israel kills judge
© Agence France-Presse/Ahmad GharabliPalestinians carry the body of Raed Zeiter, 38, during his funeral in the northern West Bank city of Nablus, on March 11, 2014
Israel expressed "regret" Tuesday over the shooting of a Jordanian judge at a border crossing, but its army insisted he had attacked soldiers and tried to grab a gun.

The shooting on Monday set off a diplomatic row between Israel and Amman - which signed a peace treaty 20 years ago - with Jordan's prime minister saying Israel is "completely responsible" and demanding an apology for the "hideous" shooting.

The Israeli army said 38-year-old Raed Zeiter, a Palestinian with Jordanian citizenship who worked as a judge in Amman, had charged at the soldiers with a metal pole while shouting "Allahu Akbar" (God is greatest), prompting them to fire at his legs.

"The suspect then began to strangle a soldier and the force resorted to using live fire once again," killing the man, the army said.

It said its preliminary findings were based on extensive questioning of witnesses to the event - which took place at the Allenby Bridge crossing between the occupied West Bank and Jordan - and that a military police investigation was ongoing.

The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights disputed the army's account, saying one of the soldiers pushed Zeiter after he had disembarked from a bus with other passengers so that Israeli soldiers could search it.

Zeiter responded in kind and other soldiers joined the scuffle, with one of them firing three rounds at his chest, the PCHR said, citing "a witness."

He was left bleeding for 30 minutes without any medical help before an Israeli ambulance came to retrieve the body, the group said.

"PCHR condemns the killing of Zeiter in cold blood... and urges the international community to act immediately to stop the crimes of the (Israeli) occupation forces," it said.

Hundreds of Palestinians turned out Tuesday for the funeral of Zeiter, accompanying the body - which was wrapped in a Palestinian flag - to its burial place in his family's northern West Bank hometown of Nablus.

"They killed my only son in cold blood," said Zeiter's father Alaa, who had travelled from Amman.

"My son was unarmed; he wouldn't even know how to use a weapon."

- 'Regret' but no apology -

Israel expressed regret over the shooting, but stopped short of apologising to Jordan, which is the only Arab country besides Egypt to have made peace with the Jewish state.

"Israel regrets the death of Judge Raed Zeiter yesterday at the King Hussein (Allenby) bridge and expresses its sympathies to the people and government of Jordan," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said.

Jordan's Prime Minister Abdullah Nsur said the Israeli government was "completely responsible" for the "hideous crime."

"Jordan has pressured Israel to formally apologise. Jordan is now part of the probe into the shooting," Nsur told MPs at a meeting in parliament to discuss the shooting.

A Jordanian citizen attending the meeting in parliament tried to burn an Israeli flag but security guards stepped in and removed him from the building.

Israeli newspaper Haaretz said an envoy, Isaac Molho, had been in 24 hours of discussions with Jordanian officials to try and "prevent any escalation."

A senior Israeli official told AFP on condition of anonymity that there were "discreet consultations at a high level between the two governments."

Jordan's principal Islamist opposition, which has called repeatedly for severing diplomatic ties with Israel, condemned the incident.

"The Israeli action proves that the Zionist enemy does not respect any agreements," Murad Adaileh of the Islamic Action Front said in a statement, referring to a 1994 peace treaty between the two countries.

"The aggression against the Jordanian citizen shows the brutality of the Zionist occupation," he said, urging the government to deal with the incident "in a way that would put an end to (Israel's) carelessness."

Several hours after Zeiter's death, troops shot dead a 20-year-old Palestinian near the West Bank city of Ramallah. The army said he had been throwing stones at soldiers.