Human Rights Watch: Israel, Hamas Violating International Law

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Human Rights Watch: Israel, Hamas Violating International Law stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS


First Posted: 12-30-08 02:18 PM   |   Updated: 01-30-09 05:12 AM

I Like ItI Don’t Like It
Gaza

New York, December 30, 2008 - Israel and Hamas both must respect the prohibition under the laws of war against deliberate and indiscriminate attacks on civilians, Human Rights Watch said today. Human Rights Watch expressed grave concern about Israeli bombings in Gaza that caused civilian deaths and Palestinian rocket attacks on Israeli civilian areas in violation of international law.

Rocket attacks on Israeli towns by Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups that do not discriminate between civilians and military targets violate the laws of war, while a rising number of the hundreds of Israeli bombings in Gaza since December 27, 2008, appear to be unlawful attacks causing civilian casualties. Additionally, Israel's severe limitations on the movement of non-military goods and people into and out of Gaza, including fuel and medical supplies, constitutes collective punishment, also in violation of the laws of war.

"Firing rockets into civilian areas with the intent to harm and terrorize Israelis has no justification whatsoever, regardless of Israel's actions in Gaza," said Joe Stork, deputy director of Human Rights Watch's Middle East and North Africa division. "At the same time, Israel should not target individuals and institutions in Gaza solely because they are part of the Hamas-run political authority, including ordinary police. Only attacks on military targets are permissible, and only in a manner that minimizes civilian casualties."

Human Rights Watch investigated three Israeli attacks that raise particular concern about Israel's targeting decisions and require independent and impartial inquiries to determine whether the attacks violated the laws of war. In three incidents detailed below, 18 civilians died, among them at least seven children.

On Saturday, December 27, the first day of Israel's aerial attacks, witnesses told Human Rights Watch that shortly after 1 p.m. an Israeli air-to-ground missile struck a group of students leaving the Gaza Training College, adjacent to the headquarters of the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) in downtown Gaza City. The students were waiting to board buses to transport them to their homes in Khan Yunis and Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip. The strike killed eight students, ages 18 to 20, and wounded 19 others.

A UNRWA security guard stationed at the college entrance told Human Rights Watch that he used his UN radio to call for medical help. He said the attack also killed two other civilians, Hisham al-Rayes, 28, and his brother Alam, 26, whose family ran a small shop opposite the college entrance. The guard said that the only potential target nearby was the Gaza governorate building, which deals with civil matters, about 150 meters away from where the missile struck. Another UNRWA security guard who also witnessed the attack told Human Rights Watch: "There wasn't anybody else around - no police, army, or Hamas."

The second incident occurred shortly before midnight on Sunday, December 28, when Israeli warplanes fired one or more missiles at the Imad Aqil mosque in Jabalya, a densely populated refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip. The attack killed five of Anwar Balousha's daughters who were sleeping in a bedroom of their nearby house: Jawaher, 4; Dina, 8; Samar, 12; Ikram, 14; and Tahrir, 18. "We were asleep and we woke to the sound of bombing and the rubble falling on the house and on our heads," Anwar Balousha told Human Rights Watch. The Balousha's three-room house is just across a small street from the mosque.

The two-story Imad Aqil mosque, named after a deceased Hamas member, is regarded by Palestinians in the area as a "Hamas mosque" - that is, a place where the group's supporters gather for political meetings or to assemble for demonstrations, and where death notices of Hamas members are posted. Mosques are presumptively civilian objects and their use for political activities does not change that. Human Rights Watch said that the attack on Imad Aql mosque would be lawful only if Israel could demonstrate that it was being used to store weapons and ammunition or served some other military purpose. Even if that were the case, Israel still had an obligation to take all feasible precautions to minimize harm to civilians and ensure that any likely civilian harm was not disproportionate to the expected military gain.

