[GushShalom] Settlers fire guns to disrupt Israeli-Palestinian olive harvest
Gush Shalom (Israeli Peace Bloc)
info at gush-shalom.org
Sun Oct 20 02:36:38 IST 2002
GUSH SHALOM - pob 3322, Tel-Aviv 61033 - http://www.gush-shalom.org/
[Uri Avnery's article deals with the violence of the past week in the Gaza Strip. The
second item gives the Jerusalem Post report of Saturday's joint Israeli-Palestinian olive
harvest - in which Avnery (79) took part.]
[] The Chain of Command - Uri Avnery's analysis of the Gaza killings
[] Settlers fire guns to disrupt Israeli-Palestinian olive harvest
Uri Avnery
19.10.02
The Chain of Command
There is little controversy about the facts: last Thursday, in an IDF action in Rafah,
at least eight Palestinians were killed (the number will probably climb, since some of
the wounded were severely hurt). Five of those killed were woman and children. Almost
fifty people were wounded - many of them children who had just left their school after
lessons.
The event took place on the "Philadelphi" axis, a narrow strip of land designed to
separate the Gaza area from neighboring Egypt. The Palestinians dig tunnels under
the strip in order to move people, weapons and goods. The IDF endeavors to prevent it.
Thursday, the IDF sent a bulldozer, guarded by tanks and armored troop-carriers,
to block the tunnels.
According to the army version, fire was opened on the bulldozer and the force. The
brigade commander gave a tank commander permission to fire shells at the "sources
of fire". All in all, five shells were fired at the densely populated refugee camp, including
"flanchette" shells which spread thousands of deadly steel arrows, an especially
inhuman weapon the use of which is forbidden by international law. The IDF suffered no
casualties.
The army alleges that among the Palestinians killed were three "armed men" who
had shot at the bulldozer. The Palestinians contend that none of them was a known
member of a fighting organization. (This is not necessarily a contradiction: nowadays
any Palestinian is liable to open fire on the occupation forces.)
The Palestinians speak about a "massacre". Israeli spokespersons say they regret
the deaths of the children. The Americans asked Israel to exercise restraint. "The
world" was silently reproachful.
This was not an exceptional occurrence. It has become almost routine.
Who is to blame? Let's try to compose a list.
First: the occupation.
The occupation creates resistance. In order to overcome the resistance, the
occupation is forced to use more and more brutal methods. The occupied people, too,
become more and more brutal. Human life becomes cheap, the borderline between
fighters and non-fighters becomes blurred and disappears.
Second: The axis itself.
When the Gaza Strip was turned over to the Palestinian Authority, the Israeli
generals demanded that there be no border between the Palestinian area and Egypt.
The Rafah border crossing remained under Israeli control. The "Philadelphi" axis (I have
no idea why it was so named) was designed to create the separation all along the
border.
In order to guard the axis, a strip six kilometers long and one hundred meters wide,
soldiers must pass only dozens of meters away from the Palestinian neighborhoods,
which are among the most densely populated in the world.
In times of peace, that is a problematical situation. In times of conflict, this
becomes a pressure cooker liable to explode at any moment.
Third: the Sharon-Ben-Eliezer government.
The "political leadership" consists of two generals, whose sole language is the
language of force - the one is the leader of the Likud, the other is the leader of the
Labor party.
The policy of this government is to break by force the resistance of the Palestinian
people to the occupation. It acts according to the typically Israeli maxim: "If force
doesn't work, use more force."
It may be that by now the Israeli occupation has become the most brutal of the
modern era: millions of people are imprisoned in their homes for weeks and months on
end, two thirds of the population have been pushed under the internationally-accepted
poverty line, hundreds of thousands suffer from malnutrition, on the border of starvation -
all this in addition to almost 2000 killed, among them some 400 children.
There is no sign that the Palestinian resistance is about to break. Quite to the
contrary.
