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Gaza War (2008–2009)

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2008–2009 Israel–Gaza conflict
Part of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict

Map of Gaza
Date27 December 2008–present
Location
Result Conflict ongoing
Belligerents
 Israel (IDF) Hamas
Islamic Jihad[1]
Commanders and leaders
Israel Ehud Barak (DefMin)
Israel Gabi Ashkenazi (CoS)
Israel Yoav Galant (Chief of Southern Command)
Ismail Haniyeh
Mahmoud az-Zahar
Ahmed al-Ja'abari
Osama Mazini
Strength
176,500 (10,000 ground troops deployed)[2]

10,000[3]-

20,000 Hamas operatives in Gaza[4]
Casualties and losses

Killed: 7 (2 soldiers, 5 civilians)[5]

Wounded: 55 soldiers[6][7]
Killed: 524[8][9] (~200 civilians)[10]
Wounded: 2,600 (mostly civilians)[10]

1 Egyptian border guard officer killed and another wounded (by Hamas).[11]

The 2008–2009 Israel–Gaza conflict is an ongoing conflict, part of the wider Israeli-Palestinian conflict, between Israel and Palestinian Islamist group Hamas as well as other smaller Palestinian militias. The conflict began with a series of air strikes by Israel in Gaza Strip on 27 December 2008. Israel called the air strikes, Operation Cast Lead (Hebrew: מבצע עופרת יצוקה, Mivtza Oferet Yetzuka, Arabic: عملية قالب جبس رصاص). The operation followed the end of a six-month temporary lull in hostilities between the Hamas-led de facto government of Gaza and Israel, which ended on 19 December 2008. Israel asserts that it started the operation following a major increase in Hamas rocket attacks into Israel, culminating with 80 rockets on Christmas Eve. Israel also contends that the attacks are being undertaken in order to destroy Hamas' capability and motivation to launch future similar attacks on Israel. Hamas blamed Israel for the end of the lull agreement saying it could not renew the six month truce as long as Israel continued to blockade the Gaza strip and pointing to a deadly raid carried out by Israel in November that killed 6 Palestinians.[12] This conflict is the deadliest conflict since Hamas established political control of Gaza in early 2006.[13][14][15][16][17][18]

At least 225 people were killed on the first day of the Israeli attack, making this the single highest casualty day in the history of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.[19] Later strikes resulted in casualties as well, with the total Palestinian toll having risen to 507 by Sunday 4 January 2009.[20]

By the first evening, Israeli Air Force fighter-bomber aircraft had deployed approximately 100 tonnes (110 short tons) of explosives, according to IAF sources. Israel bombed roughly 100 Hamas-operated security installations (including police stations, prisons, and command centers) in four minutes during the first wave of the strike.[21][22] Israel also hit Hamas-operated security installations in all of Gaza's main towns, including Gaza City and Beit Hanoun in the north and Khan Younis and Rafah in the south.[23][16][24][25][26][27]

The Israeli Navy has shelled targets in Gaza, instituting at the same time a naval blockade of Gaza, which has resulted in one naval incident with a civilian boat.[28][29][30][31]

Hamas had decreased the amount of rocket and mortar attacks during the cease-fire period, and has renewed them, increasing the distance of attacks to as far away as 40 kilometres (25 mi) from the Gaza border. These attacks have resulted in civilian casualties and damage to infrastructure.[32][33][34][35]

The IDF started massing infantry and armor units near the Gaza border and engaged in an active blockade of Gaza.[36] On 3 January 2009, a ground invasion began, with mechanised infantry, armor, and artillery units, supported by armed helicopters, entering Gaza.[37][38]

Both Israel and Hamas are under pressure for a humanitarian truce, while Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported that Hamas' Damascus-based political leader, Khaled Meshal, had changed his earlier calls for ending the lull and started calling for a truce.[39][40][41] Israel has said its military action could last weeks, while Israeli defense minister Ehud Barak stated that this will be a "war to the bitter end." Hamas officials in the Gaza Strip have also dismissed the idea of a cease-fire.[39][40][42]

International reactions to the conflict have either condemned the Israeli operation, or Hamas' attacks, or both. Many countries and organisations have called for an immediate ceasefire and have expressed concern about the humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip[43][44]. Israel maintains that a humanitarian cease-fire is not necessary at this point.[45][46]

Background

Template:Campaignbox Arab-Israeli conflict

On 19 June 2008, a six-month Egyptian-brokered cease-fire agreement went into effect between Hamas and Israel.[47] The first serious violation of the agreement occurred on 23 June 2008 when one mortar shell was fired from Gaza. The following day three Qassam rockets were fired into Sderot, Israel, causing two minor injuries. The attacks came from Islamic Jihad, an organisation independent of Hamas, and Hamas subsequently pressured the group into abiding by the ceasefire.[48] Hamas violated the cease-fire with rocket and mortar attacks into Israeli civilian areas on a virtually daily basis. A major eruption of violence occurred on 4 November 2008 when Israeli troops raided the Gaza Strip and killed six Hamas gunmen in an attempt to target a tunnel which, according to the IDF, the Hamas was planning to use to capture Israeli soldiers positioned on the border fence 250 metres (270 yd) away.[49]

On 13 December 2008, Israel announced that it was in favor of extending the cease-fire, provided Hamas adhered to its conditions.[50] Having previously asserted that an end to the truce would carry huge popular support and that there are daily Israeli attacks,[51] on 20 December Hamas officially announced that they would not be extending the cease-fire. Citing Israeli border closures as the primary reason, Hamas then resumed its shelling of the western Negev.[52] Hamas blamed Israel for the end of the ceasefire, saying it had not respected its terms, including the lifting of the blockade, under which little more than humanitarian aid has been allowed into Gaza. Israel said it initially began easing the blockade, but resumed it when Hamas failed to fulfill the agreed conditions, including ending all rocket fire and halting weapons smuggling.[16]

The New York Times summed up the situation leading to the complete breakdown of the cease-fire and the dramatic increase in hostilities thus:

Opening the routes to commerce was Hamas’s main goal in its cease-fire with Israel, just as ending the rocket fire was Israel’s central aim. But while rocket fire did go down drastically in the fall to 15 to 20 a month from hundreds a month, Israel said it would not permit trade to begin again because the rocket fire had not completely stopped and because Hamas continued to smuggle weapons from Egypt through desert tunnels. Hamas said this was a violation of the agreement, a sign of Israel’s intentions and cause for further rocket fire. On Wednesday [24 Dec 08], some 70 rockets hit Israel over 24 hours, in a distinct increase in intensity.[23]