Story continues below
advertisement

In the third incident, at around 1 a.m. on Monday, December 29, an Israeli helicopter fired two missiles into the Rafah refugee camp. One struck the home of a senior Hamas commander; the other struck the home of the al-Absi family, about 150 meters away, killing three brothers - Sedqi, 3, Ahmad, 12, and Muhammad, 13 - and wounding two sisters and the children's mother. Ziad al-Absi, 46, the children's father, told Human Rights Watch that at around 10:30 p.m. on Sunday, armed Palestinians had gathered near their home, firing machine guns at Israeli helicopters. "I and the neighbors argued with the militants, told them this is a populated area and this will put us into peril," he said. According to al-Absi's nephew, Iyad al-Absi, 27, the fighters refused to leave. When their commander arrived at about 11 p.m. and ordered them to leave, they again refused. The fighters finally left at around 11:15, but only after an exchange of gunfire between the fighters and their commander. Al-Absi said that he and his family then went to sleep. He told his nephew and other relatives that there was no further armed activity in the area prior to the missile strike on his house, almost two hours later. Ziad al-Absi said the blast had thrown one daughter onto a neighbor's balcony. The children's mother is in hospital intensive care; the two daughters are also in the hospital.

Human Rights Watch noted that many of Israel's airstrikes, especially during the first day, targeted police stations as well as security and militia installations controlled by Hamas. According to the Jerusalem Post, an attack on the police academy in Gaza City on December 27 killed at least 40, including dozens of cadets at their graduation ceremony as well as the chief of police, making it the single deadliest air attack of the campaign to date. Another attack, on a traffic police station in the central Gaza town of Deir al-Balah, killed a by-stander, 12-year-old Camilia Ra`fat al-Burdini. Under the laws of war, police and police stations are presumptively civilian unless the police are Hamas fighters or taking a direct part in the hostilities, or police stations are being used for military purposes.

"Israel must not make a blanket decision that all police and police stations are by definition legitimate military targets," Stork said. "It depends upon whether those police play a role in fighting against Israel, or whether a particular police station is used to store weapons or for some other military purpose."

Some other Israeli targets may have also been unlawful under the laws of war. Three teenagers were killed in southern Gaza City on December 27, when Israeli aircraft struck a building rented by Wa`ed (Promise), a Hamas-affiliated organization that defends prisoners held by Israel. Israel justified its attack on Gaza City's Islamic University on grounds that laboratories were used to manufacture explosives, but this did not address why a second strike demolished the women's quarters there. Israel also attacked the Hamas-affiliated Al-Aqsa TV, but did not provide a reason. Television and radio stations are legitimate military targets only if used for military purposes, not if they are simply being used for pro-Hamas or anti-Israel propaganda.

Human Rights Watch expressed grave concern about the seriously deteriorating humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip, which was already dire prior to the latest attacks. A health expert with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Gaza said on December 28 that hospitals were "overwhelmed and unable to cope with the scale and type of injuries that keep coming in." The ICRC noted that medical supplies and medicines were already badly depleted as a result of Israel's prohibition of most imports into Gaza since Hamas took full internal control of the territory in June 2007. In a statement on December 29, the ICRC said that some neighborhoods were running short of water, owing to damage from attacks or fuel and power shortages. The statement also said that prices for food and basic commodities were reportedly rising fast. UNRWA had reported several days prior to the latest escalation of fighting that its stocks of essential commodities were extremely low.

According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), which also monitors security matters in Gaza, Palestinian armed groups fired more than 100 rockets towards Israel on December 27-28; Haaretz, the Israeli daily, reported that on December 29 Palestinian armed groups fired at least 60 rockets into Israel. One of them killed a Bedouin construction worker, 27-year-old Hani al-Mahdi, and wounded 14 others in the coastal city of Ashkelon, north of Gaza; another fatally wounded 39-year-old Irit Sheetrit while she was driving home in the city of Ashdod, 35 kilometers from Gaza. The previous day, December 28, a rocket attack killed another Israeli civilian and wounded four in Netivot, some 20 kilometers east of Gaza City.