By orders and hints, the "political leadership" tells the army to use even more
brutal methods, gradually abolishing all limits. To appease international opinion, some
tiny restrictions are lifted, while at the same time much more severe ones are put into
place. In this game, Shimon Peres, the Nobel hypocrisy prize laureate, plays an
central role.
Fourth: the Chief-of-Staff.
Under the military hierarchical system, the Chief-of-Staff is the person solely
responsible for all the acts and omissions of the IDF.
General Moshe Ya'alon has already made public his extreme right-wing orientation.
He has announced that any concession to the Palestinians constitutes a "reward for
terrorism". He has defined the Palestinian resistance as a "cancerous growth".
The Chief-of-Staff controls the actions of even the last man in the army. If he
resolutely objects to certain actions, it will travel with lightning speed through the chain
of command reaching every soldier, and if he encourages certain actions, or closes his
eyes, this, too, will be felt instantly. There is no need for written orders. Every
commander senses what his superior wants, every soldier senses was his commander
desires. That's how the army works.
Fifth: the Area Command chief.
The Commanding Officer of the Southern area and his staff are well familiar with the
topographical realities. They know that if you put tanks into the "Philadelphi" axis,
there will be Palestinians who will open fire. There exists, therefore, a high probability
that a fire-fight will develop near a densely populated area, and men, women and
children will be killed. That's what happened this time, too.
(The same thing has happened in other incidents in the Gaza Strip, such as the
one a week before at neighboring Khan Younis, when 17 Palestinians, including
women and children, were killed. A different topography, similar circumstances, same
command.)
Sixth: the brigade commander.
After the fire fight started, the brigade commander ordered the firing of the shells.
He knew that under the circumstances there was no possibility of separating the
armed men from bystanders. He acted according to a principle, which seems to have
been adopted by the IDF: in order to "liquidate" one armed man, it is worthwhile killing
ten unarmed people. He should not have ordered the firing of even one shell, much less
five.
He acted with the approval of the division commander, who appeared again on
television and boasted about the action. Like the commander of the air force, he
seems to sleep very well at night. He has no qualms, no second thoughts, nothing.
Seventh: the tank commander.
A tank commander is supposed to be able to act under pressure and to make
decisions under fire. He must have known that under the circumstances, one shell
would cause havoc, and much more so several, including the murderous "flachette"
variety.
The light finger on the trigger is another symptom of the deterioration of the
situation and places a heavy burden of guilt on the whole chain of command, from the
Prime Minister down to the last soldier. Shooting shells at curfew-breakers, and
especially at children throwing stones at heavy tanks, has already become the bane of
the West Bank.
The order to shoot shells may have been a "manifestly illegal order", over which
flies "the black flag of illegality", which a soldier is obliged to disobey under Israeli law.
No soldier can argue that he "only followed orders".
I cannot judge if the lives of the soldiers were in danger. Fortunately, no soldier
even suffered a scratch. IDF soldiers are better protected than any soldier in the world.
But if they were indeed in mortal danger - the responsibility lies with the commanders,
who deliberately put them into this situation.
[] Settlers fire guns to disrupt Israeli-Palestinian olive harvest
By THE JERUSALEM POST INTERNET STAFF
Oct. 19, 2002
Dozens of settlers prevented residents of the West Bank villages of Akrabeh and
Inabus near Nablus, as well as Jewish and Arab Israeli left-wing activists, from picking
olives Saturday. The activists said settlers fired shots in the air in an attempt to stop
the olive picking.
Several dozens of left-wing activists of Peace Now, Gush Shalom, Ta'ayush (Jewish-
Arabic partnership), the Women's Peace Coalition, as well as other organizations,
arrived in Inabus on Saturday afternoon to help the Palestinian pick olives.
The olive picking season, which starts at around the beginning of October, has been
severely hampered by prolonged curfews imposed by the IDF in the West Bank, Gush
Shalom said in a statement. The IDF, the statement said, frequently bars the
Palestinian population from picking olives, the main source of livelihood for many.
