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WORLD
NEWS Tuesday, November 20, 2001

Belgian court summons Sharon to appear over Lebanon massacre


A  Belgian  court  has summoned Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to
appear on
November 28 in relation to the 1982 massacre of Palestinian refugees in
Lebanon,
Le Soir newspaper reports.

The civil complaint was brought by 23 victims of the massacres or their
families
under  a  1993  Belgian law which allows war crimes, crimes against humanity
and
genocide  to  be tried in Belgian courts, regardless of where they took
place or
the nationality or residence of the victims or the accused.

An  estimated  800  to  1,500  Palestinian refugees died in the massacres in
the
Sabra  and  Shatila  camps  by  Christian  militiamen after Israel's
invasion of
Lebanon in 1982, when Sharon was Israeli defense minister.

Sharon was forced to resign from the post after an Israeli investigation in
1983
found him indirectly but "personally" responsible for the deaths.

The  summons  to  appear  is theoretically to be served on Sharon by the
Belgian
ambassador  to  Israel, Wilfried Geens, Le Soir said, adding that it was
delayed
because  of  the weekend visit to the Middle East by a high-level European
Union
mission.




Belgium holds the union's rotating presidency until the end of the year.

The  Belgian  grand  jury is to decide on November 28 whether the court here
has
jurisdiction in the case under the 1993 law.

That  jurisdiction  is being challenged by Sharon's Belgian lawyer,
resulting in
suspension of the investigation pending the current inquiry.

Two related lawsuits brought last June are pending against Sharon, alleging
that
he  was guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity during the
massacres at
the Palestinian refugee camps.

Suspension of the investigation was in response to a motion by Michele
Hirsch, a
Belgian  lawyer  retained  by  the  Israeli  government  to  represent
Sharon, a
73-year-old former general.

Hirsch  contended  in  July  that  Belgian investigations of Sharon "violate
the
judicial  sovereignty  of  the  state  of  Israel,"  and  that the
investigating
magistrate had no authority in the matter.

Patrick  Collignon, the investigating magistrate appointed to prepare a
possible
case  against Sharon, ruled in July that his office was competent to
investigate
the cases.

The first of the two suits, charging him with responsibility for the deaths,
was
lodged  by  an  ad  hoc  group  of  Palestinian,  Lebanese, Moroccan and
Belgian
nationals.

The  second suit, alleging crimes against humanity, genocide and war crimes,
was
filed by 23 survivors of the massacres as well as five eyewitnesses.


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