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Israel reneges on investigation of Jenin atrocities
By Patrick Martin
25 April 2002
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After a Tuesday night cabinet meeting, the government of Ariel
Sharon reversed its decision to cooperate with a UN investigation
into the deaths of Palestinians at the refugee camp outside Jenin,
on the West Bank. Cabinet spokesmen suggested the UN probe would
have to shift its focus to include Palestinian suicide bombings
in Israel, or it might be barred from entering the devastated
camp, which is still surrounded by Israeli troops.
The Jenin investigation was approved by a unanimous 15-0 Security
Council vote April 19, after an Arab-sponsored resolution which
also called for immediate withdrawal of Israeli military forces
from the West Bank was blocked by the threat of a US veto. Both
the Bush administration and the Sharon government initially declared
their support for a UN probe. Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon
Peres declared, Israel has nothing to hide.
Evidently, Sharon and the Israeli Defense Forces high command
feel differently. As soon as UN Secretary General Kofi Annan announced
the composition of the investigatory commissionformer Finnish
President Marti Ahtisaari, as chair, together with Sadako Ogata,
former UN high commissioner for refugees, and Cornelio Sommaruga,
former head of the International Committee of the Red Crossthe
Israeli government began to balk.
First, the Israelis protested that the panel should be more
balanced, including military and counter-terrorism experts
as well as those with backgrounds in humanitarian aid work. Annan
accommodated these concerns by adding to the commission Major
General William Nash, a retired US army officer with experience
in the Persian Gulf War and Kosovo.
Then the Israelis objected to any participation by Sommaruga,
who has previously criticized Israeli human rights violations
in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The Sharon government had already
vetoed three other UN officials as potential members of the commission:
Terje Roed-Larsen, the UN representative for Mideast talks; UN
High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson; and Peter Hansen,
head of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian
refugees.
After a visit to Jenin last week, Roed-Larsen expressed outrage
over the Israeli militarys destruction of the camp, declaring,
Combating terrorism does not give a blank check to kill
civilians. The Israeli press launched a smear campaign against
the Norwegian diplomat, who played a key role in the 1993 Oslo
accords, branding him an apologist for terrorism.
When Iraqi President Saddam Hussein sought to veto the participation
of American officialslater revealed to be CIA and Pentagon
spiesin UN weapons inspections, Washington declared that
Iraq could not be allowed to dictate to the UN. No such objections
have been made to the Israeli effort to control the composition
of the panel investigating the Jenin atrocities.
Finally, the Israelis attacked the terms of reference for the
investigation laid out by Kofi Annan, insisting that it should
engage solely in fact-finding and should come to no
conclusions. The Sharon government also demanded that any testimony
and evidence collected should be the exclusive property of the
UN commission, and not be turned over to any other authority.
Behind this legalistic quibbling is a real concern: that the
UN investigation could lay the basis for indicting Sharon and
other Israeli officials for violations of the Geneva Conventions.
Cabinet spokesman Gideon Meir called the probe a setup to
accuse Israel of war crimes.
US officials claimed to be urging Sharon and his cabinet to
cooperate with the UN inquiry. That was our resolution,
a State Department spokesman told the press. We believe
it should be implemented. Secretary of State Colin Powell
telephoned Sharon and discussed the Israeli decision to delay
or even shut down the probe.
The dispute between the Bush administration and Sharon over
the UN investigation appears to be following the same pattern
as the public divergence over Bushs call for an immediate
withdrawal of Israeli military forces from the West Bank, with
the US government saying one thing for the record, mainly for
European and Arab consumption, while privately giving the Israelis
a green light to continue their hard-line policy.
Human rights violations
Senior officials of Amnesty International, the Red Cross, and
other humanitarian aid groups have already begun to assemble evidence
of human rights violations in Jenin and elsewhere on the West
Bank to present to the UN commission.
Rene Kosirnik, regional chairman of the Red Cross, told a press
conference that the Israeli Defense Forces violated international
norms both in the physical destruction inflicted on the Jenin
camp and by preventing Red Cross rescue teams and other aid workers
from getting into the camp for nearly a week. Undoubtedly many
of those who were wounded and died in the conflict could have
been saved by prompt medical intervention.
Putting the case mildly, Kosirnik said, When we are confronted
with the extent of destruction in the Jenin refugee camp, in an
area of civilian concentration, it is difficult to accept that
international humanitarian law has been fully respected.
At a news conference in London, Amnesty International charged
Israel with very serious violations of human rights
in Jenin. The group called for a fuller investigation to determine
if Israel was guilty of war crimes, including summary executions,
failure to protect civilians, use of excessive force, use of civilians
as human shields, and deliberate and wanton destruction of property.
Amnesty said the complaints from Palestinian witnesses suggested
a systematic pattern of abuse, rather than isolated cases of indiscipline
by Israeli soldiers. There was no effort to give the 13,000 people
in the refugee camp an opportunity to escape before the military
onslaught began. Instead, the entire population was treated as
the enemy.
