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- Most of the recorded gunfire seems to come from
the Palestinian side: The AP filmed a Palestinian
policeman shooting from directly behind the al-Durah’s
position, and the boy’s gaping stomach wound suggests
an exit wound, so it’s possible that this gunfire hit
Mohammed.
- Palestinians tend to fire wildly, even when
they can’t see where they’re shooting, over fences or
into holes in walls (see Pallywood
movie).
- The two shots that hit the wall by the barrel come
from the Palestinian position. Ballistic tests show
that bullets coming from the angle of the Israeli position
that day would have produced large
clouds of dust kicking off behind the barrel, but
bullets shot from head on would produce small round circular
dust clouds before the wind blew them away. These two
identifiable shots, which can explain the terror on the
faces of father and son, come
from the Palestinian side, possibly the “pita.”
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- Fire from head on seems deliberate: The two
shots are individual, not the product of “wild machine
gun fire”, and the Palestinian gunmen who shot them would
have had to miss their mark by almost ninety degrees in
order to have shot them
by accident. Jamal claimed that eight bullets hit
him and four hit Mohammed. One or two bullets is an accident;
twelve is not.
- All the evidence that indicates that the boy was
not shot: see Scenario
4 “against” or Scenario
5 “for.”
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