UN says Israel should face war-crimes trial over Gaza
Report also censures Hamas but accuses Israelis of punishing entire
population of the Palestinian Strip

By Donald Macintyre in Jerusalem


Wednesday, 16 September 2009
  [A Palestinian woman next to her home destroyed during Israeli strikes
in Jabalia refugee camp in the Gaza Strip in January]
<http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/un-says-israel-shou\
ld-face-warcrimes-trial-over-gaza-1787972.html?action=Popup> AFP/GETTY
IMAGES - A Palestinian woman next to her home destroyed during Israeli
strikes in Jabalia refugee camp in the Gaza Strip in January




Israel targeted "the people of Gaza as a whole" in the three-week
military    operation which is estimated to have killed more than 1,300
Palestinians at    the beginning of this year, according to a
UN-commissioned report published    yesterday.

A UN fact-finding mission led by the Jewish South African former Supreme
Court    Judge Richard Goldstone said Israel should face prosecution by
the    International Criminal Court, unless it opened fully independent
investigations of what the report said were repeated violations of   
international law, "possible war crimes and crimes against humanity"
during    the operation.

Using by far the strongest language of any of the numerous reports
criticising    Operation Cast Lead, the UN mission, which interviewed
victims, witnesses    and others in Gaza and Geneva this summer, says
that while Israel had    portrayed the war as self-defence in response
to Hamas rocket attacks, it    "considers the plan to have been
directed, at least in part, at a different    target: the people of Gaza
as a whole".

"In this respect the operations were in furtherance of an overall policy
aimed    at punishing the Gaza population for its resilience and for its
apparent    support for Hamas, and possibly with the intent of forcing a
change in such    support," the report said. It added that some Israelis
should carry    "individual criminal responsibility."

The 575-page document presented to yesterday's session of the UN Human
Rights    Council in Geneva was swiftly denounced by Israel. The foreign
ministry    spokesman Yigal Palmor said the UN mission had "dealt a huge
blow to    governments seeking to defend their citizens from terror",
and that its    conclusions were "so disconnected with realities on the
ground that one    cannot but wonder on which planet was the Gaza Strip
they visited".

The Gaza war began on 27 December 2008 and ended on 18 January 2009.

The UN report found that the statements of military and political
leaders in    Israel before and during the operation indicated the use
of    "disproportionate force", aimed not only at the enemy but also at
the    "supporting infrastructure". The mission adds: "In practice this
appears to    have meant the civilian population."

The mission also had harsh conclusions about Hamas and other armed
groups,    acknowledging that rocket and mortar attacks have caused
terror in southern    Israel, and saying that where launched into
civilians areas, they would    "constitute war crimes" and "may amount
to crimes against humanity".

It also condemned the extrajudicial killings, detention and
ill-treatment of    Palestinian detainees by the Hamas regime in Gaza -
as well as by the    Palestinian Authority in the West Bank - and called
for the release on    humanitarian grounds of Gilad Shalit, the Israeli
corporal abducted by Gaza    militants in June 2006.

While the Israeli government refused to co-operate with the inquiry - or
allow    the UN team into Israel - on the ground that the team would be
"one-sided",    Cpl Shalit's father, Noam, was among those Israeli
citizens who flew to    Geneva to give evidence.

That said, the much greater part of the report - and its strongest
language -    is reserved for Israel's conduct during the operation.
Apart from the    unprecedented death toll, the report says that "the
destruction of food    supply installations, water sanitation systems,
concrete factories and    residential houses was the result of a
systematic policy by the Israeli    armed forces". The purpose was "to
make the daily process of living and    dignified living more difficult
for the civilian population".

The report also says that vandalism of houses by some soldiers and "the
graffiti on the walls, the obscenities and often racist slogans
constituted    an overall image of humiliation and dehumanisation of the
Palestinian    population". Hospitals and ambulances were "targeted by
Israeli attacks."

Amid a detailed examination of most of the major incidents of the war -
albeit    an examinations carried out five months after the incidents
took place - it    says that:

* The first bombing attack on Day One of the operation when children
were    going home from school "appears to have been calculated to cause
the    greatest disruption and widespread panic".

* The deaths of 22 members of the Samouni family sheltering in a
warehouse    were among ones "owing to Israeli fire intentionally
directed at them", in    clear breach of the Geneva Convention.

* The firing of white phosphorus shells at the UN Relief and Works
Agency    compound was "compounded by reckless regard of the
consequences", and the    use of high explosive artillery at the al-Quds
hospitals were violations of    Articles 18 and 19 of the Geneva
Convention. It says that warnings issued by    Israel to the civilian
population "cannot be considered as sufficiently    effective" under the
Convention.

* On the attack in the vicinity of the al-Fakhoura school, where at
least 35    Palestinians were killed, Israeli forces launched an attack
where a    "reasonable commander" would have considered military
advantage was    outweighed by the risk to civilian life. The civilians
had their right to    life violated as under Article 6 of the
International Covenant on Civil and    Political Rights (ICCPR). And
while some of the 99 policemen killed in    incidents surveyed by the
team may have been members of armed groups, others    who were not also
had their right to life violated.

* The inquiry team also says that a number of Palestinians were used as
human    shields - itself a violation of the ICCPR - including Majdi
Abed Rabbo,    whose complaints about being so used were first aired in
The Independent.    The report asserts that the use of human shields
constitutes a "war crime    under the Rome statute of the International
Criminal Court."


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