Report of the
Secretary-General prepared pursuant
to General Assembly resolution ES-10/10
Summary
This
report was prepared on the basis of General Assembly
resolution ES-10/10,
adopted on 7 May 2002, in which the Assembly requested the Secretary-General to
present a report, drawing upon the available resources and information, on the
recent events that took place in Jenin and other Palestinian cities. The General
Assembly requested the report following the disbandment of the United Nations
fact-finding team that had been convened by the Secretary-General in response to
Security Council
resolution 1405 (2002)
(2002) of 19 April 2002.
The report
was written without a visit to Jenin or the other Palestinian cities in question
and it therefore relies completely on available resources and information,
including submissions from five United Nations Member States and Observer
Missions, documents in the public domain and papers submitted by
non-governmental organizations. The Under-Secretary-General for Political
Affairs wrote to the Permanent Representative of Israel and the Permanent
Observer of Palestine to the United Nations requesting them to submit
information but only the latter did so. In the absence of a response from
Israel, the United Nations has relied on public statements of Israeli officials
and publicly available documents of the Government of Israel relevant to the
request in resolution ES-10/10.
This report covers the period from approximately the beginning of March to 7 May
2002. The report sets out the context and background of the situation in Israel
and the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including the security, humanitarian and
human rights responsibilities of both parties. It briefly charts the rising
violence since September 2000, which had by 7 May 2002 caused the deaths of 441
Israelis and 1,539 Palestinians.
The report describes the pattern of attacks carried out by Palestinian armed groups against Israel operating from the West Bank and Israel's military action during Operation Defensive Shield, which began on 29 March with an incursion into Ramallah, followed by entry into Tulkarm and Qalqilya on 1 April, Bethlehem on 2 April, and Jenin and Nablus on 3 April. By 3 April, six of the largest cities in the West Bank, and their surrounding towns, villages and refugee camps, had been occupied by the Israeli military. Operation Defensive Shield was characterized by extensive curfews on civilian populations and restrictions, indeed occasional prohibitions, on the movement of international personnel, including at times humanitarian and medical personnel as well as human rights monitors and journalists. In many instances, humanitarian workers were not able to reach people in need. Combatants on both sides conducted themselves in ways that, at times, placed civilians in harm's way. Much of the fighting during Operation Defensive Shield occurred in areas heavily populated by civilians and in many cases heavy weaponry was used. As a result of those practices, the populations of the cities covered in this report suffered severe hardships. The Israeli Defence Forces announced the official end of the operation on 21 April but its consequences lasted until the end of the period under review and beyond.
I. Introduction
1. The
present report is submitted pursuant to resolution ES-10/10 adopted on 7 May
2002 by the General Assembly at its tenth emergency special session. In
paragraph 6 of the resolution the Assembly requested the Secretary-General to
present a report, drawing upon the available resources and information, on the
recent events that took place in Jenin and other Palestinian cities.
II. Security Council resolution 1405 (2002)
2. On 19
April 2002, the Security Council unanimously adopted resolution 1405 (2002), in
which it welcomed my initiative to develop accurate information regarding recent
events in the Jenin refugee camp through a fact-finding team. This resolution
was tabled in the Council by the delegation of the United States of America
following telephone conversations that I had with Israel's Foreign Affairs and
Defence Ministers at their initiative, during which I was assured that Israel
would cooperate fully with the team that I would designate.
3. Pursuant to resolution 1405 (2002), on 22 April 2002, I established a
fact-finding team composed of Martti Ahtisaari, Sadako Ogata and Cornelio
Sommaruga. Headed by Mr. Ahtisaari, the team's members also included four senior
advisers: Major General (ret.) William Nash, as Military Adviser; Deputy
Commissioner Peter Fitzgerald, as Police Adviser; Ambassador Tyge Lehmann, as
Legal Adviser; and Helena Ranta, as Medical/Legal Adviser. In addition, the team
was provided with technical expertise in military, security and
counter-terrorism issues, as well as forensic science and general support staff.
The team gathered at Geneva and began to prepare a work plan based on three
elements: (a) events in Jenin in the period immediately prior to Israel's
military operation; (b) the battle in Jenin during Operation Defensive Shield;
and (c) efforts by humanitarian workers to gain access to the civilian
population in Jenin after the end of hostilities.
4. After the appointment of the members of the team, the Government of Israel raised a number of concerns regarding the work of the team that made its timely deployment impossible and led me to disband the team. On 1 May 2002 I sent a letter to the President of the Security Council (S/2002/504) describing my efforts to implement resolution 1405 (2002), which read, in part:
(a) I instructed that the team should gather in Geneva on 24 April and proceed to the area on 25 April. However, soon after I announced my plan to deploy the team, the Government of Israel began to express concerns related to the composition of the team, the scope of its mandate, how this mandate would be carried out and various procedural matters. At the request of the Government of Israel, I agreed that the Secretariat would meet with a delegation from Israel and listen to Israel's concerns and engage in a clarificatory process. I set back the arrival of the team in the area to 27 April.
(b) The
discussions with the Israeli delegation were held in a very constructive
atmosphere on 25 and 26 April. By the time the Israeli delegation was able to
report back on the results of those meetings, the Sabbath had begun in Israel.
The Foreign Minister of Israel informed me that the Israeli Cabinet would
address the issue at its scheduled meeting on 28 April and requested that the
team delay its arrival for another day. I acceded to this request and the
Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs briefed the Security Council
accordingly.
(c) On 27 April, I spoke on the telephone with the Prime Minister of Israel,
after which I dispatched letters to the Permanent Representative of Israel and
the Permanent Observer of Palestine setting out the parameters of work of the
team. These letters were circulated to Security Council members on the same day.
The Permanent Representative of Israel sent me a reply late on 27 April, in
which he put forward several concerns on the part of his Government. The
Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs responded orally to the Permanent
Representative of Israel.
(d) On 28 April, the Israeli Cabinet did not reach a decision on the
fact-finding team; I was informed by Israel that the matter would be reviewed by
the Cabinet at a meeting the following day. The Secretariat briefed the Security
Council on the information I had received on 28 April, and the Council agreed
that the President of the Council would express its continuing support for my
efforts to implement resolution 1405 (2002).
(e) The Israeli Cabinet did not meet on 29 April. Instead, I was informed by the Permanent Representative of Israel that the Cabinet had scheduled a meeting for early on 30 April. The Secretariat briefed the Security Council accordingly.
(f) Israel's
Ministerial Committee on National Security (the Security Cabinet) met early on
30 April, after which it issued the following statement: "Israel has raised
essential issues before the United Nations for a fair examination. As long as
these terms have not been met, it will not be possible for the clarification
process to begin." In the absence of a formal indication of the terms on which
the Government of Israel would cooperate with the fact-finding team, this
statement was reviewed against the backdrop of various public statements by, and
telephone conversations that I held with, senior Israeli officials. I was drawn
reluctantly to the conclusion that, while continuing to express its concerns to
the United Nations mainly in the form of procedural issues, Israel had developed
concerns about Security Council resolution 1405 (2002) that were fundamental in
nature.
(g) Throughout this process, the United Nations has made every effort to
accommodate the concerns of the Government of Israel within the mandate given to
me by the Security Council. It was made quite clear that the team was tasked
specifically to develop information about the recent events in Jenin and that
the facts established would be used solely for its report to me. In my view, the
team would have conducted its assignment in the field in a professional and fair
manner and produced an accurate, thorough, balanced and credible report.
(h) Clearly
the full cooperation of both sides was a precondition for this, as was a visit
to the area itself to see the Jenin refugee camp at first hand and to gather
information. This is why the Secretariat engaged in a thorough clarification
process with the Israeli delegation.
(i) In the light of yesterday's announcement by the Government of Israel, it
seems evident that the team will not be able to proceed to the area and begin
its mission in the near future. While I have not received any further written
communication from the Israeli Government since 27 April, in my telephone
conversations over the past two days, high-level Israeli officials have broached
issues additional to those raised by the delegation that came to New York last
week and there have been indications that this list may not be exhaustive.
(j) As the Secretariat noted in its briefings to the Council, time is also a
critical factor. With the situation in the Jenin refugee camp changing by the
day, it will become more and more difficult to establish with any confidence or
accuracy the "recent events" that took place there.
(k) For
these reasons, it is my intention to disband the fact-finding team tomorrow. I
regret being unable to provide the information requested by the Council in
resolution 1405 (2002), and especially that the long shadow cast by recent
events in the Jenin refugee camp will remain in the absence of such a
fact-finding exercise.
5. On 3 May 2002 I disbanded the team. In writing to the President of the
Security Council to inform him of this, I expressed my deep appreciation to
President Ahtisaari, Mrs. Ogata, Mr. Sommaruga and all the members of the team
for their efforts to support my actions intended to implement resolution 1405
(2002). I stated that I had every confidence that the team would have conducted
itself in a professional and fair manner in producing the report requested by
the Council.
