GAMBIA-L Archives

The Gambia and Related Issues Mailing List

GAMBIA-L@LISTSERV.ICORS.ORG

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
Momodou Buharry Gassama <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Momodou Buharry Gassama <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 15 Jan 2009 13:40:53 +0100
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (426 lines)
Israel is in daily breach of its obligations under international law.
Some of these breaches probably amount to war crimes.

The Fourth Geneva Convention 1949
(Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of
War)

A: Background
1. The purpose of the Fourth Geneva Convention

The Fourth Geneva Convention was specifically designed to protect
civilians in time of war and focuses on the treatment of civilians in
the hands of the adversary, whether in occupied territories or in
internment.
It was adopted on 12 August 1949 and entered into force on 21 October
1950.
2. Applicability of the Fourth Geneva Convention to the Occupied
Territories

Israel ratified the Fourth Geneva Convention with effect from 6 July
1951.
The convention is considered to have been elevated to the status of
"customary international law", which means it applies irrespective of
whether a State has ratified it.
Apart from Israel, the entire international community, has
unambiguously accepted the applicability of the Fourth Geneva
Convention to those territories captured and occupied by Israel in the
1967 war, which include the West Bank and Gaza.
Both the Security Council and the General Assembly have consistently
issued resolutions calling on Israel to recognise the applicability of
the Convention, a view that has been endorsed by the International
Committee of the Red Cross.
3. Scope of the Fourth Geneva Convention

The Convention deals specifically with the treatment of what it calls
'protected persons' - civilians who find themselves in enemy hands as a
result of a conflict or an occupation.
The Convention prohibits, among other things, violence to life and
person, torture, taking of hostages, humiliating and degrading
treatment, sentencing and execution without due legal process, and
collective punishments of any kind, with respect to all "protected
persons". It calls for them to be humanely treated at all times, with
no physical or moral coercion, intimidation, deportation.
It specifies 'grave breaches' of the Convention as including willful
killing; torture or inhuman treatment; willfully causing great
suffering or serious injury to body or health; unlawful deportation or
transfer or unlawful confinement of a protected person; willfully
depriving a protected person of the rights of fair and regular trial;
taking of hostages and extensive destruction and appropriation of
property, not justified by military necessity and carried out
unlawfully and wantonly.
B: Israel's violation of specific provisions of the Fourth Geneva
Convention
a) Humane treatment
Article 27: 'Protected persons are entitled, in all circumstances, to
respect for their persons, their honour, their family rights, their
religious convictions and practices, and their manners and customs.
They shall at all times be humanely treated, and shall be protected
especially against all acts of violence or threats thereof and against
insults and public curiosity.'/p>

Violations:

Every day tens of thousands of Palestinians are subjected to a
checkpoint system involving body searches, humiliation and
inconvenience.
B'Tselem (The Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the
Occupied Territories ) reports many incidents of violence, at times
gross violence against Palestinians that are unnecessary and without
justification. Many claims of police brutality remain uninvestigated
and have become the norm.[1]
The building of the Wall/ 'Security Barrier', has created an area
between the barrier and the Green Line referred to as the "seam area".
B'Tselem estimates that this section of the barrier alone "will
infringe the human rights of more than 210,000 Palestinians who live in
67 towns and villages: 13 communities, containing 11,700 residents,
will become enclaves trapped between the barrier and the Green Line;
the barrier's winding route and the additional barrier (the depth
barrier) east of the separation barrier will turn 19 other villages, in
which 128,500 Palestinians live, into enclaves; 36 villages situated
east of the separation barrier or depth barrier, containing 72,200
residents, will be separated from a substantial part of their farmland,
which lies west of the barriers."[2]
Only Palestinians are required to apply for a permit in order to remain
living within the seam area and separate permits to enter the seam area
to carry out activities such as farming. Such permits are subject to
renewal. The criteria for obtaining a permit are unclear and allow
complete discretion to the Civil Administration to deny the permit and
thus eject Palestinians from their homes or refuse them entry to their
fields. In June 2004 B'Tselem reported that "Palestinians wanting to
obtain a permit face a bureaucratic nightmare".[3]
The Family Unification Law, forbids Israelis married to, or who will
marry in the future, residents of the Occupied Territories to live in
Israel with their spouses. This law does not apply to spouses who are
not residents of the Occupied Territories and is therefore
discriminatory.
b) No use of torture or brutality
Article 31: 'No physical or moral coercion shall be exercised against
protected persons, in particular to obtain information from them or
from third parties.'

