Israel acknowledges killing aid worker in strike after initially accusing UN of ‘baseless slander’

Authored by cnn.com and submitted by Currymvp2
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The Israeli military acknowledged on Thursday that it was responsible for killing a United Nations aid worker in a strike on a UN guesthouse in Gaza last month, backtracking on its previous denials in the face of mounting public evidence of Israeli responsibility.

The Israeli military said its preliminary investigation into the incident “indicates that the fatality was caused by tank fire from IDF troops operating in the area.”

The strike killed Marin Marinov, a 51-year-old from Bulgaria who worked to deliver life-saving aid to the population of Gaza, the UN said. Six others were injured in the deadly attack that occurred one day after Israel renewed its bombardment of Gaza, ending a two-month ceasefire.

“The building was struck due to assessed enemy presence and was not identified by the forces as a UN facility,” the Israel Defense Forces said in a statement. “The IDF regrets this serious incident and continues to conduct thorough review processes to draw operational lessons and evaluate additional measures to prevent such events in the future. We express our deep sorrow for the loss and send our condolences to the family.”

The Israeli military initially denied any role in the strike on the UN guesthouse and Israel’s Foreign Ministry accused the United Nations of “baseless slander” for saying Israeli tank fire was the source of the attack.

The United Nations welcomed the conclusion of Israel’s investigation while emphasizing the need for “accountability.”

“There’s been more cooperation and transparency on their side that we’ve had in these types of incidents since the beginning of this conflict,” the spokesperson for the UN Secretary-General Stéphane Dujarric said during a daily briefing on Thursday.

“What is clear to us is that we need to have accountability. We need to have accountability not just for this incident but we need to have accountability and transparency for all of the other times,” Dujarric added.

This is the second time in the past month that the Israeli military has made false statements about an attack on aid workers, only to backtrack in the face of irrefutable evidence contradicting the Israeli military’s official account. Last week, the Israeli military acknowledged “mistakes” that led its forces to attack multiple ambulances, a fire truck and a UN vehicle, killing 15 rescue and aid workers – but only after video of the incident emerged, disproving the IDF’s initial account.

Evidence of Israeli responsibility for the strike on the UN guesthouse on March 19 emerged almost immediately.

The day of the strike, weapons experts told CNN that damage to the building and weapons fragments filmed at the scene were consistent with Israeli tank fire.

Trevor Bell, a former US Army senior explosive ordnance disposal team member who reviewed the footage, said the fragments were consistent with the M339, an Israeli tank shell. N.R. Jenzen-Jones, director at Armament Research Services (ARES) who also analyzed the footage, said at the time the “remnants appear to be from an Israeli 120 mm tank projectile, most likely the M339 multi-purpose model.”

A subsequent report by the Washington Post earlier this month found that two Israeli tank shells very likely killed the UN worker and wounded five others in that strike. The Post report also identified an Israeli tank position just over two miles from the guesthouse in satellite imagery captured the day before the strike.

The United Nations said it had repeatedly informed the Israeli military about the guest house’s location, including as recently as the night before the strike.

The Israeli military said its initial findings had been presented to the Israeli military’s chief of staff and to UN representatives and that a full investigation would be completed “in the coming days, pending the receipt of additional required information.”

On Thursday, the IDF carried out a strike on a police headquarters in Jabalya, completely destroying the building and killing 10 Palestinians, according to Fares Afana, the director of emergency services in northern Gaza.

The Israeli military said the strike targeted a command and control center for Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad that “was used to plan and execute terrorist attacks against Israeli civilians and IDF troops.”

A separate attack in Gaza City severely damaged two apartment buildings, killing seven Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Civil Defense organization. Video from the scene shows a child on the roof of a building crying for help, blood streaked across his forehead as he waves a hand covered in dust in the air.

CNN has reached out to the IDF for comment.

On Thursday evening, the Israeli military announced that a tank driver was killed in combat in northern Gaza on Thursday, marking the second time an Israeli soldier has been killed in Gaza since the resumption of the war last month. Two more soldiers were severely injured in the incident.

“If we do not see progress in the return of the hostages, we will expand our activity into a more intense and significant operation,” said IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir during a visit to Gaza Thursday.

The Israeli military also issued evacuation orders for two areas in northern Gaza as Israel broadens its bombardment of the besieged territory in what it says is an effort to put increasing pressure on Hamas. The IDF says the evacuation orders were issued after troops faced “terrorist activities and sniper fire.

CNN’s Mounira Elsamra and Mohammed Tawfeeq contributed reporting

GrizzledFart on April 28th, 2025 at 00:23 UTC »

This is why aid organizations should never allow agents of any belligerent in any war to use their vehicles or emblems. As soon as they do that, they are no longer "aid organizations" and lose all protection. If it happens and there is nothing the aid organization can do to stop it, they should very loudly and publicly state that one of the belligerent parties forced the aid organization to let them use their vehicles and/or emblems under threat of force, preferably instantly. Otherwise, they aren't aid agencies - they are participants in the conflict.

Currymvp2 on April 27th, 2025 at 18:29 UTC »

Submission statement:

Article discusses how an airstrike which hit a UN guesthouse in mid March (2nd day after Bibi broke the ceasefire) caused the death of a Bulgarian UN aid worker in central Gaza. The strike also wounded six others. Israel initially denied that they hit the UN guest house multiple times and its foreign ministry specifically called it "baseless slander" when the UN accused Israel of being behind the strike a handful of weeks ago. The western media did not accept these denials and investigative reporting was conducted by CNN and Washington Post which they had different conclusions. And then, Israel reversed its stance and acknowledge they were behind the strike.

Mister-Psychology on April 27th, 2025 at 17:43 UTC »

IDF under Netenyahu are just denying all negative stories outright. It takes them a month to fix these stories. It's extremely weird. At times the right-wing movement is a bit loose with the truth as if just saying something nationalistic is enough.

I suggest media wait a month after each event before doing interviews. They keep pressuring IDF. Keep getting denials. Keep printing false stories. Then keep correcting these stories. It's bad journalism as they know that all interviews the first few weeks are pure propaganda.

Also, IDF at times trick the journalists by saying truthful stuff that's still misleading and journalists are not sharp enough or wise enough about the conflict to catch on. One IDF commander was interviewed about the ambulances and told the media station that there were 6 Hamas fighters in the group so IDF killed soldiers. This may be factual according to the IDF database. But note how it doesn't actually answer the question. It avoids the question and a critical in-depth interview would have spotted this easily. But it's like they don't want the truth they just want talking points so they avoid asking too many questions.

Those Hamas fighters were not always in ambulance uniform, but they didn't carry any weapons either. And furthermore what the journalist failed to get from the IDF commander is that they were not shot after being spotted as Hamas fighters. They were shot because the IDF soldier shooting didn't have a clear view so he was just guessing those were Hamas fighters with rifles. The fact that they were Hamas was just a happenstance as Hamas uses ambulances to get around Gaza. But they were still unarmed.

The viewer is doing 90% of the work when Western media stations refuse to read up on the conflict and military doctrines. So we need to look up everything ourselves and then string together a story as they never once printed the full story.