A forensic pathologist who traveled to Jenin on behalf of Amnesty,
Derrick Pounder of Dundee University, Scotland, said the most
disturbing finding was the absence of severely wounded patients
in the local hospital, despite the fact that there is typically
a ratio of three wounded for every death in a combat situation.
Given the 40 Palestinians the IDF claims were killed in Jenin,
there should be well over a hundred wounded. We draw the
conclusion that they were allowed to die where they were,
Pounder said.
The number killed at Jenin has been impossible to determine
because of the enormous scale of the devastation and Israeli restrictions
on access to the camp. Initially the IDF estimated the number
of dead at 200, and proposed to remove the bodies in refrigerated
trucks to a common mass grave in the Jordan Valley. After an Israeli
Supreme Court order blocking that action, the number of bodies
was suddenly discovered to be only dozens, and these
were mainly shattered pieces that had to be dug out of the ruins
by hand.
Palestinians have charged that many bodies have been burned
or otherwise disposed of by the Israeli military, and that dozens
if not hundreds of remains are still buried in the wreckage. The
circumstantial evidence supports these claims. Aid agencies have
found that 600 homes in Jenin have been destroyed and another
200 made uninhabitable. Given the density of the population, these
homes must have sheltered many thousands before Israeli tanks,
helicopter gunships, armored cars and bulldozers moved in.
Even after the withdrawal of IDF troops from the camp, Israel
continues to block rescue and salvage efforts. The Israeli newspaper
Haaretz reported that a team of 34 Greek earthquake
rescue experts was sitting on a runway at the Athens airport,
in a plane loaded with equipment, because the Israeli Foreign
Ministry told the Greek government there is no need for
such a team, and denied permission to enter the West Bank.
A destructive rampage
Press accounts in the aftermath of the withdrawal of Israeli
troops from most of the West Banks towns and cities have
made clear that the events in Jenin were only the most terrible
in a rampage that took place throughout the occupied territory.
In Nablus, soldiers stole computer equipment, vandalized stores
and broke open safes. They demanded money and jewels in the homes
they invaded, destroyed family photographs and smashed furniture.
They daubed anti-Arab slogans on the walls of buildings. Three
mosques, a Roman Catholic Church and the 400-year-old Turkish
baths were heavily damaged. Israeli soldiers killed 75 Palestinians,
the largest admitted death toll of any of the cities invaded.
In Ramallah, Israeli tanks smashed buildings, roads, parked
cars and street lights. Israeli soldiers broke into dozens of
stores and looted them, and defaced monuments in the central square.
A dress shop owner told the Washington Post that troops
took over his home and stole a mobile phone, cash equivalent to
about $200, some antiques and his sons GameBoy.
At one bank, reporters saw an ATM machine that had been yanked
out of the wall, while tellers drawers were pried open and
holes were drilled into the vault. Computers and telephone equipment
were deliberately smashed, and the soldiers taped a large Star
of David and the number of their unit onto the front entrance.
The offices of nearly every ministry of the Palestinian Authority
were laid waste. In the Education Ministry, Israeli soldiers removed
the hard drives of every computer, seizing test records for students,
payroll time sheets, and construction contracts for the building
of schools. They also blew open safes and removed cash, documents
and official seals. Acting education minister Naim Abu Hommos
told the New York Times, The only conclusion I can
make is they dont want to see any Palestinian institution
able to work again.
The Los Angeles Times gave a detailed account of the
destruction in dozens of Palestinian government offices with functions
ranging from education to health care to public works, with partial
estimates placing losses as high as $450 million:
In ministry after ministry, computers, photocopiers and
other electronic machines were heaped in piles, destroyed by explosions
and fire. Important files were missing. Telephones were smashed.
Pictures were ripped from the walls.
In the Ministry of Public Works, the destruction included outright
vandalism with no conceivable military purpose: Couches
and chairs were slashed, the stuffing spilling out. A map of the
region had the West Bank torn out. Even the ministers personal
toilet was shattered.
This kind of thievery, vandalism, individual violence and destruction
expresses, not the stress of combat, but an intense hatred directed
against an entire people or race.
In that sense, the devastation of the West Bank over the past
month recalls the conduct of American forces in Vietnam, or even
that of the German Nazis on the eastern front in World War II,
who viewed the invasion of the Soviet Union as a war of extermination
against the Russian and other Slavic peoples. The American Jewish
peace activist, Adam Shapiro, compared Ramallah and Nablus to
German cities after Kristallnacht, the 1938 rampage of anti-Semitic
violence instigated by Hitler.
See Also:
Bush defends Sharon as Jenin massacre
provokes international condemnation
[20 April 2002]
Powell ends Mideast trip: a US cover
for Israeli war crimes
[18 April 2002]
European governments give Sharon a free
hand against the Palestinians
[16 April 2002]
Israeli devastation of West Bank paves
way for mass expulsions
[12 April 2002]
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