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Israel steps up its war against the Palestinians
By Jean Shaoul
28 October 2003
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The Sharon regime in Israelsecure in the knowledge that
it has Washingtons unconditional supporthas stepped
up its military attacks on Palestinian civilians in Gaza and the
West Bank, occupied illegally since 1967. In the process, it has
signalled its contempt for international conventions on human
rights, the United Nations General Assembly, and indeed the formal
strictures of the US-brokered Road Map for peace in
the Middle East.
Far from dismantling the security wall it has erected
in the West Bank, the Sharon government has vowed to press on
with it. And it has announced that it will also go ahead with
the expansion of the Zionist settlements.
As usual, the worlds press barely reported the incidents,
much less condemned them.
On October 20, the Israeli army launched a series of air strikes
on the Gaza Strip that have killed at least 11 people and wounded
about 100, mostly civilians. Helicopter gun ships targeted a vehicle
driven by a Hamas member and a building that Israel claimed was
a Hamas weapons workshop.
The air strikes followed minor Palestinian rocket attacks against
an Israeli town near Gaza. They came only days after Israel mounted
the heaviest assault on the lives, homes and land of Palestinians
in the Rafah refugee camp in Gaza in three years.
The Guardians Chris McGreal authored an October
27 report that made clear the scale of the violence and destruction
perpetrated in Rafah, which has been assailed by the UN as disproportionate
punishment. He explains that over the past two weeks the Israeli
Defence Forces (IDF) has mounted what it calls Operation
Root Canal, which is ostensibly aimed at uncovering and
destroying dozens of tunnels that Israel claims are being used
to bring in arms to terrorist groupsincluding surface-to-air
missiles.
The operation involves some 65 tanks, armoured vehicles and
bulldozers, and left 18 Palestinians dead, including three children,
and more than 120 wounded. Just three tunnels were found,
and no weapons. But in the process, the military crushed or rocketed
nearly 200 homes, throwing about 1,700 people onto the street.
The army claimed it never happened, that just 10 homes were wrecked,
and then sent back the bulldozers to grind the evidence that the
houses ever existed into the dirt, writes McGreal.
He notes that Palestinians have killed three soldiers and one
settler in Rafah since the start of the Intifada, while the IDF
has killed 280 Palestinians.
The magnitude of the Israeli retaliation and the scale of the
casualties were so disproportionate to the damage caused by the
Palestinians primitive weapons that even members of Ariel
Sharons right-wing coalition cabinet were moved to objectalthough
not to resign from the government.
We should not carry out mass killings in order to strike
two or three terrorists, the BBC reported Interior Minister
Avraham Poraz of the Shinui Party as saying. Another Shinui Party
cabinet member, Yosef Paritsky, the minister of infrastructure,
urged Israel to apologise to and compensate the victims. He said,
We are not at war with the Palestinian population.
Paritsky fools only himself with such comments. He is a member
of a government that has been waging a continuous war against
the Palestinians that has included political assassinations, the
killing and maiming of civilians, collective punishments, house
demolitions and deportations. Curfews and roadblocks have made
travel to work, school and hospital all but impossible and brought
the majority of the population close to starvation.
Is it conceivable that somebody on our side has decided
that all of Palestinian society is the target? wrote Alex
Fishman in Yediot Aharonot.
Dr. Shemuel Bar, an Israeli military analyst, evidently believes
this to be the case. He was quoted in the Jerusalem Post as
saying that the air strikes were aimed at creating a living
hell for Palestinians and fomenting a popular backlash against
the Islamic fighters. However, far from turning the Palestinians
against the Islamic Resistance Movement, Israeli action has only
served to increase support for Hamas, which has grown by 60 percent
since the start of the intifada three years ago.
Stung by the criticism, the army has taken the rare step of
releasing a short video that purports to show that it did not
fire a missile into a crowded area but targeted a car driven by
a group of terrorists along a quiet road. The car
blew up, burning two members of Hamas to death. A man in a nearby
car was also killed. But it fails to answer how such a political
assassination killed so many innocent bystanders.
Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon has rejected Palestinian
prime minister Ahmed Qureis call for a cease-fire, which
would include an end to Israeli raids as well as attacks by Palestinian
militants. He demanded instead that the Palestinian Authority,
whose infrastructure has been totally demolished by the Israeli
army, disarm and disband the militants to prevent all attacks
on Israelis. Sharons demand for such a crackdown, even if
it were possible, would result in nothing short of civil war.
On October 22, the Israeli army shot and killed three suspected
Palestinian militants, one in Qalqilya and two in two separate
incidents in Hebron, the Palestinian town that has a 400-strong
Zionist enclave responsible for countless provocations against
the inhabitants and guarded by 1,500 troops.
In another incident aimed at provoking the Palestinians into
further acts of terrorism that can be used as an excuse to forcibly
expel them from the occupied territories, Israeli troops shot
dead an elderly Palestinian near Elei Sinai, a settlement in the
northern Gaza Strip.
The army at first tried to claim that he was trying to enter
the settlement, but later an army spokesperson admitted that the
elderly man was known to them and was not considered a threat.
