Israeli military changes account of Gaza first-responder killings
Person making initial report describing the scene 'mistaken,' military official says
The Israeli military has provided new details that changed its initial account of the killing of 15 emergency workers near the southern Gaza city of Rafah last month but said investigators were still examining the evidence.
The 15 paramedics and emergency responders were shot dead on March 23 and buried in a shallow grave, where their bodies were found a week later by officials from the United Nations and the Palestine Red Crescent Society. Another man is still missing.
The military initially said soldiers had opened fire on vehicles that approached their position "suspiciously" in the dark without lights or markings. It said they killed nine militants from Hamas and Islamic Jihad who were travelling in Red Crescent vehicles.
But video recovered from the mobile phone of one of the dead men and published by the Palestine Red Crescent Society showed emergency workers in their uniforms and clearly marked ambulances and fire trucks, with their lights on, being fired on by soldiers.
The only known survivor of the incident, Red Crescent paramedic Munther Abed, also said he had seen soldiers opening fire on clearly marked emergency response vehicles.
An Israeli military official said late on Saturday the investigators were examining the video and conclusions were expected to be presented to army commanders on Sunday.
No mention of lights on vehicles
He said the initial report received from the field did not describe lights but that investigators were looking at "operational information" and were trying to understand if this was due to an error by the person making the initial report.
"What we understand currently is the person who gives the initial account is mistaken. We're trying to understand why."

Israeli media briefed by the military reported that troops had identified at least six of the 15 dead as members of militant groups. However, the official declined to provide any evidence or detail of how the identifications were made, saying he did not want to share classified information.
'Investigation is not over'
"According to our information, there were terrorists there, but this investigation is not over," he told reporters at the briefing late on Saturday.
The UN and the Red Crescent have demanded an independent inquiry into the killing of the paramedics.
Red Crescent and UN officials have said 17 paramedics and emergency workers from the Red Crescent, the Civil Emergency service and the UN had been dispatched to respond to reports of injuries from Israeli airstrikes.
Apart from Abed, who was detained for several hours before being released, another worker is still missing.
The UN said last week that available information indicated one team was killed by Israeli forces, and other emergency and aid crews were killed one after another over several hours as they searched for their missing colleagues.
Vehicles spotted with aerial surveillance
The military official said initial findings from the investigation showed troops had opened fire on a vehicle at around 4 a.m., killing two members of the Hamas internal security forces, and taking another prisoner, who the official said had admitted under interrogation to being in Hamas.
As time passed, several vehicles passed along the road until, at around 6 a.m., he said troops received word from aerial surveillance that a suspicious group of vehicles was approaching.
"They feel this is another incident like what happened at 4 a.m. and they opened fire," the official said.
Soldiers 'opened fire from afar'
He said aerial surveillance footage showed the troops were at some distance when they opened fire, and he denied reports that the troops handcuffed at least some of the paramedics and shot them at close range.
"It's not from close. They opened fire from afar," he said. "There's no mistreatment of the people there."
He said the soldiers had approached the group they had shot, identifying at least some of them as militants. However, he did not explain what evidence had prompted the assessment.
"And in their eyes they had an encounter with terrorists, that is a successful encounter with terrorists."
He said the troops had informed the UN of the incident on the same day and initially covered the bodies with camouflage netting until they could be recovered.
Strikes on Gaza kill 19, health officials say
Israeli strikes on the Gaza Strip killed at least 19 people overnight and into Sunday, local health officials said.
The strikes hit a tent and a house in the southern city of Khan Younis, killing five men, five women and five children, according to Nasser Hospital, which received the bodies.

And Israeli shelling killed at least four people in the Jabaliya refugee camp in northern Gaza, according to Gaza's Health Ministry.
The latest military strikes were carried out as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu headed to the United States to meet with U.S. President Donald Trump.
Netanyahu on Monday is to meet with Trump for the second time since Trump began his latest term in January. The prime minister said they would discuss the war in Gaza and the new 17 per cent tariff imposed on Israel, part of a sweeping global decision by the new U.S. administration.
With files from The Associated Press