III. Report prepared pursuant to paragraph 6 of resolution ES-10/10
A. Introduction
6. In order to comply with the General Assembly's request in resolution ES-10/10, on 14 May 2002, the Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs addressed letters to the Permanent Representative of Israel and the Permanent Observer of Palestine to the United Nations, requesting them to submit information relevant to the implementation of that resolution. In addition, on 14 May 2002, the Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs addressed a note verbale to all other Member States and Observer Missions requesting the submission of relevant information. On 3 June 2002, the Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs addressed another note verbale to Member States and Observer Missions extending the deadline for submissions to 14 June 2002.
7. On 3 June
2002, in response to the letter of the Under-Secretary-General for Political
Affairs, the Permanent Observer of Palestine submitted materials regarding
recent events in Jenin and other Palestinian cities (see annex I). In addition,
five Member States and Observer Missions have submitted information, responding
to the note verbale of 14 May (see annexes II-IV). As at the date of submission
of this report, the Government of Israel has not responded to the information
request. In the absence of a response from Israel, the United Nations has relied
on public statements of Israeli officials and other publicly available documents
of the Government of Israel relevant to the request in resolution ES-10/10.
8. This report covers the period from approximately the beginning of March to 7
May 2002. In keeping with the request of the General Assembly, the substantive
portion of the report is based on sources of information available to the United
Nations, including those in the public domain and submitted by non-governmental
organizations. The report begins by setting out the context and background,
before describing recent events.
B. Security, humanitarian and human rights responsibilities
9. Subsequent to the signing on 13 September 1993 of the Declaration of
Principles on Interim Self-Government Arrangements, the Government of Israel and
the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) signed a further agreement that,
inter alia, specified the security-related responsibilities of the two sides.
The Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip
signed on 28 September 1995 by Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization
details the mechanisms for the extension of Palestinian self-rule to portions of
the West Bank. The main feature of the Agreement was the provision for the
division of the West Bank into three areas, each with varying degrees of Israeli
and Palestinian responsibility. Area A consisted of the seven major Palestinian
towns - Jenin, Qalqilya, Tulkarm, Nablus, Ramallah, Bethlehem, Jericho and
Hebron - in which Palestinians would have complete responsibility for civilian
security. In area B, which comprised all other Palestinian population centres
(except for some refugee camps), Israel would retain "overriding security
responsibility". In area C, which includes all settlements, military bases and
areas, and State lands, Israel would retain sole security responsibility. Area A
comprises approximately 10 per cent of the territory of the West Bank.
10. The Interim Agreement also provides that "Israel shall have the overall
responsibility for security for the purpose of protecting Israelis and
confronting the threat of terrorism". It states that "both sides shall take all
measures necessary in order to prevent acts of terrorism, crime and hostilities
directed against each other, against individuals falling under the other's
authority and against their property, and shall take legal measures against
offenders".
11. Israel's obligations in the Occupied Palestinian Territory are set out in
the Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of
War, of 12 August 1949, to which Israel is a High Contracting Party. Palestinian
residents of the Occupied Territory are "protected persons" under the
Convention, which provides that they may not be wilfully killed, tortured, taken
as hostages or suffer humiliating or degrading treatment. Israel has obligations
not to engage in acts of collective punishment or reprisals and is to refrain
from appropriating or extensively destroying the property of protected persons
unless such destruction is "rendered absolutely necessary by military
operations".
12. The
Government of the State of Israel has not, as at the submission of this report,
accepted the de jure applicability of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 to
all Territory occupied since 1967. Israel has stated that it has undertaken to
comply with the humanitarian provisions of the Convention in its administration
of the Occupied Palestinian Territory. All other High Contracting Parties, as
well as the International Committee of the Red Cross, maintain that the
Convention does apply de jure to the Occupied Palestinian Territory.
13. The Palestinian Authority is obligated under international customary law to
respect human rights, including to refrain from carrying out attacks against
civilians, and is required to prevent groups within its territory from engaging
in such attacks. Thus, the Palestinian Authority has the responsibility to
protect Israeli civilians from attacks, including suicide bombings, emanating
from areas under its security control. Those Palestinian groups that have
carried out attacks against civilians have also violated the basic international
legal principle of the inviolability of civilian life and property. Acts of
terror that take life violate the right to life set forth in the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. In addition, those groups, and other
armed personnel, are prohibited under international humanitarian law from
establishing military bases in densely populated civilian areas.
C. Rising violence
14. Since
the outbreak of crisis in September 2000, the origins of which have been
comprehensively set out in the report of the Sharm el-Sheikh Fact-Finding
Committee headed by former Senator George Mitchell, there has been sustained
violence between the parties, fluctuating in intensity, causing by 7 May 2002
the deaths of 441 Israelis and 1,539 Palestinians. By the beginning of 2002, the
parties were already locked in an accelerating cycle of violent attacks. This
cycle of violence further increased in intensity through the early months of
this year. The violence reached a high point in the months of March and April,
which saw suicide bomb attacks against Israelis by Palestinian groups increase
in frequency, and two waves of incursions by the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF)
into Palestinian towns and villages in the West Bank, including areas under the
administrative and security responsibility of the Palestinian Authority.
15. On 12 March 2002, after a series of terrorist attacks carried out by
Palestinians earlier in that month, and as the first wave of IDF incursions into
the West Bank was coming to a close, I told the Security Council in a briefing
that I believed that Israeli-Palestinian tensions were at boiling point and that
the situation was the worst in 10 years. I called on Palestinians to stop all
acts of terrorism and all suicide bombings, stating that such attacks were
morally repugnant and caused harm to their cause. I called on Israelis to stop
the bombing of civilian areas, the extrajudicial killings, the demolitions, and
the daily humiliation of ordinary Palestinians. I asserted that such actions
gravely eroded Israel's international standing and fuelled the fires of hatred,
despair and extremism among Palestinians. Finally, I urged the political leaders
of both peoples - Prime Minister Sharon and Chairman Arafat - to lead their
peoples away from disaster.
16.
Palestinian terrorist attacks against Israelis continued, followed by Israeli
military incursions into Palestinian areas. On 4 April, one week into the second
wave of incursions in the West Bank - the Israeli Defence Forces' Operation
Defensive Shield - I again briefed the Security Council and called on all
members of the international community to consider urgently how best to
intercede with the parties to persuade them to draw back from their present
course. I told the Council that self-defence was not a blank cheque, and that
responding to terrorism did not in any way free Israel from its obligations
under international law, nor did it justify creating a human rights and
humanitarian crisis in the Occupied Palestinian Territory. Equally, the
Palestinian Authority seemed to believe that failing to act against terrorism,
and inducing turmoil, chaos and instability, would cause the Government and
people of Israel to buckle - which I believed they would not. I called on the
Government of Israel to comply with Security Council resolution 1402 (2002) and
withdraw its forces from the Palestinian territory it had occupied during
Operation Defensive Shield. I urged Chairman Arafat to exercise political
leadership and set the course for the future of his people.
17. On more than one occasion during this very difficult period, I expressed to
the Security Council my view that, despite the fact that bitterness and despair
were at an all-time high on both sides, we all needed to cling to the conviction
that, in the end, however long it would take, there would one day have to be a
peaceful settlement of this conflict. While the road back to the negotiating
table would not be easy or smooth, both sides, with the help of the
international community, must restart a process based on Security Council
resolutions 1397
(2002) and
1402 (2002) which, taken together, provide the
vision for a permanent settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the
immediate security and political steps needed to move beyond the present crisis.
18. From the beginning of March until 7 May, Israel endured approximately 16 bombings, the large majority of which were suicide attacks. More than 100 persons were killed and scores more wounded. Throughout this period, the Government of Israel, and the international community, reiterated previous calls on the Palestinian Authority to take steps to stop terrorist attacks and to arrest the perpetrators of such attacks.
19. During
this same period, IDF conducted two waves of military incursions primarily in
the West Bank, and air strikes against both the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
The first wave began on 27 February 2002 and ended on approximately 14 March.
Those incursions, which Israel stated were in pursuit of Palestinians who had
carried out attacks against Israelis, involved the use of ground troops, attack
helicopters, tanks and F-16 fighter jets in civilian areas, including refugee
camps, causing significant loss of life among civilians.
20. Over the course of two days, 8 and 9 March, 18 Israelis were killed in two
separate Palestinian attacks and 48 Palestinians were killed in the Israeli
raids that followed.
21. Israeli military retaliation for terrorist attacks was often carried out against Palestinian Authority security forces and installations. This had the effect of severely weakening the Authority's capacity to take effective action against militant groups that launched attacks on Israelis. Militant groups stepped into this growing vacuum and increased their attacks on Israeli civilians. In many cases, the perpetrators of these attacks left messages to the effect that their acts were explicitly in revenge for earlier Israeli acts of retaliation, thus perpetuating and intensifying the cycle of violence, retaliation and revenge.
22. It was against this backdrop that the most extensive Israeli military incursions in a decade, Operation Defensive Shield, were carried out. The proximate cause of the operation was a terrorist attack committed on 27 March in the Israeli city of Netanya, in which 28 people were killed and 140 injured. I condemned the terrorist attack from the Beirut Summit of the League of Arab States as morally repugnant and later described it to the Security Council as a blow against the very possibility of coexistence. On 29 March 2002, the Cabinet of the Government of Israel issued a communiqué approving "a wide-ranging operational action plan against Palestinian terror" and, to that end, "the mobilization of reserves as per operational need". The objective was to "defeat the Palestinian terror infrastructure and to prevent the recurrence of the multiple terrorist attacks which have plagued Israel".
