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Israeli Rights Groups Slams Army Practices

Everyday, more news of Israeli army’s atrocities against the Palestinians come to light.

JERUSALEM, March 21 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - A leading Israeli rights group Thursday branded the Israeli army's behavior in the occupied Palestinian territories as "trigger-happy," while dozens of Palestinians were abducted after Israeli tanks were sent into the West Bank in overnight raids, news agencies reported.

The B'Tselem Israeli organization said in a report that unclear rules of engagement in the 18-month Palestinian intifada "caused extensive injury of Palestinians not involved in acts of violence against Israel," reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The report, entitled "Trigger Happy," said live ammunition was at times used even when there was "no clear and immediate threat to life," while regulations are "not provided to soldiers in writing and in a straightforward manner."

It also slammed the army for a lack of investigations into frequent shootings of Palestinians, saying those probes that are carried out are "superficial and usually rely exclusively on soldiers' versions of the events."

B'Tselem said the report was based on evidence given by Israeli soldiers deployed in the occupied Palestinian territories, and from press reports.

The report quoted an Israeli soldier as saying, "You hear shooting, nothing effective. You jump and start shooting. There's nowhere to shoot. You shoot at suspicious places, which is a bush here and a bush there, more or less".

"But the soldiers take a bit of initiative and shoot at suspicious water tanks, suspicious television antennas, suspicious satellite dishes," he said. The soldier denied Israeli reports that during one attack on the Jewish settlement of Morag in the Gaza Strip the troops had only responded to fire.

"This was an incident that was later reported on the army radio, as shots were fired at the greenhouses of the Morag settlement. Our forces returned fire to the sources of the shooting. I don't know about any sources of the shooting, and I was there," he said.

The report also highlighted incidents when a mentally disabled Palestinian man was shot dead in the Gaza Strip when he wandered onto a road closed by the army, and of a Palestinian child shot dead while playing with a plastic gun near a Jewish settlement in the Gaza Strip.

For his part, Israeli Army spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Olivier Rafowicz denied the accusations of excessive use of force, and claimed Israeli officers made clear that their men understood the rules of engagement.

"There are some problems here and there, but we do investigate, unlike the other side. Israel is a country with due processes of law," he claimed.

Meanwhile, dozens of Palestinians were abducted after Israeli tanks were sent into the West Bank in overnight raids, reported BBC’s online news service.

The action came shortly after senior Israeli and Palestinian security officials failed to agree on a ceasefire, despite intense U.S. pressure.

The tanks entered three villages around Jenin in Sector A, which is meant to be entirely under Palestinian Authority control.

An Israeli army spokesman claimed troops withdrew once the raids were completed. Palestinian officials, however, said soldiers remained on the outskirts of the villages.

Israeli radio reported that among the villages targeted was Tubas, the home of Palestinian activists who shot and killed an Israeli soldier earlier this week.

 

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