War crimes and crimes against
humanity number among the most serious crimes. Responding to the
atrocities committed in the course of the second World War, the
international community set itself the objective of vigorously combating
such crimes. This ambition has found its expression in a number of
international treaties, notably under the aegis of the United Nations.
The request for the
extradition of Augusto Pinochet and the legal battles that ensued has
shown a heightened interest in bringing persons involved in grave crimes
to justice. The Pinochet case reaffirmed the principle that human rights
atrocities are subject to "universal jurisdiction" and can be
prosecuted anywhere in the world. Two rulings by the House of Lords found
that Pinochet was not immune from prosecution even though he was head of
state at the time the crimes were committed.
The Israeli candidate who
seems poised to win election as Israel's prime minister, Ariel Sharon, has
a personal history that is intertwined with war crimes and crimes against
humanity and peace. Cases such as against Yugoslavian former president
Slobodan Milosevic, the perpetrators of the Rwandan genocide, and others,
provide compelling precedents for ending the impunity that Ariel Sharon
has thus far enjoyed.
In the early 1950s, as
commander of the notorious Unit 101, he led secret attacks on Palestinian
villages in which women and children were killed. The massacre in the West
Bank village of Qibya, on October 14, 1953, was perhaps the most
notorious. His troops blew up 45 houses and 69 Palestinian civilians,
about half of them women and children, were killed. The U.S. State
Department issued a statement on 18 October 1953 expressing the conviction
that those responsible "should be brought to account and that
effective measures should be taken to prevent such incidents in the
future." This action also led to the United Nations Security Council
to adopt a resolution expressing "the strongest censure of that
action" and called upon Israel "to take effective measures to
prevent all such actions in the future."
In 1982, as defense minister,
he led Israel's aggression against Lebanon that killed 20,000 people.
Ariel Sharon's actions and failure to act facilitated the massacre of at
least seven hundred to eight hundred, and by some accounts as many as
3,000, Palestinian and Lebanese men, women and children in the Sabra and
Shatilla refugee camps in Beirut in September 1982.
Eighteen years later, on 28
September 2000, Ariel Sharon, appeared at the Haram as-Sharif in
Jerusalem, the third holiest site in Islam, surrounded by 1,000 Israeli
armed forces, setting off what has come to be known as the (Aqsa) Intifada.
The United Nations Security Council, unanimously deplored "the
provocation carried out...and the subsequent violence there." By a
vote of 14 to 0 the Security Council made it clear that it was Sharon's
desecration of the Haram al-Sharif, with the support of Israel's Prime
Minister Barak, that is responsible for the start of the current round of
bloodshed and warfare in the occupied Palestinian territories. Even the
United States did not go against that determination.
Soon after, the United Nations
Human Rights Commission sent a Special Rapporteur to investigate the
situation that has occurred and later adopted a resolution condemning
Israel for violating the Fourth Geneva Convention, its rights as a
belligerent occupant, and stating that Israeli policies constitutes
"a war crime and a crime against humanity." On 1 November 2000,
Amnesty International said that Israeli troops were using excessive force
in battles with Palestinians, and that violations of human rights during
recent weeks could constitute war crimes. Amnesty's Claudio Cordone said:
"There is a pattern of gross human rights violations that may well
amount to war crimes."
As Israelis prepare to vote
this week, the United States' newly formed Bush administration signaled it
would assume a restrained role in Middle East peacemaking no matter who is
elected. In the new administration's first two weeks, top officials have
approached the intractable conflict between Israeli and Palestinian
tersely and with reserve.
With this in mind, the
European Union now has to show how serious it can be. This concerns not
only in assuming a role in the Middle East diplomacy, but also how serious
the European Union considers international human rights as core values.
The European Union has stated a "commitment to human rights",
referring to the fact that human rights form an essential component of all
the Union's Association Agreements with third parties, including Israel.
Codified in article 2, commitment to human rights is an essentyial part of
the Union's agreement with Israel.
Judicial authorities in Israel
have never shouldered their legal responsibilities and thoroughly
investigated and prosecuted Ariel Sharon for the massacres and other
crimes he committed. The failure of the Israeli legal system to act
obligates the international community, in particular the European Union
since all its member states are High Contracting Parties of the Geneva
Conventions to hold Ariel Sharon accountable, irrespective of whether he
is a private citizen of Israel, a cabinet minister, or the head of
government.
In order to show a real
commitment towards the enforcement of human rights, the European Union
could impose sanctions against Israel as a means of exerting international
influence that is more powerful than diplomatic mediation but lying below
the threshold of military intervention. Sanctions are intended, by their
coercive pressure, to get those at whom they are directed to alter
behaviour that is breaking or endangering the peace. Bound up with this is
the desire to bring home to the target state the international community's
disapproval of its behaviour. Finally, the demonstration of international
law-enforcement which sanctions constitute is also intended to deter other
states from breaches of their duties under international law.
In 1998, the European Union
imposed sanctions to punish Yugoslavia for its crackdown on the Albanian
majority in Kosovo. The EU sanctions had been imposed separately to
embargos brought in by the U.S. and the International Monetary Fund, and
to a U.N. arms embargo. In October 2000, the EU partially lifted sanctions
as the Serbian parliament, a key element of Milosevic's power base, agreed
to hold early elections. The lifting of EU sanctions had previously been
linked to Milosevic's appearance at the U.N. war crimes court in The
Hague, to face charges relating to the treatment of ethnic Albanians in
Kosovo. The EU felt compelled to act, having promised to help the people
of Yugoslavia if they ousted Milosevic.
Ironically, Sharon has made it
crystal-clear to the world that there is a similarity and perhaps even
identity between Milosevic's attitude toward Kosovo and the attitude of
Sharon toward the Palestinians. While former Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu has announced his support for the NATO actions in
Kosovo, Sharon, Israel's foreign minister at that time, opposed any action
against the Serbs.
In February 2000, the European
Union froze bilateral relations with Austria when the far right populist
democratically elected Freedom Party, under the leadership of Joerg Haider,
was included in Austria's coalition government. Haider subsequently stood
down as leader of the party and after seven months, the EU lifted the
sanctions.
The European Union could take
similar steps when Sharon becomes the next Israeli prime minister. He was
a principal in the first degree to murder, war crimes, grave breaches of
the Fourth Geneva Convention, and crimes against humanity, causing the
death and injury of thousands of Palestinian and Lebanese civilians.
The terrible events that take
place in Palestine, involving the loss of lives of hundreds of Palestinian
men, women and children, raise important issues concerning the legal
responsibility of the political and military leaders of Israel. Human
rights are universal, indivisible, interdependent and interrelated. This
also applies to peace. Strict adherence, de facto and de jure, to
international human rights law and international humanitarian law is the
prerequisite for creating trust and strengthening security in the wider
sense.
However, until such time as
authoritative institutions enforce these rights and the European Union
recognises that its morality will be judged on its fulfillment of its
legal and moral obligations, morality will continue to be a limitation on
state action, difficult to define but impossible to ignore.
The author is a
Dutch-Palestinian political scientist, human rights activist and is affiliated
to the the Palestine Right to Return Coalition
(Al-Awda).
Source:
by courtesy & © 2001 Arjan El Fassed
by the same author: