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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Politics
Bethan McKernan

Elor Azaria: Israeli president refuses to pardon soldier who shot and killed unarmed Palestinian

Israel’s president has declined to pardon a soldier who was given 18 months in jail on manslaughter charges for shooting a Palestinian assailant in the head when he was immobilised on the ground.

Then 19-year-old Elor Azaria, an Israel Defence Forces (IDF) medic, shot 21-year-old Abdel Fattah al-Sharif when he lay wounded on the ground in the occupied West Bank city of Hebron after he and an accomplice attacked two soldiers in the March 2016 incident.

He was handed down 18 months in jail, a sentence which was reduced to 14 months following a September decision from the IDF chief of staff. 

The landmark case - the first manslaughter prosecution for a serving member of the IDF in more than a decade - split opinion in Israeli society.  There is widespread support for the IDF, in which service is compulsory for at least two years.

There have been several fundraisers and protests in support of the soldier, as well as high profile calls for the young recruit to be given a pardon by the government, including from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman.

Palestinians and rights activists, however, have widely criticised Azaria’s punishment as not harsh enough for the severity of his crime.

The deceased man’s father noted that while manslaughter is punishable under Israeli law by up to 20 years in prison, Azaria’s sentence was less harsh than the mandatory minimum penalty of four years in prison some Palestinian children have faced for throwing stones

Azaria submitted a formal pardon request last month.

“President Reuven Rivlin today took the decision to deny the request for a pardon filed by Elor Azaria,” the president's office said in a statement issued on Sunday.

Mr Rivlin had taken into account both the offences committed by Azaria and their circumstances, his office said.

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