Article 32 prohibits the use of 'any measure of such a character as to
cause the physical suffering or extermination of protected persons', a
prohibition that applies not just to murder, torture etc 'but also to
any other measures of brutality whether applied by civilian or military
agents'.

Violations:

According to a recent report by the Public Committee Against Torture in
Israel and other human rights organisations, there is evidence of
systematic and routine torture of Palestinian prisoners causing "severe
pain or suffering, whether physical or mental".[4]
According to the report, violence, painful tying, humiliations and many
other forms of ill-treatment, including detention under inhuman
conditions, are a matter of course.
The ill-treatment of Palestinian detainees by IDF soldiers and other
detaining forces is manifested through ill-treatment of relatives of
the detainee; violence during arrest and on the way to the detention
facility; shackling of detainees with "azikonim" (small handcuffs);
inhuman conditions of detention; and other means of ill-treatment,
including being suspended with legs up, 'goal' (a stone-throwing
contest at the detainee), forcing the detainee to run blindfolded and
tripping him, stripping (sometimes to complete nakedness), intimidation
using a dog, cocking a weapon as if intending a summary execution, and
more.
According to the same report, and based on official data, Israel's
General Security Service (GSS) agents have interrogated thousands of
Palestinians per year during the Second Intifada, and over 200 at any
given moment.[5] In July 2002, the GSS related to the press that 90
Palestinians were defined as 'ticking bombs' and were tortured (that
is, were exposed to 'physical pressure').[6] Research by the Public
Committee Against Torture in Israel shows that the number tortured is
actually much greater.
Information obtained by the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel
shows that the official sources have admitted to using a large portion
of the torture methods, including slapping, 'bending,' shaking, sleep
deprivation, and prolonged shackling.
Israel's policy of targeting and killing Palestinians believed to have
some connection to hostilities, is also a clear violation of this
provision.
c) No collective punishment
Article 33: '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.'

Violations:

The Family Unification Law (see above), is a from of collective
punishment.
The sweeping nature of restriction of movement in the form of closure,
siege and curfew constitutes a form of collective punishment. Since the
outbreak of the second Second Intifada, Israel has imposed a total
closure on the occupied territories and has prohibited Palestinian
movement between the occupied territories and Israel and between the
West Bank and Gaza, unless they have a special permit. Since 2000
Israel has issued no new entry permits.
Israel also imposes internal closures on specific towns and villages.
Since October 2000, most Palestinian communities in the West Bank have
been closed off by staffed checkpoints, concrete blocks, dirt piles or
deep trenches. During curfews, residents are completely prohibited from
leaving their homes. As B'Tselem has put it: "The sweeping nature of
the restrictions imposed by Israel, the specific timing that it employs
when deciding to ease or intensify them, and the destructive human
consequences turn its policy into a clear form of collective
punishment. Such punishment is absolutely prohibited by the Fourth
Geneva Convention.'[7]
The requirement of all Palestinians who wish to remain living in or to
enter the "seam area" to apply for the permits is a form of collective
punishment. Residents in this area, as well as those who wish to enter
the area, will now be dependent on the benevolence of the defense
establishment, even though they are suspected of no wrongdoing. These
residents are affected solely because of their poor luck in living or
working east of the route where Israel decided to construct the
barrier.
House demolitions are carried out under the emergency regulations (DER
119) of the British mandate which provide for an authority to demolish
a house as a response against persons suspected of taking part in or
directly supporting criminal or guerilla activities. Recently,
application of DER 119 has become limited to instances in which an
attack was launched from a specific house or cases in which an
"inhabitant" of the house was suspected of involvement in an offense.
The term "inhabitant," however, has been broadly defined to include
persons who do not necessarily reside in said house regularly, and
often is applied to family homes in which a suspected offender
previously resided. The regular occupants' knowledge of the offense has
been deemed irrelevant by the Israeli authorities. This is clearly a
form of collective punishment.[8]
d) No deportations
Article 49 states: 'Individual or mass forcible transfers, as well as
deportations of protected persons from occupied territory to the
territory of the Occupying Power or to that of any other country,
occupied or not, are prohibited, regardless of their motive.' In
addition, 'The Occupying Power shall not deport or transfer parts of
its own civilian population into the territory it occupies.'

Violations:

The Israeli policy of deporting relatives of terrors suspects from the
West Bank to Gaza is a clear violation of the provision.
The Israeli policy of authorizing houses and settlements in the West
Bank and Gaza is clear violation of this provision and cannot be
justified.
e) No imprisonment without due process
Article 71 states: 'No sentence shall be pronounced by the competent
courts of the Occupying Power except after a regular trial.'