On 23 December 2008, the IDF said it killed three Palestinian militants who were planting explosives on the Gaza border.[53] Israel was also reluctant to open the border crossings, which had been closed since November.[54] On 24 December the Negev was hit by more than 60 mortar shells and Katyusha and Qassam rockets, and the IDF was given a green light to operate.[55] Hamas claimed to have fired a total of 87 rockets and mortar rounds that day at Israeli targets, codenaming the firing "Operation Oil Stain".[56]

On 26 December 2008, Israel reopened five crossings between Israel and Gaza for humanitarian supplies.[57] Fuel was allowed in for Gaza's main power plant and about 100 trucks loaded with grain, humanitarian aid and other goods were expected during the day.[58] Israel also reopened border crossings and announced, for the sake of Hamas deception, that it would continue deliberations on what course of action to take on 28 December.[59] Rocket attacks continued — about a dozen rockets and mortar bombs were fired from Gaza into Israel, one accidentally striking a northern Gaza house and killing two Palestinian sisters, aged five and thirteen, while wounding a third.[60] According to Israeli defense officials, the subsequent Israeli offensive took Hamas by surprise, thereby increasing their casualties.[59]

Planning

According to The Jerusalem Post, the head of the IDF's Southern Command had been calling for a military operation against Hamas since the group took over Gaza in the 2007 Battle of Gaza, but had been opposed at the national level. The paper said that a "technological threshold" had been set for the beginning of the operation, namely when Hamas became capable of manufacturing improved rockets with a greater accuracy and shelf-life. This condition was met by December 2008, when Hamas was in the middle of the rockets' production cycle.[59] The operation had been reportedly in the planning for over six months, from the approximate time that the temporary cease-fire between Israel and Hamas was signed. On 19 November, the operation plan was submitted for Israeli Minister of Defense Ehud Barak's final approval. On 18 December, Barak met with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert at the IDF headquarters in Tel Aviv to approve the operation. Later, the Israeli cabinet unanimously voted in favor of the strike, leaving it for the Prime Minister, the Defense Minister and the Foreign Minister to work out the timing.[61]

Planning for the operation itself began more than six months before it was finally implemented. The plan included a large intelligence-gathering operation by Aman and the Shin Bet to map out Hamas security targets.[59] According to Haaretz, sources in the defense establishment said Barak instructed the IDF to prepare for the operation over six months ago. This intelligence-gathering effort brought back information about Hamas' security infrastructure, permanent bases, weapon silos, training camps, the homes of senior officials and coordinates of other facilities.[61]

It reached Barak's desk for approval on 19 November, though it was not until 18 December that he and Olmert met to approve it;[59] the plan was subsequently delayed in order to see how Hamas would react after the cease-fire's expiration. On 24 December the Israeli cabinet met to talk about the proposed operation, and approved it unanimously after a five-hour meeting.[59] Egyptian Foreign Minister Abou el Gheit said that Egypt didn't have prior knowledge of the date of the attack.[62] A final meeting of defense and intelligence chiefs took place on the morning of 26 December, followed by a meeting between Olmert, Livni, and Barak. They gave the final orders for the operation to the Israeli Air Force, and that night, into the morning of 27 December, various Israeli political leaders were told of the decision.[59]

According to the Israeli government and the UN, telephone calls from the IDF or leaflets dropped by airplanes to people throughout Gaza ordering evacuation from homes before specific bombings were widely reported. [63] [64] As also reported by the UN, in some cases the strikes occurred only five minutes after the flee call. [65] Given the high population density in Gaza and the proximity between their homes, this has caused "considerable" panic and uncertainty among residents. [64]

Launched during the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah, the operation was named after a line in the children's Hanukkah song "In Honor of Hanukkah" (Hebrew: לכבוד החנוכה) by Hayyim Nahman Bialik in which a dreidel made of "cast lead" is mentioned.[66][67]

Development

27 December 2008

The Jerusalem Post reported based on Israeli military sources that:

At 11:30 a.m., more than 50 fighter jets and attack helicopters swept into Gazan airspace and dropped more than 100 bombs on 50 targets. The planes reported ‘alpha hits,’ IAF lingo for direct hits on the targets, which included Hamas paramilitary bases, training camps, headquarters and offices. Thirty minutes later, a second wave of 60 jets and helicopters struck at 60 targets, including underground Kassam launchers — placed inside bunkers and missile silos — that had been fitted with timers.[68]

The aircraft used were F-16 fighter jets and AH-64 Apache helicopters. The air-strikes against Hamas targets in Gaza killed at least 228 and wounded around 780. Israeli authorities stated that the attack was a response to Qassam rocket attacks on southern Israel which intensified during the few weeks preceding the operation.[68][69][70][71] About 140 members of Hamas security forces had been killed, including police chief Tawfiq Jabber, the head of Hamas’ security and protection unit[72] and the police commander for central Gaza,[73] along with at least 15 civilians. Children have been reported among the casualties.[72][74] The bombed areas included a passing out ceremony for new police officers, killing around 40 cadets.[75] A mosque in Gaza City was also targeted in the airstrikes, killing two Palestinians.[76] Israeli military spokesmen claimed that the mosque was being used for "terrorist activities".[76]

Sixty Israeli planes targeted Hamas security and military training compounds, as well as weapon storage buildings,[77][78] and dropped more than 100 tons of bombs. Some of the bombs used on 27 and 28 December against underground Qassam launchers and tunnels around Rafah were the US built GBU-39 Small Diameter Bomb, the first shipment of which arrived in Israel at the beginning of the month.[79] It is the most extensive attack in Gaza since 1967 in terms of the number of Palestinian casualties in one day.[80]

The day has become referred to by some Palestinians as the Massacre of the Black Saturday.[81] Between 225 and 292 Palestinians were killed in this attack and more than 1,000 were injured.[80][82][83][84] The Israeli attack is considered to be the bloodiest one-day death toll in 60 years of conflict with the Palestinians.[19]

Hamas later fired 70 rockets and mortars at Israel. One of the rockets hit the town of Netivot, killing an Israeli man, destroying a house and wounding six other people.[78][32] Another rocket hit a synagogue in the Eshkol Regional Council, injuring two men, one seriously.[33] In the evening, two men in the Israeli community of Mivtahim were injured from a direct hit of a Hamas' rocket; one of them was seriously wounded.