D. Operation Defensive Shield
23. Operation Defensive Shield began on 29 March with an incursion into Ramallah, during which IDF seized most of the buildings in the headquarters compound of Chairman Arafat. Operations followed in Tulkarm and Qalqilya on 1 April, Bethlehem on 2 April, and in Jenin and Nablus on 3 April. By 3 April, six of the largest cities in the West Bank, and their surrounding towns, villages and refugee camps, were occupied by the Israeli military. The Israeli Defence Forces announced the official end of the operation on 21 April as they completed their withdrawal from Nablus and parts of Ramallah, while continuing negotiations to lift the siege at the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem. The IDF withdrawals from Palestinian cities were, in general, not to pre-29 March positions, but rather to positions encircling the cities. Since then, the Israeli Defence Forces have made additional incursions into many of the Palestinian towns and cities from which they had withdrawn at the conclusion of Operation Defensive Shield, and as this report was being prepared had re-entered many Palestinian towns.
24. A few
generally applicable observations can be made about the incursions during
Operation Defensive Shield. In each incursion, Israeli troops, tanks and
armoured personnel carriers entered the cities and IDF imposed curfews on their
civilian populations. In each case, the incursions were accompanied by the entry
of IDF into nearby villages and refugee camps. The Israeli Defence Forces
declared the cities they had entered "special closed military areas", imposing
restrictions on, and at times completely barring, the movement of international
personnel, including at times humanitarian and medical personnel as well as
human rights monitors and journalists. As a result of these restrictions on
movement, including the round-the-clock curfews that lasted with periodic
liftings throughout the incursions, the civilian populations of the cities
suffered severe hardships, compounded in some places by the extensive fighting
that occurred during the operation. As was the case with the first wave of
incursions from 27 February to 14 March described above, during Operation
Defensive Shield, in many instances, IDF made use of heavy weaponry in
Palestinian civilian areas.
25. In each of these incursions, the Israeli Defence Forces arrested
Palestinians who they believed were involved in armed actions against Israel,
including suicide bombings and other terrorist attacks against Israeli
civilians. IDF also, in most of these incursions, destroyed infrastructure they
believed to be part of the operating capacity of militant groups, as well as the
infrastructure of the Palestinian Authority security services. In addition,
widespread damage was caused to the civilian capacity of the Palestinian
Authority and to private property.
26. It was
not only the Palestinian people whose movement was restricted during Operation
Defensive Shield. In many instances, humanitarian workers were not able to reach
people in need to assess conditions and deliver necessary assistance because of
the sealing of cities, refugee camps and villages during the operation. There
were also cases of Israeli forces not respecting the neutrality of medical and
humanitarian workers and attacking ambulances.
27. The Government of Israel has asserted that ambulances were used to transport
Palestinian combatants and weapons; and that the Israeli Defence Forces have in
many instances acted to prevent that misuse. It has also stated that IDF policy
is to allow free passage in cases of humanitarian need, and that Israeli forces
continuously provided food and medical assistance to the Palestinian population.
28. As a result of the severe restrictions on movement, human rights workers and
journalists were unable to observe the conduct of the parties and provide
independent reporting on that conduct. Some journalists reported being fired at
by members of IDF.
29. There were numerous reports of IDF compelling Palestinian civilians to
accompany them during house searches, check suspicious subjects, stand in the
line of fire from militants and in other ways protect soldiers from danger.
Witnesses claim that this was done in the Jenin camp and other Palestinian
cities. While IDF soldiers have acknowledged in press reports that they forced
Palestinians to knock on doors for house searches, they deny the deliberate use
of civilians as human shields. The Government of Israel has denied that its
military personnel systematically engage in this practice. In response to a
petition filed on 5 May by five Israeli, Palestinian and international human
rights organizations, the State Attorney's Office of the Government of Israel
informed the High Court of Justice of Israel that "in light of the various
complaints received … and so as to avoid all doubt, the [IDF] has decided to
immediately issue an unequivocal order … that forces in the field are absolutely
forbidden to use civilians as a means of 'living shield'".
30.
According to local human rights groups, more than 8,500 Palestinians were
arrested between 27 February and 20 May. Reportedly, most of the 2,500
Palestinians arrested during the first wave of incursions in February and March
were released within a week, whereas many of the more than 6,000 Palestinians
arrested during Operation Defensive Shield after 29 March were held for longer
periods without any outside contact. On 5 April, the Commander of the Israeli
Defence Forces in the West Bank issued Military Order 1500, which gave soldiers
the authority to hold detainees for a period of up to 18 days without access to
a lawyer, family members or judicial review. This type of detention can be
extended by a military judge for up to 90 days. The order was retroactive to 29
March and was valid for 60 days. By 6 May an alleged 7,000 Palestinians had been
arrested under Operation Defensive Shield, of whom 1,500 were still in
detention. In many instances during the operation, IDF followed a pattern of
using loudspeakers to summon males between 15 and 45. According to human rights
reports, significant numbers of the men arrested were blindfolded and
handcuffed, not allowed to use a lavatory, and deprived of food or blankets
during their first day in detention.
31. In addition to Military Order 1500, the Government of Israel has access to a
procedure of administrative detention under which detainees can be held without
charge or trial, and which can be renewed indefinitely. The Israeli Defence
Forces and the State Attorney have told Amnesty International that from 450 to
990 people were in administrative detention as of May 2002.
32. Of particular concern is the use, by combatants on both sides, of violence
that placed civilians in harm's way. Much of the fighting during Operation
Defensive Shield occurred in areas heavily populated by civilians, in large part
because the armed Palestinian groups sought by IDF placed their combatants and
installations among civilians. Palestinian groups are alleged to have widely
booby-trapped civilian homes, acts targeted at IDF personnel but also putting
civilians in danger. IDF is reported to have used bulldozers, tank shelling and
rocket firing, at times from helicopters, in populated areas.
33.
Operation Defensive Shield resulted in the widespread destruction of Palestinian
private and public property. Nablus was especially hard hit, especially in its
old city, which contained many buildings of cultural, religious and historic
significance. Much of the destruction appears to have occurred in the fighting
as a result of the use by IDF of tanks, helicopter gunships and bulldozers.
United Nations agencies and other international agencies, when allowed into
Ramallah and other Palestinian cities, documented extensive physical damage to
Palestinian Authority civilian property. That damage included the destruction of
office equipment, such as computers and photocopying machines, that did not
appear to be related to military objectives. While denying that such destruction
was systematic, the Israeli Defence Forces have admitted that their personnel
engaged in some acts of vandalism, and are carrying out some related
prosecutions.
34. The Government of Israel justified each of the incursions as being necessary
to destroy the infrastructure of Palestinian militant groups that had carried
out attacks on Israel with increasing frequency in February and March 2002. In
each case, Israel has published information about its assessment of the
infrastructure of militant groups. More details regarding such information are
included in the sections of the report that describe events in specific
Palestinian cities.
35. Closures
of cities, villages and refugee camps and curfews exacted a substantial
humanitarian price from the civilian populations in the affected areas. That
burden was exacerbated in most cities occupied during Operation Defensive Shield
by significant periods of time during which utilities (electricity, water and
telephone) were cut or severely curtailed. After an initial period of
round-the-clock curfews without any relief, the Israeli Defence Forces
instituted a periodic lifting. The closures and curfews posed particular
problems for those with chronic medical problems, who were unable to obtain care
and medications. After the lifting of the closures, when they were able to
assess the condition of the affected populations, humanitarian agencies reported
shortages of food and other basic supplies among Palestinians affected by the
incursions. In addition to these humanitarian consequences of the closures and
curfews, the restrictions had a devastating economic impact, virtually shutting
down the economy of the Palestinian Authority by impeding normal business
activity and preventing Palestinians from going to work.
36. Terrorist attacks against Israeli civilians continued in the aftermath of
Operation Defensive Shield, and most Palestinian cities endured further
incursions after the end of the operation up to the end of the period under
consideration in this report.
