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Israel expels relatives of assassinated Al-Aqsa Brigades member
By Harvey Thompson
18 September 2002
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On September 3, Israels supreme court ruled in favour
of forcibly expelling relatives suspected of helping a Palestinian
alleged to have planned a bombing. The court decision ignored
protests from human rights groups pointing out that the action
contravened international law.
The ruling marks the first time since the Intifada began two
years ago that Israel has attempted to deport relatives of those
allegedly linked to bombings and other acts. Israel has punished
Palestinians by demolishing family homes, but deportation has
not been used since a mass expulsion to Lebanon in 1992.
The Israeli military claim that the two Palestinians, Intisar
and Kifah Ajouri, helped hide their brother, Ali Ajouri, a member
of the al-Aqsa Brigades, who was suspected of masterminding a
bombing in Tel Aviv on July 17 that killed five people.
The Israeli army demolished the family house on the West Bank
in July. Ali Ajouri was assassinated during a military operation
on August 6. Now the family members have been expelled from the
West Bank to the Gaza Strip.
The court ruled that the West Bank and Gaza form one territorial
unit and that the expulsions therefore did not violate international
law. But since the army has cut off all access to and from Gaza,
the impact on the two will be the same as being sent abroad.
Dalia Kersstein from the human rights groups HaMoked, which
is working with the family, feared their expulsion would be the
first of many: We fear it will be the first car on a train
riding to Gaza. The Israeli defence ministry quickly confirmed
her fears, saying the army had more candidates for expulsion.
The Palestinian Authority said it might file a complaint with
the new International Criminal Court. Palestinian chief negotiator
Saeb Erekat; This is a sad and black day for human rights.
The chief justice, Aharon Barak, said the military could only
expel a relative of a militant if that person presented a real
security threat.
The two Palestinians have been in detention since June 4 and
July 18 respectively, but have never been charged and no proceedings
have been initiated to bring them to trial. The Israeli government
claims that it cannot try them because this would expose the source
of the evidence against them.
Amnesty International (AI) stated that the ruling effectively
allows for a grave violation of one of the most basic principles
of international human rights lawnotably the right of any
accused to a fair trial and to challenge any evidence used against
them.
The AI statement went on to declare that the landmark decision
against the Ajouris also constitutes a breach of international
humanitarian law. According to the Fourth Geneva Convention, Palestinians
living in those territories that have been under Israeli military
occupation since 1967 are protected persons. Therefore, The
unlawful forcible transfer of protected persons constitutes a
war crime under both the Fourth Geneva Convention and the Rome
Statute of the International Criminal Court. Under the Rome Statute
such violations may also constitute crimes against humanity.
The High Court of Justice ruled that forcible transfer to the
Gaza Strip can only be used for people who have been personally
involved in serious crimes and cannot be used as a deterrent,
but it is an open secret that forcible transfers are being used
as a form of collective punishment. Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva
Convention states, No protected person may be punished for
an offence he or she has not personally committed.
Twenty-four hours after the Israeli High Court of Justice decision
to accept the transfer of Kifah and Intissar Ajouri, the two were
dumped in the Gaza Strip near Netzarim settlement. The two were
expected to arrive in the Gaza Strip through the Erez crossing,
but the Israeli military transported them using settler roads
and left them on agricultural land surrounding the Netzarim settlement,
south of Gaza City.
In the week leading up to the Israeli supreme court decision,
there was a stepping up of human rights violations against Palestinian
civilians by the Israeli occupying forces.
Just days before the court decision, 14 Palestiniansall
but one of them civilianswere killed by the Israeli military.
On August 31, Israeli occupying forces assassinated a member of
the Palestinian Military Intelligence Service, in an operation
during which four children were killed and six others were wounded.
Two Israeli Apache helicopters fired three missiles at a civilian
car, killing one man accused by Israel of heading the al-Aqsa
Martyrs Brigade in Tubas, and two youths who were in the car.
Two passing children were also killed. The second missile, apparently
overshooting the target, struck a house, demolishing it and killing
a boy, aged nine, and a girl, thought to be aged six.
Nabil Shaath, the Palestinian Minister of Planning, condemned
the Toubas attack as a filthy, appalling crime that
he said was a repetition of previous assassination crimes
conducted by Israel aimed at escalating the military situation
to avoid sitting at the negotiating table.
In an apparent extra-judicial execution, on September 1, Israeli
forces shot dead four Palestinian labourers in Bani Nam
village in Hebron. The four were arrested at a marble company
where they were working, taken to an adjacent area and shot dead.
In the Gaza Strip, Israeli forces shelled and carried out incursions
into Palestinian areas. On August 29, the Israeli Defence Force
moved into a residential area in Rafah. They opened fire, killing
a child and wounding eight civilians, and demolished 21 Palestinian
stores.
On September 3, the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) moved into
al-Salam neighbourhood in Rafah and began demolishing a family
home as its residents were sleeping, without any prior warning.
Neighbours were prevented from offering help to the wounded. Throughout
the week, the IDF shelled Palestinian residential areas in Khan
Yunis, wounding at least eight Palestinian civilians.
See Also:
Israeli government censors architectural
exhibition
[16 September 2002]
UN report on Jenin: A whitewash
of Israeli war crimes
[8 August 2002]
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