maandag 4 augustus 2008

Israëlische burgerrechten organisatie tegen terugsturen Fatahleden naar Gaza

 
Ik zou zeggen: dit is meer dan menselijk. Israël heeft uiteraard geen enkele verplichting de Fatah leden binnen te laten, noch de gewonden in ziekenhuizen te behandelen, maar doet dat toch, zoals er jaarlijks tienduizenden Palestijnen in Israëlische ziekenhuizen worden behandeld. Omdat Abbas de gevluchte Palestijnen niet op de Westoever wil toelaten, heeft Israël er een aantal teruggestuurd, waarop prompt een Israëlische burgerrechten organisatie protest aantekent. Het zou me niet verbazen als ze ook nog gelijk krijgen van het hooggerechtshof. Begrijp me niet verkeerd: ik heb hier niks op tegen. Het valt me alleen op als uitzonderlijk om zo met je vijand begaan te zijn.
 
 
RP
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Watchdog petitions court against return of Fatah refugees
 
jpost.com staff, ap, KHALED ABU TOAMEH and YAAKOV KATZ , THE JERUSALEM POST
Aug. 3, 2008
www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1215331177349&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

 
The Association for Civil Right in Israel petitioned the High Court of Justice on Sunday to prevent the state from returning Fatah refugees to Gaza after they fled the territory on Saturday.

The petitioners stated that forcing the Fatah loyalists to return to the Strip could endanger their lives and called it a serious violation of human rights and of Israeli law.

The court ordered the state to respond to the petition by Monday.

Earlier on Sunday, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas refused to grant West Bank asylum to dozens of supporters who fled Hamas-ruled Gaza to Israel under fire, during fierce factional fighting.

Abbas stood his ground, with aides explaining that he felt his embattled Fatah group must maintain a presence in Gaza. The escape posed a dilemma for Abbas. After the Hamas takeover of Gaza last summer, he had agreed to resettle some 250 of his Gaza loyalists in the West Bank.

It's been a costly arrangement - the refugees each get $350 a month, in addition to government salaries, and Abbas's cash-strapped government covers rent for dozens of the most senior among them. The 2007 exodus also sent a message that Fatah is abandoning Gaza to Hamas.

Abbas wanted to send a different message this time, aides said.

"Fatah officials in Gaza should stay in their posts and should not leave Gaza to Hamas," Fahmi Zaghrir, a West Bank spokesman for Fatah, said Sunday. An exception would be made for those wanted by Hamas, added Nimr Hamad, an Abbas adviser.

However, there were concerns that the returnees could face mistreatment by Hamas.

Hamas confirmed it detained the first group of 32 who were sent back to Gaza on Sunday. The organization said it released all but five in that group.

Nine Palestinians were killed - including members of Hamas's security forces - and more than 90 were wounded in Saturday's fighting in Gaza City.

The clashes began when hundreds of Hamas policemen raided homes belonging to the Hilles clan in the city's Shajayieh neighborhood in a bid to arrest suspects in the bombing that killed five Hamas men on July 25.

Hamas had accused members of the clan, which has long been affiliated with Fatah, of being behind the explosion, which also killed a seven-year-old girl.

Toward Saturday night, the 188 clan members approached the border fence with Israel near the Nahal Oz fuel crossing, laid down their weapons and asked soldiers to allow them to cross over.

Wary Israeli troops allowed them to cross the heavily guarded border, stripping them first to make sure none were concealing weapons or wearing explosives. Soldiers prepared stretchers, and ambulances rushed the badly wounded to nearby hospitals. Mortar shells landed nearby as the Palestinians crossed into Israel.

One of the wounded men, Shadi Hilles, was hospitalized Sunday morning in Ashkelon. He said he was wounded when Hamas attacked the clan's compound with shoulder-launched rockets and mortars, forcing him to crawl through nearby fields to safety.

"We crawled to the border, that was our solution, and I think we stayed at the border for two or three hours until the army let the injured enter," he said.

IDF sources said the group was allowed into Israel out of "humanitarian concerns" that they would be slaughtered by Hamas.

Hamas policemen had surrounded the area where the clan lives for the past five days, demanding that the suspects be handed over. However, the clan refused to comply and instead chose to resist any attempt to enter their area.

At least 12 of those who were wounded in Saturday's fighting were under the age of 15, said Khaled Radi, spokesman for the Hamas Health Ministry. Six of them were being treated for serious wounds in the intensive care unit of various hospitals, he added.

Ihab al-Ghissin, spokesman for the Hamas Interior Ministry, said the massive security operation came after the Hilles clan refused to hand over the suspects wanted in connection with the fatal beachfront bombing.

He said the Hamas security forces seized large amounts of weapons, including rocket-propelled grenades and dynamite, during the crackdown on the clan.

Ghissin added that at least 100 members of the clan were arrested for questioning, while others managed to flee the scene.

Islam Shaheen, spokesman for the Hamas police force, said officers discovered a weapons factory that had been run by members of the clan and former Fatah security officers. He said the operation ended successfully when the Hamas security forces managed to "liberate" the area that had previously been under the clan's control.

Col. Ron Ashrov, commander of the Northern Gaza Regional Brigade, said Saturday night that the fleeing Palestinians had been allowed into Israel, including 22 wounded, most with light injuries.

He also said the Hamas attacks on the group constituted a breach of the Gaza cease-fire reached in June.

 
AP contributed to this report

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