Human Rights Watch has long criticized Palestinian rocket attacks against Israeli civilians - most recently, in a public letter to Hamas on November 20. The rockets are highly inaccurate, and those launching them cannot accurately target military objects. Deliberately firing indiscriminate weapons into civilian populated areas, as a matter of policy, constitutes a war crime. Rocket attacks have killed 19 civilians in Israel since 2005, including those killed to date during the current clashes.

Human Rights Watch has also criticized Israel's policy of severely restricting the flow of people and goods into Gaza, including fuel and other civilian necessities, saying that those restrictions amount to collective punishment against the civilian population, a serious violation of the laws of war. Israel continues to exercise effective control over Gaza's borders and airspace as well as its population registry, and remains the occupying power there under international law. The laws of war prohibit the occupying power from attacking, destroying, or withholding objects essential to the survival of the civilian population. Israel is also obliged to protect the right of Palestinians in Gaza to freedom of movement, to secure access to health care and education, and to lead normal lives.

New York, December 30, 2008 - Israel and Hamas both must respect the prohibition under the laws of war against deliberate and indiscriminate attacks on civilians, Human Rights Watch said today. Human ...
New York, December 30, 2008 - Israel and Hamas both must respect the prohibition under the laws of war against deliberate and indiscriminate attacks on civilians, Human Rights Watch said today. Human ...
Filed by Hanna Ingber Win  |  Report Corrections
 
Comments
22
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:

As other have pointed out it is simply a lie to say that Hamas targets civilians.

An organisation that lies to defame the victims of genocide is no human rights group.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:42 PM on 12/31/2008
photo

Let me get this straight:

According to HRW if I hold up a bank and take a hostage who end up getting killed by the police in an ensuing firefight, instead of me, the hostage taker, being charged with responsibility for the death, the police would be responsible and charged with murder?!! Give me a break. That's not how it works.

Hamas has taken the civilians hostage by purposely putting military operations in civilian neighborho­ods/areas. They should be charged with war crimes and condemned by the international community. They are SOLELY responsible for the deaths and them alone. Their is no moral equivalency here. Hamas targets civilians and they hide behind civilians.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:06 PM on 12/31/2008
- arvay I'm a Fan of arvay 140 fans permalink
photo

The two situations aren't comparable, unless the police call in air strikes and obliterate the neighborhood where the hostages are being held.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 12/31/2008
photo

Sorry but they are comparable. The law is very simple. If you use civilians as a shield then you are responsible for their well being. In the case of a hostage it is the hostage taker who is responsible for the well being of those hostages. PERIOD.
While it is always sad to see civilians killed, that is precisely what Hamas wants. They use those images against Israel on the world stage. From their perspective they can't lose. If Israel doesn't fight back then Hamas wins. If Israel does shoot back then Hamas wins. Hamas does not care at all about the civilians.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:53 PM on 12/31/2008
- arvay I'm a Fan of arvay 140 fans permalink
photo

As a supporter of Palestinian rights, I've always been uncomfortable with the targeting of civilians, despite the fact that Israel has willfully killed many, many more civilians, intentionally, with its vastly superior and more accurate weapons.

The Palestinians and Hizbollah do not so much target civilians as fire very inaccurate weapons, which frequently land in civilian areas. It was frustrating to see Hizbollah rockets landing in cities during the Israeli bombing of Lebanon when there were so many splendid, military targets of opportunity arrayed right there on the border.

I hope the Palestinian groups can obtain much more accurate missiles, so that they can target Israel's business and military infrastructure, which will make a real difference in this fight. All the Arab and Iranian sympathizers should focus on making this a reality.

Killing civilians only helps Israel. Bombing civilians only toughens resistance.

