People's Democracy
(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist)
|
Vol. XXXIII
No.
32
August
09, 200
|
Gaza: �Breaking the Silence�
Yohannan
Chemarapally
A
Report �Breaking the Silence� based on the testimony of 30 Israeli
soldiers who
had participated in �Operation Cast
Lead� (the military code name for the 22 day war on Gaza) has revealed that the Israeli Defense Force
(IDF) had routinely committed human rights violations in the 22 day
siege of Gaza.
The 110 page report,
released in mid-July, provides graphic testimony about the targeting of
Palestinian civilians and their property. Israeli soldiers were
repeatedly told
by their superiors to ignore the safety of the civilian populace in Gaza. According
to the report,
senior IDF officers told the soldiers to shoot first rather than worry
about
the deaths of civilians. �Better hit an innocent than hesitate to
target the
enemy�, was one of the instructions given by senior IDF commanders
before the
Israeli army set out to destroy Gaza.
Another army commander told the young soldiers that in �urban warfare,
anyone
is your enemy. No innocents�.
Not
surprisingly, the Israeli Defense ministry has been quick to reject the
new report
detailing the serious human rights violations including the use of
white
phosphorous and the rampant demolition of thousands of Palestinian
houses. In
the last week of July, the Israeli Defense ministry brought out its own
report
on the conduct of the war in the last week of July. The report has
denied all
the serious war crime charges leveled by the Palestinians, the UN and
human
rights groups. The Defense ministry has ordered criminal inquiries into
a dozen
cases. This is the only acknowledgement of possible lapses by the IDF
during
the Gaza
war.
SERIOUS HUMAN
RIGHTS VIOLATIONS
One
Israeli soldier whose testimony appears in the �Breaking the Silence�
report
said that his unit had received an order to �ignite� an area populated
by
Palestinians. �The way to do that was to actually fire phosphorous
shells from
above�. The white phosphorous lets out �an umbrella of fire� over a
targeted
house and sets it on fire. The soldier who gave the testimony said that
he was
told while undergoing training that it was �inhumane� to use
phosphorous shells
in warfare.
International
law allows the use of white phosphorous only to obscure troop movement
and to
prevent the enemy from firing guided missiles. The IDF also used
civilians as
�human shields�. This was called the �neighbour procedure� in Israeli
army
jargon. Palestinian civilians were forced to enter the buildings to
provide
cover for Israeli troop�s intent on killing or capturing resistance
fighters.
The report also highlights the dubious role played by the military
rabbis. The
report gives many instances of the rabbis trying to inculcate messianic
zeal
into the soldiers. The Palestinians were compared to the �Philistines�,
the
tribal enemies of the Jews in the Biblical days.
One
Rabbi told soldiers during the Gaza
war that they were the �sons of light� and that their fight was against
the
�sons of darkness�. In its summary, �Breaking the Silence� concludes
that the
massive destruction inflicted on Gaza
�was unrelated to any direct threat to Israeli forces� and that the
rules of
engagement were �deliberately permissive�.
Amnesty
International in a report released in the first week of July had
accused Israel
of
�breaching the laws of War� by putting women and children �in harms
way�. The
Amnesty report said that women and children were forced �to remain in
or near
houses which they took over and used as military positions�. The Amnesty report notes that the scale and
intensity of attacks on Gaza
were unprecedented. Most of the civilians were killed with high
precision
weapons. The IDF relied on surveillance drones which have exceptionally
good
optics, allowing those observing the targets to see them in detail.
�The
deaths of so many children and other civilians cannot be dismissed
simply as
�collateral damage� as argued by Israel�, said Donatella
Rovera, the
Amnesty official who led the inquiry. The Israeli army spokesperson has
criticised
both the Amnesty report as well as the report compiled by Israeli
soldiers
themselves, for not containing �facts� and being �based on hearsay�.
The
Israeli Defense ministry has conducted its own inquiry into �Operation
Cast
Lead� and concluded that the IDF remains the �most moral� army in the
world.
The Israeli Defense minister, Ehud Barak, one of the key brains behind
the
inhumane assault on Gaza
responded to the report with the brazen statement that the Israeli army
�behaves in accordance with the highest ethical code�.