Also, the Jerusalem Post has previously reported police were investigating a West
Bank settler on suspicions he was implicated in the killing of a 24-year-old Palestinian,
Hani Yusuf of Akraba, and the wounding of another man on October 6, while they were
harvesting olives near Hirbat Yanun and Itamar, in Samaria.
Villagers from Inabus, just south of Yitzhar, filed complaints with police, according to
which they were attacked on October 5 by a group of 20 to 30 settlers. 'They almost
killed my wife,' Hisham Salomon said. 'They shot in the air, at the ground, and beat us
with sticks and rocks. They might as well ship us off to Jordan or Iraq as they plan,
maybe there we will at least have some peace.'
The activists said several settlers from Yitzhar fired several shots in the air as well as
at the group of Palestinians and activists engaged in olive-picking in Inabus Saturday
afternoon, from a distance of some 300 meters. One activist said they shots were
aimed at a group that included women and children. There was no immediate response
from the settlers.
In a conversation with the Jerusalem post internet staff, one of the Israeli activists, who
would only give her first name, Liora, said her group had arrived at an olive grove near
Yitzhar, at around 1 p.m. local time.
"They (the settlers) started shooting at us when we were there for only about ten
minutes," she said. Even though they were most of the fire was shot in the air, she
said they could not know that at the time." We just ran away." She says the fire lasted
for some 10 minutes.
Later, she said, the activists resumed their work, but were moved by the IDF to a grove
some 300 meters away, in what she termed "an attempt by the IDF to minimize
'friction' with the settlers." The olive-picking work, once resumed, lasted three hours.
In one case, Liora told The Jerusalem Post, settlers continued to shoot rounds in the
air even after all the Palestinians had left the grove, and only an Israeli activist stayed.
"They kept shooting even though he was calling out to them that he was an Israeli,"
she said, "and shouted obscenities at him."
Alleged illegal activity by West Bank settlers has come into the public eye during the
weekend, when clashes residents of the Havat Gilad illegal outpost and their
supporters clashed with the IDF over the dismantlement of the outpost.
Settlers who were evacuated from the outpost earlier in the week arrived at the site
Thursday night, apparently after having learned that the IDF and police were planning
to tear down several prefabricated buildings still left there.
In another case allegedly connected to settler brutality, six Palestinian families on
Friday set out from the tiny village of Hirbat Yanun, near the settlement of Itamar,
leaving it completely abandoned.
Sobbing as they filled a truck with furniture and piled themselves into dusty cars,
members of the Sobih clan said they were fleeing the village -- once home to 25
families -- after four years of worsening attacks by settlers, who have set up illegal
outposts on nearby hilltops. The attacks have become increasingly frequent in recent
months, they said.
"Our life here is more bitter than hell," Kamal Sobih, a thin, bearded man of 40, said
Friday. Groups of masked Jewish settlers have charged into the village, coming at
night with dogs and horses, stealing sheep, hurling stones through windows and
beating the men with fists and rifle butts, Palestinian residents said.
An electricity generator has been scorched by fire, knocking out power to the village.
Three large water tanks were tipped over and emptied.
An IDF spokesman, who insisted his name not be used, said soldiers try to prevent
conflict between settlers and Palestinians, but that forces are primarily in the area to
protect Israelis from attacks by Palestinian militants.
Police and the civil administration, as well as the Yesha Council of Jewish
Communities in Judea, could not be reached for a statement Friday evening, because
of the Shabbat
The nearby settlement of Itamar, about six miles west, was attacked by a Palestinian
gunman June 20. Five Israelis were killed and eight were injured before the gunman
was shot dead The residents of Yanun have not been linked to that attack or other
violence.
More than 200,000 Jews live in about 150 settlements in the West Bank and Gaza
Strip -- lands that are home to 3 million Palestinians, who hope to establish a state on
the territory Israel conquered in 1967.
"Death would be easier than leaving," Kamal Sobih said, describing his attachment to
the land where generations of his family have lived. "But there is no choice". He said
he often spent nights keeping watch for attackers from his windows.
---
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