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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, August 15, 2018
Israel normalizing war crimes in Gaza

Palestinian medics treat a wounded protester after he was shot by
Israeli soldiers during Great March of Return protests in Khan Younis,
southern Gaza Strip, 10 August.
Ashraf AmraAPA images
Gaza’s fuel crisis remains unresolved a week after a United Nations humanitarian official warned that hospitals and water sanitation facilities would soon shut down as a result.
“Despite our continued engagement with the concerned bodies, we have not
encountered any preparations to contain the fuel crisis that threatens
health services and facilities in the Gaza Strip,” the health ministry
in the territory stated on Monday.
Six human rights groups urgently petitioned Israel’s high court on
Thursday to reverse all restrictions on the movement of goods through
Gaza’s sole commercial crossing, which is controlled by Israel.
Israel tightened its blockade on Gaza a month ago, banning imports to and exports from the territory with the exception, at its discretion, of food and medicine.
Gisha, one of the groups petitioning Israel’s high court, noted that
“Gaza’s devastated economy is almost entirely dependent on the
operation of the Israeli-controlled crossing,” adding that the new
sanctions “threaten an already delicate humanitarian situation.”
The tightened blockade is a new disaster for Gaza’s economy, all but
destroyed after 11 years of siege and successive full-scale military
assaults.
Unemployment had soared beyond 50 percent even before the ban on the movement of goods last month.
Collective punishment
The ban on exports and imports is a form of collective punishment that
Israel has admitted is “intended to mount pressure on Hamas in response
to incendiary kites and balloons being launched from Gaza,” Gisha
stated.
“Collective punishment of the civilian population for actions that are
beyond its control is both immoral and illegal, further propelling Gaza
toward a foreseeable humanitarian disaster,” Gisha added.
Collective punishment is a violation of Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention.
In 2010 the International Committee of the Red Cross affirmed that
Israel’s blockade on Gaza – imposed after Hamas won legislative
elections and began administering the internal affairs of the territory
in 2007 – “constitutes a collective punishment imposed in clear
violation of Israel’s obligations under international humanitarian law.”
The Israeli daily Haaretz reported that the high court ordered the state to respond to the petition by Sunday.
Citing a report by a Gaza manufacturers association, Haaretz added that the continued closure of the commercial crossing will result in the folding of hundreds of companies.
“Some 350 companies have already stopped working over the last month,
and the association says that if the closure continues, about half the
1,800 companies now operating in Gaza will shut down and more than 1,500
workers will be dismissed,” the paper stated.
Israel mulled assassinations
Haaretz reported on
Sunday that Israel was prepared to assassinate senior Hamas figures in
Gaza in response to the Great March of Return protests held along the
eastern perimeter of the territory since 30 March.
Israel has killed more
than 125 Palestinians during the Great March of Return demonstrations,
and 50 more men, women and children in Gaza in other circumstances since
that date.
On Monday Israel’s defense minister made the outlandish claim that every Palestinian killed by Israel in Gaza since 30 March was a member of Hamas – an assertion later walked back by his office.
“Since the start of the March of Return events, Hamas has sustained 168
deaths, 4,348 injured and dozens of terror facilities destroyed,”
Avigdor Lieberman stated.
Nothing to see here, just Israel's Defense Minister describing every Palestinian killed or wounded by Israeli snipers during Gaza protests as a terrorist, and praising the army for its "holy work".https://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/250444 …
Lieberman’s claim is demonstrably untrue. Those killed have included a pregnant woman and her toddler daughter sleeping in their home when it was hit in an airstrike, as well as 23 children, some as young as 11, gunned down during protests.
It also has no bearing on the legality of Israel’s actions, human rights groups have previously said.
In July Lieberman inadvertently confirmed that he makes no distinction between civilians and combatants killed during the ongoing crackdown on popular protests.
“There are 159 dead terrorists, there are some 5,000 wounded,” he claimed.
The principle of distinction between civilians and combatants is the first rule of international humanitarian law governing armed conflict.
Lieberman’s statements could therefore potentially be viewed as evidence
of intent to commit war crimes by International Criminal Court
prosecutors currently examining the situation in Gaza.
Lieberman’s lies, threats
Lieberman previously claimed without basis that
Yaser Murtaja, a journalist who was wearing a flak jacket marked with
the word PRESS when he was fatally wounded by an Israeli sniper on 6 April, was a high-ranking member of Hamas’ military wing who used drones to collect intelligence on Israeli forces.