Violations

According to the Public Committee against Torture in Israel, over
28,000 Palestinians were arrested between the beginning of the Second
Intifada in September 2000, and the beginning of April 2003. (see above
report)
In May 2003, 5,362Palestinians were being held in IDF and Israel Prison
Service (IPS) detention and prison facilities, of whom 1,107were
detained but neither charged nor tried (i.e. were under administrative
detention).
f) No destruction of personal property
Article 53 states: 'Any destruction by the Occupying Power of real or
personal property belonging individually or collectively to private
persons, or to the State, or to other public authorities, or to social
or cooperative organizations, is prohibited, except where such
destruction is rendered absolutely necessary by military operations.

Violations:

Over 500 Palestinian homes have been demolished in the last 3 years.
While the convention recognises a wide scope of discretion to the
military commander, the concept of military necessity is not a "carte
blanche" to the military. There are criteria for assessing military
necessity' (see below) and if the demolition fails to fulfill one of
these criteria, it is illegal. It is impossible to sustain the view
that the large number of demolitions have complied with these
criteria.
According to a recent Human Rights Watch report, the IDF has rendered
16 000 people homeless over the past four years, regardless of whether
their homes posed a genuine military threat.[9]
The uprooting of tens of thousands of olive and orange trees and the
confiscation of large amounts of land to build the Wall/ 'security
barrier' are in direct violation of this provision.
A recent article in Ha'aretz describes how the military authorities
have done nothing to prevent settlers from stealing Palestinian olive
harvests. (30 Sept 2004)
g) Grave breaches
Article 147 specifies 'grave breaches' of the Convention as including
willful killing; torture or inhuman treatment; willfully causing great
suffering or serious injury to body or health; unlawful deportation or
transfer or unlawful confinement of a protected person; willfully
depriving a protected person of the rights of fair and regular trial;
taking of hostages and extensive destruction and appropriation of
property, not justified by military necessity and carried out
unlawfully and wantonly.

Violations:

As demonstrated above, each of the acts described as a grave breach has
been carried out by the IDF or been sanctioned by the Israeli
government. Clear and comprehensive records of these acts have been
documented by reliable Israeli human-rights organizations and can be
easily found on the internet.[10]

C: Israel's position
Israel?s official position that the Fourth Geneva Convention is not
applicable is based on an extremely narrow interpretation of Article 2
of the Convention,  claiming that the Convention only applies where a
legitimate sovereign is evicted from the territory in question.
According to this argument, since neither Egypt nor Jordan were
recognized as legitimate sovereigns of the Gaza Strip and West Bank
respectively prior to 1967, the Convention is not applicable.
This argument has however been rejected by the entire international
community, including the United States (and by many Israelis) since
Article 2 explicitly sets out the conditions of application and is
clearly intended to apply when an occupation begins during an armed
conflict between two or more High Contracting parties. It makes no
distinction regarding the status of the territory in question.
Irrespective of the nature of the war in 1967, Israeli conquest of the
Occupied Territories was the direct result of just such an 'armed
conflict' between High Contracting Parties to the Convention. (This
view is supported by the International Committee of the Red Cross's
commentary on the Convention and recognises the fact that the
Convention aims to protect the rights of the inhabitants of the
occupied territories more so than those of the ousted sovereign.)
Israel has also argued that it has voluntarily applied the
'humanitarian' provisions of the Fourth Geneva Convention. This is
disingenuous as the document is in its entirety a 'humanitarian'
document, and, as a signatory, Israel is bound by the entire document,
not just the parts it chooses to apply. Furthermore, the Israeli
Supreme Court recognises the situation as one of "belligerent
occupation" and has recently applied the Convention on the basis that
"the parties agree that the humanitarian rules of the Fourth Geneva
Convention apply to the issue."[11]
Israel argues it has valid claims to title in the occupied territories
based on 'its historic and religious connection to the land', 'its
recognized security needs' and the fact that it came under Israeli
control 'in a war of self-defense, imposed upon Israel'.[footnote]
Nothing in the Convention leads credence to any of these arguments
which are irrelevant in terms of international law.[12]
Addition made on 22nd August 2005:

The question of the status of the territories has now been clearly and
conclusively dealt with by the Israeli Supreme Court. In an attempt to
prevent the government from removing them 'the Gaza settlers took their
case to the Israeli Supreme Court. The government asserted that it was,
indeed, in belligerent occupation of the territories, and had always
been so. Therefore Israeli settlements in them could only ever have
been temporary and could be removed by the government. The Supreme
Court decided in favour of the government by a 10:1 majority. It said
that its decision applied to the West Bank as well as Gaza.

