Extrajudicial Assassinations As 
		Official Israeli Policy
      
		
        By Stephen Lendman
		ccun.org, November 19, 2008
		
        
 
Extra-judicial killings are indefensible, morally abhorrent, 
		and illegal under international laws and norms. Article 23b of the 1907 
		Hague Regulations prohibits "assassination, proscription, or outlawry of 
		an enemy, or putting a price upon an enemy's head, as well as offering a 
		reward for any enemy 'dead or alive.' " 
 
Article 3 of the 
		Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) states that "Everyone has 
		the right to life, liberty and security of person." UDHR also recognizes 
		the "inherent dignity (and the) equal and inalienable rights of all 
		members of the human family."
 
So do "just war" principles that 
		rule out gratuitous violence, assassinations, especially if 
		premeditated, war against civilians, and so on, despite the difficulties 
		of  distinguishing between combatants, those who've laid down their 
		arms, and the innocent in times of war - let alone dealing with 
		"terrorism" or what one analyst calls the "twilight zone between war and 
		peace." Others say it's justifiable resistance or "blowback" in response 
		to state-sponsored violence and other crimes of war and against 
		humanity.
 
In 1980, the Sixth United Nations Congress on the 
		Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of Offenders condemned "the 
		practice of killing and executing political opponents or suspected 
		offenders carried out by armed forces, law enforcement or other 
		governmental agencies or by paramilitary or political groups" acting 
		with the support of official forces or agencies.
 
The General 
		Assembly also acted in response to arbitrary executions and politically 
		motivated killings. On December 15, 1980, it adopted resolution 35/172 
		in which it urged member states to abide by the provisions of Articles 
		6, 14 and 15 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political rights 
		that cover the right to life and various safeguards guaranteeing fair 
		and impartial judicial proceedings.
 
The first principle of the 
		1989 UN Principles on the Effective Prevention and Investigation of 
		Extra-legal, Arbitrary and Summary Executions states: 
 
		"Governments shall prohibit by law all extra-legal, arbitrary and 
		summary executions and shall ensure that any such executions are 
		recognized as offences under their criminal laws, and are punishable by 
		appropriate penalties which take into account the seriousness of such 
		offenses. Exceptional circumstances, including a state of war or threat 
		of war, internal political instability or any other public emergency may 
		not be invoked as a justification of such executions. (They) shall not 
		be carried out under any circumstances including, but not limited to, 
		situations of internal armed conflict, excessive or illegal use of force 
		by a public official or other person acting in an official capacity or 
		by a person acting at the instigation, or with the consent or 
		acquiescence of such person, and situations in which deaths occur in 
		custody. This prohibition shall prevail over decrees issued by 
		governmental authority."
 
These articles and provisions apply to 
		occupied civilian populations, and the Fourth Geneva Convention and its 
		Article 3 affords ones (like the Palestinians) under foreign occupation 
		special protection. It covers all actions related to "Violence to life 
		and person, Murder of all kinds, mutilation, cruel treatment and 
		torture." In addition, "The passing of sentences and the carrying out of 
		executions without previous judgment pronounced by a regularly 
		constituted court, affording all the judicial guarantees....recognized 
		as indispensable by civilized peoples."
 
Its Article 32 states: 
		"the High Contracting Parties specifically agree that each of them is 
		prohibited from taking any measure of such a character as to cause the 
		physical suffering or extermination of protected persons in their hands. 
		This prohibition applies not only to murder, torture, corporal 
		punishment, mutilation and medical or scientific experiments not 
		necessitated by the medical treatment of a protected person, but also to 
		any other measures of brutality whether applied by civilian or military 
		agents."
 
Its Article 85 refers to "Grave Breaches" and defines 
		them as "Acts committed willfully and causing death or serious injury to 
		body or health....making the civilian population or individual civilians 
		the object of attack (or)launching an indiscriminate attack affecting 
		the civilian population or civilian objects...."
 
The 2002 
		International Criminal Court's Rome Statute also defines these grave 
		violations as war crimes that include (in its Article 8):
 
-- 
		"Grave" Geneva Convention breaches;
 
-- "Willing killing...."
		 
-- "Intentionally launching an attack" knowing it will "cause 
		incidental loss of life...."
 
-- "Killing or wounding" combatants 
		who've laid down their arms;
 
-- extrajudicial killings; and
 
		-- "Killing or wounding treacherously a combatant adversary...."
 