According to United Nations officials, fuel deliveries to the Gaza Strip through the Nahal Oz crossing were suspended, with the last delivery taking place a day previous on 26 December.[85]

28 December 2008

Twenty-five airstrikes were carried out on Sunday by Israel, raising the numbers of casualties to 287 dead and 900 wounded.[86] According to the Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit, the situation was further complicated by Hamas' refusal to allow the wounded to leave Gaza for medical treatment.[87] One rocket shot by an F-16 fighter jet on a mosque near Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, from which rockets were reported to be launched, killed four Hamas militants.[88][89] In Gaza City, 5 daughters from the same family were killed in an Israeli airstrike.[90] Israeli jets bombed tunnels in the Rafah area that were used to smuggle both civilian goods such as fuel and weapons after Israel and Egypt imposed the blockade of Gaza in June 2007. [91] [92] Israel targeted them due to their presumed use for illicit smuggling of weapons, explosives and fugitives.[23] The main road of Sallah el-Dein in northern Gaza Strip was bombed. The road leads to the towns of Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahia and Jabalia. No injuries were reported. An Israeli air-to-ground rocket destroyed a metal workshop in northern Gaza City which, according to Israel, was used in manufacturing Qassam rockets fired at Israel. The Al-Noor organisation in Gaza City, belonging to the Hamas movement, was bombed, causing severe damage to the building.[93] The main building of the Hamas-owned Al-Aqsa TV station was struck.[94] The station continued broadcasting via a "mobile unit".[24] Aidan White, Secretary-General of the International Federation of Journalists condemned the destruction of the television station, stating that international law "forbids attacks on media installations, even when they are instruments of propaganda".[95] The IAF attacked Jabalia and northern Gaza killing two more people and wounding others.[96] An attack on Al Saraya, a building which includes government offices, security offices and a prison in Gaza city, was carried out, causing the deaths of four people.[96] A fuel lorry traveling in Rafah near the Egyptian border was destroyed, killing six people.[97] IDF also confirmed the attack on weapon smuggling underground tunnels in Philadelphi Route and claimed successful destruction of 40 of them in just four minutes.[98] Missiles also hit near the Beit Hanoun City Hall.[99]

The rockets shooting from the Gaza Strip continued, and the range was extended. Three rockets landed near the city of Ashdod – the fifth largest Israeli city and a main sea port.[34] The border with Egypt was breached and inhabitants from Gaza moved into Egypt. One Egyptian border policeman was killed by Palestinian gunmen, and several Palestinians were wounded by Egyptian gunfire and taken to hospital in Egypt.[100]

29 December 2008

Inspecting Kassam rocket damage in Sderot

Just after midnight on 29 December, Israeli forces made six separate airstrikes against the Islamic University of Gaza, a cultural symbol of Hamas,[101][102] though the university had evacuated days in advance. According to The Jerusalem Post, the university hosts Hamas military wing laboratories under the auspices of its professors, and its buildings were used for storing rockets and explosives, as well as being used for meetings of senior Hamas officials.[103] According to the IDF and the Shin Bet, the compound near the Islamic college, which was bombed twice, was being used as a chemical lab and as Hamas' explosives lab in Gaza, and Hamas militants had been working there to produce improved rockets and manufacture mortar shells that were later fired toward Israeli cities.[104] According to the New York Times, Israel asserts that the university chemistry laboratory, which it claims was used for making rockets, was a fair target in the attack, even if it could not show conclusively that those inside the laboratory at the time of the attack where engaged in making weapons.[105]

The death toll rose to 315 that morning, as reported by the Associated Press.[106] The Palestinian interior ministry in Gaza building was hit by Israeli missiles at dawn. These two sites, both located in the Tel al-Hawa neighborhood, are reported to be the two main targets Monday.[25] A mosque in the Jabaliya refugee camp was also bombed by the IAF, destroying the building and leading to the death of five young girls whose house was located next to it.[107] Ziad Abu-Tir, a senior member of the Islamic Jihad's military wing was killed in a strike in the Khan Younis area.[1]

The International Red Cross said hospitals in the Gaza Strip were overwhelmed and unable to cope with the casualties.[108] Red Cross spokesman in Gaza Iyad Nasr said Gaza needed more supplies to be brought in urgently. According to him, "in particular the hospitals have been depleted and stretched to the maximum because of the closure imposed".[109] According to the IDF, Israel permitted a number of Turkish-donated ambulances from the West Bank to be transported to the Gaza Strip, as well as medical supplies given by the Red Cross, UNRWA, World Food Programme and Doctors Without Borders.[110]

The Israeli city of Ashkelon was hit by a Grad rocket, killing an Israeli-Arab[111] construction worker and seriously wounding three other people.[107] Rockets fired from Gaza by Hamas and Islamic Jihad killed two Israelis after nightfall in less than an hour, increasing pressure on the government as the army amassed infantry and armored forces along the border.[112]

The AP reports: "Israel's military intelligence chief said Hamas' ability to fire rockets had been reduced by 50 percent. Indeed, Hamas rocket fire dropped off sharply, from more than 130 on Saturday to just more than 20 yesterday. Still, Hamas continues to command some 20,000 fighters".[113]

The foreign ministry of Senegal reported that exiled Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal has said he is ready to sign an immediate ceasefire with Israel provided Israel lifts its blockade on the Gaza Strip totally.[114]

On 29 December the IDF spokesperson confirmed for the first time that, apart from maintaining the naval blockade on Gaza, the Israeli Navy is taking an active part in the operation.[115] A video taken by the Israeli Navy and published in several news sites[31] showed the Israeli Navy attacking the Gaza coast line, using both Typhoon Weapon System and surface-to-surface missiles.

According to Haaretz, among the targets hit by the Israeli Navy were Ismayil Haniah's offices, several command and control centers used by Hamas, and a Hamas patrol boat.[31] On 31 December, the Israeli Navy "targeted a number of Hamas outposts and rocket launching sites", according to the IDF spokesperson.[30] On January 4, Israel extended the naval blockade from 6 to 20 nautical miles (11–37 km; 6.9–23.0 mi), preventing all vessels from trying to enter the strip.[116]

Dignity incident

On 29 December 2008, 16 international activists from the international political organisation Free Gaza Movement, including three al Jazeera journalists, Irish human rights activist Caoimhe Butterly, former United States Representative and 2008 Green Party nominee for U.S. President Cynthia McKinney, CNN video correspondent Karl Penhaul,[28] and three surgeons including Dr. Elena Theoharous, a member of the Cyprus Parliament,[117] attempted to enter the Gaza Strip by boat, carrying 3.5 tonnes (3.9 short tons) of medical supplies.[29] The activists stated that several Israeli navy boats approached their boat, Dignity.[118] According to Reuters, Free Gaza member David Halpin said that Israeli officers on board asked the captain to halt the boat's course to Gaza, but he refused.[119] According to Penhaul, one Israeli boat rammed the Dignity causing heavy damage,[118][28] while other passengers also claimed that several Israeli boats fired machine guns into the water.[118] The activists claimed that their boat was clearly in international waters, about "70-80 miles"[29][120] or "90 miles"[118][121] from the Gaza Strip coast. McKinney claimed that the Israeli boat had rammed the Dignity "approximately three times, twice in the front and once in the side".

