WORLD BRIEFING / ISRAEL
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Israel has agreed to pay about $2 million to the family of a British cameraman killed by Israeli troops in 2003, a Foreign Ministry official confirmed.
James Miller’s family said through a spokesman that the settlement “is the nearest they are likely to get to an admission of guilt.”
In May 2003, Miller, 34, was in Rafah, on the Gaza-Egypt border, shooting footage for a documentary about the effect of violence on children in the region, when he was shot and killed by Israeli gunfire.
The army officer who fired the shot was cleared by a court-martial. In 2006, a British coroner’s inquest concluded that Miller’s death was murder.
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