12) ISRAEL ACCUSED OF
WHITE PHOSPHORUS ATTACKS
(The
following
article is from the February 1-14, 2009, issue of People's Voice,
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Special to PV
Credible reports are emerging that
Israel's tactics in Gaza have included use of the incendiary weapon
white phosphorus, which is banned in civilian areas under international
conventions.
One such
report from
Agence-France Presse concerns a January 5 Israeli bombardment of the
outskirts of Beit Lahiya, in the northern part of the Gaza Strip. AFP
reports that "Sabah Abu Halima and her family rushed to the top floor
of their house, to shelter in a corridor without windows and escape any
flying glass." Two weeks later, Chris Cobb-Smith, a British weapons
expert, arrived to examine the home. He found a hole in a burnt-out
ceiling, fragments of a shell, and a substance that bursts into flames
at the slightest contact with oxygen.
AFP quotes
Cobb-Smith: "Here the
white phosphorus comes through the roof, detonates as it hits the wall
and distributes the pieces of white phosphorus within the house, and
that's the explanation for the severe burning that you see around."
Cobb-Smith
was part of an
Amnesty International delegation investigating the Israeli army's use
of phosphorous bombs. These weapons are regulated by the 1980
Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons, specifically by Protocol
III on Prohibitions or Restrictions on the Use of Incendiary Weapons,
which bans them in civilian areas.
In the Beit
Lahiya attack, five civilians were killed and four wounded, including
Sabah Abu Halima.
"It hurts me
terribly, my skin
is burning. I don't sleep any more, neither day nor night," she told
AFP in the burns unit of Gaza's Shifa hospital. Gaza hospitals have
been inundated with victims of white phosphorus, which they don't know
how to treat as the substance has never been used in the Gaza Strip.
At Shifa
hospital, survivors
recounted how their wounds began smoking when they washed them or took
off their bandages; white phosphorus remains active for a long time and
continues to burn when you try to smother it. It explodes on contact
with the air and is used by armies mainly to create a smokescreen or to
mark targets for aerial bombardment.
"There is
absolutely no
military, tactical reason for the use of white phosphorus in this
environment," Cobb-Smith says. "I believe it's just being purely used
as a weapon of terror to frighten, to intimidate people. Obviously it's
going to cause physical harm as well because it can kill people and it
can destroy property."
Israel has
now admitted that
white phosphorus was deployed in its Gaza offensive, a report in The
Times of London said on Jan. 25. When the Times reported the matter on
January 5, it was strenuously denied by the Israeli army, which was
finally forced to backtrack in the face of mounting evidence and
international outcry.
"Yes,
phosphorus was used but
not in any illegal manner," the Times quoted Israeli Foreign Ministry
spokesman Yigal Palmor as saying. "Some practices could be illegal but
we are going into that. The IDF (Israel Defence Forces) is holding an
investigation concerning one specific incident."
The Times
said Palmor was
thought to be referring to the firing of phosphorus shells at a UN
school in Beit Lahiya on January 17. Pictures of this attack show
Palestinian medics fleeing as blobs of burning phosphorus rain down on
the compound.
There are
increasing calls for
war crimes trials to be launched against Israel. While the
International Court of Justice in The Hague cannot try Israel as it is
not a signatory to the Geneva Convention, any country that is a
signatory can prosecute individuals who took part in the Gaza operation
as culpable of war crimes. The ICJ did rule several years ago that
Israel's so-called "separation wall," which carves Palestinian West
Bank territories into small pieces, is a violation of international law.