Archbishop Tutu Heads UN
Fact-Finding Commissions to Gaza, to Investigate Beit Hanoun Killings
UN delegation to visit Beit Hanoun this week
to investigate Israeli carnage
[ 26/05/2008 - 02:44 PM ]
NEW YORK, (PIC)--
The UN announced that it will send this week a
delegation headed by South African priest Desmond Tutu, a Nobel peace
prize laureate, to the Beit Hanoun town, northern Gaza Strip, to
investigate a heinous massacre committed by the Israeli occupation
forces (IOF) in November 2006 and claimed the lives of 19 Palestinian
citizens most of them were members of one family.
The UN council for human rights had decided in the
same month of 2006 to form an investigation commission headed by Tutu to
visit Beit Hanoun, but Israel refused to allow that UN delegation to
visit Gaza ever since.
According to a statement by the UN high commissioner
for human rights, the UN delegation will be composed of priest Tutu and
British academic Christine Chinkin who will try to visit Beit Hanoun
through Egypt for two days during this month.
The statement said that the delegation will listen
to the statements of survivors and witnesses to the Israeli shelling of
a residential area in Beit Hanoun and will report in this regard to the
UN council for human rights in September.
In another context, the caretaker government headed
by premier Ismail Haneyya strongly denounced during its weekly cabinet
meeting on Sunday the international community for staying passive
towards the crimes of mass punishment committed by Israel against the
Gaza people, calling for necessarily opening all border crossings and
ending the unjust siege imposed on the Strip.
In a press statement following the meeting, Taher
Al-Nunu, the spokesman for the government, stated that the cabinet
discussed the results of the contacts with the Amir of Qatar and the
letter sent to the secretary-general of Arab League regarding the
government's appeal for an effective Arab role in healing the
inter-Palestinian rift similar to the Arab efforts made few days ago to
end the Lebanese crisis.
Nunu also said that the government discussed a
number of important political and administrative issues including a plan
to enhance the steadfastness of the Palestinian people in Gaza and
alleviate their burdens.
In another context, during his visit to a number of
wounded Palestinians in Turkish hospitals, MP Jamal Al-Khudari, the head
of the popular committee against the siege, underlined that the
Palestinian steadfastness is still solid and strong despite the ferocity
of the ongoing Israeli siege and aggression.
MP Khudari stressed the need to break the Israeli
siege imposed on one and a half million Palestinians in Gaza especially
for the access of medication to thousands of patients and for the travel
of others to receive medical treatment abroad.
Archbishop Tutu will travel to Gaza to investigate
Beit Hanoun killings this week
Date: 26 / 05 / 2008 Time: 14:35
Jerusalem -
The UN Office of the High Commissioner for
Human Rights in Geneva reported on Sunday evening that an independent
High Level Fact-Finding Mission led by Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South
Africa would be traveling to Gaza on 27 and 28 May – and entering from
Egypt through the Rafah crossing.
The High Level Fact-Finding Mission to Beit Hanoun was established and
authorized by the UN Human Rights Council after a Special Session in
Geneva, following an Israeli tank attack on two homes in the northern
Gaza town of Beit Hanoun during an Israeli operation against Palestinian
fighters just before dawn in November 2006 in which 19 persons were
killed, including 7 children – most of them still sleeping.
After several weeks of cooling their heels in Geneva, the Mission was
“postponed” in January 2007.
“There were several previous efforts to go, but they never came to
fruition – they never got the necessary clearances, so the Mission was
officially left in suspense,” one UN official said from Geneva.
“Israel wouldn’t give permission for the UN Mission, or Egypt either,”
the UN official said. “The shift has been on the Egyptian side.”
This development comes as Egyptian-led negotiations are apparently
nearing conclusion on some kind of truce between Israel and Hamas.
The Egyptian Embassy in Tel Aviv was asked for a comment, but has not
yet replied.
“It was sorted out in the last couple of weeks, and everybody signed off
on it over the past couple of days,” another UN official from Jerusalem
said on Monday.
Archbishop Tutu will be accompanied on this Mission by Professor
Christine Chinkin, of the Centre for the Study of Human Rights at the
London School of Economics.
A UN press release says that the Mission is “scheduled to hold a range
of meetings in Gaza, including with survivors and witnesses of the
attack on 8 November 2006.”
