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Israel “Expulsion” Moves Slammed By Israeli Human Rights Group 

Israel's collective punishment of Palestinians defies Geneva Accords 

BETHLEHEM, West Bank, June 23 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - An Israeli human rights group and the father of a 19-year-old Palestinian female resistance activist slammed on Sunday any move by Israel to expel families of Palestinians carrying out attacks in Israel.

A human rights organization slammed the practice of what Israel terms “suicide bombings” but asserted that Israeli intentions of expelling the relatives of resistance activists from the area also amounts to attacks against civilians and amounts to internationally condemned policies of collective punishment.

"Palestinian terror is horrific, it is the indiscriminate murder of innocent civilians. However, family members of Palestinian [bombers] are also innocent civilians," the Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI) said.

"Any attempt to injure innocent family members would blur the boundaries of a democratic state," it said in a statement addressed to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

"By acting against these families we would become like the terrorist organizations whose values we fight," said the statement, which was also sent to Israeli Attorney General Elyakim Rubinstein.

ACRI warned the expulsions of these families would be a form of "collective punishment", which the group said is banned under the Fourth Geneva Convention.

"Article 49 of the same Convention prohibits the expulsion of protected persons from conquered territory, regardless of the motivation for the expulsion," ACRI president Naama Carmi wrote in the statement.

The father of Ayat al-Akhrass, who carried out an attack on March 30 in a west Jerusalem supermarket, also warned that such measures would be useless and fail to stem the tide of such attacks.

"Any decision, no matter how well it is planned, will not stop ‘suicide bombings’ because ‘suicide bombers’ will never consult anyone when they are ready to carry out an operation," Mohammad Lotfi Al-Akhrass, 55, told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

On Sunday, the Israeli cabinet decided to look at the legalities of expelling relatives of Palestinian bombers in a new step to crack down on the attacks, government secretary Gideon Saar announced.

The government debated the move at its regular weekly cabinet meeting.

"The government decided to examine the legal possibilities [that would allow] the expulsion of families of those who commit ‘suicide’ attacks," Saar told reporters after the meeting.

Saar did not say where they would be moved. But Israeli public radio and Effi Eitam, minister without portfolio from the right-wing National Religious Party, both suggested the more tightly sealed Gaza Strip.

"We are today at war and in addition to all the defense measures such as the construction of a security barrier, we must take offensive action such as the expulsion of families of terrorists to the Gaza Strip," Eitam said.

Speaking from his home at the Dheisheh refugee camp near the West Bank town of Bethlehem, Akhrass said that expulsions would be tantamount to "collective punishment" for entire families.

"There are 20 members in my family alone," he said.

Akhrass said he has already been punished by the Israeli authorities after his daughter’s resistance attack in March.

"A month ago they stormed our house and they arrested my son Samir and my son Ismail who are still being held in an Israeli jail without any charges leveled against them," he said.

"They were only arrested because they were Ayat's brothers," he said.

Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat urged world leaders to intervene swiftly to contain Israel's get-tough policy in the West Bank, where he said Israel wants to restore military rule.

The Palestinian news agency WAFA said Arafat made the appeal in talks with the consuls of several foreign countries at his battered Ramallah headquarters in the northern West Bank.

Arafat later met Jordanian Foreign Minister Marwan Moasher, who also condemned the Israeli reoccupation of Palestinian towns and cautioned Israel against "setting back the hands of the clock" in the conflict.

"There can be no talk about a re-occupation of Palestinian towns. We cannot restore the [Israeli] civilian administration of the West Bank, which is in fact a military administration," Moasher said after the talks.

Arafat gave the diplomats from more than 20 countries "urgent messages" to deliver to their leaders, "asking them to intervene swiftly to save the situation and stop the Israeli aggression," WAFA said.

The embattled Palestinian leader also handed them an alleged Israeli army document written in Hebrew, and its Arabic-language translation, saying "Palestinian civilians must deal with the Israeli occupation [forces] and not the Palestinian Authority," WAFA reported.

"This is an indication that Israel is trying to revive the civilian military administration in the occupied Palestinian territories," WAFA said.

The agency said the document was distributed by the Israeli army in Beitunia, a southern suburb of Ramallah.

According to an AFP correspondent who saw the Arabic translation of the document, the text bore the header "Gudud [battalion in Hebrew] Gernit".

The message went on to say that this unit, "controls, occupies and imposes a curfew on Beitunia, and closes all roads leading to it, in order to transfer the responsibility from the Palestinian Authority to the hands of Israel for a long time".

As the Israelis maintained their grip on six of the eight principal West Bank towns, military officials began calling up the first 2,000 reservists mobilized to beef up the army as it geared for a long-haul operation.

But despite its actions on the ground, the defense ministry categorically denied reports it was planning to re-establish military government on the West Bank as was the case before the Palestinian Authority was created in 1994 under the Oslo accords.

   

 

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