E. Overall effects of the incursions on the Palestinian population
37. According to a report prepared by United Nations agencies in the Occupied
Palestinian Territory, the humanitarian and development effects of the two waves
of incursions were as follows:
(a) A total of 497 Palestinians were killed in the course of the IDF
reoccupation of Palestinian area A from 1 March to 7 May 2002 and in the
immediate aftermath;
(b) Palestinian health authorities and the Palestinian Red Crescent Society reported approximately 1,447 wounded with some 538 live-ammunition injuries (for the same period);
(c) Round-the-clock curfews were imposed in cities, refugee camps, towns and villages affecting an estimated 1 million persons; over 600,000 of them remained under a one-week curfew, while 220,000 urban residents lived under curfew regimes for a longer duration and without vital supplies and access to first aid;
(d) Severe internal and external closures continue to paralyse normal economic activity, and movement of persons and goods throughout the West Bank; in the Gaza Strip, the unprecedented 38-day-long internal closures divided the Strip into three intermittently isolated areas;
(e) Protracted curfews, compounded by severe restrictions on commercial circulation of supplies, rendered the food security situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territory precarious: over 630,000 persons or roughly 20 per cent of the resident population were considered food security vulnerable;
(f) Food deficit was increasingly observed in various regions of the Occupied Palestinian Territory, the Gaza food market being particularly distorted. Restrictions on food imports resulted in a mild increase in the overall food price level in the West Bank and in a considerable rise (up to 25-30%) of prices for staple commodities in the Gaza Strip;
(g) Over
2,800 refugee housing units were damaged and 878 homes were demolished or
destroyed during the reporting period, leaving more than 17,000 people homeless
or in need of shelter rehabilitation;
(h) Non-refugee housing in Nablus, Ramallah, Bethlehem, Jenin town and Tulkarm
and a number of surrounding villages sustained damage ranging from minor to
structural;
(i) Students
in eight West Bank districts were prevented from attending school. It is
estimated that, during the reporting period, some 11,000 classes were missed and
55,000 teaching sessions were lost;
(j) Fifty Palestinian schools were damaged by Israeli military action, of which
11 were totally destroyed, 9 were vandalized, 15 used as military outposts and
another 15 as mass arrest and detention centres.
38. Even before the recent military operation, economic and social conditions in
the West Bank and Gaza were in a state of crisis. According to an assessment by
the Office of the United Nations Special Coordinator, the 18 months of
confrontations and restrictions on movement prior to March and April had
witnessed a more than 20 per cent reduction in domestic production levels,
unprecedented levels of unemployment, a 30 per cent decline in per capita income
and a more than doubling of the poverty rate, to some 45 per cent of the
Palestinian population.
39. While it is difficult to ascertain with precision the magnitude of the socio-economic effects of the incursions, available preliminary information indicates a sharp intensification of the hardships faced by the population. That information suggests that the principal economic result has been a near-complete cessation of all productive activity in the main West Bank centres of manufacturing, construction, commerce and private and public services. Activities in those centres account for at least 75 per cent of the value of goods and services produced in the West Bank. The production stoppage has imposed immediate income losses on employees and owners of businesses, as well as losses in tax revenues for the Palestinian Authority. In addition, suppliers and buyers in the urban areas directly affected have close economic links to rural areas; the isolation of the former has significant negative effects on the latter. This is also true of the relationship between businesses in East Jerusalem and the West Bank.
40. In
addition to the inability of households to access medical, educational or other
services during Operation Defensive Shield, people have been separated from
their means of income. This has resulted in lost opportunities to earn income,
further compressing household income and savings and exacerbating the severe
decline in living levels of the last 18 months. As a result, the West Bank will
witness even higher levels of poverty in the short- to medium-term.
41. According to the World Bank, reconstruction costs for physical and
institutional damage to Palestinian Authority civilian infrastructure resulting
from the incursions in the West Bank in March and April 2002 would total US$ 361
million.
42. While the United Nations does not have a mandate to monitor and report on
conditions in Israel, as it does in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, it is
apparent that the violence, specifically terrorist attacks, has caused enormous
suffering for the Israeli people and the country's economy.
F. Recent events in Jenin
Introduction
43. In the early hours of 3 April 2002, as part of Operation Defensive Shield,
the Israeli Defence Forces entered the city of Jenin and the refugee camp
adjacent to it, declared them a closed military area, prevented all access, and
imposed a round-the-clock curfew. By the time of the IDF withdrawal and the
lifting of the curfew on 18 April, at least 52 Palestinians, of whom up to half
may have been civilians, and 23 Israeli soldiers were dead. Many more were
injured. Approximately 150 buildings had been destroyed and many others were
rendered structurally unsound. Four hundred and fifty families were rendered
homeless. The cost of the destruction of property is estimated at approximately
$27 million.
Jenin refugee camp before 3 April 2002
44. On the eve of Israel's military incursion in April, the Jenin refugee camp, established in 1953, was home to roughly 14,000 Palestinians, of whom approximately 47 per cent were either under 15 or over 65 years of age. It was the second largest refugee camp in the West Bank in population and was densely populated, occupying a surface area of approximately 373 dunums (one square kilometre). The Jenin refugee camp came under full Palestinian civil and security control in 1995. It is in close proximity to Israeli settlements and is near the "green line".
45. According to both Palestinian and Israeli observers, the Jenin camp had, by April 2002, some 200 armed men from the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, Tanzim, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Hamas who operated from the camp. The Government of Israel has charged that, from October 2000 to April 2002, 28 suicide attacks were planned and launched from the Jenin camp.
46. The
Government of Israel has published information regarding infrastructure within
the Jenin camp for the carrying out of attacks. The Israeli Defence Forces point
to their discovery in the camp of arms caches and explosive laboratories and the
numbers of Palestinian militants killed or arrested there during Operation
Defensive Shield. They cite posters glorifying suicide bombers and documents
describing Jenin as a "martyr's capital" reportedly found by Israeli soldiers in
the camp during the incursion.
47. The Government of Israel and IDF have acknowledged that their soldiers were
unprepared for the level of resistance they encountered in Jenin camp, noting
that it was "probably the most bitter and harsh" that they had faced. The IDF
soldiers who took part in the operation were, for the most part, reservists who
had been mobilized only on or after 17 March. Many were called up only after the
Passover bombing in Netanya (27 March).
Israeli Defence Force incursion into Jenin city and refugee camp, 3-18 April 2002
48. Although
available first-hand accounts are partial, difficult to authenticate and often
anonymous, it is possible, through Government of Israel, Palestinian Authority,
United Nations and other international sources, to create a rough chronology of
events within the Jenin camp from 3 to 18 April 2002. The fighting lasted
approximately 10 days and was characterized by two distinct phases: the first
phase began on 3 April and ended on 9 April, while the second phase lasted
during 10 and 11 April. Most of the deaths on both sides occurred in the first
phase but it would appear that much of the physical damage was done in the
second.
49. There are allegations by the Palestinian Authority and human rights organizations that in the conduct of their operations in the refugee camp the Israeli Defence Forces engaged in unlawful killings, the use of human shields, disproportionate use of force, arbitrary arrests and torture and denial of medical treatment and access. IDF soldiers who participated in the Jenin incursion point to breaches of international humanitarian law on the part of Palestinian combatants within the camp, including basing themselves in a densely populated civilian area and the use of children to transport and possibly lay booby traps.
50. In the
account of the Government of Israel of the operation, IDF first surrounded and
established control of access into and out of the city of Jenin, allowing its
inhabitants to depart voluntarily. Approximately 11,000 did so. According to
Israeli sources, in their incursion into the camp IDF relied primarily on
infantry rather than airpower and artillery in an effort to minimize civilian
casualties, but other accounts of the battle suggest that as many as 60 tanks
may have been used even in the first days. Interviews with witnesses conducted
by human rights organizations suggest that tanks, helicopters and ground troops
using small arms predominated in the first two days, after which armoured
bulldozers were used to demolish houses and other structures so as to widen
alleys in the camp.
51. Using loudspeakers, IDF urged civilians in Arabic to evacuate the camp. Some
reports, including of interviews with IDF soldiers, suggest that those warnings
were not adequate and were ignored by many residents. Many of the inhabitants of
the Jenin camp fled the camp before or at the beginning of the IDF incursion.
Others left after 9 April. Estimates vary on how many civilians remained in the
camp throughout but there may have been as many as 4,000.
52. As described by the Government of Israel, "a heavy battle took place in
Jenin, during which IDF soldiers were forced to fight among booby-trapped houses
and bomb fields throughout the camp, which were prepared in advance as a
booby-trapped battlefield". The Palestinian Authority acknowledges that "a
number of Palestinian fighters resisted the Israeli military assault and were
armed only with rifles and … crude explosives". An IDF spokesman offered a
slightly different portrayal of the resistance, stating that the soldiers had
faced "more than a thousand explosive charges, live explosive charges and some
more sophisticated ones, … hundreds of hand grenades … [and] hundreds of
gunmen". Human rights reports support the assertions that some buildings had
been booby-trapped by the Palestinian combatants.
53. That the Israeli Defence Forces encountered heavy Palestinian resistance is not in question. Nor is the fact that Palestinian militants in the camp, as elsewhere, adopted methods which constitute breaches of international law that have been and continue to be condemned by the United Nations. Clarity and certainty remain elusive, however, on the policy and facts of the IDF response to that resistance. The Government of Israel maintains that IDF "clearly took all possible measures not to hurt civilian life" but were confronted with "armed terrorists who purposely concealed themselves among the civilian population". However, some human rights groups and Palestinian eyewitnesses assert that IDF soldiers did not take all possible measures to avoid hurting civilians, and even used some as human shields.
