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Gaza suffering ‘massive’ rights violations:
UN
BEIT HANOUN (Gaza)—A senior United Nations official described Gaza as
suffering “massive” human rights violations during a visit to the
territory on Monday and urged all sides to be bold in trying to end the
violence.
“The violation of human rights I think in this territory is massive,”
Louise Arbour, the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, told
reporters during a visit to Beit Hanoun, a town the Israeli army shelled
earlier this month, killing 19 civilians.
“The call for protection has to be answered. We cannot continue to see
civilians, who are not the authors of their own misfortune, suffer to
the extent of what I see.”
Arbour, on a five-day trip to the region, spent time at the house of a
family who had lost more than a dozen members in a shelling on November
8, when Israel says a mistake led to the barrage of artillery shells
hitting the neighborhood.
Her visit, the first she has made to the region since becoming
commissioner, comes days after the U.N. General Assembly approved a
resolution that “deplored” Israel’s shelling of Gaza and called for an
immediate cessation of violence.
Asked what she planned to do about the rights violations, Arbour said:
“I will help to keep the conscience of the many who care about what
happens in this part of the world alive.
“I will speak to the Palestinian Authority about their responsibility to
enforce the law, to create an environment in which people can seek
protection of the law and, of course, I will also speak to the Israeli
authority.
“We need to collectively call on leaders, political, military and
militia leaders, to have the courage to break the cycle of violence to
ensure the well-being of civilians.”
More than 350 Palestinians, almost half of them civilians according to
Palestinian doctors and human rights workers, have been killed since
Israel launched an offensive in Gaza in late June, following the
kidnapping of an Israeli soldier.
The offensive was designed not only to try to trace the captured
soldier, who was seized by militants including members of the governing
Palestinian faction Hamas, but also to stop militants firing rockets
into Israeli territory from Gaza.
Israeli authorities say militants have fired more than 300 of the
homemade rockets into southern Israel this year, targeting towns like
Sderot, just across the frontier from Gaza.
Last week, a woman resident of Sderot was killed, the first death from a
rocket attack since July 2005. Others have been wounded and scores are
treated each week for shock.
Residents of Beit Hanoun turned out to see Arbour as she toured the
town, where many buildings are scarred by shrapnel, but were not hopeful
her visit would achieve any results.
“It will not do anything,” said Majdi al-Athamna, 37, who lost his son
and three brothers in the shelling.
“This visit will not achieve anything unless the world pressures Israel
to engage in a real peace process because as Palestinians we are paying
the price of the false peace”.—Agencies |