		In 1982, the UN established the Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, 
		summary or arbitrary executions. It was one of several mandates to 
		address disappearances, torture, assassinations and many other human 
		rights abuses and violations of international law. 
 
Philip 
		Alston currently holds the post to investigate extrajudicial killings, 
		hold governments responsible for committing them, failing to prevent 
		them, or for not responding when they're carried out by others. In May 
		2008, he issued the latest report of his "principle activities" in 2007 
		through the first three months of 2008. As of March 2008, he requested 
		permission from 32 countries and Occupied Palestine to visit. In spite 
		of "proceed(ing) with plans for a visit," Israel "so far failed to 
		respond affirmatively." The Palestinian Authority (PA) "issued an 
		invitation."
 
The US Position On Extrajudicial Killings
 
		In 1976, President Gerald Ford signed Executive Order (EO) 11905 banning 
		the practice against foreign leaders in peacetime and by implication 
		against others. Yet Reagan's Defense Secretary, Caspar Weinberger, 
		argued that only "murder by treacherous means" is forbidden so 
		assassinations are acceptable as long as they're unrelated to 
		"treachery." 
 
George Bush then swept aside subtleties, reversed 
		Ford's EO, and authorized the CIA to assassinate Osama bin Laden, his 
		supporters, and publicly stated that bin Laden "was wanted, dead or 
		alive." His Defense Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, concurred and called 
		killing "terrorists" an act of "self-defense."
 
In June 2008, 
		Philip Alston visited the US. He met with federal and state officials, 
		judges and civil society groups in New York, Washington, Alabama and 
		Texas. He also conducted a fact-finding tour of US prison and detention 
		facilities and presented his findings at a June 30 press conference. He 
		sharply criticized the Bush administration, the country's flawed 
		judicial system, and continued rule of law violations. He cited:
 
		-- racism in the application of the death penalty;
 
-- the lack 
		of transparency in Guantanamo prisoner deaths;
 
-- a lack of 
		information about Iraq and Afghanistan civilian deaths; the 
		unwillingness of Department of Defense officials and others to 
		cooperate; his concern about serious human rights violations as well; 
		and
 
-- the refusal of the US Justice Department to prosecute 
		mercenary contractors (like Blackwater Worldwide) who commit unlawful 
		killings. Or the US military. 
 
Israeli Extrajudicial Killings
		 
Throughout its history, Israel willfully and systematically 
		committed premeditated extrajudicial killings of Palestinians and other 
		Arabs as official state policy - carried out with explicit high-level 
		political, judicial and military authorization and allegedly in 
		"self-defense" against individuals threatening Israeli security. 
		Government officials even admit that certain persons are targeted, and 
		Dan Haluts, former Israeli Army Chief of Staff, once told the Washington 
		Post (in August 2006) that "Targeted killing is the most important 
		method in the fight against 'terrorism.' " In other words, premeditated 
		murder is acceptable as long as it's properly classified.
 
In May 
		2007 on Israeli Army Radio, Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, former Infrastructure 
		Minister, defended the practice and said: "We decided to carry out more 
		physical liquidation operations against (Palestinian) 'terrorists"....I 
		think this will eliminate the damage caused to Israeli territory due to 
		the launching of Palestinian rockets."
 
Almost never do Israeli 
		government or military officials show evidence that targeted individuals 
		acted violently or threatened Jewish citizens. Simply calling them 
		"terrorists" is justification enough - to kill them extrajudicially, 
		with no recourse to due process or respect for international law that 
		bans the practice for any reason.
 
"My crime was to protest 
		Israeli assassinations"
 
On January 5, 2007, the London Guardian 
		headlined that comment in reporting on Jewish activist Tali Fahima's 
		first interview following her release from Israeli incarceration. 
		Sitting with her arms handcuffed to a chair's legs 16 hours a day, her 
		captors said they wanted to teach her to be a "good Jew." She was 
		imprisoned for 30 months for traveling to the West Bank, "meeting an 
		enemy agent and translating a simple army document."
 
She 
		explained and said her crimes were for refusing to work with Shin Bet 
		(Israel's secret service), going to see the Palestinians, then 
		protesting the Israeli assassinations policy. She was kept in isolation 
		for nine months. Finally, at the urging of her lawyer, she struck a plea 
		bargain for a shorter sentence, and ended up being "unbowed" by her 
		experience. She learned how Sin Bet "terroriz(es)" people, both 
		Palestinians and Jews. "About the nature of the government, how they do 
		not want us to see what is going on in our name."
 
