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Written by Rory McCarthy in Jerusalem Rory McCarthy in Jerusalem
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Category: News News
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Published: 07 January 2010 07 January 2010
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Last Updated: 07 January 2010 07 January 2010
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Created: 07 January 2010 07 January 2010
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A fire at the UN building in Gaza City after Israeli strikes
[PHOTO: A woman escaping fire at the UN building in Gaza after Israeli strikes last year. Photograph: Mahmud Hams/AFP/Getty Images]
Israel has agreed to pay the UN around $10m in compensation for damage
caused to UN buildings in Gaza during last year's war, according to
diplomatic sources.
The payout is the first since Israel's heavily criticised three-week
war a year ago in which around 1,400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis were
killed. It is also thought to be one of the first times Israel has paid
the UN any compensation for damage to its facilities in the occupied
Palestinian territories.
The UN's Office for Legal Affairs, in New York, has been in
negotiations with Israeli officials for months over the payment before
Ehud Barak, Israel's defence minister, agreed to pay. In an
embarrassment to Israel some of the damage to UN buildings occurred
while Ban-Ki Moon, the UN secretary general, was in meetings with
Israeli leaders trying to win a halt to the fighting.
However, there is no sign yet that Israel is ready to pay any other
compensation over the war or conduct its own independent inquiry,
despite repeated allegations that its military committed war crimes.
Immediately after the war the UN commissioned an inquiry into damage to
its buildings in Gaza and injuries to its staff. That investigation
accused the Israeli military of "negligence or recklessness" in its
conduct of the war and said reparations for death and damage should be
paid, putting the figure at more than $11m.
The inquiry, led by Ian Martin, a Briton who is a former head of
Amnesty International, marked the first major challenge to Israel over
its conduct of the war. It found the Israeli military's actions
"involved varying degrees of negligence or recklessness" and that the
military took "inadequate" precautions towards UN premises and said the
deaths of civilians should be investigated under the rules of
international humanitarian law.
Israel at the time rejected those findings, even before the summary of
the report was made public, saying it was "tendentious" and "patently
biased".
However, the allegations were matched by international human rights
groups and by a second, broader UN inquiry, commissioned by the UN
Human Rights Council, and led by the former South African judge Richard
Goldstone, which accused both Israel and Hamas, the Palestinian
Islamist group, of war crimes.
One of the most serious incidents involving the UN in Gaza took place
on 6 January near a UN boys' prep school in Jabaliya being used as a
shelter for hundreds of Palestinians who had fled their homes to escape
the fighting. The Israeli military fired several 120mm mortar rounds in
the "immediate vicinity" of the school, killing between 30 and 40
people. Although Israel at the time insisted Hamas had fired mortars
from within the school, the UN inquiry found this was untrue. It held
Israel responsible for the attack.