BBC NEWS
Israelis accused of 'human shields' tactic
By Lucy Williamson
BBC News, Gaza

The Israeli army has been accused of using Palestinian civilians as
human shields in an operation in northern Gaza.

According to the Israeli human rights group, B'tselem, six civilians
including two minors were subjected to the illegal tactic during an
incursion into the town of Beit Hanoun last week.

There are piles of rubble leading up to the hole in Hazem Ali's house.

It's a week since Israel came into Beit Hanoun, but the gash in the
side of his house is still raw, the soft inside of family life still
visible through the lumps of concrete hanging from the wall. A broken
bed; a few girders dripping onto it; an elegant wardrobe still
standing against the back wall.

It was soon after dawn when the Israeli army bulldozed their way in.
Hazem was still sleeping, taking a break from his job as an engineer
with the local Palestinian news agency.

'Blindfolded'

It was his mother who met them in the hallway, Israeli soldiers in a
Palestinian home. Behind her, Hazem and his two brothers emerged, one
by one.

The three brothers were blindfolded, says Hazem, and their hands tied
behind their backs. He shows me the wounds on his wrists from the
plastic handcuffs - still sore and infected, but beginning to heal
over.

He shows me where the soldiers positioned them: outside the entrance
to his flat on the third floor, in the stairwell, facing down the
steps.

"I think they put us here because they were expecting suiciders to
come into the flat because none of the soldiers were on the stairs -
they were all inside the flat. They put us here so we'll be shot
first."

Inside the flat, the soldiers punched holes in the walls of his 
living room, and bedroom. Through them, snipers exchanged fire with
Palestinian militants. Hazem and his brothers heard it all, but could
see nothing.

Hazem says he had little idea at the time exactly how long he was kept
there. All he remembers was listening to the heavy gunfire around him,
and counting the calls to prayer as they echoed over the area: one at
lunchtime, one at tea-time, and one in the evening as the sun set.
Twelve hours in all.

He says he expected to die any second. He still can't understand why,
as civilians, they couldn't be kept in a room somewhere inside the
house, where they would have been safer. But they put us in the middle
of the clashes, he says. "There was no need for that."

Court outlawed tactic

Allegations over Israel's use of human shields have surfaced before.
The last time they made headlines was during Operation Defensive
Shield in the West Bank town of Jenin, four years ago.

 This was a very blatant violation of the prohibition of the 
use of human shields
Yekhezel Lain, B'tselem
The army denied its personnel systematically used civilians as human
shields during that operation, but it did issue an order outlawing the
practice. As did the Israeli High Court.

But Yekhezel Lain, research director with the Israeli human rights
group B'tselem says they are worried those guarantees are now being
eroded. He says the cases in Beit Hanoun last week are the first of
their kind since the High Court decision.

"This was a very blatant violation of the prohibition of the use of
human shields," he tells me. "It was just soldiers hiding behind the
back of civilians who were held with force in their homes."

B'tselem says it is investigating reports of other, similar incidents
in Gaza during the past month. And it is worried that - having
withdrawn from Gaza last year - the Israeli army may see the area as
distinct from other Palestinian Territories.

The group is concerned about Israel establishing different rules in
the case of the Gaza Strip where according to the state, there is no
occupation any more - it's only a state of war, or armed conflict. The
human rights group does not believe there is a difference when it
comes to the protection of civilians.

The IDF told the BBC the claims in Beit Hanoun were being 
investigated, and that its soldiers were obliged to act in accordance
with moral principles and the rules of engagement. Any misconduct,
they said, would be looked into.

As he waits for news of his case in Beit Hanoun, Hazem Ali has got the
builders in to fill the holes in his flat, re-glaze his windows and
repair as much of the damage as he can.

His wife, meanwhile, is preparing for the birth of their first child.
She is half Egyptian, and has been asking Hazem to move out of the
Gaza Strip for months now. But he refuses to leave. There's no running
away from Gaza, he says.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/5212870.stm

Published: 2006/07/25 11:39:10 GMT

© BBC MMVI





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