On August 8, 
		2004, she was arrested and placed under administrative detention in 
		September. In December, she was charged with "assistance to the enemy at 
		time of war." It was trumped up and false. In January 2005, the Tel Aviv 
		district court ruled that she should be placed under house arrest during 
		her trial. Jerusalem's high court overruled it on the grounds that she "identifie(d) 
		with an ideological goal." In December 2005, she pled guilty under her 
		plea bargain to meeting and aiding an enemy agent and entering 
		Palestinian territory. In January 2006, she was released.
 
She 
		felt compelled to make regular Jenin visits. Talk to hundreds of people, 
		including Palestinian resisters, and for the first time heard their 
		point of view and how hard things are under occupation. For showing 
		compassion and disagreeing with Israeli policies, she was imprisoned for 
		nearly 30 months on false charges. Not even Jews are safe from harsh 
		state retribution against anyone showing defiance or daring to resist 
		injustice.
 
The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights Documentation 
		of Israeli Targeted Assassinations
 
The (1995 established) 
		Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) functions independently in 
		Gaza and enjoys "Consultative Status" with the UN's Economic and Social 
		Council (ECOSOC). It's also an affiliate of the International Commission 
		of Jurists-Geneva, the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) 
		in Paris, the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Network in Copenhagen, the 
		Arab Organization for Human Rights in Cairo, and the International Legal 
		Assistance Corsortium (ILAC) in Stockholm.
 
Palestinian lawyers 
		and human rights activists established it to:
 
-- "protect human 
		rights and promote the rule of law;"
 
-- create, develop and 
		promote a democratic culture in Palestinian society; and
 
-- work 
		for Palestinian self-determination and independence "in accordance with 
		international law and UN resolutions."
 
PCHR issues documents, 
		fact sheets, and reports like its quarterly accounts of Israeli 
		extrajudicial executions in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT). 
		Its latest one is from April through June, and a more comprehensive one 
		covered August 2006 through its latest June 2008 data.
 
PCHR 
		states: It's "investigated and documented these (killings) in depth 
		(and) concluded that the IOF (Israeli Occupation Forces) have 
		consistently acted with utter disregard for the lives of (mostly 
		innocent) Palestinian civilians in the OPT, and that IOF have continued 
		to carry out state sanctioned extra-judicial executions, (in violation 
		of) international human rights law....in the overwhelming majority of 
		cases....suspects could have been arrested, but no efforts were 
		made....and they were instead extra-judicially executed" - according to 
		official state policy.
 
The Human Toll
 
Since the second 
		Intifada's September 2000 inception through June 30, 2008, and excluding 
		all other Palestinian killings, the IOF carried out 755 OPT executions. 
		Victims included 521 extrajudicially targeted and 233 bystanders, 
		including 71 children and 20 women. In Gaza, 405 were killed. Another 
		350 in the West Bank. The methods used included:
 
-- F-16, 
		unmanned drone, and attack helicopter-launched air-to-surface missiles; 
		tank shelling; missile launchers and gunboats; 
 
-- Israeli 
		military undercover units disguised as Palestinians; first established 
		during the first (1987 - 1993) Intifada; they became more active during 
		the second one; could easily have arrested suspects but instead killed 
		them at short range; and
 
-- IOF targeted house ambushes in the 
		West Bank.
 
Most often, civilians are attacked in their homes, 
		vehicles, on streets and at workplaces. Sometimes entire families are 
		killed, including children, women, the elderly, and infirm, and a July 
		2002 incident was typical. It targeted Salah Shehada, an Ezzedeen Al-Qassam 
		Brigades (the Hamas armed wing) leader. 
 
The IOF knew he was 
		with his wife and children. That they lived in a densely populated 
		residential area, and former Israeli Army Chief of Staff, Moshe Ya'alon, 
		admitted that he knew Shehada's wife and daughter "were close to him 
		during the implementation of the assassination....and there was no way 
		out of conducting the operation despite their presence." An Israeli F-16 
		bombed his home, and completely destroyed it. Two neighboring ones also 
		and damaged 32 others. 
 
The toll was horrific - 77 injured 
		civilians; 16 others killed, including Shehada, his wife, daughter, 
		assistant, eight children, (one a two-month old baby), and two elderly 
		men and two women. It was an indefensible criminal act of wanton murder.
		 
In May 2007, an air-to-surface missile targeted the Al-Hayia family 
		at his eastern Gaza meeting hall. It scored a direct hit. Killed were 
		seven members of his family, another Palestinian and the object of the 
		attack - Sameh Saleh Farawana, a Hamas activist. In addition, three 
		others were wounded.
 
