Ref: 56/2009
Date: 27 April 2009
Time: 09: 25 GMT
PCHR Condemn Israeli Attempts to
Legitimise Crimes in Gaza and Shield Perpetrators from Justice
On 22 April 2009, Israeli Military Authorities announced
the conclusion of five internal investigations examining the conduct of
Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) during the recent military offensive in
the Gaza Strip. The investigations, supervised by IOF Chief of Staff
Gabi Ashkenazi, claimed that investigations found a very small number of
incidents involving intelligence or operational errors, but that
“throughout the fighting in the Gaza Strip” IOF “operated in accordance
with international law”.
Deputy IOF chief of staff, Major General Dan Harel,
claimed that 1,166 Palestinians were killed in the offensive of which
295 were civilians, and 709 were combatants. 162 victims have not been
classified.
The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) strongly
contest these figures and the results of the investigations, which
constitute an attempt to legitimise crimes committed in the Gaza Strip,
and to shield perpetrators from justice. PCHR’s investigations indicate
that 1,417 Palestinians were killed in the offensive, of which 1,181
(83%) were non-combatants. Civilian property in the Gaza Strip was also
extensively targeted and destroyed: PCHR have found that, inter alia,
approximately 20,000 homes and 1,500 factories and workshops were
completely destroyed or damaged, and that 6,636 dunums of
agricultural land were razed.
PCHR’s investigations have concluded that many of the
IOF’s actions in the Gaza Strip amounted to war crimes, and grave
breaches of the Geneva Conventions. Such crimes include willful killing,
the extensive destruction of property not justified by military
necessity, the use of human shields, indiscriminate attacks, and
illegitimate means and methods of warfare, including the use of white
phosphorous and flechettes in densely populated residential areas. These
crimes are crimes of the utmost severity, they are violations of
customary international law, and are universally condemned. The
excessively disproportionate civilian death toll, and the devastation
wrought on the Gaza Strip, demands effective judicial redress. PCHR
reiterate that the rule of law must be upheld, civilians must not be
denied the protections that are their right.
PCHR wish to highlight certain aspects of the reports
released by the Israeli authorities.
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IOF
investigations concluded that, in all investigated cases, IOF did
not intentionally attack civilians not involved in the fighting.
However, PCHR investigations reveal that in numerous documented
cases, uninvolved civilians were directly targeted by IOF forces.
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PCHR
stress that these actions constitute the crime of willful killing, a
grave breach of the Geneva Conventions.
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With
respect to the coordination of medical relief, IOF established a
situation room in the Gaza District Coordination and Liaison office,
which coordinated 150 different medical requests. PCHR stress that
1,417 Palestinians were killed, and 5,303 injured. The approval of
150 requests was clearly an inadequate and inappropriate response.
As noted in the IOF report, and confirmed by PCHR investigations,
medical units which attempted to evacuate injured and wounded
personnel without coordination were directly targeted.
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IOF
acknowledge that the coordinates of United Nations facilities had
been marked on military maps in advance of the operation. Despite
this, these institutions came under direct attack, or were attacked
in a manner which could be reasonably expected to cause
disproportionate harm to the facilities and the civilian population.
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IOF
have claimed that white phosphorous munitions were used
predominantly for obscurant purposes, without acknowledging the
clear danger associated with such munitions, and the availability of
a less harmful alternative. Although white phosphorous is not an
internationally prohibited weapon, its use in civilian areas
violates customary international law prohibitions relating to the
principle of distinction and the precautions necessary in attack.
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IOF
investigations into the extensive destruction of civilian property
concluded that no uninvolved civilians were harmed during the
demolition of infrastructure and buildings carried out by ground
forces. PCHR strongly refute this claim. In at least three cases,
houses in Iazbat Abu Drabo, Netsarim, and Al Attatra were demolished
while civilians remained inside, resulting in the death of the
civilians.
These latest investigations are the last in a long series
of ineffective investigations, which do not meet international standards
of independence or transparency. No investigation supervised by those
responsible for the alleged crimes, can be considered impartial.
Additionally, the investigations conducted by Colonels, making it
difficult, if not impossible, to effectively investigate superiors,
including the Chief of Staff. The Israeli Military Attorney General and
the Attorney General were heavily involved in the planning and execution
of Israeli military operations throughout the course of the offensive,
it is unsurprising that in a letter dated 24 February 2009, the Attorney
General rejected a demand made by human rights organizations calling for
an independent investigation. Most recently, Israeli officials have
claimed that they will refuse to cooperate with an independent United
Nations mandated investigation, lead by Justice Richard Goldstone, a
respected lawyer who served as chief prosecutor for the International
Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, and the International
Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda.
PCHR have documented numerous cases whereby Israeli
authorities failed to conduct investigations into crimes of the utmost
seriousness. These findings have been confirmed by the Spanish
Audencia Nacional (National Court), which ruled on 29 January2009,
that Israeli authorities were not willing to investigate and bring to
trial persons responsible for the Shehadeh assassination in 2002. Since
the outbreak of the second Intifada, Israel no longer
opens a mandatory investigation into cases where Israeli
forces killed or wounded Palestinian civilians not taking part in
hostilities. This lack of accountability, and the culture of impunity
which it perpetuates, serves to encourage continued violations of
international law. It is civilian populations – the protected persons of
international humanitarian law – who continue to bear the consequences.
Within the Israeli legal system there exists a
fundamental flaw with respect to the investigation of alleged crimes
committed by IOF in the oPt. Currently, a case
is presented to the Military Legal Advisor, who then consults with the
relevant field commander. If requested, the field commander conducts an
investigation; subsequent to this, the Military Advocate General judges
the legal issues arising from the facts presented by the field commander.
This results in a situation whereby the accused conducts the
investigation. The
inadequacies of this system have implications for the effectiveness and
independence of any investigation; justice for Palestinian victims is
not attainable within this system.
These investigations and the crimes which they attempt to
legitimise are an affront to the principles of law and justice which
they purport to uphold. They are also an affront to the civilians of the
Gaza Strip, who have suffered at the hands of a brutal occupation, and
the horrors of this most recent offensive.
PCHR remind the State of Israel of its legally-binding
obligation to investigate and prosecute all those suspected of
committing grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions. Should Israel prove
unable or unwilling to do so, then in accordance with the principle of
universal jurisdiction, all High Contracting Parties to the Geneva
Conventions are obliged to search for and prosecute persons accused of
committing grave breaches, irrespective of where theses crimes occurred.
There is no valid pretext, legal or otherwise, for not respecting the
Conventions in their entirety.
Israel has proved itself unwilling to adequately
investigate the crimes it is accused of committing. The international
community must intervene to ensure respect for the law. International
law is applicable to all States, at all times. There can be no
exceptions.