Successful strikes on massed tanks and artillery, airfields and military industries would be much more desirable. Knocking out Israel's nuclear weapons facility at Dimona would be a real contribution to regional peace. I hope at least Hizbollah now has such weapons and will use the next time on real strategic targets. Getting such weapons to Gaza may have to wait until the Egyptian people dispose of their fat, corrupt Quisling "leadershi­p."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:12 AM on 12/31/2008
- loki I'm a Fan of loki 128 fans permalink
photo

and what will be the outcome of this report? about the same as it was when the US was published as being human right violators. Not a thing. People are not as worried about human rights unless its their personal rights being violated at the time. If its not in my back yard attitude is everywhere these days. Thats why we are in the troubles we are around the world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:42 PM on 12/30/2008
- Nicolaus I'm a Fan of Nicolaus 9 fans permalink

Sure...
After nearly four years of starving the Gazans of food, water, fuel, medicine, medical equipment, and targeted assassination Human Rights Watch speaketh..­. to condemn those who want food, water, fuel, medicine, medical equipment and a stop to 'targeted' assassination! Well.. May be they were asleep on the watch?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:07 PM on 12/30/2008
- LillianB I'm a Fan of LillianB 9 fans permalink

If you read the above, you'll see that both the Israeli government and the Hamas government of Gaza are (and I'd say rightfully) condemned for breaches on human rights. The palestinian people of Gaza (victims) and the jewish people of Israel (among them, victims too, though not as large a percentage as in the neighboring areas) are not.

War crimes are committed by both leaderships. In both cases, the people - civilians - end up suffering.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:32 PM on 12/31/2008
- LeeCalif I'm a Fan of LeeCalif 68 fans permalink

The number of dead bodies in this one picture is more then all that have been killed in Israel by those
rockets sent by Hamas.

Now Israel, on the other hand uses MISSILES. They kill HUNDREDS more people.

That's A fact.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:38 PM on 12/30/2008
- Jezreel I'm a Fan of Jezreel 62 fans permalink
photo

Agreed, LeeCalif.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:22 AM on 12/31/2008
- AZ AF VET I'm a Fan of AZ AF VET 8 fans permalink
photo

This whole Mid east problem is maddening. I'm 62 and they have been fighting as long as I can remember. I was in Libya during the 6 day war in1967. The land captured by Israel in that war is still being fought over. Until both sides are able to forgive the other for past trangressions we will not see peace in our lifetimes. Immagine if they co-operated by building hospitals and schools together and find common ground in their religions which are based on a common biblical figure. I look at the pictures of the dead be they Palestnian or Jew and they look alike, a life cut short due to hatred.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:22 PM on 12/30/2008
photo

This is all very interesting, but what "laws of war" are we talking about? I would hazard a guess that Hamas has never subscribed to any of these. As for Israel, it seems to swing wildly from patient restraint, to frustrated lashing-out.

However, I think the case can be made that that the Israeli war machine , while much more effective, is generally targeted toward the actual enemy, and that civilian deaths are not intended. On the other hand, the missile lobbing by Hamas is totally random; it would be only by chance if they actually killed a soldier or Israeli police officer. So for random acts of terror, Hamas wins hands-down.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:09 PM on 12/30/2008
- 11907281 I'm a Fan of 11907281 14 fans permalink
photo

Would you support the Arab states giving the palestinians advanced weapon systems similar to the ones the USA gives to Israel, in an attempt to avoid "lobbing rockets" at civilians? Make it a fair fight?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:24 PM on 12/30/2008
photo

No, I'm not a proponent of the international arms trade benefiting either side.

I would be in favor of a truce if there were some way to pressure each side to abide by it. I am guessing if Hamas stopped lobbing rockets and arming suicide bombers, then Israel would stop bombing Hamas buildings and targeting Hamas missile-makers. On the other side, I don't know what would stop Hamas from doing what they are doing. Some would say a great lessening of the quarantine of Gaza, but I can understand Israeli skepticism. There is nothing even vaguely like trust. The people and goods won't flow until the missiles and bombs stop. Just my simplistic thinking.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:40 PM on 12/30/2008

"Laws" go out the window when war happens. . .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:36 PM on 12/30/2008
- HARVIN I'm a Fan of HARVIN 7 fans permalink

International law is a fantasy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:22 PM on 12/30/2008
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect