UN Fails Qana, HRW Blames the
Zionist entity
BEIRUT — A divided United
Nations Security Council has failed the Qana massacre test coming short of a
clear condemnation and demand for an immediate ceasefire as requested by the UN
chief, while the Human Rights Watch held Tel Aviv solely responsible for the
grisly attack.
"The
Security Council strongly deplores this loss of innocent lives and the killing
of all civilians in the present conflict," said a statement issued late
Sunday, July 30, and cited by Agence France-Presse (AFP).
The United States, in an
emergency meeting of the Security Council, forced the 15-member body to water
down its official statement, which was highly critical of the Zionist entity.
US ambassador John Bolton led
opposition to any stronger wording during another tough day of negotiations over
Lebanon.
"What we
object to is conclusory language about the nature of the incident and language
that attempts to foreshadow the political solution," Bolton argued.
Washington had also block any
condemnation of the Zionist entity in a statement released after the killing of
four UN peacekeepers in a Zionist shelling last week.
Qatar, which proposed the Qana
measure, had wanted to call the attack "deliberate"
and to call for a ceasefire.
The council met in emergency
session at the request of UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan and Lebanese Prime
Minister Fouad Siniora after the Zionist raid left at least 60 people, including
37 children, dead.
"We must
condemn this action in the strongest possible terms, and I appeal to you to do
likewise," Annan told the council.
"I'm
deeply dismayed that my earlier calls for immediate cessation of hostilities
were not heard, with the result that innocent lives continue to be taken and
innocent civilians continue to suffer," he said.
The council asked Annan to
report back on the details of the Qana attack in a week.
"Free-Fire Zone"
The New York-based Human Rights
Watch said Sunday that responsibility for the Qana massacre rests squarely with
the Zionist military.
"Today's
strike on Qana, killing at least 54 civilians, more than half of them children,
suggests that the Israeli military is treating southern Lebanon as a free-fire
zone," HRW Executive Director Kenneth Roth said in a statement.
"The Israeli
military seems to consider anyone left in the area a combatant who is fair game
for attack."
He said the Zionist entity has
no excuse whatsoever to target innocent civilians.
"Just
because the Israeli military warned the civilians of Qana to leave does not give
it carte blanche to blindly attack," Roth said in a press release.
"It still must
make every possible effort to target only genuine combatants."
Qana residents refuted the
Zionist allegation that the village was used as a launch pad for Hizbullah's
rockets, saying that no body has ever seen a Hizbullah launch pad or fighter in
the area.
Hizbullah, which has inflicted
heavy losses on the invading Zionist troops, repeatedly gainsaid similar Zionist
claims, insisting its fighters operate only from remote non-residential areas.
Roth said such consistent
failure to distinguish combatants and civilians is a "war
crime."
He further said the
"appalling loss" of civilian life in Qana
underscores the need for Annan to establish an international commission of
inquiry to investigate serious violations of international humanitarian law.
The international watchdog said
its researchers have been in Lebanon since the onset of the current hostilities
on July 12 and have documented dozens of cases in which Zionist forces have
carried out indiscriminate attacks against civilians.
A report of these findings and
their legal consequences will be issued later this week.
Israel has faced widespread
condemnation after the Qana massacre, with British Foreign Secretary Margaret
Beckett dismissing it as "absolutely dreadful and quite
appalling."
The strike was less than a
kilometer from the mass grave of 110 Lebanese civilians killed in 1996 when the
Zionist entity bombarded their UN shelter.
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