Palestinians 'terrorised'
by sonic boom flights
By Donald Macintyre in
Jerusalem
Published: 03 November
2005
Human rights groups launched a High Court battle to stop the "physical and
mental harm" to Gaza's civilian population they say is caused by Israel's
new weapon against militant attacks: the sonic boom.
Miscarriages have increased sharply and children have been driven to panic
by Israeli jets systematically breaking the sound barrier over Gaza,
according to a petition filed with the court yesterday.
The petition, served by Physicians for Human Rights-Israel and the Gaza
Community Mental Health Programme, seeks a court ruling requiring the
Defence Minister, Shaul Mofaz, to halt the low-altitude supersonic flights.
The groups say the fear and damage caused, particularly to children, by the
"mock air raids" - a response to two phases of about 80 Qassam rocket
attacks into Israel in September and October - are a form of "collective
punishment" against the civilian population as a whole and therefore violate
international law. Denying this, the Israeli military says the flights are a
"less threatening" alternative to artillery fire and targeted
assassinations, which have also increased in response to the rocket attacks
and the suicide bombing that killed five Israelis in Hadera on 26 October.
According to UN figures 12 Palestinians were killed, including some
civilians, in the last week of October. On Tuesday an Israeli Army sergeant,
Yonatan Evron, was killed in a shoot-out with Palestinians in a village near
Jenin. An Israeli was injured last night when two mortar shells fired by
Palestinian militants hit Netiv Ha'asarah, a community just north of the
Gaza Strip, hours after the army killed an al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade militant
in Qabatiyeh, near Jenin.
A
medical opinion submitted to the court by Dr Eyad el-Sarraj, a prominent
Gaza psychiatrist, points out that the flights have often been timed when
children are on their way to and from school. Dr Sarraj says there is
already evidence the flights are triggering in young children "poor
concentration leading to low academic achievement ... fear of losing a close
relative ... fantasies, nightmares, depressive thoughts, glorification of
violence, increased feelings of vulnerability and alertness". He said this
was because "loud sounds are associated with danger in the minds of
children, who are unable to comprehend the distinction between real shelling
and mock air raids".
As well as citing bedwetting, "night terror", headaches, hyperventilation,
and palpitations as symptoms, Dr Sarraj's report quotes Palestinian Ministry
of Health figures that point to a 30-40 per cent increase in the number of
spontaneous abortions during the period 27-29 October, when the use of the
sonic boom was at its peak. Dr Sarraj, in whose own house a window was blown
in and a ceiling cracked by the booms, said yesterday: "For children between
two and eight, a loud sound like this is a sign of imminent danger. For
others who are older it is a nuisance - troubling, alarming - because they
know it is not an actual attack, but for young children it is traumatic and
we don't know what will be the long-term effect. I am against suicide
bombings, but I am also against subjecting civilians here to this form of
punishment. I fear that at a time when we should be thinking about peace and
negotiations, this will sow the seeds of hatred."
The UN Relief and Works Agency says 350 of its doors and windows were
destroyed or damaged in the first phase of the overflights.
An IDF spokeswoman said the booms were a "message to the terrorists", which
was "non-fatal" and "does not do long-term damage". There was already
evidence that it had had a deterrent effect on rocket attacks. Research
showed foetuses were not harmed by loud noises.
Human rights groups launched
a High Court battle to stop the "physical and mental harm" to Gaza's
civilian population they say is caused by Israel's new weapon against
militant attacks: the sonic boom.
Miscarriages have increased
sharply and children have been driven to panic by Israeli jets
systematically breaking the sound barrier over Gaza, according to a petition
filed with the court yesterday.
The petition, served by
Physicians for Human Rights-Israel and the Gaza Community Mental Health
Programme, seeks a court ruling requiring the Defence Minister, Shaul Mofaz,
to halt the low-altitude supersonic flights.
The groups say the fear and
damage caused, particularly to children, by the "mock air raids" - a
response to two phases of about 80 Qassam rocket attacks into Israel in
September and October - are a form of "collective punishment" against the
civilian population as a whole and therefore violate international law.
Denying this, the Israeli military says the flights are a "less threatening"
alternative to artillery fire and targeted assassinations, which have also
increased in response to the rocket attacks and the suicide bombing that
killed five Israelis in Hadera on 26 October.
According to UN figures 12
Palestinians were killed, including some civilians, in the last week of
October. On Tuesday an Israeli Army sergeant, Yonatan Evron, was killed in a
shoot-out with Palestinians in a village near Jenin. An Israeli was injured
last night when two mortar shells fired by Palestinian militants hit Netiv
Ha'asarah, a community just north of the Gaza Strip, hours after the army
killed an al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade militant in Qabatiyeh, near Jenin.
A medical opinion submitted
to the court by Dr Eyad el-Sarraj, a prominent Gaza psychiatrist, points out
that the flights have often been timed when children are on their way to and
from school. Dr Sarraj says there is already evidence the flights are
triggering in young children "poor concentration leading to low academic
achievement ... fear of losing a close relative ... fantasies, nightmares,
depressive thoughts, glorification of violence, increased feelings of
vulnerability and alertness". He said this was because "loud sounds are
associated with danger in the minds of children, who are unable to
comprehend the distinction between real shelling and mock air raids".
As well as citing bedwetting,
"night terror", headaches, hyperventilation, and palpitations as symptoms,
Dr Sarraj's report quotes Palestinian Ministry of Health figures that point
to a 30-40 per cent increase in the number of spontaneous abortions during
the period 27-29 October, when the use of the sonic boom was at its peak. Dr
Sarraj, in whose own house a window was blown in and a ceiling cracked by
the booms, said yesterday: "For children between two and eight, a loud sound
like this is a sign of imminent danger. For others who are older it is a
nuisance - troubling, alarming - because they know it is not an actual
attack, but for young children it is traumatic and we don't know what will
be the long-term effect. I am against suicide bombings, but I am also
against subjecting civilians here to this form of punishment. I fear that at
a time when we should be thinking about peace and negotiations, this will
sow the seeds of hatred."
The UN Relief and Works
Agency says 350 of its doors and windows were destroyed or damaged in the
first phase of the overflights.
An IDF spokeswoman said the
booms were a "message to the terrorists", which was "non-fatal" and "does
not do long-term damage". There was already evidence that it had had a
deterrent effect on rocket attacks. Research showed foetuses were not harmed
by loud noises.