Ref: 14/2009
Date: 14 January 2009
Time: 13:00 GMT
PCHR Condemns IOF Use of Unidentified Incinerating
Bombs Against Civilians, Causing Horrific Burns
The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) utterly
condemns the mass killing of civilians by the Israeli Occupation Forces
(IOF) during its ongoing military operation in the Gaza Strip. The
current death toll stands at 983, including at least 673 civilians, of
whom approximately 225 are children. In addition to the rising civilian
death toll, the Centre is also gravely concerned about IOF use of
unidentified incinerating bombs that are causing horrific burns to
civilians across the Gaza Strip, and forcing doctors to perform
amputations on some civilian victims. The Centre is demanding an
immediate investigation into IOF use of these weapons by international
health experts.
Hospitals across the Gaza
Strip have reported increasing numbers of civilians with serious burns
being admitted for emergency treatment, and the scale of injuries
indicates that IOF are using these unidentified incinerating bombs to
target civilians across the Gaza Strip. For example, on 10 January,
2009, residents of Khuza'a village, east of Khan Yunis, reported being
attacked by IOF artillery shells which exploded into flames, dispersing
shrapnel and dense white smoke that caused skin burns, suffocation,
spasms and fainting. At least one hundred local civilians were injured
by this IOF attack, including medical personnel who arrived at the
scene. Civilians were subsequently admitted to hospitals in Khan Yunis,
suffering from breathing difficulties and severe pains in their eyes.
As part of its ongoing investigation into the
constituents, and effects, of these unidentified IOF weapons, PCHR has
interviewed Dr Nafez Abu Shaban, Head of the Burns Unit at Al-Shifa
Hospital in Gaza city, the largest hospital in the Gaza Strip.
Dr Abu Shaban told the Centre: "We are now receiving
patients with burns that are so extreme, the patients' tissue and
muscles have been destroyed. We have been forced to amputate some
patients' limbs as a result. We have carried out six double leg
amputation operations on patients who had suffered critical burns of
this nature. Three of the patients died after surgery."
Dr Abu Shaban also told the Centre that some of the burn
victims are suffering serious lacerations, and internal bleeding. "We do
not fully understand why some of the injured are bleeding internally,
because we can find no X-ray evidence of foreign objects inside their
bodies" he said. "Our great concern is that we do not know the full
consequences of these injuries. We can only presume the victims, who are
all civilians, have been subjected to attack by chemical weapons."
He also stated that, "Our patients [in the burns unit]
ask us what exactly has happened to them, and we do not know what to
tell them. I have never seen injuries like this before. We need
international health organizations to send us medical specialists
immediately who can assist us in responding to injuries from chemical
weapons."
PCHR is gravely concerned that the IOF may be using white
phosphorous against the civilian population of the Gaza Strip as part of
its continuing military operation across Gaza. White phosphorus is a
flammable chemical typically used in military operations for signalling,
screening and incendiary purposes. When exposed to air, it spontaneously
ignites and will continue to burn until either all the [white
phosphorous] fragments are consumed, or the element itself is deprived
of oxygen. White phosphorus can burn right down to the human bone. The
chemical composition of this weapon – which causes extreme second and
third degree chemical burn injuries – also makes it exceptionally
difficult to treat.
The use of white phosphorous in densely populated areas
violates customary international law provisions relating to the
principle of distinction and the precautions necessary in attack.
Customary international law explicitly requires that all feasible
precautions in the choice of means and methods of warfare be taken, in
order to avoid or minimize disproportionate injury or loss of life among
the civilian population. It also requires that an attacker do everything
possible to assess whether an attack may be expected to cause
disproportionate loss of life or injury, and defines an indiscriminate
attack as one which employs a method or means of combat, the effects of
which cannot be limited as required by international humanitarian law.
Indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks are grave breaches of the
Geneva Conventions, and as such constitute war crimes. IOF use of white
phosphorus in the current context would violate all of these principles.
PCHR notes that international law not only prohibits
specific weapons, but also the manner in which these weapons are used,
and the manner in which hostilities are conducted.
In light of the crimes
being committed by IOF against the Palestinian civilian population and
civilian objects in the Gaza Strip, PCHR:
1.
Calls for an immediate halt
to the IOF offensive against the population of the Gaza Strip.
2.
Calls for an immediate
investigation by international health experts into the use of
unidentified weapons by the IOF against the civilian population of the
Gaza Strip.
3.
Calls for an immediate halt
to all IOF measures of collective punishment being imposed on the
Palestinian civilian population in the Gaza Strip, especially the total
siege and closure of the Gaza Strip, and demands immediate safe movement
for both persons and goods into and out of the Gaza Strip.
4.
Reiterates that crimes
committed by IOF are clear evidence not only for the excessive and
disproportionate use of force, but also of acts of retaliation against
Palestinian civilians.
5.
Holds Israel responsible
for the lives of Palestinian civilians in all circumstances. Under
international law, the existence of armed resistance does not in any
case justify the use of such excessive, disproportionate and
indiscriminate force.
6.
Warns that the lives of
Palestinian civilians are in danger in light of threats vowed by
Israeli political and military officials to expand military operations
against the population of the Gaza Strip.
7.
Calls upon the
international community to immediately intervene to stop such crimes,
and calls upon the High Contracting Parties to the Geneva Convention,
Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, to fulfil
their obligation under article 1 of the Convention to ensure respect for
the Convention in all circumstances, as well as their obligation under
article 146 to search for and prosecute those who are responsible for
perpetrating grave breaches of the Convention, as such breaches
constitute war crimes according to article 147 of the Convention and the
Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, and
Relating to the Protection of Victims of International Armed Conflicts
(Protocol I).
8.
Calls upon international
and Israeli human rights organizations to raise their voices against war
crimes being committed by IOF against the unarmed Palestinian civilian
population of the Gaza Strip.
9.
Calls for the establishment
of an independent inquiry commissions to investigate crimes committed by
IOF against Palestinian civilians, including IOF use of internationally
prohibited weapons.
10.
Calls for the prosecution
of all political and military officials who are found responsible for
committing war crimes against Palestinian civilians.