Saturday, December 02, 2006


Israeli Cluster Bomb Use Deemed 'War Crime'
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Courtesy Of: The Jerusalem Post
By The Associated Press
Geneva
Dec. 1, 2006 19:49 Last Updated: Dec. 2, 2006 9:23
http://www.jpost.com

Three international law experts assigned by the UN human rights watchdog to investigate the aftermath of this summer's war in Lebanon said Friday that one of their main conclusions is that Israel's use of cluster bombs proves the weapons should be banned.

The indiscriminate use of cluster bombs and deliberate attacks on civilians could qualify as war crimes that Israel should prosecute, according to a 153-page report the commission of inquiry presented to the UN Human Rights Council.

* The second Lebanon war: JPost.com special report

"We saw the terrible, cruel consequences of the use of those weapons," said Joao Clemente Baena Soares of Brazil. "We think they should be banned. They should be included in the list of weapons that are prohibited by international law."

...The commission, which also included Judge Mohamed Chande Othman of the Tanzanian supreme court and Greek professor Stelios Perrakis, noted that the mandate given them by the council was only to investigate the impact of the war on Lebanon and not to go into what happened in Israel.

...The commission, however, said it found that "the excessive, indiscriminate and disproportionate use of force by the IDF (Israeli Defense Force) goes beyond reasonable arguments of military necessity and of proportionality, and clearly failed to distinguish between civilian and military targets, thus constituting a flagrant violation of international humanitarian law," the report said.

"In certain cases, such as the deliberate attacks against civilians and civilian properties, attacks against Red Cross ambulances and other protected objects, and the indiscriminate use of cluster munitions, the violations committed by IDF could qualify as serious violations of the laws and customs of war and war crimes," the report said.

Ninety percent of the cluster munitions used by the Israelis were fired during the last 72 hours of the conflict, it said and asserted that the weapons were used deliberately to make large areas of fertile agricultural land unusable.

Latest estimates are that Israel dropped more than 1 million mini-explosives on Lebanon, it said.

The miniature bombs are packed into containers that can be fired by artillery or dropped from aircraft to destroy airfields or tanks and soldiers. A single container typically scatters some 200 to 600 of the mini-explosives as small as a flashlight battery over an area the size of a football field.

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The high "dud" rate of the small-bombs means that they effectively have become land mines littered across Lebanon, waiting to explode when someone touches them, the report said.

Children are especially vulnerable because the tiny bombs are often an eye-catching yellow with small parachutes attached.

The European Union, the United Nations and the international Red Cross have joined in the international outcry against cluster bombs in recent months.

The weapons, a descendant of the "butterfly bomb" dropped by Nazi Germany on Britain in World War II, were first used by the United States in Southeast Asia, and most recently in Afghanistan and Iraq. Similar weapons were used by Soviet and Russian troops in Angola, Afghanistan and Chechnya, where leftover duds also continue to inflict casualties.

The United States opposes a ban on the weapons, maintaining they are valuable for attacking artillery positions or runways, armor columns and missile installations.

The report said the conflict in Lebanon resulted in 1,191 deaths and 4,409 injured, with children making up one-third of the casualties. Some 30,000 Lebanese houses were destroyed, and more than 900,000 people fled their homes...

Source:
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1164881798411&pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull

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