The importance with which the Court viewed the case is shown by the
fact that it sat with all the justices and that the majority jointly
wrote their opinion, whereas usually one justice writes the opinion and
the others agree.'   (Arthur Goodman, letter sent for publication to
the Financial Times, 18 Aug 2005)



The fact that the Fourth Geneva Convention has been recognized as
legally binding and violations of it as prosecutable offenses, even war
crimes, makes it of vital importance to those seeking to bring to
justice those who are in breach of the Convention.
D: The question of Military Necessity
Article 27 of the Fourth Geneva Convention allows the Parties to the
conflict to 'take such measures of control and security in regard to
protected persons as may be necessary as a result of the war.'
Military necessity incorporates clear conditions:
(i) the presence of an immediate and concrete threat,
(ii) that the measures be an adequate response to the threat, and
(iii) that, even if the first two conditions are fulfilled, such
measures must respect the principle of proportionality.

It is impossible to see how any but a handful of the violations of the
Convention might be justified in these terms.

Military necessity has been assessed in numerous Israeli supreme court
judgments, many of which have found that actions by the IDF, including
the building of the "Separation Barrier" in certain areas, could not be
justified on the basis of military necessity. (In a recent case, the
court ordered a change of the route of the wall based on an
administrative law test which obliges public authorities, including the
army, to consider and choose the least damaging course of action, which
they did not do in that case as there was an alternative route. This
appears to equate to the test of proportionality in international
law.)
Notes
[1] See e.g. B'Tselem Press release Sarra Checkpoint - a Week of Severe
Abuse - Back to text

[2] See B'Tselem report The Separation Barrier: Phase One Completed -
Hundreds of Thousands Palestinians Directly Harmed - Back to text

[3] See B'Tselem report Permit System to Cross Separation Barrier is
Racist - Back to text

[4] See Public Committee against Torture in Israel report Back to a
Routine of Torture: Torture and Ill-treatment of Palestinian Detainees
during Arrest, Detention and Interrogation September 2001 - April 2003
- Back to text

[5] This statistic was given to the Knesset Law and Constitution
Committee on 19 May 2003 by IPS Deputy Commissioner Dani Avidan - based
on an article that appeared on the Ha'aretz website on 20 May 2003 (but
not in the print version of the paper). - Back to text

[6] Yoav Limor, "90 Palestinian Detainees Defined as 'Ticking Bombs,'
Maariv, 25 July 2002 - Back to text

[7] See B'Tselem report Civilians under Siege: Restrictions on Freedom
of Movement as Collective Punishment, January 2001. - Back to text

[8] See United Nations Information System on the Question of Palestine:
The legality of house demolitions under International Humanitarian Law,
1 June 2004 - Back to text

[9] See the Human Rights Watch Report Razing Rafah: Mass Home
Demolitions in the Gaza Strip, 18 October 2004 - Back to text

[10] See in particular B'Tselem ; Public Committee against Torture in
Israel ; Human Rights Watch and the United Nations Information System
on the Question of Palestine. - Back to text

[11] Beit Sourik Village Council v The Government of Israel, HCJ
2056/04 para 1 - Back to text

[12]See Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs website Israeli Settlements
and International Law? 20 May 2001 at (viewed 7 December 2004) - Back
to text


References and Further reading

The full text of the Fourth Geneva Convention

For discussions on the Applicability of the Fourth Geneva Convention
see
John Sigler, On the Applicability of the Fourth Geneva Convention, 20
December 2000 at
Public Interest Lawyers, Opinion on The protection afforded by
international humanitarian law..., 18 September 2003
Roberts, A., "Prolonged Military Occupation: The Israeli- Occupied
Territories 1967-1988" in International Law and the Administration of
Occupied Territories, Playfair (ed) 1992
Imseis, A., "On the Fourth Geneva Convention and the Occupied
Palestinian Territory", Harvard International Law Journal, Winter
(2003) 65

For the monitoring of breaches or suspected breaches of the Convention
see in particular
B'tselem
Public Committee against Torture in Israel
United Nations Information System on the Question of Palestine
Human Rights Watch

See also
Breaking the Silence. Soldiers from Hebron describe what they saw and
did, October and November 2004.

いいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいい
To unsubscribe/subscribe or view archives of postings, go to the Gambia-L Web interface
at: http://listserv.icors.org/archives/gambia-l.html

To Search in the Gambia-L archives, go to: http://listserv.icors.org/SCRIPTS/WA-ICORS.EXE?S1=gambia-l
To contact the List Management, please send an e-mail to:
[log in to unmask]
いいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいい

ATOM RSS1 RSS2