Israeli foreign ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor claimed that no shooting had occurred,[122] the Dignity was inside Israeli territorial waters, and that it had failed to respond to Israeli naval radio contact.[118] Palmor claimed that the Dignity had crashed into an Israel boat when the Dignity had tried to outmaneuver the Israeli boat.[123][124] Palmor also claimed that the fact that the ship was carrying journalists, including a CNN crew that had already broadcast live three times, proved that the incident was a provocation on the part of the media.[124] Immediately after the incident the Dignity turned back. Palmor stated that the naval ship offered to assist the passengers of the Dignity, who declined the offer.[125] Palmor also stated that Israeli ships then escorted the damaged Dignity to Cypriot territorial waters[125] or, according to YNET, until it exited Israeli territorial waters.[124] The Dignity did not have enough fuel to return to Cyprus and ended up docking in Lebanon.[123]

Cypriot Foreign Minister Markos Kyprianou stated that Cyprus would lodge a formal complaint regarding the incident.[118] In a written statement, the Consulate General of Israel to the Southeast USA, based in Atlanta, Georgia, said that McKinney "has taken it upon herself to commit an act of provocation", endangering herself and the crew, and called her behavior "irresponsible".[28]

30 December 2008

Israeli airstrikes struck five ministerial buildings, another structure owned by Islamic University, a Hamas sports centre, two Hamas training camps, the home of a senior Hamas commander (who was not present), and offices of the Popular Resistance Committees; 10 fatalities were reported.[126] The "whole compound" of ministerial buildings in Gaza City, including the Ministries of Finance, Interior and Education, were "completely destroyed" by 30 December.[127] A reporter for the International Middle East Media Center stated that the ministries were 'not "terrorist" or military sites' and that the buildings were "civilian buildings that served the population in civil matters".[127]

According to the Washington Post, Israel military officials have said that the target lists have been expanded beyond rocket launchers and stores of weapons to include the vast support network that the Islamist movement relies on to stay in power in the strip in order to weaken all the various facets of Hamas rather than just its armed wing.[39]

As reported by the Associated Press, Gazans say that most Israeli strikes came without warning, but Israeli forces claimed that they offered general warnings by dropping leaflets and recording announcements that interrupt radio broadcasts telling Gaza residents to flee their homes if they were hiding weapons or militants.[128] According to Amnesty International, "there are no 'safe' places in Gaza for civilians to seek shelter".[129]

Israel kept schools closed within a radius of about 30 km (18 miles) from the Gaza border, citing concerns about further rocket fire. Residents were told to remain indoors and on the alert for alarms heralding incoming rockets. Israel has said it would allow more aid trucks into Gaza. Dozens of trucks loaded with goods were seen heading to Gaza crossings early on Tuesday.[130]

Hamas launched Chinese-made rockets at Beersheba, a city in southern Israel. A Grad missile landed in an empty kindergarten, causing damage.[35]

Egypt said it would only fully open its border with the Gaza Strip if the crossing post was to come under the control of Mahmoud Abbas' Palestinian Authority.[131]

Hamas militants fired 24 Qassam rockets and 11 mortars into Israel from Gaza, causing some damage but no injuries.[132]

Israel has banned reporters from entering the Gaza strip since November 2008, citing "security" reasons. A petition made by 400 foreign journalists to enter the Gaza strip has been filed with Israel's supreme court.[133]

Israel permitted 100 aid trucks to enter the Gaza strip via Kerem Shalom border crossing, carrying humanitarian supplies. Five new ambulances donated by Turkey were also allowed entry.[134][135]

31 December 2008

Forty Palestinians, including at least five civilians, were killed during continued air strikes.[136] Israel continued bombing, striking "dozens of targets" including smuggling tunnels along the Gaza–Egypt border.[136]

During the morning, two more rockets launched from Gaza hit the city of Beersheba; one of the rockets hit a school, causing severe damage to the building, but no casualties, as Israeli authorities instructed schools to remain closed. Two rockets landed in the Israeli city of Ashkelon, causing light injuries to two people; another rocket hit the town of Ofakim; several more landed around these cities and the cities of Kiryat Gat, Kiryat Malachi and Ashdod.[137] Altogether, more than 60 Katyusha and Qassam rockets were fired from Gaza into Israel.[138][132]

According to UN humanitarian coordinator Maxwell Gaylard, Gaza's hospitals were facing severe strain dealing with "their largest ever trauma caseloads under some of the most adverse conditions imaginable".[139] Douglas Alexander, Britain's International Development Secretary is quoted saying "Thousands are suffering. Medical items are in short supply. Fuel shortages have led to power cuts which in turn are affecting hospitals and other essential services. And UN stocks of food are very low. The limited aid that is getting through cannot be distributed properly because of bombing from the air and rocket attacks launched from inside Gaza".[140] A seriously injured six-year-old Palestinian boy was allowed to be transferred from Gaza to an Israeli children's hospital for treatment.[141]

Israel rejected international appeals proposed by the French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner to grant a 48-hour cease-fire, saying that conditions were not right for the ceasefire.[142][143] Meanwhile, Hamas spokesman Ayman Taha told the AFP agency that Hamas is open to any ceasefire proposition that will end the Israeli airstrikes and stop the Gaza blockade.[142] Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas, threatened to halt peace talks if they go against the Palestinian interests and offer support for "aggression".[142]

In a briefing to the Israeli cabinet, Shin Bet Chief Yuval Diskin said that Hamas has suffered significant damages and its rule over Gaza has been compromised, and that many Hamas operatives are hiding in hospitals, posing as medical staff, or hiding in mosques and using them as headquarters, since they assumed Israel won't attack them there.[144] According to the Israeli air force, Hamas cells have been firing rockets from within densely populated areas and attempting to use Palestinian civilians as human shields. Cells have been detected in neighborhoods in Gaza City, Jabalya, Khan Younis and Rafah. The Israel Defense Forces has distributed flyers to the Palestinian population in Gaza, warning civilians not to stay close to any Hamas related buildings, for their own safety.[144] The Israeli Air Force bombed a Gaza Strip mosque. According to the IDF the mosque was used by Hamas as a storage site for missiles and explosive materials and that rocket cells were firing at Israel from the mosque area and from nearby sites. According to ynet, the attack on the mosque was carried out after legal consultion with IDF experts on international law.[145]

Israel's supreme court, in response to a court petition heard the previous day,[146] "gave the Israeli government until 10 a.m. Thursday to allow a small group of reporters into the Gaza Strip. The court warned that the reporters would be in the embattled area at their own risk".[146] The ruling "went against a government decision six weeks ago to keep foreign reporters out of Gaza until rockets fired against Israel were halted".[146]

Ninety-three trucks carrying medicine, medical supplies and food donated by Jordan and international organisations were allowed entry to the Gaza Strip, through the Kerem Shalom border crossing. The World Food Programme notified the IDF that it was not in need of any further food shipments, as its warehouses were filled to capacity.[147][148]

