-Caveat Lector-

http://www.counterpunch.org/

November 27, 2001

Suffer Palestine's Children
By Sunil K. Sharma

Early in the morning of November 22, five Palestinian
children were blown to pieces by an Israeli mine or
bomb as they headed to school in Khan Younis. The
children were 6 to 14 years-of-age, all from the Al
Astel family. It is unclear if the explosion was set
off by the children tripping over or kicking the
device, or via remote control.

The next day, a senior Israeli Defense Forces (IDF)
official was quoted on Israel Radio as saying "a big
mistake was done." The officer admitted an undercover
army unit planted the device "in the area," yet evaded
any explanation as to why it was planted in the
vicinity of a school. Yesterday, the IDF issued its
first official statement regarding the killings. An
IDF investigation revealed serious flaws in the
planting and operation of the ordnance. Following the
usual script, the IDF feigned "sorrow over the deaths
of five children." The IDF claims the device was
planted in an area used by Palestinians to fire
mortars at nearby Israeli colonial settlements and
army positions. Israel Radio quoted IDF officials as
saying the "device was meant to remain well hidden and
was to be set off when the Palestinian shooters
returned to the area." (quoting Ha'aretz, 11/25/01)

Israeli opposition leader MK Yossi Sarid of Meretz,
responding to IDF claims that their recent operations
in Khan Younis were designed to prevent Palestinian
attacks, stated: "That's a targeted hit? Do you know
who will pass by the area [where the bomb is planted]?
It's a residential area. What kind of bombs do you
place in an area where school children pass by?"
(Ha'aretz, 11/24/01)

MK Ran Cohen (Meretz) has called for a Knesset
committee to investigate the incident, expressing
dismay that the IDF sat quietly for two days before
putting out an official statement that amounts to
little more than a cover-up.

MK Uri Ariel (National Union-Yisrael Beiteinu)
disagreed, stating that IDF investigations take time
because they are thorough. "I have faith in the IDF,"
he stated. "[Ariel] said that the army was is in the
throes of the battle in the territories, and was busy
assassinating Mahmoud Abu Hanoud [of Hamas] and so
could not concentrate solely on the investigation that
Cohen demanded." (Ha'aretz, 11/25/01)

In other words: we were too busy trying to assassinate
a Palestinian leader to investigate our killing of
Palestinian children, but now that we've taken a
five-minute breather from our assassination campaign
we can conclude from our thorough investigation that a
regretful mistake was made. Sorry kids, we'll try to
do a better job of killing the right folks next time.

The Israelis have not condemned the killings, though
some officials say an apology might perhaps be in
order.

According to the Palestinian Red Crescent Society, the
total number of Palestinians killed since the second
Intifada erupted on September 29, 2000 is 821. 16,661
Palestinians have been injured, many maimed for life.
Palestinian children under the age of 18 represent
about 1/4 of those killed.

The Israeli military's killing of Palestinian children
is not a sometimes accidental by-product of 34 years
of occupation. It is in fact a matter of deliberate
policy.

In a chilling interview conducted by Ha'aretz
correspondent Amira Hass, an IDF sharpshooter admitted
it was IDF policy to shoot at children above the age
of 12. Here is an excerpt [AH = Hass, IS =
Sharpshooter]:

(AH) You haven't shot children.

(IS) "All the sharpshooters haven't shot children."

(AH) But nonetheless there are children who were hit,
wounded or killed after they were hit in the head.
Unless these were mistakes.

(IS) "If they were children, they were mistakes."

(AH) Do they talk about this?

(IS) "They talk to us about this a lot. They forbid us
to shoot at children."

(AH) How do they say this?

(IS) "You don't shoot a child who is 12 or younger."

(AH) That is, a child of 12 or older is allowed?

(IS) "Twelve and up is allowed. He's not a child any
more, he's already after his bar mitzvah. Something
like that."

(AH) Thirteen is bar mitzvah age.