54. As IDF penetrated the camp, the Palestinian militants reportedly moved further into its centre. The heaviest fighting reportedly occurred between 5 and 9 April, resulting in the largest death tolls on both sides. There are reports that during this period IDF increased missile strikes from helicopters and the use of bulldozers - including their use to demolish homes and allegedly bury beneath them those who refused to surrender - and engaged in "indiscriminate" firing. IDF lost 14 soldiers, 13 in a single engagement on 9 April. IDF incurred no further fatalities in Jenin after 9 April.
55. Press reports from the days in question and subsequent interviews by representatives of non-governmental organizations with camp residents suggest that an average of five Palestinians per day died in the first three days of the incursion and that there was a sharp increase in deaths on 6 April.
56.
Fifty-two Palestinian deaths had been confirmed by the hospital in Jenin by the
end of May 2002. IDF also place the death toll at approximately 52. A senior
Palestinian Authority official alleged in mid-April that some 500 were killed, a
figure that has not been substantiated in the light of the evidence that has
emerged.
57. It is impossible to determine with precision how many civilians were among
the Palestinian dead. The Government of Israel estimated during the incursion
that there were "only dozens killed in Jenin … and the vast majority of them
bore arms and fired upon [IDF] forces". Israeli officials informed United
Nations personnel that they believed that, of the 52 dead, 38 were armed men and
14 were civilians. The Palestinian Authority has acknowledged that combatants
were among the dead, and has named some of them, but has placed no precise
estimates on the breakdown. Human rights organizations put the civilian toll
closer to 20 - Human Rights Watch documented 22 civilians among the 52 dead,
while Physicians for Human Rights noted that "children under the age of 15
years, women and men over the age of 50 years accounted for nearly 38 per cent
of all reported fatalities".
58. The
Israeli Defence Forces stated at the time that their methods might not change,
"because the basic assumption is that we are operating in a civilian
neighbourhood". Other accounts of the battle suggest that the nature of the
military operation in Jenin refugee camp did alter after 9 April 2002. On that
day, in what both the Palestinian Authority and the Government of Israel
describe as a "well-planned ambush" 13 IDF soldiers were killed and a number of
others wounded. A fourteenth soldier died elsewhere in the camp that day,
bringing the IDF death toll during the operation in Jenin to 23.
59. Following the ambush, IDF appeared to have shifted tactics from
house-to-house searches and destruction of the homes of known militants to wider
bombardment with tanks and missiles. IDF also used armoured bulldozers,
supported by tanks, to demolish portions of the camp. The Government of Israel
maintains that "IDF forces only destroyed structures after calling a number of
times for inhabitants to leave buildings, and from which the shooting did not
cease". Witness testimonies and human rights investigations allege that the
destruction was both disproportionate and indiscriminate, some houses coming
under attack from the bulldozers before their inhabitants had the opportunity to
evacuate. The Palestinian Authority maintains that IDF "had complete and
detailed knowledge of what was happening in the camp through the use of drones
and cameras attached to balloons … [and] none of the atrocities committed were
unintentional".
60. Human rights and humanitarian organizations have questioned whether this change in tactics was proportionate to the military objective and in accordance with humanitarian and human rights law. The Palestinian Authority account of the battle alleges the use of "helicopter gunships to fire TOW missiles against such a densely populated area … anti-aircraft guns, able to fire 3,000 rounds a minute … scores of tanks and armoured vehicles equipped with machine guns … [and] bulldozers to raze homes and to burrow wide lanes". Other sources point to an extensive use of armoured bulldozers and helicopter gunships on 9 and 10 April, possibly even after the fighting had begun to subside. During this stage, much of the physical damage was done, particularly in the central Hawashin district of the camp, which was effectively levelled. Many civilian dwellings were completely destroyed and many more were severely damaged. Several UNRWA facilities in the camp, including its health centre and sanitation office, were badly damaged.
61. Within
two days after 9 April, IDF brought the camp under control and defeated the
remaining armed elements. On 11 April, the last Palestinian militants in Jenin
camp surrendered to IDF, having requested mediation by B'Tselem, an Israeli
human rights organization that operates in the Occupied Palestinian Territory,
to ensure that no harm would come to them. According to Palestinian Authority
sources, those surrendering included wanted Islamic Jihad and Fatah leaders;
others were three injured people and a 13-year-old boy.
Conclusion and aftermath of the IDF incursion, 11 April-7 May 2002
62. As the IDF incursion into Jenin wound down, a range of humanitarian problems
arose or worsened for the estimated 4,000 Palestinian civilians remaining in the
camp. Primary among these was the prolonged delay in obtaining medical attention
for the wounded and sick within the camp. As the fighting began to subside,
ambulances and medical personnel were prevented by IDF from reaching the wounded
within the camp, despite repeated requests to IDF to facilitate access for
ambulances and humanitarian delegates, including those of the United Nations.
From 11 to 15 April, United Nations and other humanitarian agencies petitioned
and negotiated for access to the camp with IDF and made many attempts to send in
convoys, to no avail. At IDF headquarters on 12 April, United Nations officials
were told that United Nations humanitarian staff would be given access to the
affected population. However, such access did not materialize on the ground, and
several more days of negotiations with senior IDF officials and personnel of the
Israeli Ministry of Defence did not produce the necessary access despite
assurances to the contrary. On 18 April, senior United Nations officials
criticized Israel for its handling of humanitarian access in the aftermath of
the battle and, in particular, its refusal to facilitate full and safe access to
the affected populations in violation of its obligations under international
humanitarian law.
63. UNRWA mounted a large operation to deliver food and medical supplies to needy refugees who had fled the camp and to Jenin hospital but was not allowed to enter the camp. The humanitarian crisis was exacerbated by the fact that, on the first day of the offensive, electricity in both the city and the camp were cut by IDF. Electric power was not restored until 21 April.
64. Many of the reports of human rights groups contain accounts of wounded civilians waiting days to reach medical assistance, and being refused medical treatment by IDF soldiers. In some cases, people died as a result of these delays. In addition to those wounded in the fighting, there were civilian inhabitants of the camp and the city who endured medication shortages and delays in medical treatment for pre-existing conditions. For example, it was reported on 4 April that there were 28 kidney patients in Jenin who could not reach the hospital for dialysis treatment.
65. The functioning of Jenin Hospital, just outside the camp, appears to have been severely undermined by IDF actions, despite IDF statements that "nothing was done to the hospital". The hospital's supplies of power, water, oxygen and blood were badly affected by the fighting and consequent cuts in services. On 4 April, IDF ordered the Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) to stop its operations and sealed off the hospital. Hospital staff contend that shells and gunfire severely damaged equipment on the top floor and that at least two patients died because of damage to the oxygen supplies. None of the Palestinians within the hospital was permitted to leave until 15 April.
66. It
appears that, in addition to the denial of aid, IDF in some instances targeted
medical personnel. Before the Jenin incursion, on 4 March, the head of the PRCS
Emergency Medical Service in Jenin was killed by a shell fired from an Israeli
tank while he was travelling in a clearly marked ambulance. On 7 March, a staff
member of UNRWA was killed when several bullets were fired by Israeli soldiers
at an UNRWA ambulance in which he was riding near Tulkarm in the West Bank. On 3
April, a uniformed Palestinian nurse was reportedly shot by IDF soldiers within
Jenin camp and on 8 April an UNRWA ambulance was fired upon as it tried to reach
a wounded man in Jenin.
67. The Government of Israel repeatedly charged that medical vehicles were used
to transport terrorists and that medical premises were used to provide shelter.
This, according to Israel, necessitated the strict restrictions on humanitarian
access. Furthermore, in the specific case of Jenin camp, IDF spokesmen
attributed denials of access to the clearance of booby traps after the fighting
had subsided. The IDF spokesman also maintained that the "Palestinians actually
refused our offers to assist them with humanitarian aid" and that "everyone who
needed help, got help". There is a consensus among humanitarian personnel who
were present on the ground that the delays endangered the lives of many wounded
and ill within. United Nations and other humanitarian personnel offered to
comply fully with IDF security checks on entering and leaving the camp, but were
not able to enter the camp on this basis. Furthermore, United Nations staff
reported that IDF had granted some Israeli journalists escorted access to the
camp on 14 April, before humanitarian personnel were allowed in. United Nations
personnel requested similar escorted access to assess the humanitarian condition
of people in the camp, but were unsuccessful, despite assurances from senior IDF
officials that such access would be possible.
68. On 15 April, 12 days after the start of the military operation, IDF granted
humanitarian agencies access to the Jenin refugee camp. The Palestine Red
Crescent Society and the International Committee of the Red Cross were permitted
to enter the camp under military escort but reported that their movement was
strictly confined to certain areas and further constrained by the presence of
large quantities of unexploded ordnance including booby traps. After evacuating
only seven bodies, they aborted their efforts. A United Nations team including
two trucks with water and supplies was forbidden from unloading its supplies and
was also forced to withdraw. Supplies were distributed to the camp inhabitants
only beginning the following day, 16 April. Acute food and water shortages were
evident and humanitarian personnel began calls for specialized search-and-rescue
efforts to extract the wounded and the dead from the rubble.