Top UN aid officials urged Israel to allow for the resumption of fuel deliveries into the Gaza Strip, noting that the fuel shortage resulting from the suspension of deliveries had caused the main power plant in Gaza to shut down on 30 December, affecting 650,000 people in Central and Northern Gaza, who live with 16 hours or more of powercuts per day.[85]

1 January 2009

Palestinian Legislative Council building

Israeli air strikes hit Gaza's parliament building, and the offices of the education and justice ministries, leaving four dead and 25 wounded.[149] A pre-dawn strike against the home of a Hamas operative resulted in the death of a Palestinian woman.[150] Palestinian reports also mention missiles landed on a workshop and several money changers' offices, one of which was close to a children's hospital, slightly damaging it. In Rafah, air strikes destroyed five smuggling tunnels and a police command center, while in Gaza City, an alleged weapons manufacturing center and storage facility was destroyed.[151] Dozens of Israelis received text messages from Hamas in the morning warning that the offensive on Gaza would only bring about massive rocket fire on Israel.[152] According to Israeli military sources, Hamas launched more than 50 rockets into Israel without causing casualties.[153] Rockets hit Beersheba and Ashdod, damaging a residential building in the latter city.[149]

An Israeli warplane dropped a one-ton bomb on the home of Nizar Rayan, a senior Hamas political leader, in the Jabaliya refugee camp, killing him, 9 women (including his four wives), his 11 children,[154] and wounding another 30.[155][156][157] As a liaison between the political and armed wings of Hamas and advocate of renewing suicide bombings, Rayan is the most senior political figure to be killed by Israel since 2004.[158] According to the IDF, Rayan's house was used as an arms cache, a communications headquarters and concealed a tunnel's opening.[159][160] The International Herald Tribune reported that among those killed were Rayan's four wives and nine of their twelve children.[155] On 2 January, the Times Online reports instead that two of his four wives and four of his 12 children were killed.[161] UN OCHA reports that 13 of his family members, including 11 of his children, were killed and 12 were injured. [65] There were reports that the family was warned by the IDF to leave the building but that they had refused to do so.[159][160] According to ynet, recent deliberations by the IDF resulted in a decision that striking homes used as weapons storages when sufficient warning is given to the residents falls within the boundaries of international law and is legitimate.[160] Rayan had sent his son to carry out a suicide attack in the community of Elei Sinai in 2001 in which two Israelis were killed, and was behind the bombing in the Ashdod Port in 2004 which left 10 Israelis dead.[162] [163][164][160]

Ninety trucks carrying food and medical supplies provided by international organisations entered the Gaza Strip through the Kerem Shalom border crossing.[165] Egypt blocked the entry of humanitarian aid from Qatar to pass through the Rafah crossing, however, Israel announced it would allow several aircraft from Qatar to land in Israel and the aid will be sent by truck to Gaza.[166]

2 January 2009

Hamas called for a "Day of Wrath" against Israel, bringing thousands of protesters out onto the streets of Gaza and the West Bank.[167] Israeli air strikes on Friday targeted the homes of 20 Hamas officials,[168] including that of Imad Akel in Nuseirat and Mohammed Madhoun. One of the strikes in Khan Yunis killed five civilians.[169] Israel began to bomb the ground near its boundary in an attempt to clear it of landmines, increasing speculation that a ground offensive is imminent. Israel briefly opened the Erez crossing to allow about 440 residents with foreign passports to leave the Gaza Strip.[170] Foreign journalists continued to be barred entry to Gaza; those who had lined up at the Erez crossing intending to enter after a court decision supported their right to do so when the crossing is open, were turned back by Israeli authorities.[171] At around 10:45, in a repeat attack south-west of Deir al-Balah, an International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement ambulance, which had arrived to transport survivors following an initial attack, was destroyed by a second Israeli attack. The two crew members in the ambulance were injured and hospitalised.[172]

Throughout the day, thirty rockets were fired at Israel; three people were lightly injured, and several buildings sustained heavy damage.[173] In Jerusalem, access of men to prayers in the Al-Aqsa Mosque was prohibited except for Israeli ID holders above 50 years of age. [65]

3 January 2009

Early on Saturday, an Israeli air strike in the Gaza Strip killed a senior commander of Hamas' armed wing, Abu Zakaria al-Jamal.[174] He was commander of Gaza City's rocket-launching squads.[175] In another air strike, Jamal Mamduch, commander of the Gaza City battalion, was killed.[176] Many of the killed Hamas leaders have died along with their families in their own homes. Thirteen Palestinians, including four children, were killed and dozens wounded when the Israeli Air Force bombed the Maqadna Mosque in Beit Lahiya, in which about 200 people had gathered for evening prayers.[177] [178] Another person was killed as large parts of the American International School in that city were destroyed.[179]

At least 34 rockets were fired at Israel during the day, damaging several buildings, and lightly injuring one woman in Netivot. A number of Hamas rockets hit the city of Beersheba (population 186,000) in southern Israel, with one exploding on an empty school.[180]

Israel stepped up its offensive on Gaza and launched its first artillery barrages, as its campaign entered its second week. Israel has now carried out more than 700 strikes on Gaza since launching the offensive a week ago, the AFP news agency says. Four Israelis have been killed by rockets fired from Gaza.[177]

The UN has warned of a worsening humanitarian crisis, and believes 25% of the more than 400 Palestinians killed by Israel so far were civilians.[177]

On the evening of 3 January, Israeli ground troops began entering Gaza for the first time since the operation began.[178][181] The intention of the ground invasion, termed the 'second stage' of Operation Cast Lead, according to the Israeli Defence Forces website, is to secure areas within the Gaza strip from which rockets have been launched even after the previous Israeli operations.

4 January 2009

Israeli ground troops entered Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun in northern Gaza in the early hours.[182] Israeli forces reportedly bisected Gaza and surrounded Gaza City, but restricted their movements to areas that were not heavily urbanised.[183] The Israeli military said forty sites had been targeted, including targets for weapons depots and rocket launch sites. Despite a Supreme Court ruling to allow a limited number of journalists into the warzone, Israel is refusing to allow journalists into the area at all.[184] Heavy fighting was reported near Gaza City.[182] The IDF reported that 30 of its soldiers were wounded (28 from a single mortar shell which landed next to a Golani regiment ), with two out of those 30 badly injured, one later died of his wounds. The Israeli government also reported that they killed at least 50 Hamas militants in the overnight ground operation, and wounded dozens more.[185] Later on Sunday, one Israeli soldier was reported killed as a result of the earlier mortar incident.[186][187] The fallen soldier has been identified as Staff Sergeant Dvir Emmanueloff, 22 years old, from Givat Ze'ev, near Jerusalem.[188] Palestinian medical sources claimed that at least 21 Palestinians were killed in the fighting.[189] Additionally, Palestinian health ministry officials state at least 17 people were killed and 130 injured when Israeli shells fell near a school and the main market in Gaza City. A tank shell fired in northern Gaza killed 12 people, apparently including civilians. An Israeli missile hit a house in the Shuja'iyya neighborhood, killing a mother and her four children. On the morning, an ambulance of Al Awda hospital in the north was shelled, seriously injuring 4 medical staff. [190] Meanwhile, at least 41 rockets and mortars were fired into Israel from Gaza, targeting communities close to the border.[191] Two Israeli civilians were lightly wounded in the Eshkol region, while one woman was slightly injured in Sderot.[192]