In July 2006, air-to-surface missiles 
		destroyed Dr. Nabil Abdol Latif Abu Selmeya's home in Gaza City's 
		Al-Sheikh Radwan district. He, his wife, and seven children were killed. 
		In addition, 34 bystanders were injured, including 5 children and six 
		women. At least 15 neighboring homes were also damaged in an operation 
		Israelis said targeted Mohammed Al-Deif, Hamas' armed wing leader and 
		apparently Israel's most wanted man.
 
In January 2008, an 
		air-to-surface missile struck a civilian vehicle carrying three members 
		of the Al-Yazji family killing Mohammed Al-Yazji, his five-year old son, 
		and his 40-year old brother. Three bystanders were also injured. IOF 
		sources later admitted the attack was in error and was meant for another 
		vehicle carrying Palestinian resistance activists.
 
In August 
		2007, a Gaza operation near the Rafah International Crossing Point 
		killed two civilians, injured 12 others and slightly wounded three 
		targeted activists who escaped. Moments later, another vehicle was 
		struck nearby killing the driver, a civilian bystander, and wounding 12 
		others, including a child.
 
In November 2006 in eastern Gaza, a 
		vehicle was struck carrying Bassel Sha'aban Ubeid, an Ezzedeen Al-Qassam 
		Brigades member. He and a colleague were killed. In addition, five Amen 
		family members were injured, including two children.
 
Throughout 
		the reporting period, there were many more killings in Gaza and the West 
		Bank. In November 2006, four Jenin civilians. In February 2007, three 
		others in Jenin. In March 2008, four Bethlehem civilians. Many others 
		throughout the Territories in Ramallah, Nablus, Rafah, Khan Younis, Tul 
		Karim, north, central and southern Gaza, and elsewhere - against 
		activists, resisters, civilians, women and children for the crime of 
		being Palestinians wanting self-determination, freedom, and respect for 
		their rights under international law. For their part, Israelis, with 
		world support and complicity, continue denying it to them repressively 
		and illegally.
 
Extrajudicial Executions in the Latest Reporting 
		Period - April - June 2008
 
During the period, the IOF conducted 
		eight OPT assassinations killing a total of 16 people, including two 
		civilian bystanders. Two operations were carried out in the West Bank. 
		Six others in Gaza.
 
On April 14, an air-to-surface missile 
		killed Ibrahim Mohanned Abu 'Olba, the National Resistance Brigades' 
		(the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine's armed wing) 
		leader in northern Gaza. Two civilians were also injured, including a 
		15-year old boy. In addition, a number of nearby houses were damaged.
		 
On April 15, an air-to-surface missile killed Abdullah Mohammed al-Ghassain, 
		an al-Quds Brigades' (the Islamic Jihad's armed wing) activist in 
		northern Gaza. Three others were also injured.
 
On April 17, the 
		IOF besieged a building in Qabatya village, southeast of Jenin in the 
		northern West Bank. They opened fire at a civilian car, ordered people 
		out of the building, and fired shells and demolished it with a 
		bulldozer. Two dead Palestinians were found inside.
 
On April 20, 
		an air-to-surface missile killed Nour al-Dibari in Gaza. A second 
		missile targeted a number of Palestinians who just left a grocery shop. 
		Its owner was seriously injured as well as his son. At least one other 
		Palestinian was hurt as well.
 
On June 29, the IOF entered Tubas 
		in the northern West Bank and set a cemetery ambush for a group of 
		Palestinian children there throwing stones and Molotov cocktails at 
		military vehicles. They opened fire and killed one 16-year old from 
		multiple gunshots to the chest and abdomen.
 
PCHR "asserts that 
		the Government of Israel continues to act recklessly, and with utter 
		disregard for the human rights of the Palestinian people, including 
		(their) right to life" and safety. Israel also fails "to meet its 
		obligations under human rights law, including the Fourth Geneva 
		Convention." An Israeli government representative wasn't available for 
		comment. 
 
Stephen Lendman is a Research 
		Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization. He lives in 
		Chicago and can be reached at
		
		lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
 
Also visit his blog site at 
		sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The Global Research News Hour on 
		RepublicBroadcasting.org Mondays from 11AM - 1PM US Central time for 
		cutting-edge discussions on world and national topics with distinguished 
		guests. All programs are archived for easy listening.
 http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=10946
		
      
      
      
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