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"Every third person killed and every second person injured is a child under 18 or a woman," said Gilbert (L). (Reuters)
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OSLO — Two
Norwegian medics who returned on Monday,
January 12, from the bombed-out Gaza Strip
compared the Israeli onslaught to the massacre
of Palestinian refugees in Sabra and Shatila
in 1982.
"Gaza in 2009
is becoming a new bloody chapter in
Palestinian and Middle Eastern history that
is, unfortunately, comparable to Sabra and
Shatila," Mads Gilbert told reporters at
Oslo's Gardermoen airport.
Though no definite
figures are available, around 2,000
Palestinians were massacred inside the
Lebanese camps in September of 1982 by
Christian militia under the watchful eyes of
their Israeli alley.
Lebanese Christian
Phalangist militiamen were permitted to enter
the two Palestinian refugee camps, in an area
under Israeli army control, and slaughter
civilians over three days.
Unlike massacres in
some other conflicts, the perpetrators of
Sabra and Shatila have not been brought to
justice.
"We hoped we
would never see anything like it again,"
said Gilbert, who worked in Lebanon in 1982 at
the time of the Sabra and Shatila massacre.
More than 917 people
have been killed since Israel unleashed its
war machine against the heavily-populated Gaza
Strip on December 27.
The high number of
civilian casualties and the huge amount of
suffering in Gaza is similar to what Gilbert,
61, and his colleague Erik Fosse, 58, had seen
back in 1982.
The two doctors said
as many as 90 percent of the wounded they had
treated at the Shifa hospital were civilians.
"Every third
person killed and every second person injured
is a child under 18 or a woman," said
Gilbert.
"The bombing
must stop and the borders must be opened so
that civilians can receive food, water and be
safe."
Fact-Finding
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The UN Human Rights Council set up a fact-finding mission to probe Israel's violations of human rights and international law. (Reuters)
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A divided UN Human
Rights Council voted on Monday to
"strongly" condemn Israel's
onslaught, saying it had "resulted in
massive violations" of the human rights
of Palestinians.
It tasked 10 UN
experts on human rights and UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay with
two separate probes into the violence.
It also set up an
independent, international fact-finding
mission to "investigate all violations of
human rights and international humanitarian
law by Israel."
UN Secretary General
Ban Ki-moon was asked to investigate the
bombing of UNRWA schools in the Gaza Strip.
Thirty-three
African, Asian, Arab and Latin American
countries voted for the resolution.
Thirteen mainly
European states abstained, while Canada was
the only country to vote against.
The United States is
not on the Council and steers clear of it.
Western countries
said the text put forward by Arab and African
states was too biased and failed to clearly
recognize the role that rocket attacks
launched by Palestinians played in triggering
the offensive.
Last minute changes
failed to overcome the differences after the
special session spilled into a second day.
The European Union's
representative said the EU could have
supported some elements, but found the text
too one-sided despite its concern about human
rights violations in Gaza.
Israel has refused
to cooperate with similar fact-finding
missions in the past, as well as a UN special
rapporteur on the human rights of the
Palestinians.
Israeli authorities
last month detained and turned back the UN
expert, Richard Falk, upon his arrival at Ben
Gurion airport.