Many
human rights organisations have given detailed reports about the way in
which
the IDF went about targeting civilians and their property. The Israeli
human
rights lawyer Michael Sfard said that the �Breaking the Silence �
report showed
that the Gaza operation violated the �number one principle of
international
laws of war�that of distinguishing between the civilian population and
combatants�. Recently Dor Yermiya, a 95 year old Jewish freedom fighter
who
participated actively in the creation of Israel, renounced his faith
in the
Zionist state. In his letter, Yermiya said that Israel
�turned what would have been Palestine
into a giant detention camp and is holding a whole people captive under
an
oppressive and oppressive regime, with a sole aim of taking away their
country,
come what may.�
An
UN Board of inquiry investigating alleged Israeli war crimes had come
out with
its own report which has also been highly critical of Israel�s 22 day attack on Gaza. It is
another story that the UN secretary
general Ban ki-Moon has chosen to give the report a quite burial. Only
the
summary of the reports has been made available. The summary of the
report
stated that the IDF had attacked 53 UN installations, including 37
schools. The
attack on the UN run Jabaila school had resulted in the deaths of more
than 40
Palestinian civilians. The UN secretary general had limited the scope
of
enquiry to the attacks on UN installations only.
However,
a separate investigation into all human rights violations by the IDF
during the
Gaza
operations
has been ordered by the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC).
The four
member UN team headed by the eminent South African jurist, Richard
Goldstone
was in Gaza
a
week before the Israeli soldier�s testimonies came out. Israel
had
refused to grant the UN investigating team visas. The UN team had to
finally
enter Gaza through Egypt.
TACIT SUPPORT
OF THE US, EU
Meanwhile,
Gaza which was already in a bad shape
before Israel
unleashed Operation Cast Lead on its hapless population, is crying out
for
urgent international attention. Ever since Hamas took over Gaza
two years ago, Israel
has imposed draconian sanctions. Israel
seems to have the tacit support of the US, EU and many of the Arab
governments as it seeks to starve the Gazans into submission. Today, there is no industry to speak of in
the Gaza Strip. Smuggling of a few essential goods through a labyrinth
of
tunnels has prevented the total collapse of the Gazan economy. After
the recent
Israeli military assault, 80 per cent of its agricultural output was
destroyed.
The result is that 96 per cent of the Gazan population of 1.4 million
is now
dependent on humanitarian aid for survival. But Israel
is continuing its war on Gaza
by other means. Israel
is
drastically curtailing the entry of desperately needed food and other
essential
supplies to Gaza.
The
American president Barack Obama in his Cairo
speech had called for the speedy reconstruction of Gaza. Obama said that the
�humanitarian
crisis in Gaza does not serve Israel�s security interests� but has
done nothing
to pressure Israel
into lifting its punitive economic blockade. The initial tough stance
he had
taken against Israel�s
colonisation process is now being considerably watered down. The
international
community had pledged $5.2 billion towards Gaza�s reconstruction but
mainly due
to Israeli intransigence and stonewalling, very little of the aid has
reached
the war ravaged Strip. The bombed out concrete houses are being
replaced by
ramshackle mud houses because of the lack of cement and other building
materials.
Thousands of families are still living in rudimentary tents or continue
to be
exposed to the elements.
A
June 2009 report by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
described Gaza as �looking like the epicenter of a massive earthquake�. Gaza�s heath care system after Operation Cast
Lead is in utter disrepair. Equipment and medicine for the treatment of
serious
illness are unavailable in Gaza because of the Israeli blockade. Even
pain
killers and X-ray film developers are put on the restricted list by
Israel.
Those seeking treatment in Israeli hospitals have to either agree to be
collaborators or wait for months to get clearance from Israeli
authorities. In
a new UN sponsored report, a Palestinian human rights group said that
pregnant
Palestinian women, many of them from Gaza, were �chained to their beds
until
they enter the delivery rooms and shackled once again after giving
birth�.
The
ICRC survey found that over 70 per cent of Gazan families survive on $1
a day.
Many Gazans, according to the ICRC report �have exhausted their coping
mechanisms�. They feel that the international community is now
willfully
ignoring their plight and has abandoned them to the mercy of the
rabidly right
wing government that has taken office in Israel.