Three senior Hamas leaders were killed on Sunday: Hussam Hamdan, who according to the IDF was responsible for the organisation's rocket fire and the man behind the firing of Grad missiles towards the cities of Beersheba and Ofakim; Muhammad Hilou, who according to the IDF was responsible for Hamas' special forces in Khan Younis and for the firing of long-range rockets; and Mohammed Shalpokh, who commanded Hamas forces in Rafah.[193][194][195][196] On January 4, Hamas sources told The Jerusalem Post that members of al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades, the Popular Resistance Committees, Islamic Jihad and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine were participating in the fighting against the IDF, and that they were making use of U.S. and Israeli weapons confiscated from members of Fatah in the 2007 Battle of Gaza.[197]

Also on January 4, the director of Israel's internal security agency, the Shin Bet, told the cabinet that Hamas leaders both at home and in exile felt that their organisation was facing an "existential threat" and was "willing to reach an agreement" on a cease fire. However, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni said that Israel did not intend to conclude a "diplomatic product" with Hamas. Such a move had been avoided in the past out of fear of legitimising Hamas as a negotiating partner. On the military front, the head of Aman, Israeli military intelligence, stated that Hamas felt they had made a "strategic mistake" in breaking off the truce with Israel because much of their infrastructure had been destroyed and they found themselves isolated internationally in a "lepers' alliance with Iran and Syria".[198] He also said: "The Hamas government isn't functioning."[199]

According to medical sources, the total Palestinian death toll for the day was 42, most of them civilians.[200]

5 January 2009

An Israeli air strike hit two ambulances in Gaza, killing four paramedics as they tried to reach those injured in the offensive.[201]

As Israeli tanks and troops seized control of large parts of the Gaza Strip, tens of thousands of Gazans fled their homes amidst artillery and gunfire, and flooded into the heart of Gaza city.[202] Gun battles reportedly broke out between Israel and Hamas on the streets of Gaza, as Israel surrounded the city.[200][203] BBC reporters stated that this is preventing essential medical supplies from reaching hospitals and casualties.[204]

Hamas said it will send a delegation to Egypt for talks, as France spearheaded diplomatic efforts to obtain a 48-hour truce.[200]Israel refused to let journalists enter the Gaza Strip, despite a ruling from the Israeli Supreme Court to admit a limited number of reporters.[204]

On this, the tenth day of Israeli military operations, Defense Minister Ehud Barack defined the Israeli aim in the following terms: "No terror activity from Gaza - either against civilians or against our soldiers, a dramatic change in weapons smuggling and quiet in the South."[205]

Casualties

Palestinian

As of 4th January, 2009, medical sources in Gaza reported that more than 500 Palestinians were killed, most of them civilians,[206][13] including at least 75 children,[207] while more than 2,700 have been injured. Hamas claims 10 of its fighters have been killed.[206] Four Israelis (one soldier and three civilians) have been killed in the same period by Palestinian rockets,[208] and 32 soldiers were injured during Israel's ground offensive.[206] On 31 December, the Palestinian Ministry of Health in the Gaza Strip published a list of 187 of the people killed.[209]

The UN has stated that during the first three days of the operation there are over 300 dead, of which at least 60 are women or children.[210] However, Israel claimed most of the deaths during this period were members of Hamas security forces,[211][212] including Tawfik Jaber, the chief of Hamas police in Gaza.[80] A United Nations relief agency has said that the humanitarian situation in Gaza is dire and on the brink of catastrophe.[213] As of 31 December, the death toll among Gaza Strip residents had reached 410, according to the director of the al-Shifa Hospital, Dr. Hussein,[209] and more than 1,720 people were wounded, "hundreds" of them seriously.[214] In the first 48 hours of the airstrikes, at least 32 Palestinian children were killed.[64] A day earlier, the United Nations humanitarian chief had said that about 320 Palestinians had been killed and 1400 injured. The UN said that civilian casualties, defined only as women and children, were 62.[15] Israel said that most of the deaths and injuries were Hamas militants, and said it takes careful steps to avoid harm to bystanders.[78] In a press conference in Gaza City on 29 December, a de facto Hamas Interior Ministry spokesperson, Ihab al-Ghusein, stated that most of the victims of the attacks were "Gazans at work, not activists launching rockets."[215] According to the New York Times, not all Hamas members necessarily fully accept the organisation's ideology; young men might be simply tempted by the steady work of the police force as jobs are scarce in Gaza due to an international embargo on Hamas.[216] A police spokesperson, Islam Shahwan, stated that "at least 95% of the security services buildings" were destroyed, and that 138 police officers had been killed: nine in Rafah, 29 in Khan Younis, 70 in Gaza City and 30 "in the north."[215]

According to The Jerusalem Post, the Hamas government has placed dozens of Fatah members under house arrest out of fear that they might exploit the current IDF operation to regain control of the Gaza Strip. The Jerusalem Post quotes Fatah officials in Ramallah saying that at least 75 Fatah activists were shot in the legs, and others had their hands broken. The newspaper also quotes "sources close to Hamas" saying that Hamas had executed more than 35 Palestinians who were suspected of collaborating with Israel and were being held in various Hamas security installations.of fear that Israel might try to rescue them during a ground offensive. [217]

Israeli and others

On the Israeli side, three civilians and one soldier have been killed by rocket attacks since the Gaza offensive began.[212] According to the BBC News, Hamas-run media reported the capture of two Israeli soldiers, but the Israeli army says it has no knowledge of the claim.[218] On January 5, news sources reported that Hamas claimed it had killed nine Israeli soldiers while fighting them in the Gaza strip. Israel denied these claims.[219][220] One Israeli soldier, Dvir Emmanueloff, was killed in action in the Gaza Strip during the first day of the ground operation.[221]

One Egyptian border guard was killed and one was wounded by Palestinian gunmen.[4]

Humanitarian crisis in Gaza

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs states that the Gaza strip humanitarian crisis is significant and can not be understated.[65] The UN states that the situation is a "18 month long human dignity crisis" in the Gaza strip, entailing "a massive destruction of livelihoods and a significant deterioration of infrastructure and basic services". Fear and panic are widespread; 80 percent of the population can not support themselves and are dependent on humanitarian assistance.[65]

