- Details
-
Written by AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
-
Category: News News
-
Published: 05 January 2009 05 January 2009
-
Last Updated: 05 January 2009 05 January 2009
-
Created: 05 January 2009 05 January 2009
-
Hits: 3760 3760
Research and Campaign Assistant
Amnesty International
International Secretariat
1 Easton Street
London WC1X ODW
United Kingdom
http://www.amnesty.org
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
PRESS RELEASE
5 January 2009
UN Security Council must
not fail civilians caught in Gaza conflict
Amnesty International today
urged the UN Security Council to take firm and decisive action to address
the increasingly grave situation in the Gaza Strip and southern Israel.
“Civilian casualties and
destruction in Gaza are on an unprecedented scale. The UN Security Council
must not remain silent. The Council can and must act and it should do so
without further delay,” said Malcolm Smart, Director of Amnesty International’s
Middle East and North Africa Programme.
There are growing concerns
about the safety of the civilian populations in the area, particularly
the 1.5 million Palestinians who are trapped in the Gaza Strip and facing
a spiralling humanitarian crisis amid continuing Israeli attacks and after
many months of blockade.
"The UN Security Council
has a key responsibility to help ensure that the parties to the conflict
respect international human rights and humanitarian law," said Malcolm
Smart. “It is imperative that the Council urgently adopt a strong
resolution condemning attacks against civilians by both Israel and Hamas
and demanding that such attacks cease immediately.”
Amnesty International said
the UN Security Council should urge Israel to lift restrictions on the
passage of humanitarian aid into Gaza -- medicines, food, fuel and other
necessities urgently required to alleviate civilian suffering -- and to
allow humanitarian and human rights workers and journalists unfettered
access to Gaza.
"With only a few exceptions,
humanitarian workers and journalists have been barred from Gaza by the
Israeli military since early November," said Malcolm Smart. “Their
presence now is urgently required to independently assess humanitarian
needs and report on the situation on the ground, including abuses of international
law.”
Amnesty International also
urged the UN Security Council to consider the deployment of international
monitors.
“Civilians on both sides
continue to pay a heavy price, which might be alleviated if international
monitors were to be deployed whose functions should include verifying compliance
with international law by both Israel and the Palestinian administration
in Gaza,” said Malcolm Smart.
Background
More than 500 Palestinians
have been killed in Israeli air strikes and other attacks since 27 December.
Those killed include more than 100 unarmed civilians, including scores
of children, as well as some 165 civilian police taking no part in the
conflict. More than 2,000 Palestinian civilians have been injured. While
many Israeli attacks have targeted and killed Palestinian combatants, including
leaders of Hamas, other attacks have been directed at civilian buildings
not being used for military purposes. They have targeted civilians such
as police cadets, or have been disproportionate, recklessly endangering
civilians and causing a mounting toll of civilian casualties. The number
of civilian casualties is expected to increase further as a result of the
ground incursion by Israeli forces which began on 3 January and the use
of heavy weaponry in densely populated civilian areas.
In the same period, five Israelis
have been killed, including three civilians killed in rocket attacks launched
by Palestinian armed groups from the Gaza Strip.
Those killed in Israeli air
strikes include:
- Eight-year-old Abed Rabbo
al-Astal, his 12-year-old brother Muhammad and their 10-year-old cousin
‘Abd-al-Sattar, killed on the afternoon of 2 January while playing near
their home in al-Qarara village, east of Khan Yunis (southern Gaza).
- Thirteen-year-old Sujud Dardsawi
was fatally wounded on 2 January while in her home in the Shaja’iya district
of Gaza City.
- Ihab al-Madhoun, a medical
doctor, and Muhammad Abu Hasida, a paramedic accompanying him, were killed
on 31 December as they were trying to evacuate people wounded in an earlier
attack in eastern Gaza City. The air strike also damaged their ambulance.
- A night watchman/guard was
killed on 3 January when the International School (commonly known as the
American School, though it has no link to the US government), in the north
of Gaza, was destroyed by an Israeli air strike. Known as one of the best
private educational institutions in Gaza, the school provided education
to hundreds of children from kindergarten to age 12.
As well as air strikes, Israeli
forces have also used artillery – which is notoriously inaccurate and
should never be used in densely populated areas – including from gunboats
ranged along the Gaza coast.
Leaflets dropped by Israeli
aircraft over Gaza have warned residents to leave the area, although they
are physically prevented from doing so, causing panic and confusion among
the population. Like the telephone calls made by the Israeli military
to Palestinians warning them to leave their homes to escape attack, the
leaflets seem to be random and dropped all over Gaza.
One Gaza resident, a supporter
of the Fatah party led by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, told Amnesty
International:
“My children see the leaflets
and go crazy with fear, they want to leave home; but we have nowhere to
go. My family and my wife’s family live close to the border, in
even more dangerous areas; and we can’t just stay outside, it is equally
dangerous, children have been killed walking or playing in the street.
There is no electricity, we can’t even find food, and we are not
safe even in our homes. We have nothing to do with Hamas, I’ve been
detained and harassed by Hamas, but the Israeli bombardments are indiscriminate.
No one is safe.”
The last two weeks of fighting
have increased the humanitarian crisis caused by Israel's blockade of the
Gaza Strip, in force continuously since June 2007. The UN and international
aid agencies report that there is an acute shortage of food and most basic
necessities. According to the International Committee of the Red Cross
(ICRC), Israeli bombardments have damaged water supply lines making it
difficult for some families to obtain access to safe drinking water, and
hospitals are running short of key medicines and depend on unreliable generators
for their power. The Gaza Pediatrics’ Hospital reported that most of its
windows have been smashed by the blasts and plastic sheets are being used
to block the cold. An air strike on 2 January damaged a pipe supplying
water to 30,000 residents of Nuseirat Refugee Camp, south of Gaza City.
Continuous Israeli strikes also make attempts to carry out repairs
extremely dangerous.
END/
Public Document
****************************************
For more information please
call Amnesty International's press office in London, UK, on +44 20 7413
5566 or email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
International Secretariat,
Amnesty International, 1 Easton St., London WC1X 0DW, UK www.amnesty.org