Human Rights Watch Accuses
the Zionist entity of War Crimes
By Jim Lobe
08/02/06 "IPS" -- --
In systematically failing to distinguish between Hezbollah
fighters and civilian population in its three-and-a-half-week-old military
campaign in Lebanon, the Zionist Defense Forces (IDF)
have committed war crimes, according to
a report released by Human Rights Watch Wednesday.
The 50-page report,
"Fatal Strikes: Israel's Indiscriminate Attacks Against Civilians in Lebanon,"
detailed nearly two dozen cases of IDF attacks in which a total of 153
civilians, including 63 children, were killed in homes or motor vehicles.
In none of the cases did HRW researchers find
evidence that there was a significant enough military objective to justify the
attack, given the risks to civilian lives, while, in many cases, there was no
identifiable military target. In still other cases cited in the report,
Zionist forces appear to have deliberately targeted
civilians.
"By consistently
failing to distinguish between combatants and civilians, Israel has violated one
of the most fundamental tenets of the laws of war: the duty to carry out attacks
on only military targets," according to the report.
"The pattern of attacks
during the Israeli offensive in Lebanon suggests that the failures cannot be
explained or dismissed as mere accidents; the extent of the pattern and the
seriousness of the consequences indicate the commission of war crimes,"
it concluded.
The report, which was based on interviews
with victims and independent witnesses of attacks, as well as investigation of
the sites where the attacks occurred, called for the United States to
immediately suspend transfers to the Zionist entity of
arms, ammunition, and other material credibly alleged to have been used in such
attacks until they cease.
In addition, it called on United Nations
Secretary-General Kofi Annan to establish a formal commission to investigate the
alleged war crimes with a view to holding accountable those responsible for
their commission.
Such a commission should also investigate
Hezbollah's rocket attacks against the Zionist entity
which have been the subject of previous HRW reports. Since the onset of the
latest round of fighting July 12, Hezbollah has launched some 2,000 rockets into
predominantly civilian areas in the Zionist entity,
killing at least 19 Zionist civilians and wounding more
than 300 others. Given the inherently indiscriminate nature of the rockets,
these attacks also constitute war crimes, according to the New York-based group.
The report, whose main conclusions about
the Zionists failure to discriminate between civilian and
military targets echo a statement by Amnesty International two days ago, was
issued just hours after HRW released the preliminary results of its
investigation of the July 30 Zionist air strike on an
apartment building in Qana in southern Lebanon, which was initially reported to
have killed 54 people, most of them children, who had taken refuge in the
basement.
HRW, which took testimony from some of the
nine survivors it identified, said that it had confirmed the deaths of 28
people, including 16 children, in the building and that 13 others remained
missing and were believed to be buried in the rubble. It said that at least 22
people survived the attack and escaped the basement.
One of the survivors, Muhammad Mahmud
Shalhoub, as well as a Qana villager who helped in the rescue effort, strongly
denied initial Zionist claims that any Hezbollah fighters
or rocket launchers were present in or around the home when the attack took
place. HRW said its own on-site investigation, which took place July 31, as well
as interviews with dozens of international journalists, rescue workers and
international observers who visited Qana July 30 and 31, also yielded no
evidence of any Hezbollah military presence in or around the building.
"The deaths in Qana
were the predictable result of Israel's indiscriminate bombing campaign in
Lebanon," said Sarah Leah Whitson, director of HRW's Middle East and
North Africa Division, who called for international investigation to determine
what took place.
The Zionist entity
has insisted that it has tried hard to avoid civilian
casualties, although the great majority of the more than 500 Lebanese who have
reportedly been killed by Zionist fire have been
civilians. The Zionist entity has claimed that
Hezbollah's alleged practice of shielding its fighters and arms by locating them
in civilian homes or areas and firing off missiles in populated areas –
allegations which HRW said are the subject of ongoing investigations – has made
civilian casualties unavoidable.
But the rights group said its own
investigations of specific Zionist attacks, which
included interviews with victims and witnesses, on-site visits, as well as
corroboration, where available, by accounts by independent journalists and aid
workers, had failed to uncover any evidence that Hezbollah was operating in or
around the area during or before each attack.
"Hezbollah fighters
must not hide behind civilians – that's an absolute – but the image that Israel
has promoted of such shielding as the cause of so high a civilian death toll is
wrong," according to HRW's executive director, Kenneth Roth.
"In the many cases of civilian deaths examined by [us],
the location of Hezbollah troops and arms had nothing to do with the deaths
because there was no Hezbollah around."
He cited a July 13 attack which destroyed the
home of a cleric known to be a Hezbollah sympathizer but with no record of
having taken part in hostilities. The strike killed the cleric's wife, their 10
children, the family's Sri Lankan maid, as well as the cleric himself, according
to the report.
In a July 16 attack on a home in Aitaroun, a
Zionist aircraft killed 11 members of the al-Akhrass family, including
seven Canadian-Lebanese dual nationals who were vacationing in the village at
the time. HRW said it interviewed three villagers independently, all of whom
denied that the family had any connection to Hezbollah. Among the victims were
four children under the age of eight.
The report also assailed statements by
Zionist officials and IDF commanders that only people
associated with Hezbollah remain in southern Lebanon, so all are legitimate
targets of attack. The Zionist entity has dropped
leaflets in the region and even telephoned residents warning them that if they
do not flee, they will be subject to attack.
But the report stressed that many civilians
have been unable to leave because they are sick, wounded, or lack the means,
such as money or gasoline, or are providing essential services to the civilian
population that remains there. Still others have said they are afraid to leave
because the roads have come under attack by Zionist
warplanes and artillery.
Indeed, the report documents 27 deaths of
civilians who were trying to flee the fighting by car and notes that the actual
number of killings is "surely higher." In addition, the report cites air strikes
against three clearly marked humanitarian aid vehicles.
"The pattern of attacks
shows the Israeli military's disturbing disregard for the lives of Lebanese
civilians," said Roth. "Israeli warnings of
imminent attacks do not turn civilians into military targets," he added,
noting that, according to the IDF's logic, "Palestinian
militant groups might 'warn' Israeli settlers to leave their settlements and
then feel justified in attacking those who remained."
Amnesty accused the Zionist
entity of trying to convert southern Lebanon into a
"free-fire zone," which it said Monday was
"incompatible with international humanitarian law."
Copyright © 2006 IPS-Inter Press Service. All
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