(IS) "Twelve and up, you're allowed to shoot. That's
what they tell us."

(AH) Again: Twelve and up you're allowed to shoot
children.

(IS) "Because this already doesn't look to me like a
child by definition, even though in the United States
a child can be 23."

(AH) Under international law, a child is defined as
someone
up to the age of 18.

(IS) "Up until 18 is a child?"

(AH) So, according to the IDF, it is 12?

(IS) "According to what the IDF says to its soldiers.
I don't know if this is what the IDF says to the
media."

(AH) And children are from 12 down. Is there no order
that between 12 and 18 you shoot at the legs and not
the head?

(IS) "Of course we try to see to it that he really is
over
20."

(AH) In the 10 seconds that you have.

(IS) "In the 10 seconds that I have, I have to
estimate how old he is."

(AH) And in what direction the wind is blowing, and
the deviation here and there, and which way he'll jump
the next moment.

(IS) "Yes, but there are hardly any mistakes by
sharpshooters. The mistakes are made by people who
aren't sharpshooters."

(AH) And it turns out that they happen to hit the
children's heads, and all this is just by chance?

(IS) "If you say you have seen children that have been
hit in the head a lot, then it is sharpshooters."

(AH) So what you're saying is that our definition of
children is different.

(IS) "Your definition is different."

(AH) Because for you it's someone who is 12.

(IS) "Yes."

(AH) But a child of 13 doesn't bear arms, no matter
what you call him, a boy or a teenager or an adult.

(IS) "He isn't holding a gun but a firebomb, and in
certain places it is possible also to fire on people
who throw firebombs."

["Don't shoot till you can see they're over the age of
12," Ha'aretz, November 20, 2000]

In another article, Hass reported that a group of
Western diplomats traveling from Jerusalem to Ramallah
witnessed Israeli troops fire live ammunition at a
group of stone-throwing Palestinian children, "even
though the children were too far to pose a risk to the
soldiers." "The diplomats say that shots were fired
even though a long line of civilian cars were
traveling past the children at the time." "[One of the
diplomats] says that he saw a second soldier in the
observation tower clapping and raising his hands as if
in victory after his colleague fired at the children."
["Envoys say they saw IDF fire at children." Ha'aretz,
July 26, 2001]

In a damning indictment of Israeli military
criminality and pathology, New York Times Middle East
Bureau chief Chris Hedges writes: "Yesterday at this
spot the Israelis shot eight young men, six of whom
were under the age of eighteen. One was twelve. This
afternoon they kill an eleven-year-old boy, Ali Murad,
and seriously wound four more, three of whom are under
eighteen. Children have been shot in other conflicts I
have covered-death squads gunned them down in El
Salvador and Guatemala, mothers with infants were
lined up and massacred in Algeria, and Serb snipers
put children in their sights and watched them crumple
onto the pavement in Sarajevo-but I have never before
watched soldiers entice children like mice into a trap
and murder them for sport." ["Gaza Diary: Scenes from
the Palestinian Uprising," Harper's Magazine, October
2001]


In a report released last week, B'Tselem, the leading
Israeli human rights organization, blasted what it
called a "shallow and superficial" Israeli army
investigation into the shooting death of an
eleven-year-old Palestinian boy, Khalil al-Mughrabi.

On July 7, Khalil and twenty to thirty other children
played soccer in the Yubneh Refugee Camp, in Rafah,
near the Egyptian border. After they finished playing,
the children sat on some mounds of sand near the
border fence. Suddenly, Khalil's head burst into parts
from a bullet fired by an Israeli soldier in a nearby
observation post. The soldiers proceeded to unleash
"intense fire" on the other children. Ibrahim Abu
Susin, 10, and Suleiman Abu Rijal, 12, were badly
wounded.

B'Tselem concludes: "An eleven-year-old child was
killed and two children were injured for no reason.
However, the army failed to open any investigation
against the soldiers responsible, even though all the
army officials involved in the review of the incident
clearly knew that the soldiers had used lethal weapons
when their lives were not in jeopardy and had violated
army regulations."

