Amnesty: Israel deliberately hit civilian targets
Human rights group accuses Israel of indiscriminate attacks against
civilians, civilian infrastructure in Lebanon during war, says
Jewish state may be guilty of war crimes. Third of war casualties
were children, Amnesty reports
By Reuters
08/23/06 "YNet"
-- -- Rights group Amnesty International accused Israel on Wednesday of
deliberately targeting civilians during its campaign against
Hizbullah in Lebanon and said the Jewish state may be guilty of war
crimes.
Not only were food shops purposely destroyed by shelling and air
attacks, Amnesty said, but aid convoys were deliberately blocked and
hospitals and public utilities like water and power plants put out
of action to force people to flee.
"The evidence strongly suggests that the extensive destruction of
public works, power systems, civilian homes and industry was
deliberate and an integral part of the military strategy rather than
collateral damage," Amnesty said.
Israel says it did not target civilians and had warned
non-combatants to leave south Lebanon. It also accused Hizbullah of
launching rockets from civilian areas.
Amnesty called for the United Nations to quickly set up an
independent inquiry into breaches of international humanitarian law
it says were committed by both sides.
"In the context of the attacks on Lebanon's infrastructure, Israel
has specifically violated the prohibition on indiscriminate and
disproportionate attacks," it said.
"Israel may also have violated other prohibitions, including that on
direct attacks against civilian objects. These violations are war
crimes," Amnesty added.
War crimes?
In a report "Israel/Lebanon: Deliberate destruction or 'collateral
damage'", Amnesty said that between July 12 and Aug. 14 when a
fragile UN-brokered ceasefire came into force, Israel carried out
more than 7,000 air attacks against 7,000 targets.
At the same time the Israeli Navy mounted a further 2,500
bombardments and long-range artillery fired an untold number of
shells into southern Lebanon.
The attacks killed more than 1,100 people - of whom one-third were
children - with more than 4,000 injuries and 970,000 people or one
quarter of the population forced to flee north.
"Many of the violations examined in this report are war crimes that
give rise to individual criminal responsibility," Amnesty said.
It said the Lebanese government estimated 31 key facilities from
airports to power plants and water and sewage treatment plants had
been completely or partially destroyed, as had 80 bridges and 94
roads.
More than 25 fuel stations and 900 other businesses had been hit,
with more than 30,000 homes, offices and shops razed to the ground.
"Israeli government spokespeople have insisted that they were
targeting Hizbullah positions and support facilities, and that
damage to civilian infrastructure was incidental or resulted from
Hizbullah using the civilian population as a 'human shield',"
Amnesty said.
"However, the pattern and scope of the attacks, as well as the
number of civilian casualties and the amount of damage sustained,
makes the justification ring hollow," it added.
Total estimated damage is put at USD 3.5 billion dollars – USD 2
billion for buildings and USD 1.5 billion for infrastructure.
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