OCCUPIED
JERUSALEM, November 4 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Israel on
Sunday, November 3, rebuked Belgian ambassador for criticizing
Israel’s policies against the Palestinians, as Amnesty International
Accused Israel of War Crimes.
Israeli
Cabinet Secretary Gideon Saar scolded Belgian ambassador Wilfred Geens
that his comments branding a hard line cabinet minister "a
fascist" were "false and revolting."
In
an interview with the Israeli Arab daily Kol el-Arab, widely quoted in
the Hebrew press Sunday, Geens called Israeli Infrastructure Minister
Effi Eitam "a fascist", and said "the Palestinian
territories are the biggest prison camp in the world."
Saar,
in his talks with Geens, stressed "the gravity of the comments
attributed to the ambassador about the infrastructure minister," a
statement from the prime minister's office said.
Saar
told him the remarks were "grave, false and revolting" and
"demonstrate a misunderstanding of the right and fundamental duty
of Israel to defend the lives of its citizens in line with international
law," it added.
In
the interview, Geens attacked Israel's policies at checkpoints and
roadblocks in the West Bank.
"I
have seen how the Israeli soldiers humiliate the Palestinians at the
road blocks. It is contrary to international law and human values,"
he was quoted as saying.
The
Israeli statement added the ambassador had "denied certain remarks
attributed to him, stressing they had been contorted because of
translation problems, and said he was planning to publish a correction
and write a letter about the issue to the infrastructure minister."
Geens
was also summoned to the Israeli Foreign Ministry.
Meanwhile,
Amnesty International accused Israel Sunday of committing war crimes
during its invasion of the West Bank towns of Nablus and Jenin between
April and June 2002.
An
Amnesty report, entitled "Shielded from Scrutiny: IDF (Israeli
occupation forces) violations in Jenin and Nablus", demanded that
Israel and the international community investigate those responsible, no
matter how high their position in power, Agence France-Presse (AFP)
said.
It
said that between last April and June the Israeli army killed civilians,
tortured prisoners, used civilians as human shields, destroyed homes and
blocked humanitarian aid to Palestinians.
"Amnesty
International believes that some of the acts by the IDF (Israeli army)
described in this report amount to grave breaches of the Fourth Geneva
Convention and are war crimes," it says.
The
rights watchdog called for "a full, thorough, transparent and
impartial investigation into all allegations of violations of
international human rights and humanitarian law."
Javier
Zuniga, Amnesty's international director of regional strategy, said
Israel should accept responsibility for its actions and cooperate with
an investigation into the army's conduct during the spring offensive.
"The
culpability goes from the soldier who shot somebody with no necessity to
those in the line of the command who ordered or condoned or covered up
and to the highest authority of the state because they are politically
responsible -- that would be the prime minister," said Zuniga.
But
Zuniga, one of the authors of the report, added: "We are not a
court of law ... The first thing that has to happen is a proper judicial
investigation and this has not happened yet."
The
report comes out just two days after Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
named as his defense minister former army chief of staff Shaul Mofaz,
who headed the military's six-week occupation of the West Bank.
The
report is sharply critical of the UN probe into the fighting in Jenin,
which began when the army entered the town and barred access to
humanitarian groups from April 4 to 15.
The
31-page UN report released by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan on August
1 claimed no widespread killing occurred in Jenin, after the Jewish
state blocked an on-the-scene investigation.
In
April, Palestinian officials accused Israel of massacring between 300 to
500 people. However, Amnesty says 54 Palestinians were killed in the
fighting in Jenin, many of them civilians.
The
Jenin toll includes "seven women, four children and six men over
the age of 55. Six people had been crushed by houses," it added.
About
the UN probe, Amnesty said: "This report was written without a
visit to Jenin or any other Palestinian cities.
"Israel
did not respond to any request by the UN undersecretary general for
political affairs to provide information for the report ... The
secretary general's report on Jenin can not be a substitute for a full,
independent, impartial and thorough investigation or inquiry," it
added.
In
Nablus, Amnesty said at least 80 people were killed last April,
including seven women and nine children under the age of 15.
Amnesty
also said the Israeli army tortured detainees in Nablus.
"In
Nablus, the IDF (army) ill-treated and sometimes tortured detainees
arrested in mass roundups of males between 15 and 45 years old," it
said.
In
one case, the report chronicles the beating of a 25-year-old man in a
wheelchair who was taken into detention and pushed down a stairwell.