B'Tselem notes that despite the deaths of hundreds of
Palestinian civilians since the Intifada broke out,
"the Military Police only opened some twenty
investigation files relating to the illegal use of
weapons. In none of the cases were indictments filed."
The report goes on to say that, "Over the years,
B'Tselem has received hundreds of letters from the
Judge Advocate General's office regarding events in
which Palestinians were killed, injured, or beaten by
soldiers. In some of the cases, Military Police
investigations were opened, and in some, the Judge
Advocate General's office only conducted an internal
investigation. Most of the replies that B'Tselem
received state that the soldiers acted properly and
that no action was taken against the soldiers
involved." ["Whitewash: The Office of the Judge
Advocate General's Examination of the Death of Khalil
al-Mughrabi, 11, on 7 July 2001," B,Tselem, 11/13/01]

Given the well known history of the Israeli military's
farcical self "investigations," don't hold your breath
for an honest accounting of the killing of the five
children in Khan Younis.

The message Israeli troops receive from the lack of
serious investigation into and punishment for military
criminality is clear: you can murder civilians -- even
little children -- for no reason at all, and you can
do it with impunity.

True to form, the US has also refused to condemn its
client's murderous actions.

US State Department spokesman Philip Reeker expressed
"regret" over the latest killing of Palestinian
children, saying the incident served as a "strong
reminder" of the consequences of the ongoing violence.
"The United States deeply regrets the tragic
accidental deaths of five Palestinian children . . .
when they came in contact with unexploded ordnance. It
was a terrible tragedy. We understand that the Israeli
army has begun an investigation into the circumstances
of these deaths and we expect that investigation will
thoroughly determine what happened. This incident...
is a strong reminder of why both sides should do all
they can to end the violence, reduce tensions and
resume negotiations," he added.

And so it goes, the children of Palestine suffer, the
occupation continues, Israeli state terrorism
accelerates and the best that the Palestinians can
expect from the US by way of Colin Powell is a PR
performance that does nothing in substance to pressure
our Israeli client from desisting. Instead, the US
puts the burden of responsibility for "ending the
violence" squarely on the Palestinians, while calling
for an end to the Intifada, an uprising (however
flawed) that is both a reaction to Israel's brutal
occupation and the Palestinian Authority's corruption,
incompetence and selling out of the cause.

To steal a quip from Palestinian writer Sam Bahour, US
statements are "equivalent to that of a policeman
walking past a rape victim, still pinned under her
assailant, and verbally scolding both parties by
advising them to work out their differences."

Israel has little to fear that its continuing rampages
through the occupied Palestinian territories and the
latest incident of child killings will jeopardize the
staggering $3-5 billion of military and economic "aid"
it receives from the US annually. Nor should Israel
fear that America's vaunted "War on Terror" will
extend to them. It's simply a matter of whose side you
are on.

Our tax dollars at work as they say. And still we
wonder why the US is the object of anger and
resentment to many around the world.

Given the overwhelming US military, economic and
diplomatic support for Israel, the moral imperative is
on us to end our government's decisive role in
Israel's ongoing colonial conquest and occupation of
Palestinian lands and its people. CP

Sunil Sharma is a musician, writer and activist based
in Northern California. He is the editor of Dissident
Voice, a semi-regular newsletter "dedicated to
challenging the lies of the corporate press and the
privileged classes it serves." He can be contacted at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



=====
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
http://www.infiltration.org
http://www.darkpassage.com
http://www.mattoledefense.org/alerts/08192001_video.html
http://sf.indymedia.org/display.php?id=100562#100565
http://www.pieman.org/
http://www.webcom.com/%7epinknoiz/covert/seberg.html

__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Yahoo! GeoCities - quick and easy web site hosting, just $8.95/month.
http://geocities.yahoo.com/ps/info1

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to