Published on Monday, May 4, 2009 by Agence
Spanish Judge to Probe
Public prosecutors made their recommendation last month on the grounds that the alleged crimes in question were already under investigation in
Lietenant General Dan Halutz, seen here, in 2006, was head of the airforce in 2002 and responsible for ordering a deadly strike on
The judge was responding to a complaint lodged with the court against seven Israeli officials, including former defence minister Benjamin Ben-Eliezer, by the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights over an air attack on July 22, 2002 on
The attack killed a suspected leader of the Islamist movement Hamas, Salah Shehadeh, along with 14 civilians, mainly children, and wounded some 150 Palestinians, according to the complaint.
Spain assumes the principle of universal jurisdiction in alleged cases of crimes against humanity, genocide, and terrorism.
In addition to Ben-Eliezer, the complaint names the then army chief of staff, General Moshe Yaalon, as well as the then head of the Israeli air force, General Dan Halutz.
It also names General Doron Almog, national security council head Giora Eiland, Michael Herzog, a defence ministry official, and Avi Dichter, director of the Shin Beth intelligence agency.
© 2009 AFP Published on Monday, May 4, 2009 by Inter Press Service
Environment Emerges as a Major Casualty in
by Erin Cunningham
A Palestinian wheels a cart loaded with bottles filled with water from a public tap in Khan Younis in the southern
Throughout the three-week Operation Cast Lead,
According to a preliminary assessment of environmental and infrastructural damage made by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Israel's assault not only exacerbated Gaza's existing hazards, but created new ones by contaminating both land and urban environments and leaving unprecedented amounts of debris in its wake.
The United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) announced last month it would send a team of post-conflict experts to the
Prior to the war,
Many areas of
A report released by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) just ten days before the launch of Operation Cast Lead stated that at least 80 percent of the water supplied in Gaza "does not meet the World Health Organisation standards for drinking.
"Much needed maintenance is impeded by a lack of pipes, spare parts and construction materials. The resulting degradation of the system is posing a major public health hazard," the report reads.
Restrictions on materials and goods left at least 70 percent of Gaza's agricultural land without irrigation, according to the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO), while local authorities were being forced to dump approximately 70 million litres of raw sewage into the sea each day. Fuel shortages made garbage collection infrequent at best.
During the assault, Israeli bombs hit the already fragile sewage and water treatment systems, causing drinking water and raw sewage to mix across some of the most populated areas of
Tank shells hit the strip's largest wastewater plant in the Sheikh Aljeen area of
Forty percent of the rooftop water tanks in Khan Younis were damaged or destroyed, and four water wells were destroyed completely in Gaza City, Beit Hanoun and Jabaliya, according to the Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) cluster group that works under OCHA.
"After the war, the major impact is being felt in the northern areas of
Ten million more litres of raw sewage is now being dumped into the Mediterranean Sea each day than was prior to the war,
Israeli missiles also targeted factories in urban-residential and rural areas, releasing potentially toxic chemicals into both the air and soil. The piles of rubble that continue to mark
"The demolition waste created by the latest hostilities potentially contain hazardous materials such as asbestos," a representative of the UNEP's Post- Conflict and Disaster Management branch told IPS on telephone from Geneva. "High levels of exposure to asbestos have been linked to lung cancer."
Over 20,000 buildings and 5,000 homes were destroyed, according to local authorities. Some 600,000 metric tonnes of rubble has yet to be cleared as a result of the siege, with much of the debris having been bulldozed into the soil by Israeli tanks.
Gaza's soil will also be affected in the long-term by Israel's use of white phosphorus shells throughout the war, says Sameera Rifai, representative of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.
"The soil of the agricultural land is now polluted by the weapons the Israelis used, particularly white phosphorus," Rifai told IPS.
White phosphorus, a chemical incendiary agent, can remain unchanged in soil sediments and in the bodies of fish for many years, according to the
Samples of
The war weakened even further the capability of municipalities to collect rubbish, says Palestinian environmental activist and researcher for Friends of the Earth
As long as the blockade is in place, however, and
"It is a continuous crisis, not just the one war, that is constantly preventing the Palestinians from developing sustainable projects," Shawa told IPS. "Mainly this includes a lack of access to materials, which prevents the water networks and sewage plants from being constructed."
"In the last two months, just two or three containers of water pipes were allowed into
Shawa also says the so-called "buffer zone"
"People just cannot access areas in the east and northern parts where most of the sewage plants are located," she says. "Municipal authorities are unable to reach areas to test the water or soil for sewage levels."
The UNEP says environmental stability is crucial to establishing long-term peace in any conflict.
"Significant progress in terms of the environment cannot be made as long as the borders remain closed," says Rifai.
"If we want to develop
(This story is part of a series of features on sustainable development by IPS - Inter Press Service, and IFEJ -- the International Federation of Environmental Journalists.)
Copyright © 2009 IPS-Inter Press Service
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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