which won Emmy and Peabody awards; "Children
    of the Secret State" (2000), about famine in North Korea; and
    "Armenia: The Betrayed" (2002), about the massacres of Armenians in
    1915.

    Mr. Miller and his colleagues had spent the evening at a Palestinian
    house, filming Israeli bulldozers knocking down Palestinian
    buildings.

    Two Israeli armored personnel carriers were in the area,
    investigating reports that a Palestinian tunnel under the Egyptian
    border was being used to smuggle weapons into Gaza.

    The vehicles were fired on during the day, and the soldiers responded
    in kind. By 11 p.m. or so, things were quiet. The filmmakers decided
    to call it a night.

    Wearing flak jackets and hats marked "TV," waving a white cloth in
    the air that they illuminated with a flashlight and shouting that
    they were British journalists seeking to leave the area safely, Mr.
    Miller and two colleagues, Saira Shah and Abdul Rahman Abdullah,
    slowly walked toward one of the armored personnel carriers. But
    suddenly, according to Ms. Shah and Mr. Abdallah, a shot rang out
    close by.

    A warning, they said they thought. They dropped to the ground.
    Thirteen seconds passed. Then there was a second shot. It hit Mr.
    Miller.

    He lost consciousness almost immediately and was pronounced dead at
    an Israeli base. His wife, Sophy, at home with their children, then 3
    and 1, and expecting her husband the next day, woke up to a phone
    call from a distraught Ms. Shah.

    Soon it was all over the news. But while Mr. Miller's colleagues said
    he had been shot in the front of the neck from the direction of one
    of the Israeli vehicles, the Israelis initially gave a different
    account. Mr. Miller walked into an exchange of gunfire, they said,
    and was hit in the back by a Palestinian bullet.

    The next day, the Miller family dispatched Chris Cobb-Smith, a
    security expert and British Army veteran, to Gaza to investigate.

    "The emphasis had to be on us to do the proper investigations,
    because it was obvious that the I.D.F. was not going to conduct their
    investigation with any impartiality," said Mr. Cobb-Smith, whose
    examination of footprints, tank tracks and traces of blood and bullet
    holes, among other things, led him to conclude that the shot that had
    killed Mr. Miller had come from an Israeli vehicle.

    He said no one from the Israeli Army had interviewed him about his
    findings. One of the most important pieces of evidence was a grainy
    video taken by an Associated Press Television News cameraman from the
    balcony of the building that Mr. Miller had just left. Seven
    intermittent shots can be clearly heard on the audio, 13 seconds
    apart, then 12, then 5, then 15, then 5, then 12.

    "These shots were not fired by a soldier in response to incoming
    fire," Mr. Cobb-Smith said. "They were slow and calculated and
    deliberate." He added, "I have no doubt that it was cold-blooded
    murder."

    Interviewed at home in rural Braunton, Devon, Mrs. Miller said her
    husband had worked in hostile environments for 14 years and was known
    for his extreme caution. She says she has fought so hard not just for
    her husband, but because she is disturbed at what she sees as the
    lack of accountability in the Israeli Army in this and other cases.

    The Israelis now agree that Mr. Miller was indeed shot in the neck,
    from the front. But they say there is no evidence that M-16 bullet
    fragments recovered from his body match the guns of any Israeli
    soldiers in the area.

    And after analyzing the audiotape of the gunfire, an Israeli expert
    concluded that the first two shots had come from "an urban area" -
    from the direction of populated Rafah - rather than the Israeli
    vehicles. Mr. Miller was killed by the second shot.

    "The evidence from the military investigation concluded that there
    was no involvement of I.D.F. soldiers in the killing of James
    Miller," Colonel Modzgvrishvily said. "When talking about the death
    of innocent civilians it is of course very tragic, but unfortunately
    it is the nature of war."

    Freddy Mead, a British ballistics expert sent by the family, likewise
    could not link the bullet that killed Mr. Miller to any particular
    weapon. But Mr. Cobb-Smith said that conclusion was meaningless
    because of the delay in seizing the soldiers' weapons and the lack of
    a credible chain of evidence in the investigation.

    The army's 94-page report shows that the investigation focused almost
    immediately on the commander of one of the Israeli personnel
    carriers, the only one who fired his weapon around the time Mr.
    Miller died.

    But although the commander, identified in the report as First Lt. H.,
    gave conflicting accounts in six separate interviews of when and why
    he had fired, he was adamant - as was every other soldier - that they
    could neither see nor hear the Britons approaching.

    Mr. Miller's colleagues disputed that, saying the soldiers knew they
    had been filming from the balcony and had taunted them from their
    vehicles. The evening was clear, they said; the soldiers had
    night-vision equipment.

    The military's judge advocate general recommended that the commander,
    who has since been identified by the Miller family as First Lt. Hib
    al-Heib, be disciplined for improperly using his weapon. But the
    recommendation was rejected.

    The London inquest, held as is the custom in Britain when a citizen
    dies in violent circumstances abroad, took place this spring. The
    coroner, Dr. Andrew Reid, criticized Israel for not participating and
    joined Mr. Miller's family in calling for the British government to
    consider an international prosecution of the Israeli soldier. The
    Millers have filed a civil suit in Israel.

    Anne Waddington, Mr. Miller's older sister, said that while the
    jury's conclusion was reassuring, it was not enough.

    "We've struggled for three years to put the pieces of this tragic
    jigsaw together," she said in an interview. "We have all pursued
    justice all of our lives, and James was the biggest and best of all
    in doing that. For the circumstances of his death to be treated with
    such disdain by the Israelis is something we cannot forgive."

    After Mr. Miller died, his colleagues finished the film, with an
    ending he had never envisioned: his own killing. Its title was "Death
    in Gaza," and it won a host of awards, including three Emmys.

    http://www.palsolidarity.org/main/2006/06/ 24/british-filmmakers-death-in-gaza-continues-to-r esound/
Working...
X