Israeli convicted of Palestinian murder that helped trigger war

Ben-David had lodged insanity plea that held up his formal conviction and sentencing

Israeli Yosef Haim Ben-David with Israeli policemen at a court in Jerusalem. Photograph: AFP Photo/Ahmad Gharabli
Israeli Yosef Haim Ben-David with Israeli policemen at a court in Jerusalem. Photograph: AFP Photo/Ahmad Gharabli

An Israeli man was convicted on Tuesday of murdering a Palestinian teenager in Jerusalem as a court rejected his insanity plea for a crime that helped trigger the 2014 Gaza war.

Prosecutors said Yosef Haim Ben-David organised the killing of 16-year-old Mohammed Abu Khudair. Two Jewish youths who helped him abduct the teen, who was bludgeoned, strangled and burned alive, were sentenced in February, one to life imprisonment and the other to a 21-year term.

All three defendants had confessed, and said the July 2nd, 2014, murder was revenge for the killing days earlier of three Israeli youths by the Hamas Islamist group in the occupied West Bank.

Ben-David (30) lodged an insanity plea that held up his formal conviction and sentencing. After receiving psychological assessments, the court ruled he “fully understood his actions” and found him guilty. He will be sentenced on May 3th.

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Abu Khudair's killing raised tensions, and a seven-week Israeli offensive against the Hamas-run Gaza Strip began on July 8th, 2014, after cross-border Palestinian rocket attacks and an Israeli round up of suspected militants in the West Bank. – (Reuters)