Israel/Occupied Territories:
The international community must act to end Israel's policy of closures and
house demolitions.
Amnesty International called today on the international community to act
promptly to end the Israeli policy of closures in the West Bank and Gaza.
"The confinement of more than three million people for 10 months to their
own villages or homes by curfews and closures is a totally unacceptable
response to the violence of a few," the organization said.
Amnesty International welcomed the European Union's call on Monday 16 July
for international observers. "But the international community must not
wait any longer before acting to unblock what has become an intolerable
situation," said the organization.
The delegates from Amnesty International, Philippe Hensmans, Director of
Amnesty International's Belgian (Francophone) Section, and Elizabeth
Hodgkin, researcher, returned yesterday from a fact-finding visit to
Israel and the Occupied Territories and travelled widely around the area.
"Almost every road to every village we passed south of Jerusalem was
blocked by mountains of earth or concrete blocks. The main north-south
road between Nablus, the area's largest city, and Jenin is empty of
vehicles other than army vehicles for many stretches. Army checkpoints
consistently turn back Palestinian vehicles. In a number of cases,
Palestinians requiring urgent medical attention have died," said Philippe
Hensmans.
"Such a situation should no longer be tolerated by the international
community," said Amnesty International. "Closures constitute the
collective punishment of a whole people."
"In all cases the closures deny the right to freedom of movement and
suffocate economic life. They are not effective in preventing violent
attacks against Israelis, as the latest suicide bombings have shown," the
organization said.
Delegates also visited areas of the West Bank where dozens of homes of
Nawaje -- a Bedouin groups had been bulldozed in reprisal after one
settler had been killed.
"In the vast majority of encampments, not a single person was accused of
the murder and arrested. Yet the Israeli Defence Force bulldozed the tents
and stone shelters, blew up the caves where many groups live, and even
filled wells with rubble."
In Rafah and Khan Yunis more than 70 homes have been demolished since
March, most of them one-storey buildings of refugees who lost their homes
in 1948.
Israel is a High Contracting Party to the Geneva Conventions. Yet its
actions towards the Palestinians, regarded as "protected persons" under
the Conventions, is in breach of the Fourth Geneva Convention Relative to
the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War. Article 33 states
clearly that: "No protected person may be punished for an offence he or
she has not personally committed. Collective penalties and likewise all
measures of intimidation or of terrorism are prohibited.... Reprisals
against protected persons and their property are prohibited."
In a joint letter to political and UN leaders on 6 July, Amnesty
International and Human Rights Watch reiterated their calls for
international observers to monitor compliance with human rights and
international humanitarian law as a means of enhancing protection for
civilians.
Background:
Since the beginning of the intifada in late September 2000 at least 480
Palestinians have been killed, most of them unlawfully, by Israeli
security forces when their lives and the lives of others were not in
danger.
More than 130 Israelis have been killed, most of them civilians
deliberately targeted in suicide bombings or drive-by shootings by
Palestinian armed groups and individuals.
Human rights abuses by opposition groups can never justify abandonment of
human rights principles by a government.
For more information please call Amnesty International's press office in
London, UK, on +44 20 7413 5566
Amnesty International, 1 Easton St., London WC1X 0DW web :
www.amnesty.org
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