-Caveat Lector-

--- In [EMAIL PROTECTED], Mike Hawkins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
http://electronicintifada.net/coveragetrends/jeninunreport.shtml

Media Distortions and the UN Report on Jenin
Written by Ali Abunimah for The Electronic Intifada, 1 August 2002



The UN Secretary General Kofi Annan on August 1, 2002 published his
report, mandated by the United Nations Security Council, into the
Israeli
attack on Jenin refugee camp in the Occupied West Bank last April.
[http://www.un.org/peace/jenin/index.html]
Israel is crowing that the report exonerates it from charges that
there
was a "massacre" in the camp. As we shall see, the Palestinian claims
against Israel have been deliberately exaggerated and misrepresented
in
such a way as to diminish and obscure ample evidence that Israel
committed serious breaches of international law. The most important
thing
about the new UN report on Jenin is that it is not an investigation
into
the events at the camp last April: none of the authors visited Jenin,
since the UN Security Council-mandated investigation was blocked by
Israel, which refused all cooperation.
The text states:
"The report was written without a visit to Jenin or the other
Palestinian
cities in question and it therefore relies completely on available
resources and information, including submissions from five United
Nations
Member States and Observer Missions, documents in the public domain
and
papers submitted by non-governmental organizations."
Israel not only blocked the Jenin investigation, but refused repeated
requests by Annan for it to submit written testimony for inclusion in
the
report. Hence while having done everything possible to block,
discredit
and undermine an investigation into Jenin, the Israeli government is
today citing the same report as vindication. The Israelis cannot have
it
both ways. If Israel claims that UN reports are not credible when they
criticize Israel, it cannot then claim that they suddenly regain
legitimacy when they appear to "exonerate" it.
The UN report does repeat the findings of several international aid
and
human rights agencies that Israel used excessive and disproportionate
force in civilian areas, blocked medical treatment for wounded
civilians
for days, and prevented access to the camp to humanitarian aid and
journalists.
Both Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, which unlike the UN
team, actually sent investigators to Jenin, reported that these
actions
by Israel may constitute "war crimes" and "crimes against humanity"
among
other serious breaches of the Geneva Conventions.


Media Distortions: The Myth that Palestinians claimed that 500 were
killed in Jenin
'There was no massacre' is the main headline coming from most media
organizations reporting about UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's report
about the Israeli attack on Jenin refugee camp last April.
In fact, Annan's report does not use the word "massacre" at all. The
report does state:
"Fifty-two Palestinian deaths had been confirmed by the hospital in
Jenin
by the end of May 2002. IDF also place the death toll at approximately
52. A senior Palestinian Authority official alleged in mid-April that
some 500 were killed, a figure that has not been substantiated in the
light of the evidence that has emerged."
Palestinian cabinet minister Saeb Erekat was widely cited in press
reports as having said that 500 people were killed in Jenin. Yet,
despite
an extensive search, I have been unable to find any directly quoted
statement from any Palestinian official, including Erekat, using that
figure for the death toll in Jenin. None of the reports which cited
Erekat said where he allegedly made the claim, and some provided
conflicting accounts of when he allegedly said it. For a claim that
is so
widely cited, it should not be so difficult to find a direct quote.
Nevertheless, Israeli officials, commentators and journalists alike
repeated constantly that Erekat or sometimes other Palestinian
officials
had put the Jenin death toll at over 500. So what did Erekat actually
say?
On April 10, 2002, Erekat did tell CNN that he believed that up to 500
people had been killed throughout the West Bank, not just in Jenin,
since
Israel had begun its "Operation Defensive Shield" at the end of
March.
In the context of a discussion about the entire Israeli offensive and
the
announced visit of US Secretary of State Colin Powell to the region,
Erekat told CNN Anchor Jim Clancy:
"What we're saying, we see an opportunity in the secretary's visit. We
want to help in order to insure the success of the secretary's visit,
because insuring the success of implementing [UN resolution] 1402
means
stopping the killing fields out there, and you know as the numbers I
am
receiving today is that the numbers of killed could reach 500 since
the
Israeli offensive began. Thousands of wounded. You know, the Jenin
refuge
camp is no longer in existence, and now we've heard of executions
there."
Later the same day, CNN News Anchor Bill Hemmer stated on air,
apparently
in reference to Erekat's earlier appearance:
"Also a heavy war of words today, Saeb Erekat the Chief Palestinian
negotiator, live on CNN earlier today said, Palestinians have lost now
500 people between the battles in Jenin and Nablus."
It is clear from a comparison of Hemmer's claim with Erekat's actual
statement, that Erekat said nothing of the kind, and yet inaccurate
though he is, even Hemmer does not state that Erekat was referring
only
to Jenin. Amongst others, Xinhua news agency reported accurately that
"Senior Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said on Wednesday [April
10]
that at least 500 Palestinians had been killed since Israel launched
the
military offensive in the West Bank on March 29." ("Military
operations
bolster Palestinian militant spirit: Israeli source," Xinhua, April
12,
2002)
Since Annan's just published report put the actual Palestinian death
toll
in the period from March 1 to May 7 at 497, and since the Palestinian
Red
Crescent places most of those deaths squarely in the period of the
Israeli invasion, Erekat's estimate, which he had stated at the time
was
unconfirmed, was far from unreasonable. Most of the comments from
Palestinian officials such as Erekat about Israeli actions in Jenin
were
premised on the notion that urgent UN intervention and investigation
was
necessary precisely because no one knew exactly what was really going
on
in the camp.
Yet, on April 11, the day after the CNN interview, The Jerusalem Post
reported that
"The actual number of Palestinian casualties in Jenin is unknown. IDF
sources estimated it at between 100 and 200. But Palestinian
negotiator
Saeb Erekat told CNN that Israel had "massacred" 500 people in the
Jenin
camp." ("Hundreds of gunmen surrender in Jenin," by Arieh O'Sullivan,
April 11, 2002)
Erekat did not even use the word "massacre" in this interview,
although
the Jerusalem Post quoted him as having done so. The false claim about
Erekat appears to have originated here. Yet while the Jerusalem Post
misreports what Erekat said it does highlight that at the same time
that
Erekat allegedly claimed 500 were killed, even Israeli sources were
putting the death toll at up to 200. There are numerous
contemporaneous
press reports that Israeli Major General Ron Kitrey had put the death
toll in Jenin alone at up to 300, but had later issued a statement
saying
that figure included dead and wounded.
Thus, the myth of Erekat's claim that 500 were killed in Jenin had
begun.
It has become so durable that it even made it into the report of the
United Nations Secretary General.
Without the claim that Palestinians explicitly accused the Israelis of
killing 500, the main accusation from supporters of Israel and the
media
is that Palestinians alleged a "massacre." There is no scientific or
precise definition of a massacre, and no rule that says that hundreds
must be killed before an event qualifies as such. "Massacre" is a
subjective term and certainly for those who live through it the
killing
of 'only' dozens would qualify. Perhaps it is for this reason that
Israeli officials routinely refer to Palestinian attacks which kill
20 or
fewer people as "massacres."
In conclusion, the UN report provides no new information to those who
are
seriously interested in the truth of what happened in Jenin last
April.
To the Israelis it provides another propaganda coup and plenty of
misleading headlines clearing it of any fault, to Kofi Annan and the
UN
it provides a welcome end to an embarrassing and politically awkward
chapter, and to Palestinians it proves yet again that for Israel
impunity, not law, is the rule.

*** NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this
material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed
a prior interest in receiving the included information for
research and educational purposes.***
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