Israel's foreign minister Tzipi Livni has stated that there is no humanitarian crisis in Gaza,[222]and that Israel has thus protected the civilian population, keeping the humanitarian situation in Gaza "completely as it should be". [223] The head of the Arab League, Amr Moussa, has criticised Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni for declaring that there was no humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip. He also criticised the Security Council for not responding faster to the crisis[223]

Shelter

The "entire civilian population" in the Gaza strip remains vulnerable.[224] There is a sense of "panic, fear and distress" throughout the whole strip. [65] [224] Civilians have implemented a self-imposed curfew since no public warning systems or effective shelters exist. [224] People have been evacuating their homes and staying in streets for long hours exposed to further danger, or staying with relatives. [64] Civilians face insecurities while re-stocking basic food items, water and cooking gas. [224] Most families are holed up in one or two rooms that are considered the safest in the home, without electricity and with barely running water. Children have no outlets and entire families are moving to safer places at night. [224]

The Palestinian Red Cross estimates that thousands of homes have been damaged and it became "increasingly difficult" for their residents to stay in them due to the cold weather. [190] The UNRWA has prepared its schools to act as temporary shelters for displaced persons. [64] As of January 1st, approximately 400 people spend the night under the UNRWA emergency shelters.[225][65] As reported by both the Save the Children Alliance and the Al Mezan Center, prior to the IDF ground operation, more than 13,000 people (2000 families) have been displaced in the strip. [190] The majority of those families seek shelter with relatives, while 1,200 people are staying on the temporary emergency shelters provided by the UNRWA. [190]

Fuel and electricity

The only power plant in Gaza is not operational due to the lack of industrial fuel and spare parts.[224][65] As of January 1st, power outages last 16 hours per day. [224] [65] [64] Due to localized damage following the airstrikes, some electrical lines has been cut causing some areas to suffer from power cuts lasting 24 hours. [224] [65] In addition, due to the damages caused by the air strikes to 15 electrical transformers, as much as 250,000 people in central and northern Gaza have no electricity supply during the entire day and night. [65] As of the first of January, a 5MW line from Egypt to Rafah was damaged, extending the power cuts also to Rafah, which has usually continuous supply. [65] Fuel for heating and cooking are no longer available and most of the 240 gas stations in Gaza City have closed.[65]

As of January the fourth, there's almost total blackout in Gaza City, North Gaza, Middle Area and Khan Yunis. [190] Most (90%) of the telephone network, including both cellular service and land lines are down since it depends on backup generators with dwindling fuel stocks. [226] [190]

Water

Since 5 November, there has been a shortage of chlorine for water treatment, increasing the risk of outbreak of water diseases.[64] On 27 December, Israeli airstrikes extensively damaged two water wells, rendering a population of 30,000 Palestinians without water.[64] Since Wednesday 31 December, sewage and water systems in Beit Hanoun were hit at five locations causing considerable damage to the main sewage pipeline leading to sewage water pouring into the streets. [224] [65] On 2 January, airstrikes in the Al Mughraga area damaged a main drinking water pipe, cutting off water supplies to 30,000 people in Nuseirat Camp.[227] The UN sums the situation that as of 2 January, 250,000 people in Gaza City and northern Gaza are without water supply; seven water wells were seriously damaged and cannot be repaired due to bombardments.[65]

As of the fourth of January, and as reported by the Palestinian Coastal Municipality Water Utility (CMWU) throughout the UN reports, 70% of the Gaza strip 1.5 million population have no access to water. [190] The CMWU also fears that continued shelling near the Beit Lahiya sewage lagoon will cause a massive sewage overflow. In addition to agricultural areas, up to 15,000 people are directly at risk. [65] [190]

Health

Weakened by the eighteen-month Blockade of the Gaza Strip, as of 31 December the central drug store reported that 105 drugs and 255 medical supplies of the essential drug and supplies list are still unavailable, and approximately 20 percent of the ambulances were grounded due to lack of spare parts.[64] Ambulances are experiencing difficulties in reaching the injured because of continuous fire. [190] Hospitals also suffer a "severe" shortage of cooking gas, which is expected to be totally depleted in the coming days. Due to this shortage, the WFP distributed canned meat and high energy biscuits. [65] As a result of shortages,[228] dozens of Gaza Arabs are being treated in Ashkelon's Barzilai Hospital,[229] while others are crossing into Egypt from Gaza for treatment.[230] According to the World Health Organisation, there are at least 1,000 medical machines out of order. As of the eighth day of war, this shortage of equipment and spare parts was still a "main challenge" but the Ministry of Health stated that "while conditions at hospitals are extremely precarious, the situation has stabilised, following the large volume of medical supplies received". [227]

As of the fourth of January, all of Gaza City hospitals have been without main electricity for 48 consecutive hours, depending entirely on back-up generators. The hospitals warn that the generators are close to collapse. [190] On the fourth of January, UNRWA had to close four out of its eighteen health centers because of hostilities in the vicinity. [190] For the second consecutive day, Israeli authorities have refused to allow an International Committee of the Red Cross emergency medical team into Gaza to help the staff of Shifa hospital. [190] The Swiss government "protests the denial by Israeli authorities of access to Gaza by an emergency medical team of the International Committee of the Red Cross".[231][232][233]

Cash

The Israeli shekel is a widely used currency in the Gaza Strip, and the territory needs at least 400 million shekels, or about $100 million, each month in new currency to replace aging notes and to pay salaries. [234] The ban on the entry of banknotes into Gaza has hampered several humanitarian programs run by the UNRWA.[64] As of the ninth day of the attacks, cash has still not entered the Gaza Strip and is urgently needed, including for the UNRWA cash distribution program to some 94,000 dependent beneficiaries, as well as its "cash for work" program.[227] [190]

Public relations campaign and media strategies

Israel

IDF support demonstration in Tel Aviv University

Haaretz reported that Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni "instructed senior ministry officials to open an aggressive and diplomatic international public relations campaign in order to gain support for Israel Defense Forces operations in the Gaza Strip". The campaign includes Ministry officials at Israeli embassies and consulates around the world mounting public relations campaigns that focus on local media and governmental officials, contacts by Livni with foreign officials in Israel, recruitment of people who speak Arabic, Italian, Spanish and German, and the opening of an international media centre in Sderot, to which "foreign media and diplomatic figures" will be invited. Livni will also hold a series of talks with foreign officials, "in which she will attempt to explain the rationale for the expanded IDF operations in the Gaza Strip".