The International Federation of Journalists accused Israel of “fabricating lies to justify murder” in the case of Murtaja.
Lieberman reportedly stated at
the end of Monday’s meeting with the Israeli army chief of staff and
other military and intelligence officials that “I want to thank the
determined commanders and soldiers, who are infused with the spirit of
battle and do holy work for the sake of ensuring the security of
Israel’s citizens.”
He also declared Israel’s intent to inflict further violence on Gaza
after pounding the territory in more than 150 strikes last week.
“The question of the next round is not a question of ‘if’ but of ‘when.’
I am sure that we will do what is necessary, the way it needs to be
done,” he stated, according to Israeli media.
Designs on Gaza
The military reportedly seeks to defer a full confrontation until at
least the end of next year, when an “above- and below-ground obstacle”
along Gaza’s perimeter is due to be completed.
Haaretz reported that
“completion of the barrier will be the most important strategic event
on the Gaza front, a senior defense official recently told a closed
forum.”
Such a calculation further demonstrates that, as I wrote last month, any future major assault on Gaza will be another of Israel’s wars of choice aimed at maintaining Israeli ascendancy through the violent, permanent subjugation of millions of Palestinians.
Last month Lieberman indicated that Israel would once again target
civilians in any new major operation in order to exact political
concessions from Hamas.
“Unfortunately, residents of Gaza will be among those who will have to pay the price,” the defense minister stated.
Israel targeted civilian infrastructure during its bombing campaign in Gaza last week.
Cultural center targeted
Drones and warplanes struck a building housing the Said al-Mishal
Institute for Culture and Science and the Egyptian delegation in Gaza
with several missiles on Thursday, obliterating the five-story structure.
Al Mezan, a human rights group based in Gaza, said that
at least 24 persons were injured during the airstrikes, among them four
children, four women and a journalist. Nearby buildings sustained
substantial damage.
According to Al Mezan, the Said al-Mishal Institute was “founded in 1996
to promote cultural development by providing space, resources, and
opportunities for creative children and young people in Gaza.”
It opened a cultural center in 2004 featuring “a theater, conference
hall, library and digital library, research and study center and
computer labs,” as well as art exhibition galleries.
“A cultural center is civilian property enjoying protection under
international humanitarian law, as in Article 53 of the Fourth Geneva
Convention,” Al Mezan stated.
Cultural sites are also protected under the Hague Convention and the
Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions, “whereby making
cultural property the object of retaliatory attacks is prohibited, and
under the principles set out by UNESCO,” Al Mezan added.
“The unnecessary destruction of the cultural center, which affords
Israel no military gain, points to an act of retaliation,” according to
the rights group.
Noting that “attacks on civilian targets have become a feature of
Israel’s military engagement in the Gaza Strip,” Al Mezan added that
such attacks “must not become normalized.”
Medic killed

Abdallah al-Qatati, at right, was killed on 10 August. (WHO)
Meanwhile the World Health Organization has reiterated its call for the protection of health workers, patients and health facilities following the killing of a medic during last Friday’s Great March of Return protests.
Abdallah al-Qatati, 22, was a volunteer medic providing care to a 55-year-old man who had been shot when he too came under fire.
Both al-Qatati and the injured patient he was treating, Ali Said al-Aloul, died from their injuries.
The third medic killed during the Great March of Return demonstrations,
al-Qatati was in the final year of his psychology degree at a Gaza City
university.
Since January he had been volunteering with Nabd al-Hayat (Pulse of
Life), providing first aid training and mental health and psychosocial
support around Rafah in southern Gaza, according to the World Health
Organization.
Al-Qatati and Nabd al-Hayat had been volunteering as first responders
since the outset of the Great March of Return demonstrations.
He “liked to be photographed in his white coat, and his colleagues say
he was proud of the work he was doing and the service he could offer to
his community,” the World Health Organization stated.
I join others in mourning the death of Abdullah Al-Qutati, third Palestinian health worker killed while helping people injured during #Gaza protests since 30 March. Health workers are #NotATarget.
On Saturday, a third Palestinian, Ahmad Jamal Suleiman Abu Luli, 40, succumbed to wounds sustained the previous day east of Rafah.
Wissam Yousif Hijazi, 30, died on Monday from injuries sustained on 14 May, the deadliest day yet during the Great March of Return.

