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World Joins Lebanon in Marking 20th Anniversary of Sabra & Shatila Massacre

The massacre went on for 40 continuous hours

BEIRUT, September 15 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - As the world winds up commemorating September 11, an international delegation flocked to Beirut to take part in the somber commemoration of the 20th anniversary of the Sabra and Shatila massacre, where more than 1,500 Palestinian refugees were slaughtered, a Lebanese newspaper reported Sunday, September 15.

The Daily Star said that part of the delegation, comprising members of the Italian parliament, journalists and representatives of nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) from Italy, Spain, Denmark, Norway, France, the United Kingdom and Japan, visited the Bourj al-Barajneh and Shatila camps Friday, September 13, as part of a week-long series of activities commemorating the 1982 massacre that also claimed the lives of Lebanese civilians between September 16-18.

“We are here to keep the memory alive,” said Giorgio Stern, who came from Italy where he works with The Children of the Olive Tree NGO, that strengthens relations between the people of Italy and Palestine, reported the Star.

As members of the delegation explained, they are here on a fact-finding mission, to meet people and collect information otherwise unavailable to them in the Western media and relay this information, through their different areas of expertise, to their compatriots, the paper said adding that they were here to get “ammunition” to fight the many pro-Israeli forces in the West that work against the “right information regarding the Palestinian cause” and work for “eliminating the Palestinian identity.

“We’re here to reconstruct the historical memory and to carry it back home because people without memory are condemned to relive the same history,” Stern told the Daily Star as he walked with the rest of the group in the cramped and rancid alleyways of Shatila where some 23,000 refugees still live herded in a small area of the capital.

These are the same narrow alleys that witnessed torture and rape inflicted on civilians by Israeli-allied Christian militias 20 years ago.

“I still remember all the details very vividly as if it all occurred yesterday,” said Shatila resident Siham Balkis, who lost her father during the ordeal.

“When we were told that a massacre had taken place, we didn’t believe it,” she said. “But as we went out of our homes, we saw disfigured bodies lying around. I saw a girl who was only days old that had been squashed by an Israeli tank and her flesh was still sticking to the tank’s caterpillar tracks,” the Star quoted her saying.

Balkis, who now works with Al-Awda Organization (The Return), said that the whole camp still suffers from the psychological impact of the massacre.

“If you test all the people who survived the massacres, you will find that they have psychiatric and psychosomatic problems as a result of the massacre,” she said.

The victims’ blood, which then ran through these alleyways, has now been replaced with dirt and wastewater, which constitutes only a small portion of the misery with which the camp’s inhabitants have to deal, said the paper.

Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon was Israel’s defense minister when the massacre in Sabra and Shatila occurred in September 1982.

At the time, the Israeli army also invaded southern Lebanon, under the pretext of halting cross-border attacks on Israeli settlements.

Sharon was forced to resign as defense minister in 1983 after an Israeli tribunal found him indirectly responsible for the Sabra and Shatila massacre.

He went on to hold several other senior government posts, before he led his right-wing Likud party to election victory in 1999 and became prime minister.

Twenty-three Palestinians filed a suit against Sharon to have him tried in Belgium for his role in the September 1982 massacres of up to 2,000 Palestinians at the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps, perpetrated by Israel with the help of the Israeli-allied Christian phalangist militia during Israel’s invasion of Lebanon.

They based their case on a “universal competence” law that enables Belgian courts to try cases of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide, regardless of where the outrages took place.

But the hopes of the families of the victims of the 1982 Sabra and Shatila massacres in Lebanon, to have Sharon tried in Belgium for war crimes were dashed on June 26, 2002, when judges declared the case inadmissible.

The indictment chamber of the Brussels appeals court ruled that the case - lodged a year ago - could not proceed because Sharon was not in Belgium, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

Court spokesman Guy Delvoie said: “The Belgian courts have competence with regards to cases that concern serious violations of human rights.”

“But for cases based on universal competence ... it is necessary that the alleged perpetrators be in the territory of the kingdom [of Belgium]. Otherwise they are inadmissible," he said.

A Sabra and Shatila survivor who lost her father and six brothers in the massacre told reporters: “My disappointment with Belgian justice is complete.”

“I would have preferred to have died than to hear this,” said the 37-year-old survivor, Souad Srour El Marai, who was herself left handicapped after she was raped and injured during the massacre. Human rights groups like Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International deplored the ruling.

Shortly after on July 18 a team of U.S. lawyers filed a lawsuit against Israeli and U.S. officials, including President George W. Bush, on behalf of Palestinian-Americans who suffered atrocities at the hands of Israel and her U.S. supporters, from the 1982 Sabra and Shatila massacres to war crimes in the most recent intifada, or uprising. 

“The world has stood silent, and that is why we will not be silent,” said Stanley Cohen, the lead attorney for the team filing the lawsuit Tuesday, July 16, in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., at a press conference Wednesday, July 17. 

“These Palestinian-Americans seek nothing more of this court than that which they have been denied for more than five decades,” Cohen said, pausing to subdue emotion choking his voice. 

Speaking to a packed room at the National Press Club, Cohen summarized the backgrounds of the central defendants named in the lawsuit - Israel’s current prime minister, Ariel Sharon, for his actions as Prime Minister and as defense minister in 1982, and other Israeli officials, as well as Bush and Secretary of State Colin Powell. 

Cohen told IslamOnline that this was the first lawsuit of its kind - bringing together so many issues - that demanded direct action on the Arms Export Control Act, although challenges have been raised before, without much success. 

Although hundreds of requests from Palestinian victims were received by the team when they began their research about a year ago, along with Solidarity International - a Washington-based group formed after September 11 to help Muslim Americans - the team selected 21 plaintiffs, all of whom remain anonymous in the suit. 

Eighteen of the plaintiffs are U.S. citizens; two are resident aliens, and one is a survivor of the massacre at the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps in Lebanon. 

 

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