Deze beschuldiging was ook veelvuldig in onze media te horen, waarbij vaak niet werd vermeld dat Hamas een tunnel had gegraven onder de grens met Israel door om meer soldaten te kunnen ontvoeren, een duidelijke schending van het bestand. Ook werden tijdens het bestand, aanvankelijk sporadisch en later steeds vaker, nog raketten op Israel afgevuurd. Bovendien was mondeling afgesproken dat over een gevangenenruil verder zou worden onderhandeld, en Hamas zich daarbij flexibel op zou stellen. Voor Israel waren beide zaken: het bestand en een gevangenenruil, duidelijk gekoppeld, terwijl Hamas daarop tegen was. De afspraken die waren gemaakt, waren op sommige punten vaag (hoe ver zou Israel de grenzen openen en hoe flexibel zou Hamas zich opstellen?), en beide interpreteerden die op hun eigen manier. Ikzelf zou belangrijke zaken die je met een vijand regelt altijd op papier vastleggen, met handtekeningen en onder toezicht van een neutraal persoon, maar dit is het Midden-Oosten en het was wellicht het meest haalbare.
RP
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The Jerusalem Post
May 28, 2009 0:08 | Updated May 28, 2009 7:59
Amnesty blames Israel for collapse of truce with Hamas
By JONNY PAUL. JERUSALEM POST CORRESPONDENT
LONDON
The Jerusalem Post
May 28, 2009 0:08 | Updated May 28, 2009 7:59
Amnesty blames Israel for collapse of truce with Hamas
By JONNY PAUL. JERUSALEM POST CORRESPONDENT
LONDON
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1243346492782&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
In its 2009 annual report, formally released on Thursday, Amnesty International places sole blame on Israel for the breakdown in the cease-fire between Israel and Hamas that led to Operation Cast Lead.
The London-based organization accuses Israel of breaking the six-month cease-fire on November 4, 2008, when "Israeli forces killed six Palestinian militants."
Jerusalem-based research organization NGO Monitor said the report ignored Hamas violations.
"Hamas's highly visible preparations for resumed Palestinian aggression during the six-month cease-fire in 2008, including the preparation of a human-shields strategy, are entirely ignored," NGO Monitor said.
Amnesty also says the Israeli government is maintaining a "tight blockade" on Gaza as collective punishment for the "continuing detention" of St.-Sgt. Gilad Schalit in the Gaza Strip.
While the report acknowledges that the Red Cross has been denied access to Schalit, and makes reference to the indiscriminate rocket attacks on southern Israel, NGO Monitor said the report showed that Amnesty's activities on Israeli and Palestinian issues were "highly biased and lack credibility."
Subtitled "The state of the world's human rights," the report states that the Gaza smuggling tunnels are used to move food and fuel, but does not mention arms smuggling.
NGO Monitor also accused Amnesty of not giving context when it blames Israel for the plight of Gazans who are denied access to Israel hospitals. The report uses four examples of Palestinians who died after being denied entry to Israel, without mentioning the large number of Palestinians treated in Israeli hospitals.
"Amnesty's activities in the Middle East are totally divorced from reality and constitute a continued attack on the moral foundation of human rights," said Prof. Gerald Steinberg, NGO Monitor's executive director.
"The world's most prominent human rights organization continues to abuse this position to join the ideological campaign that seeks to single out Israel for condemnation, promote the Palestinian narrative, and erase the context of mass terror and aggression by Hamas."
In its 2009 annual report, formally released on Thursday, Amnesty International places sole blame on Israel for the breakdown in the cease-fire between Israel and Hamas that led to Operation Cast Lead.
The London-based organization accuses Israel of breaking the six-month cease-fire on November 4, 2008, when "Israeli forces killed six Palestinian militants."
Jerusalem-based research organization NGO Monitor said the report ignored Hamas violations.
"Hamas's highly visible preparations for resumed Palestinian aggression during the six-month cease-fire in 2008, including the preparation of a human-shields strategy, are entirely ignored," NGO Monitor said.
Amnesty also says the Israeli government is maintaining a "tight blockade" on Gaza as collective punishment for the "continuing detention" of St.-Sgt. Gilad Schalit in the Gaza Strip.
While the report acknowledges that the Red Cross has been denied access to Schalit, and makes reference to the indiscriminate rocket attacks on southern Israel, NGO Monitor said the report showed that Amnesty's activities on Israeli and Palestinian issues were "highly biased and lack credibility."
Subtitled "The state of the world's human rights," the report states that the Gaza smuggling tunnels are used to move food and fuel, but does not mention arms smuggling.
NGO Monitor also accused Amnesty of not giving context when it blames Israel for the plight of Gazans who are denied access to Israel hospitals. The report uses four examples of Palestinians who died after being denied entry to Israel, without mentioning the large number of Palestinians treated in Israeli hospitals.
"Amnesty's activities in the Middle East are totally divorced from reality and constitute a continued attack on the moral foundation of human rights," said Prof. Gerald Steinberg, NGO Monitor's executive director.
"The world's most prominent human rights organization continues to abuse this position to join the ideological campaign that seeks to single out Israel for condemnation, promote the Palestinian narrative, and erase the context of mass terror and aggression by Hamas."
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