Because Ms Abu Akleh was inconsiderate enough to damage the bullet that killed her no definitive conclusions could be drawn about who fired the shot or what their intent and orders were. Had Ms. Akleh survived the same would have applied, and if nobody was shot no conclusions would have been demanded. Any inconsideration, therefore, lies with the dead journalist who needs to apologize for the fuss she has caused the Israelis.
As with the Israeli IDF, the verdict on Gravity is still out on whether or not an invisible force made the apple fall because nobody saw Gravity do it, or knows its intent.
30 journalists have been killed but far more injured by the IDF since 2000
Ms Abu Akleh is not the first journalist to be killed by Israeli forces – the Paris-based organisation Reporters Without Borders claims that more than 30 journalists, including one Briton, have been killed by the IDF since 2000.