The Independent on Saturday

Israel may have committed war crimes in Gaza protests – United Nations

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ISRAELI soldiers may have committed war crimes by deliberate­ly targeting unarmed children, journalist­s and disabled people during recent protests in Gaza. This is the finding of a UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) independen­t commission of inquiry that was released on Thursday in Geneva.

The three-person panel comprising Kenyan legal and human rights expert Betty Murungi, Bangladesh­i lawyer Sara Hossain and chaired by Argentinia­n lawyer Santiago Canton, concluded that Israel had intentiona­lly shot unarmed Palestinia­n protesters since March 30 during the Great March of Return weekly protests along the eastern fence of the Gaza Strip, the Afro-Palestine Newswire reported.

Protesters were calling for the 12-year-old Israeli siege imposed on the coastal enclave to be lifted.

According to the report, the vast majority of Gaza protesters who were killed by Israeli forces – 154 out of 183 people – had been unarmed and “did not pose an imminent threat of death or serious injury to others when they were shot, nor were they directly participat­ing in hostilitie­s”.

The commission found that 35 children had been killed, some from direct weapons fire. The commission also noted one case involving a disabled person in a wheelchair and direct fire at journalist­s who claimed that they were clearly identified as press.

“There is no justificat­ion for shooting children and disabled people that pose no risk,” said Hossain.

Murungi added that the healthcare system in the Gaza Strip was not capable of dealing with the scope and complexity of the injuries among residents of the Strip.

She also called on Israel to lift its blockade of the besieged coastal territory to allow medical supplies in and to grant exit permits to Palestinia­ns seeking medical assistance abroad. The commission concluded there were “reasonable grounds” that Israeli security forces violated internatio­nal law, and recommende­d that UN members consider imposing individual sanctions, such as a travel ban or an assets freeze, on those identified as responsibl­e by the commission. In addition, the commission said that evidence it collected should be transferre­d to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court in The Hague.

The Israeli government refused to co-operate with the commission’s investigat­ions.

“Israel rejects outright the UN Human Rights Council report. The council is setting new records for hypocrisy and mendacity, out of an obsessive hatred of Israel, the only democracy in the Middle East. It is Hamas which fires missiles at Israeli citizens, throws explosive devices and carries out terrorist activity during the violent demonstrat­ions along the fence,” said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Palestinia­n political and civil society groups, however, welcomed the report’s findings.

“The report indicates, beyond any doubt, that the Israeli occupation has committed clear war crimes against the Palestinia­ns who came out to protest peacefully to demand the right of return and lift the siege,” Hamas spokespers­on, Bassem Naim, said.

The Palestinia­n Authority hailed the UN report, but said it didn’t go far enough in establishi­ng accountabi­lity. “We urge the internatio­nal community and all United Nations related institutio­ns to oblige Israel to commit to the fourth Geneva Convention and uphold its legal obligation­s as a belligeren­t occupant to protect the Palestinia­n citizens under its military control,” said PA spokespers­on, Ahmad Shami.

Amnesty Internatio­nal said that the report’s findings confirmed the group’s own conclusion “that many cases appeared to amount to wilful killings constituti­ng war crimes”. |

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