Livni said Israel "expects the support and understanding of the international community, as it confronts terror, and advances the interest of all those who wish the forces of peace and co existence to determine the agenda of this region".[235]

Deputy Foreign Minister Majallie Whbee on Sunday criticised the international media coverage, saying that they have often failed to report on the pervasive Kassam attacks that preceded the [current] violence.[236]

During the conflict, the Israeli government also tried to spread its message online: Israel's consulate in New York began holding online press conferences on Twitter, a microblogging website, and the IDF Spokesperson's Unit opened a channel on the website YouTube to diffuse video of airstrikes against Hamas targets.[237]

Arab

The Los Angeles Times reports that "Pan-Arab satellite channels broadcast nearly nonstop images of bloodied Palestinian bodies, ambulances screaming and women wailing in hospital corridors. Al Jazeera quickly designed a logo for its live coverage, calling it 'Gaza Under Fire'".[238] The New York Times likewise reported that "Across the region, the Israeli strikes were being broadcast in grisly detail almost continually on Arab satellite networks".[239]

Reactions

Most members of the Arab League including Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Qatar, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, the United Arab Emirates, and Yemen have called for an end to the Israeli "attack" and/or "aggression". Cuba, Iran, Pakistan, Russia, South Africa, the United Kingdom, Spain, Turkey[240] and Venezuela also criticized Israel. Australia, Canada, the Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, and the United States defended Israel's attacks and condemned Hamas.[241]

The United Nations Security Council called on December 28 "for an immediate halt to all violence".[242][243] the European Union made similar calls,[244] as did Argentina, Brazil, China, Hungary, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, Peru, the Philipines, South Korea, and Vietnam.[242] The US has blocked this effort at the Security Council.[245][246][245][247]

Indonesia has pledged to send troops to the region as part of a peace-keeping mission or an observation team to monitor a possible truce, should the United Nations request it.[248][249]

Involved parties

International organisations and NGOs

  •  Arab League – The Arab League relocated and delayed its emergency summit from Cairo on December 28[255] to Doha on January 2, 2009.[256]
  •  OIC‎ - Issued a communiqué condemnning the "brutal and sustained aggression"[257] and expressed its dissapointment with the UN security council and called for a calling of the general assembly. The communiqué also called for the Palestinian factions to end their differences and noted the OIC's continued aid works in Gaza and its support for the PNA and other "legitimate institutions"[258]
  •  European Union – A spokesman for the European Union’s Foreign Policy Chief, Javier Solana, called "for an immediate ceasefire",[243] and France, which held the EU presidency until the end December 2008, condemned acts of violence on both sides. The European Commission has expressed "deep concern" about the humanitarian situation.[259] However, Mr Jiří Potužník, the special EU presidency spokesman for Czech prime minister Mirek Topolánek, the boss of the Czech EU presidency that just began in 2009, said: "At the moment from our perspective we do understand that the action is part of the defensive action of Israel." Although he expressed the actual attitude of the current EU presidency, pressure from old EU member countries has led Mr Potužník to retract the statement.[260]
  •  United NationsSecretary General Ban Ki-moon condemned Israeli and Palestinian attacks,[261] calling for an immediate ceasefire, and for humanitarian supplies to be allowed into Gaza.[243] The President of the UN General Assembly Miguel d'Escoto called the Israeli incursion a "monstrosity", and criticised the "disfunctionality" of the UN Security Council.[262]
  •  African Union – The African Union condemned the air raids on the Gaza Strip, expressing deep concern at the number of casualties.[263]
  • Amnesty International condemned the blockade of the Gaza Strip as well as Hamas' rocket attacks in Israel.[264]

Civilian protests

Further information: Civilian protests to 2008-2009 Israel-Gaza conflict
Protesters in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

Major protests against Israel were held world-wide[265][266] in London,[267] Paris,[268] Berlin,[269] Moscow,[270] Athens,[269] Amsterdam,[271] Istanbul[272], Dublin,[273] and Madrid,[269] dozens of American cities,[274] Iran[275], Damascus,[276] India,[277][278] Pakistan, Afghanistan,[279] Bangladesh,[277] Indonesia,[270] the Philippines,[277] Malta,[280] and throughout Africa,[270][281][282] and the Arab world.[citation needed] In Israel demonstrations were held both in support of the operation and against it.[283] Pro-Israel demonstrations were also held in several American cities,[284][285] and worldwide.[286] In Egypt, the protests resulted in the government's reopening of the Rafah border crossing to allow passage of food and medicine to Gaza.[287]

Protesters in London, Paris, Oslo, and other cities clashed with the police.[288][289] One Palestinian man was shot dead in a confrontation between Israeli troops and Palestinian youth in Qalqilya.[290] Recent attacks against Jews, Jewish locations and Israelis were interpreted to be in response to the conflict.[291][292] In the first days after the beginning of the hostilities, over 300 Israeli Websites have been hacked and defaced with anti-Israeli and anti-US messages.[293]

Alleged violations of international law

Under international humanitarian law, warring parties are obliged to distinguish between combatants and civilians, ensure that attacks on legitimate military targets are proportional, and guarantee that the military advantage of such attacks outweigh the possible harm done to civilians.[294] Violations of these laws are considered war crimes.

Attacks by the Israeli Defense Forces

On 27 December, the United Nations Human Rights Council released a statement by Richard Falk, professor emeritus of international law at Princeton University and United Nations Special Rapporteur on "the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories", [295] in his official capacity as Special Rapporteur. The statement described the Israeli airstrikes as "severe and massive violations of international humanitarian law as defined in the Geneva Conventions, both in regard to the obligations of an Occupying Power and in the requirements of the laws of war." [296]

The UNHRC statement argued three prominent violations had occurred:

Attacks by Palestinian militants

The UNHRC statement by Falk also argued that the rocket attacks against civilian targets in Israel violated international law. [296]

Weiner and Bell concur on the grounds of distinction, perfidy/civilian shields, terrorism and genocide. They argue that the very usage of weapons by Palestinians violates international law because their weaponry lacks the precision necessary for aiming. They also hold Hamas responsible for civilian deaths in Gaza because it blurs the line between civilians and combatants, which is a violation of Article 28 of the Geneva convention, which states that the presence of civilians "may not be used to render certain points or areas immune from military operations". Thus they argue that Palestinians are guilty of war crimes against the Palestinians killed in Gaza.[297]

Weiner and Bell write that the Palestinian attacks are terrorist in nature, because they kill civilians to the effect of intimidating a population. Claiming that Hamas has violated the International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism[298], and that every rocket launched since 2005 is a separate war crime, they hold the entire organisation and every militant responsible.[297] They also argue that Hamas' attacks on Israel constitute acts of genocide (as defined by the Genocide convention), as they fall within its broader aim of killing Jews, outlined in its covenant. Thus they argue Israel is obligated by international law to "prevent and punish" Palestinian acts of genocide.[297]

See also

References

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  298. ^ International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism
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