A more recent similar tragedy occurred in Beit Hanoun at the end of
April this year, when a mother and her four children were killed while
having breakfast. Palestinian eyewitnesses thought that these deaths had
been caused by an Israeli tank shell exploding beside the family home.
But, an Israeli investigation asserted that in fact the Israeli Air
Force had fired at a group of Palestinian militants carrying weapons,
and that a secondary explosion of those weapons caused the blast that
killed the young family.
Aryeh Mekel, spokesperson for the Israeli Foreign Ministry, expressed
surprise to hear about the plans, and said he would check to see if
anybody in the Foreign Ministry was aware of the imminent visit.
Asked about coordination, Mekel said: “We are not in Gaza … Do you think
our soldiers would protect somebody in Gaza?”
Mr. Mekel later returned this reporter’s call, with this comment: "What
we know is that Desmond Tutu was appointed by the Human Rights Council
to investigate something that happened two years ago. Our position is
that we will of course allow Desmond Tutu to enter Israel if he wants to
do so -- he's a well-known personality, and he is welcome. But we will
not cooperate with him if he intends to investigate this event of two
years ago. The reasons is that the UN Human Rights Council has an
unbalanced attitude toward Israel."
In addition, Mr. Mekel said that "We are not aware that Desmond Tutu is
in Cairo, and we have not heard of this thing [the Mission, apparently
for a long time, the last time was about a year ago."
Normally, however, coordination would at least assure that IDF forces
who might carry out operations in Gaza during the period of the visit
would be aware that a UN Mission would also be there.
Both UN officials contacted today said they were “not sure” how the
coordination was being done.”
Presumably, the South African government would have made some kind of
representation on behalf of Archbishop Tutu, and perhaps the British
government might have done the same on behalf of Professor Chinkin.
The Fact-Finding Mission is meeting up today in Cairo, will be driving
to Rafah on Tuesday, and hopes to spend Tuesday and Wednesday and early
Thursday in Gaza, including a planned visit to meet survivors in Beit
Hanoun. They will be leaving for Cairo on Thursday and flying out from
Cairo on Friday.
Archbishop Tutu will formally report back to the Human Rights Council in
Geneva during its September session. He has previously denounced, in
speeches to the Human Rights Council, the foot-dragging by Israel on
approval for this Mission.
However, he is also expected to give a press conference during his time
in Gaza.
A great controversy arose out of remarks that Archbishop Tutu made to a
conference in the United States in 2007, after which he was accused of
anti-Semiitism. Following a detailed examination of a full transcript of
his remarks, Jewish groups then denounced the hasty condemnation of
Archbishop Tutu, and most of the effects were rescinded.
According to the transcript, what Archbishop Tutu said was: “My heart
aches. I say why are our memories so short? Have our Jewish sisters and
brothers forgotten the humiliation of wearing yellow arm bands with the
Star of David? Have my Jewish sisters and brothers forgotten the
collective punishment? The home demolitions? Have they forgotten their
own history so soon? And have they turned their back on their profound
noble and religious traditions? Have they forgotten that their God, our
God, is a God who sides with the poor, the despised, the down trodden?
That this is a moral universe? That they will never, they will never get
true security and safety from the barrel of a gun? That true peace can
ultimately be built only on justice and equity? We condemn the violence
of suicide bombers. And if Arab children are taught to hate Jews, we
condemn the corruption of young minds too. But we condemn equally
unequivocally the violence of military incursions and reprisals that
won’t let ambulances and medical personnel reach the injure; that wreak
an unparalleled revenge, totally imbalanced, even with the Torah’s law
of an eye for an eye – which was designed actually to restrict revenge
to the perpetrator and perhaps those supporting him”.
Israel has three options: to revert to the stalemate of the recent
status-quo bristling with tension, hatred and violence. Or, to
perpetuate genocide and exterminate all Palestinians. Or third – which
is what I hope they will chose – to strive for peace based on justice
based on withdrawal from all the occupied territory. And for the
Palestinians to be committed too and say so loud and clear at every
opportunity that they too are committed to such a peace. We in South
Africa had a situation where everyone thought we would be overwhelmed by
a blood bath. The blood bath did not happen. We had a relatively
peaceful transition. And, instead of revenge and retribution, we had a
remarkable process of forgiveness and reconciliation of the Truth and
Reconciliation Commission. If our madness, if our intractable problem
could have ended as it did, then we believe it must be possible
everywhere else in the world
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