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NEWS STORY
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Israel:
Dart Shells Pose Civilian Threat
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Human Rights Watch
June 25, 2001
Human Rights Watch welcomed Israel's announcement that it will
investigate the June 9 tank shelling that killed three Palestinian
Bedouin women.
Israel has acknowledged that it used flechette
munitions in Gaza. Human Rights Watch urged Israel to expand the
investigation to include an examination of the use of such
anti-personnel weapons in dealing with Palestinian unrest, and
asked for a public commitment by the Israeli government that such
weapons will not be used in the future in or around populated
areas.
"Anti-personnel weapons that have a large 'kill radius' must
never be used in areas where civilians live," said Hanny Megally,
executive director of the Middle East and North Africa division of
Human Rights Watch. "While flechette ammunition is not banned
under international law, its use in such circumstances is highly
questionable since it raises risk of civilian casualties to a
threshold that is intolerable under international law."
The three women, Selmiya al-Malalha, 37, Hekmat al-Malalha, 17,
and Nasra al-Malalha, 61, were killed, and three other family
members wounded when their tents were hit by 120 mm tank shells
packed with thousands of steel darts. The al-Malalha clan lived in
an area surrounded by populated villages about 1.5 km from the
Netzarim settlement.
Salem Naji al-Malalha, 22, the husband of Hekmat, told Human
Rights Watch that he had heard some shooting several hours earlier
from the Shouhada [also known as Netzarim] Junction area, about
1.5 kilometers away. "About two hours later I heard a big
explosion and felt the earth shake," he said. "The first shell
exploded about four meters from the women's tent"- referring to
the tent where his wife, mother-in-law, and sister-in-law were
sitting. "The second and third shells fell fifty meters further
away. I could see that the tent in which the women were staying
was full of blood."
Salem's mother, who was in a tent with him, was wounded. "She
was injured by three nails," he told Human Rights Watch. "They are
not really nails. They look like small missiles. They are
incredible, they made holes through the metal, they made holes in
my water jugs and they even went through the cement."
On June 11, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said that the killing
of the three women "should not have happened." Israel Defense
Forces (IDF) officials, who initially had said that troops were
returning fire from the area, confirmed the next day that the
shelling had been a mistake and said there would be an inquiry.
A 1996 study by Human Rights Watch, Civilian Pawns: Laws of War
Violations and the Use of Weapons on the Israel-Lebanon Border,
investigated the IDF's use of U.S.-supplied tank-fired flechette
munitions in southern Lebanon. The IDF used these rather than
other types of anti-personnel weapons in this conflict mainly for
their ability to penetrate dense foliage, which is not
characteristic of Gaza. The shells used in southern Lebanon
contained ten to fourteen thousand 1.5 inch steel darts that, when
released from the canister, spread out in an arc that had a
maximum width of about ninety-four yards.
"Even if Palestinian gunmen fired from the vicinity of a
populated area, Israel is not free from its obligation to minimize
civilian casualties in returning fire," Megally said. "It is hard
to see how the use of this weapon in this context can be
consistent with international legal principles outlawing
indiscriminate attacks."
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