
Prendiamo spunto dalla notizia per pubblicare anche la versione di Thierry Meyssan su cosa sia stato davvero "Piombo fuso". Thierry Meyssan è autore del libro L'Effroyable Imposture, nel quale si sostiene che non fu un aereo a colpire il Pentagono l'11 settembre.(1)
Amnesty International has accused both Israel and Hamas of committing war crimes during the fighting in the Gaza Strip earlier this year, in its first in-depth human rights report on the recent offensive. The group charged that the Israel Defense Forces killed hundreds of Palestinian civilians and destroyed thousands of Gaza Strip homes in attacks that amounted to war crimes, and denounced Hamas for firing rockets into civilian areas of southern Israel. "Five months on, neither side has shown any inclination to change its practices and abide by international humanitarian law, raising the prospect that civilians will again bear the brunt if fighting resumes," concluded Donatella Rovera, who headed Amnesty's field research mission.
Amnesty called on Israel to publicly pledge not to use artillery, white phosphorus and other imprecise weapons in densely populated areas. And it urged Gaza's militant Hamas rulers to stop rocket fire against Israeli civilians. Amnesty - which first accused Israel of war crimes shortly after the fighting ended on Jan. 18 - said disturbing questions remain about why high-precision weapons like tank shells and air-delivered bombs and missiles killed so many children and other civilians. The group also deplored Israel's alleged use of less-precise artillery shells and highly incendiary white phosphorous in densely populated areas. It also accused the IDF of using Palestinians as human shields and frequently blocking civilians from receiving medical care and
humanitarian aid.

"The pattern of Israeli attacks and the high number of civilian casualties showed elements of reckless conduct, disregard for civilian lives and property and a consistent failure to distinguish between military targets and civilians and civilian objects," Amnesty International charged. Gaza health officials and human rights groups say that some 1,400 Palestinians, including more than 900 civilians, were killed during the three-week offensive. Israel puts the death toll closer to 1,100 and says the vast majority of the dead were militants. Amnesty says some 300 children and hundreds of other unarmed civilians were among the dead.
Thirteen Israelis also were killed, including three civilians who died in rocket attacks. The Geneva Conventions ban using white phosphorous as an incendiary weapon against civilian populations and in air attacks against military forces in civilian areas. During the Gaza conflict Israel categorically denied that its use of phosphorous weapons was illegal. The IDF says its internal investigations concluded it did not violate international law during the Gaza conflict. The 117-page Amnesty International report was based on physical evidence and testimony that a team of four researchers, including a military expert, gathered from dozens of attack sites in Gaza and southern Israel during and after the war.

She said investigators were able to operate freely in Gaza, without any intervention by Hamas security forces. "This was a fierce, one-sided war in which all means of killing and destruction were employed," said Ismail Haniyeh, prime minister of Hamas' Gaza government. "We believe that the leaders of the occupation state must be tried for these crimes."
The UN is examining the conduct of both sides in the conflict. Hamas allowed veteran war crimes investigator Richard Goldstone and his team into Gaza last month, but Hamas security often accompanied them, raising questions about the ability of witnesses to freely describe the militant group's actions. Israel has refused to cooperate with the probe, claiming the UN council overseeing the investigation is biased. Israel conducted its own internal investigation earlier this year and cleared the military of wrongdoing. Human rights groups criticized the probe as a whitewash.
Fonte: www.haaretz.com
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