Israel Takes Revenge On Palestinian Armed Factions By Mass Killing Civilians In Gaza
Palestinian Territory - In what appears
to be retaliation against Palestinian armed factions,
Israeli forces are mass-killing civilians in the Gaza Strip
and subjecting them to collective punishment, said Euro-Med
Human Rights Monitor in a statement.
Within a few hours
of a single night, Israeli armed forces killed approximately
70 children inside their homes. Israel is clearly violating
international humanitarian law by employing weapons of
enormous destructive power against Gaza Strip residents;
residential buildings came crashing down on their
inhabitants, resulting in a significant number of casualties
among civilians, including children.
The Israeli Cabinet
approved the declaration of war on Saturday evening, and
thus the launch of large-scale military operations in
response to Hamas’ armed attack on Israel dubbed
“Operation Al-Aqsa Flood”, which has resulted in the
deaths of approximately 700 Israelis and the capture of
hundreds more.
On Sunday evening and during the early
hours of Monday morning, the Israeli army launched hundreds
of air strikes against residential neighbourhoods and
multi-storey inhabited buildings. According to Euro-Med
Monitor’s preliminary data, 22 residential buildings were
levelled directly onto the civilians inside of them on the
morning of 9 October. The Israeli airstrikes have killed all
or most of the members of approximately 18 Gazan
families.
The death toll among Palestinians has risen to
436, including 91 children and 61 women, with over 2,271
others injured, including 244 children and 151 women,
according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Gaza.
Meanwhile, the number of housing units that have been
completely destroyed since Saturday is about 500, Euro-Med
Monitor estimates, while another 2,400 have been partially
destroyed.
According to the Euro-Med Monitor team in
Gaza, Israel appears to be using thermobaric weaponry
(vacuum bombs) in its attack, the effects of which are felt
by all residents in the vicinity. These bombs have
tremendous destructive power and the ability to level
multi-storey buildings. Additionally, several testimonies
which Euro-Med Monitor has yet to verify claim that the
Israeli army used tightly controlled [IB1] white phosphorus
munitions in areas in the southern Gaza Strip.
Initial
estimates indicate that more than 40,000 families have been
displaced from various areas of the Gaza Strip, escaping the
violent attacks, while the United Nations Relief and Works
Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) reported that about
74,000 people sought refuge in 64 of its schools and
shelters in the Gaza Strip. Under the pretext that it had a
tunnel underground, Israel even launched an airstrike on a
UNRWA school housing over 225 people.
According to an
Israeli army spokesman, the Israeli Air Force has dropped
over a thousand tons of bombs on Gaza since the attack
began. Israeli naval forces also took part in bombing
various areas near the Gaza coast.
Israeli army forces
issuing “warnings” via phone calls and text messages, or
by “tapping the roof” with drone missiles with limited
destructive power, is insufficient to protect Palestinian
civilians and does not absolve Israel of responsibility for
the large number of civilian casualties. Mass killings, and
burying residents beneath the rubble of their own homes, are
examples of Israeli bombing policy that disregards the
principles of necessity and proportionality.
In the form
of retaliation and collective punishment, Israeli forces
deliberately target civilian objects to inflict widespread
casualties and destruction, including material and human
losses, said Euro-Med Monitor. This violates international
humanitarian law and the Geneva Conventions (1949), and
amounts to a war crime under the Rome Statute of the
International Criminal Court.
“Even in cases of
military necessity, Israel must adhere to provisions of
international humanitarian law, which prohibits
‘preventive’ damage to property––that is, damage
done before the danger has been [properly understood by
residents][IB2] ––and the destruction of property to
achieve deterrence, instil fear in civilians, or retaliate
against them,” said Euro-Med Monitor’s Chief Operating
Officer Anas Jerjawi.
Jerjawi explained that Article 33
of the Fourth Geneva Convention states, “Collective
penalties and likewise all measures of intimidation or of
terrorism are prohibited…Reprisals against protected
persons and their property are prohibited”. “Israel’s
policy of targeting and demolishing civilian homes
constitutes collective punishment against the residents of
the Gaza Strip, which violates international humanitarian
law,” he
stated.