69. Once IDF
granted full access to the camp on 15 April, unexploded ordnance impeded the
safe operations of humanitarian personnel. Non-United Nations humanitarian
agencies reported that large amounts of unexploded ordnance, explosives laid by
Palestinian combatants as well as IDF ordnance, slowed their work. Negotiations
carried out by United Nations and international agencies with IDF to allow
appropriate equipment and personnel into the camp to remove the unexploded
ordnance continued for several weeks, during which time at least two
Palestinians were accidentally killed in explosions.
G. Recent events in other Palestinian cities
70. Brief descriptions of recent events in Ramallah, Bethlehem and Nablus follow.
Ramallah
71. Ramallah was the first city occupied by the Israeli Defence Forces in
Operation Defensive Shield. IDF entered on 29 March and withdrew from most of
Ramallah on 20 April and the remaining sections of the city on 30 April. While
many of the features of the incursion were common to incursions in other cities
- a curfew, the severing of telephone, water and electricity services to most of
the city, the prevention of the delivery of humanitarian assistance, and
detentions - the status of Ramallah as the administrative centre for the
Palestinian Authority appeared to be a factor in the actions of IDF.
72. The Government of Israel avers that Ramallah has played a central role in
terrorist attacks against Israeli civilians because of the presence there of the
headquarters of a number of Palestinian security forces (the National Security
Force, Preventive Security, Civil Police and Force-17) and the cooperation
between those security forces and militant groups. According to IDF, militant
groups both collaborate with the security forces and enjoy their protection. The
Government of Israel contends that Fatah, which is headquartered in Ramallah and
shares personnel with Palestinian Authority security forces, is a terrorist
organization. It asserts that the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
also uses Ramallah as its base of operation and that Hamas uses Ramallah as a
"relay station" for suicide attacks. The Palestinian Authority denies any
involvement of its security forces in terrorist attacks.
73. During the course of the military operation in Ramallah, Palestinian
Authority civil institutions suffered extensive damage. Reports of human rights
monitoring groups contend that those institutions were specifically targeted by
IDF, and the World Bank stated in a report that the offices of 21 ministries and
agencies were entered and ransacked to varying degrees. According to the
Palestinian Authority, IDF entry into the Authority offices appeared to be
focused on information-gathering. They cite the common removal of computer
servers, hard disc drives, computers and paper records as indicative of this
goal. The World Bank states that the destruction was focused on office
equipment, computers and data storage facilities; it estimates replacement and
repair costs for Palestinian Authority office interiors at $8 million. In
addition, the Authority asserts that IDF made efforts to disrupt the ministries'
capacity to function effectively, pointing to what they believe was the
systematic destruction of office and communication equipment and removal or
destruction of records and data from ministries. Records from the Education,
Health and Finance Ministries and the Central Bureau of Statistics were removed
during the operation and, as at 7 May, had not been returned. The Palestinian
Authority and non-governmental organizations cite cases of vandalism and theft
of private property. IDF also caused heavy destruction at the compound of
Chairman Arafat. The Government of Israel has denied that IDF personnel engaged
in systematic destruction, vandalism and theft during Operation Defensive
Shield.
Bethlehem
74. On 2 April, IDF entered Bethlehem using tanks and armoured personnel
carriers. Exchanges of fire occurred around the city on 2 and 3 April. IDF
assert that Palestinian militants fired on Israeli soldiers from churches, while
the Palestinian Authority says that IDF attacked civilians and clerics on church
premises. On 4 April, according to IDF, Palestinian militants took over the
Church of the Nativity. The Palestinian Authority contends that on 3 April 150
people, including women and children, sought refuge in the Church. Israeli
forces surrounded the Church of the Nativity and for 37 days a stand-off ensued.
Israeli forces withdrew from the city on 10 May, three weeks after the formal
end of Operation Defensive Shield, after the conclusion of protracted
negotiations over the fate of Palestinian militants who had sought refuge in the
Church of the Nativity.
75. The Israeli Defence Forces assert that Bethlehem had been a base for
operations of the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and
the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. According to IDF, five
attacks on Israelis emanated from Bethlehem from 18 February to 9 March 2002,
which resulted in the deaths of 24 people and dozens wounded. IDF say that the
Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for four of those attacks.
76. A curfew was imposed on Bethlehem and its surrounding villages from 2 April,
and from the start of the incursion IDF declared Bethlehem a closed military
area. From 2 April to 10 May, the Israeli forces lifted the curfew in parts of
the greater Bethlehem area approximately every three days for periods of two to
four hours. According to an Israeli human rights organization, in some of
Bethlehem's nearby villages it became difficult to obtain medical care during
the brief liftings of the curfew because of the need for residents to travel to
Bethlehem or other larger towns to visit hospitals or clinics. As a result,
pregnant women were unable to get prenatal care and people with chronic medical
problems were unable to replenish medications or receive care. One village, al-Walaja,
remained under round-the-clock curfew from 2 April to 10 May.
Nablus
77. The IDF incursion into Nablus began on 3 April 2002 and ended on 21 April.
Heavy fighting reportedly occurred in various parts of the city, the most
intense combat happening in the old city. Most accounts estimate that between 70
and 80 Palestinians, including approximately 50 civilians, were killed in Nablus
during the operation. IDF lost four soldiers during the incursion. Of all the
Palestinian cities entered during Operation Defensive Shield, Nablus appears to
be the one that suffered the most extensive physical damage to property. This is
in part because of the substantial damage to the old city, some of which had
been restored with the help of UNESCO. According to the World Bank, the
reconstruction costs for Nablus alone account for approximately $114 million,
more than one third of the total reconstruction cost for all of the cities
affected by Operation Defensive Shield.
78. After
encircling Nablus on 3 April, IDF entered the city using helicopter gunships,
tanks, armoured personnel carriers and ground troops. From 6 to 11 April the
most intense fighting occurred in the warren of narrow streets in the old city,
where armoured bulldozers were put to use destroying buildings to clear a path
for the entry of tanks. By 11 April, most of the fighting had ended. IDF imposed
a curfew on 3 April and completely lifted it on 22 April. The first temporary
lifting occurred on 10 April for one hour, and thereafter IDF lifted the curfew
for two to three hours approximately every two days.
79. The Israeli Defence Forces have alleged that Nablus is a centre for the
planning and organization of terrorist attacks on Israel and say that groups in
the city directed the work of militant groups in the northern part of the West
Bank. IDF hold those groups responsible for 19 attacks in 2002, which resulted
in 24 deaths and 313 people injured. According to IDF, the various militant
groups operated cooperatively, with Palestinian Islamic Jihad planning attacks,
Hamas preparing explosives and Fatah/Tanzim providing suicide bombers.
80. As a result of Operation Defensive Shield and the earlier incursions, IDF
assert that 18 explosives laboratories, seven Qassam rocket laboratories, 10
explosive belts, and hundreds of kilos of explosives were found in the old city
of Nablus and the nearby Balata refugee camp. They say they found tunnels for
hiding and smuggling arms under the old city and discovered arms caches in the
homes of the mayor of Nablus and the city's police commander.
81. Humanitarian and human rights groups report that the population of Nablus
was particularly affected by the extent of the fighting as well as by the
curfew. Substantial portions of the city suffered from water, electricity and
telephone cuts throughout the operation. There are also reports of Israeli
forces severely hampering the movement of medical personnel and ambulances. The
substantial destruction in Nablus included houses, numerous other buildings and
religious and historical sites. According to local Palestinian Authority
officials, 64 buildings in the old city, including 22 residential buildings,
were badly damaged or destroyed and up to 221 buildings suffered partial damage.
H. Observations
82. As I wrote on 3 May 2002 to the President of the Security Council, I share the assessment of President Ahtisaari and his fact-finding team that a full and comprehensive report on recent events in Jenin, as well as in other Palestinian cities, could not be made without the full cooperation of both parties and a visit to the area. I would, therefore, not wish to go beyond the very limited findings of fact which are set out in the body of the text. I am nevertheless confident that the picture painted in this report is a fair representation of a complex reality.
83. The events described in this report, the continuing deterioration of the situation and the ongoing cycle of violence in my view demonstrate the urgent need for the parties to resume a process that would lead back to the negotiating table. There is very wide support in the international community for a solution in which two States, Israel and Palestine, live side-by-side within secure and recognized borders, as called for by the Security Council in resolution 1397 (2002). I believe that the international community has a compelling responsibility to intensify its efforts to find a peaceful and durable solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, as a key element in the search for a just, lasting and comprehensive settlement in the Middle East based on Security Council resolutions 242 (1967) and 338 (1973).
Annex I
Letter dated 3 June 2002 from the Permanent Observer of Palestine to the United Nations addressed to the Secretary-General
·
Enclosed please find the Palestinian report on the recent events that took place
in Jenin and in other Palestinian cities. For practical reasons, the annexes to
the report have been submitted to the United Nations Special Coordinator's
Office. This report is being submitted with the intention of assisting you in
preparing your report, requested in paragraph 6 of General Assembly resolution
ES-10/10, adopted on
7 May 2002
by the General Assembly at its resumed tenth emergency special session. It is
also being submitted in response to the letter addressed to me by the
Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs, which requested that the
Palestinian Authority provide any information relevant to the implementation of
that resolution.