Hours later, Palestinian gunmen killed three Israeli soldiers,
two women and a man in an attack on Netzarim in the central Gaza
Strip. Security forces gave chase to and killed one of the gunmen,
Samir Fouda, a Hamas militant from Jabaliya refugee camp in Gaza.
In yet another serious breach of international law, Israeli
troops raided two West Bank hospitals and seized suspected Palestinian
militants. In the early hours of October 25, Israeli troops pulled
up in jeeps, ran into the Anglican Hospital in Nablus, kicking
open doors in a room-to-room search and seized Khaled Hamid, a
Hamas member who was being treated in the intensive care unit.
Dr. Annan Abdel Hak told Associated Press, I explained to
the soldiers how critical his condition is. Then they removed
the machines from his body. According to an Israeli army
spokeswoman, Hamid had been badly injured when a bomb he was carrying
went off prematurely.
On October 21, the UN General Assembly passed a resolution
condemning the wall that Israel has built around much of the West
Bank that cuts deep into Palestinian territory, ghettoises the
Palestinians, and effectively redraws the boundaries between Israel
and the West Bank. To the north of Jerusalem, the wall will include
thousands of Palestinians who do not have permission to be in
the city, while to the south it will separate thousands of Palestinians
from their families, workplaces and schools. Others will be cut
off from the city, jeopardising their citizenship of Jerusalem
and right to access. Thus, the wall serves as yet another measure
to make life for the Palestinians so intolerable that they will
voluntarily leave Jerusalem and the Israeli side of the wall,
an example of ethnic cleansing, to give it its proper name.
The resolution demanded that Israel stop and reverse
the construction of the wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory,
and said that the barrier was in contradiction to relevant
provisions of international law. But the European powers
bowed to US pressure and refused to support Arab demands for it
to be referred to the International Court of Justice at the Hague
for a legal ruling. Unlike Security Council resolutions, General
Assembly resolutions are not legally binding.
The resolution was carried overwhelmingly, but the US joined
Israel and the tiny US-dominated but nominally independent entities
of Micronesia and the Marshall Islands in voting against it. Israel
now has the green light from Washington to press on regardless
with effecting a population transfer, seizing Palestinian land
and waging war against the Palestinians. So, while under the terms
of the resolution, if Israel has not complied with the resolution
within a month, UN secretary general Kofi Annan has to come up
with suggestions for further action, the resolution is in effect
a dead letter.
Although President Bush had said earlier in the year that the
wall was a problem, now the Republican administration
has signalled that no crime against humanity or breach of international
conventions is too great for it to consider acceptable.
Ariel Sharon, in his address to the first session of the Knesset
after its recess, pledged to complete the wall within the next
12 months. Ehud Olmert, the deputy prime minister, responding
to the UN resolution, told Israeli radio, The fence will
continue being built and we will go on taking care of the security
of Israels citizens.
In another measure aimed at consolidating Israels position
on the West Bank and further antagonising the Palestinians, Israels
housing minister invited tenders to construct more than 300 new
homes in Karnei Shomron, a settlement in the north of the West
Bank, and Givat Zeev, north of Jerusalem. It follows an
announcement earlier in the month of the construction of a further
600 new homes in settlements in the West Bank. According to Peace
Now, more than 1,500 such invitations to tender have been published
this year.
Not only is it illegal under international conventions to expropriate
and build on land under occupation, this is land that is supposed
to be handed over to the Palestinians for a state. While President
Bush has called for a freeze on the settlements, this time calling
them unhelpful, Israel clearly believes that there
are no serious objections and that this, combined with Washingtons
preoccupation with Iraq and the 2004 elections, means it has carte
blanche to do as it pleases.
At 2.30 a.m. on October 26, the Sharon regime carried out yet
another atrocity. Israeli troops got more than 2,000 Palestinian
residents of Al-Zahara in Gaza out of their beds and proceeded
to blow up in a single massive explosion three 13-story buildings
and scores of apartments nearby, making at least 1,000 people
homeless. The tower blocks were under construction by the Palestinian
Preventive Security, the main security force in Gaza charged with
reining in the Palestinian militants.
The Israeli authorities claimed that militants were using the
buildings as observation posts. One senior source said that plans
to demolish the buildings had been drawn up 11 months ago, but
had been put on hold to allow the PA time to stop the militants
from using them.
Saeb Erekat, the Palestinian chief negotiator, called the demolition
a war crime, saying that more than 140 apartments
had been destroyed. Terje Roed-Larsen, the United Nations envoy,
also strongly deplored the demolitions. Destroying
property as a punitive measure is a clear violation of the rules
of international law, he said. Such actions are also
counterproductive towards Israels legitimate security concerns,
for they foster anger and despair among the Palestinians,
he added.
Later that morning, Israeli troops shot dead at least one Palestinian
near the Gush Katif settlement bloc. A hospital in Gaza City reported
that a 17-year-old died of wounds received in the raid by Israeli
troops on Gaza last Wednesday, while another man died of his injuries
received in the West Bank city of Nablus.
See Also:
Bomb attack against US convoy in Gaza
as US-Israeli aggression continues
[18 October 2003]
UN report details Israels Human
Rights abuses in Occupied Territories
[17 October 2003]
Why is Israel threatening
to murder Arafat?
[16 September 2003]
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