·
*
Only section I is reproduced in the present document.
The Palestinian report is composed of the following sections:
Section I. Main submission
Section II. Support documents
1. Letters
from the Permanent Observer Mission of Palestine to the United Nations to the
Secretary-General, the President of the Security Council and the President of
the General Assembly (see documents of the tenth emergency special session)
2. Israeli position on the fact-finding committee on the Jenin refugee
camp/names of some Israeli persons who might be implicated in the atrocities
committed against the Palestinian people
3. Chronology of events from 29 March to 15 May 2002 (prepared by the
Palestinian Academic Society for the Study of International Affairs)
4. Summary/indicative information on the annexes
5. List of annexes
Section III. Annexes
1. Palestinian Authority reports
2.
International non-governmental humanitarian and human rights organizations
3. Israeli human rights organizations
4. Palestinian non-governmental organizations and institutions (humanitarian and human rights organizations)
5. United Nations related reports
6. World Bank
7. Local Aid Coordination Committee/Donor Support Group
8. Media
9. Video
tape (22 minutes from local and international media archives)
10. Photographs (150 photographs)
We trust
that your report will be accurate and comprehensive. We also believe that it is
necessary for the report to contain specific conclusions and recommendations to
Member States and relevant organs of the United Nations. The international
community must be enabled to know the facts of what occurred and to respond to
them so that the atrocities committed by the Israeli occupying forces in the
Occupied Palestinian Territory, including Jerusalem, are not repeated. This
would then open the road for the establishment of real peace in the region.
(Signed) Nasser Al-Kidwa Ambassador Permanent Observer of Palestine to the
United Nations
Attachment
Palestinian report submitted to the Secretary-General, pursuant to General
Assembly resolution ES-10/10 of 7 May 2002, on the recent events in Jenin and in
other Palestinian cities
Section One: Main Submission
Introduction
This report on the recent events that occurred in Jenin and in other Palestinian
cities in the Occupied Palestinian Territory is being submitted by the
Palestinian Authority to the United Nations Secretary-General with the intention
of assisting him in preparing the report requested in paragraph 6 of General
Assembly resolution A/ES-10/10, adopted on 7 May 2002 by the resumed tenth
emergency special session. The report, including this main submission, also
addresses Israeli actions prior to 29 March 2002 and some overall longstanding
policies and practices of Israel, the occupying Power, as a nary background for
understanding the recent events that occurred in many Palestinian populated
centers, including the cities of Ramallah, Bethlehem, Nablus, Tulkarem Qalqilya,
Jenin and Al-Khalil. Earlier, the Palestinian people had hoped that the
fact-finding team established by the Secretary-General would, in implementation
of Security Council resolution 1405 (2002), be enabled to present a
comprehensive report on the events that took place in the Jenin refugee camp.
This, regrettably, was not possible due to Israel's refusal to cooperate with
the fact- finding team and with the Secretary-General and its rejection of the
Council's resolution.
The Palestinian Authority sought to undertake its own investigation into the
events of the last two months, to document cases and to provide complete and
reliable evidence required to assess the atrocities and serious violations of
international humanitarian law that were committed by the Israeli occupying
forces. However, Israel's systematic and continuous attacks on Palestinian
Ministries and other official bodies and local government institutions, combined
with the continuous military siege, have severely obstructed basic functions of
government and have effectively prevented the Palestinian Authority from fully
undertaking such a comprehensive investigation. In submitting this report, the
Palestinian Authority wishes to also draw the attention of the U.N.
Secretary-General to the findings presented in the support documents as well as
in the annexes of the report, including the video and photographs.
The Palestinian Authority condemns the refusal of the Israeli government, in
reversal of its own position, to comply with Security Council resolution 1405
(2002) and its refusal to cooperate with the fact-finding team and with the
Secretary-General. In condemning this Israeli position, the Authority joins the
worldwide condemnation of such an Israeli position, which impeded efforts to
establish the facts in a quick and determined manner. This refusal falls in line
with Israel's refusal to comply with relevant Security Council and with its
legal obligations and responsibilities under the Fourth Geneva Convention
relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, of 12 August
1949.
Israel, the occupying Power, has persistently rejected the de jure applicability
of the Fourth Geneva Convention to the Arab territories it occupied in 1967,
despite the international consensus affirming the Convention's applicability,
including in 26 Security Council resolutions. In addition, it has consistently
disregarded the provisions of the Convention and the international humanitarian
law principle concerning the protection of the civilian population under
occupation. Israel's refusal to accept the applicability of the Fourth Geneva
Convention to the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including Jerusalem, has
rendered the internal mechanism of the Convention inoperable. Moreover, the High
Contracting Parties have failed to adopt measures to ensure compliance by the
occupying Power with the provisions of the Convention and have thus failed to
ensure respect of the Convention "in all circumstances" in accordance with
article 1 common of the four Geneva Conventions.
Consequently, over the last 35 years, the Palestinian population in the Occupied
Palestinian Territory, including Jerusalem, has been left without any effective
protection against Israel's oppressive policies and measures, including its
excessive use of lethal force. The absence of enforcement has fostered an
environment in which Israel acts with impunity, disregarding international
humanitarian law, international law and the will of the international community.
An important
attempt to redress this situation has been the convening of the. Conference of
High Contracting Parties on Measures to Enforce the Convention in the Occupied
Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, at Geneva on 15 July 1999, and
the resumption of this Conference on 5 December 2001. An extremely important
Declaration was adopted by the participating High Contracting Parties at the
resumed Conference of 5 December, which, inter alia, affirmed that "the Fourth
Geneva Convention has to be respected in all circumstances". The Declaration
specified the legal obligations of the parties to the conflict, of the occupying
Power and of the States Parties. Such an important document should provide the
basis for further action to ensure respect of the Convention in the Occupied
Palestinian Territory, including Jerusalem.
The Palestinian Authority submits this report with the expectation that the U.N.
Secretary-General will present a report that is both accurate and comprehensive.
It is necessary for the report to contain specific conclusions and
recommendations to Member States and relevant organs of the United Nations. The
international community must be enabled to know the facts of what occurred and
to respond to them so that the atrocities committed by the Israeli occupying
forces in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including Jerusalem, are not
repeated. This would then open the road for the establishment of real peace in
the region, including a final settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
We expect the Secretary-General to also help in formulating the response,
including cooperative efforts aimed at bringing Israel into compliance with
relevant Security Council and with international humanitarian law; establishment
of mechanisms to ensure the protection of the Palestinian population; and
support of efforts to establish legally required mechanisms to determine
accountability for violations of international humanitarian law, in particular
war crimes, including the commission of grave breaches of the Fourth Geneva
Convention.
Factual and Legal Context
"The Palestinians must be hit and it must be very painful. We must cause them losses, victims, so that they feel the heavy price." Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, 5 March 2002.
An informed
understanding of Israel's policies and practices, including the systematic and
deliberate violation of the basic rights of the Palestinian population as
defined by international humanitarian law and human rights law, is necessary for
an accurate understanding and assessment of Israeli actions throughout the last
two months. The context in which any assessment must be made is the context of
foreign occupation.
The Israeli occupation and the policies and practices executed by the occupying
Power have been driven by an overriding and ongoing Israeli goal to actively
colonize the Palestinian Territory, including Jerusalem, with a vast and
continuously expanding colonial structure manifested in the form of illegal
Israeli settlements. The occupying Power, since the beginning of the occupation
in 1967, has illegally transferred more than 400,000 Israeli civilians into the
Occupied Palestinian Territory, including Jerusalem. It has confiscated
Palestinian land, exploited and abused natural resources arid created a separate
structure of life, including a different system of law, to carry out its illegal
settlement campaign, which is the only remaining colonial phenomenon in the
world at the beginning of the 21st Century.
Israel's 35-year settlement campaign has not been, and could not have been, executed without the forceful dispossession and confinement of the indigenous Palestinian population. Moreover, to gain the full submission of the entire occupied population to Israel's expansionist designs on the Palestinian Territory, Israel has systematically employed countless repressive means, including socioeconomic suffocation, detention, deportation, home demolition, collective punishments, the use of lethal force and, more recently, the use of heavy weaponry reserved for warfare.
Over the past 20 months, Israel, the occupying Power, has waged a bloody military campaign against the Palestinian people and has escalated many of its unlawful policies and practices, routinely violating the provisions of international humanitarian law guaranteeing protection to the Palestinian civilian population, in addition to violating the existing agreements between the two sides. Since the beginning of the Al-Aqsa intifada on 28 September 2000, which began in response to the infamous visit of Mr. Ariel Sharon to Al-Haram Al-Sharif, Israel has been expanding its use of "retaliation" and "deterrence" and intensifying its illegal practices, including willfully killing civilians; using excessive, disproportionate and indiscriminate force; using lethal force a gainst demonstrators, including children throwing stones; imposing military siege and severe restrictions on the movement of persons and goods; imposing collective punishments; targeting of ambulances and medical personnel and obstructing their access to the wounded; and destroying agricultural fields and uprooting of trees. Israeli occupying forces also bombarded and destroyed many institutions of the Palestinian Authority, including police and security installations, and even the Gaza International Airport. These serious violations and breaches of international humanitarian law have caused extensive harm to the Palestinian civilian population, the Palestinian infrastructure and the Palestinian Authority and its institutions.
On 29 March and throughout the period under report, the Israeli occupying forces waged a large-scale military assault against the Palestinian people, unprecedented in its scope and intensity since the start of the Israeli occupation. The Israeli occupying forces invaded and reoccupied most Palestinian populated centers, including cities, villages and refugee camps and practically all areas under Palestinian control in the West Bank. The Israeli occupying forces dramatically increased the indiscriminate use of lethal force, using heavy weaponry, including tanks, helicopter gunships and warplanes, to attack and, in some cases bombard, heavily populated Palestinian areas. A large number of Palestinians, including civilians, were killed, many willfully. The occupying forces also continued the practice of extrajudiciary executions, using snipers, helicopter gunships and sometimes tank fire, killing identified people as well as others. In some cases, extrajudiciary executions were even carried out against surrendered fighters and people in Israeli custody.
While the exact number of Palestinians killed is still not final, given the circumstances of the situation on the ground, as of now reports indicate that 375 Palestinians were killed from 29 March to 7 May 2002. Hundreds Palestinians were also wounded, many suffering permanent disabilities as a result of serious injuries, in addition to suffering psychological and mental trauma, which has been especially prevalent among children.
The Israeli occupying forces also imposed harsh measures of collective punishment against hundreds of thousands of Palestinian civilians, including a widespread military siege and extensive curfews, often lasting for days. Such policies and measures led to a critical shortage of basic necessities, including food and medicines; a situation that was dramatically worsened by the restrictions and, in many cases, complete prevention of emergency ambulances and humanitarian aid from reaching those in need. In several cases, this even included the prevention of the removal and burial of the Palestinian dead. Attacks also targeted some medical installations, including hospitals. Moreover, some areas were declared closed military zones and made completely off limits to the media. Palestinians were also continuously subjected to humiliation and harassment by the Israeli occupying forces at the numerous roadblocks and checkpoints throughout the Occupied Palestinian Territory. Many Palestinians died after being prevented by the occupying forces at such roadblocks from reaching hospitals or clinics to receive medical care. In addition to the increased number of roadblocks, the Israeli occupying forces also obstructed movement by digging trenches and bulldozing roads as well as erecting barbed wire in many locations.
During the period under examination, the Israeli occupying forces also rounded-up thousands of Palestinian males and approximately 7,000 were detained by Israel in a mass arbitrary detention. Many of the detainees were subjected to ill-treatment and, according to reports, some were tortured. The occupying forces raided and searched innumerable Palestinian homes, humiliated and harassed residents and in many instances looted homes. An even more condemnable practice was the use of Palestinian civilians as human shields while conducting those searches and while carrying out military advances in Palestinian cities, villages and refugee camps.
The Israeli Occupying forces also invaded the headquarters of President Yasser Arafat in the city of Ramallah and, imposed a strict military siege, while carrying out almost continuous military actions, which endangered the safety and well being of the persons inside the headquarters, including the President. The occupying forces also imposed a military siege on the Church of the Nativity, the birthplace of Jesus Christ, in the city of Bethlehem, seeking several Palestinians who took refuge in the Church. During the more than five-week siege, the Israeli occupying forces repeatedly endangered the integrity of the Church and actually caused some destruction, including fire damage, to parts of the Church compound. In addition, the Israeli occupying forces attacked several other churches and mosques in several Palestinian cities, causing damage to them.
The Israeli
occupying forces, during the same period of time, also caused broad and
extensive destruction to the Palestinian infrastructure in all major Palestinian
cities and refugee camps, including to electricity and water networks and to
roads. Reports indicate that the occupying forces destroyed and/or damaged about
4,000 structures, including houses and institutions. Some of the structures
destroyed by the occupying forces were in historic areas, such as the Old City
of Nablus, which suffered extensive damage. The occupying forces destroyed
property belonging to several Palestinian Ministries, such as the Ministries of
Education and Agricultural, including computers, records and furniture. The
occupying forces also destroyed various other Palestinian properties, including
350 vehicles, among them several ambulances.
The World Bank assessed the overall damage incurred during the period under
report at US$361 million, in addition to the assessment of US$305 million worth
of destruction caused by the occupying forces during the preceding 18 months.
These estimates of course do not include the much more substantial losses in
terms of loss of income suffered by the whole population and the destruction of
the nascent Palestinian economy, which is being estimated by the Palestinian
side to stand at US$3 billion for the entire 20 month period.
Then comes the Israeli military assault on the Jenin refugee camp, one square kilometer in which 13,000 Palestine refugees, who were uprooted from the homes and properties in 1948, had been living. The assault began on 3 April and continued for 10 days. The Israeli occupying forces used helicopter gunships to fire TOW missiles against such a densely populated area. The occupying forces also used anti-aircraft guns, able to fire 3,000 rounds a minute. They deployed scores of tanks and armored vehicles equipped with machine guns and used snipers. The occupying forces also used bulldozers to raze homes and to burrow wide lanes throughout the camp, knocking down whole blocks of homes, in many instances while the inhabitants were still inside. The occupying forces intensively used civilians in the camp as human shields while conducting this military assault.
Most of the camp was obliterated and most of its inhabitants were displaced for the second time in their lives. A number of Palestinian fighters resisted the Israeli military assault and were armed only with rifles and, as some reports indicate, crude explosives. The Israeli occupying forces had complete and detailed knowledge of what was happening in the camp through the use of drones and cameras attached to balloons that monitored the situation, indicating complete control of the situation by the commanders and that none of the atrocities committed were unintentional.
The
occupying forces, even after the end of the Israeli military actions in the
Jenin camp, continued to prevent international humanitarian organizations,
including the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and UNRWA, from
entering the camp to treat the wounded and to deliver emergency medicine and
food aid, including for children, women and the elderly, for more than 11 days.
As a result of all of the above, numerous Palestinians were killed, including
some that had been buried under the rubble of bulldozed homes. Some are still
missing and many were wounded and seriously traumatized. It is an understatement
that the entire population of the Jenin refugee camp experienced horrific
suffering throughout and as a result of this Israeli military assault.
Many credible sources have reported about atrocities committed in the camp and
about the presence of prima facie evidence of war crimes. In addition, it is
probable that a massacre and a crime against humanity might have been committed
in the Jenin refugee camp - a probability that was enhanced by the statements
made at some point by the occupying forces about hundreds of Palestinians being
killed in the camp and their reported attempts to move bodies from the camp to
what they referred to as the graveyards of the enemy.
The broad
Israeli military assault continued in full defiance of Security Council
resolution 1402 (2002)-of 30 March 2002 and even Security Council resolution
1403 (2002) of 4 April 2002, which demanded the implementation of resolution
1402 (2002) "without delay". Israeli occupying forces only withdrew from the
last Palestinian city after 6 weeks from the beginning of the assault and even
then maintained a hermetic siege on the cities and maintained the reoccupation
of large parts of surrounding areas through a heavy military presence. Since
then, the Israeli occupying forces repeatedly raided and reoccupied parts of
those cities, at times for days, killing and abducting people and causing
further destruction and acting in a way intended to erase the lines defining the
Palestinian-controlled areas under existing agreements.
It is apparent that the above-mentioned Israeli atrocities, committed during the
period under report, were intended to cause the socioeconomic collapse of the
Palestinian society. They aimed to destroy not only the present but also the
future of the Palestinian people, including the destruction of the Palestinian
Authority. The current Israeli attempts to institutionalize the situation
created by the Israeli military assault as the norm, through the creation of
several isolated areas and through the reemergence of the civil administration
of the Israeli military government, are just further proof in this regard. In
fact, the Israeli political aim has clearly been to take us back to a pre-Oslo
situation, only under severely devastated living conditions for the Palestinian
people.
In sum, the
Israeli occupying forces have, without a doubt, committed serious violations of
international humanitarian law. Also, without a doubt, war crimes, including
grave breaches of the Fourth Geneva Convention, have been committed by Israel,
the occupying Power, in several Palestinian cities, including in the Jenin
refugee camp. Those war crimes include "willful killing", "inhuman treatment",
"unlawful confinement of protected persons" and "extensive destruction and
appropriation of property, not justified by military necessity and carried out
unlawfully and wantonly". These have been committed in addition to countless
other grave breaches as defined in Additional Protocol I to the Geneva
Conventions. This is clear and documented. What is now necessary is an accurate
assessment of the exact scope of these atrocities.
It is imperative to stress the personal responsibility of the perpetrators of
the abovementioned war crimes at both the poetical level, which might have given
the orders, and, more obviously, the military level, including the commanders
and soldiers of the military units that committed those atrocities. In this
regard, the personal responsibility of General Shaul Mofaz, the Chief of Staff
of the Israeli army, is very clear. The liability of every High Contracting
Party to the Fourth Geneva Convention, in accordance with article 148, whether
incurred by itself or another in respect of grave breaches of the Convention,
must also be stressed.