Arachnid wrote:It's enough to drive a guy mad I tells yah, mad!
Yeah no, I invented sanity.
Moderator: Referees
Arachnid wrote:It's enough to drive a guy mad I tells yah, mad!
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/03/world ... d=all&_r=0
When Fadel Shalouf’s family went to pick up his body at the morgue the day after he was executed on a busy Gaza street corner, they found his hands still cuffed behind his back. Hamas, the militant faction that rules Gaza, did not provide a van to carry the body to burial, so the family laid him on two of his relative’s laps in the back of a sedan.
It was an undignified end to a short, shrouded life. Mr. Shalouf, his family insisted, was an illiterate fisherman with a knack for designing kites when he was arrested at 19 by Gaza’s internal security service. Yet he was convicted in a Hamas court in January 2011 of providing Israel with information that led to the 2006 assassination of Abu Attaya, commander of the Popular Resistance Committees.
During last month’s intense eight-day battle with Israel, the military wing of the Hamas government brutally and publicly put an end to Mr. Shalouf, 24, and six other suspected collaborators. The vigilante-style killings by masked gunmen — with one body dragged through a Gaza City neighborhood by motorcycle and another left for crowds to gawk over in a traffic circle — highlighted the pathetic plight of collaborators, pawns preyed on by both sides in the long-running Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
“Fadel lived poor and died poor,” said his cousin Ahmed Shalouf, 28. “They left the bodies for a few hours in the streets, people spitting on them, throwing stones. They did not execute only Fadel. They executed all of us.”
The Qassam Brigades, Hamas’s military arm, claimed responsibility for the killings.
In an interview four days after his death, Mr. Shalouf’s relatives said he had been abducted on Jan. 10, 2008, on his way to the sea in pursuit of sardines, sea bass and crabs. His father, Mussalam Shalouf, said he was summoned by the internal security service nine days later, and found Fadel, one of his 10 children, with broken fingers and burns from melted hoses having been dripped onto his skin, complaining that he had been hung from the ceiling by his ankles during interrogations.
Ahmed Shalouf, the cousin, said that far from aiding the enemy, Fadel had once helped the resistance by shuttling four fighters into Egyptian waters, violating Israel’s naval blockade on Gaza’s coast. He offered a photograph of Fadel on crutches around the time of the Abu Attaya killing as proof he was not involved.
“How can there be a collaborator who doesn’t have more than a SIM card? He can’t even write his name on the mobile,” Ahmed Shalouf said.
“If he was a collaborator, he would have built at least a room,” the cousin added, showing the former greenhouse strewed with debris where, he said, Fadel slept on a crude platform. “He would have bought a car. He would have bought clothes.”
“It’s like we are in a shed of cows, waiting their turn for slaughtering,” the elder Mr. Shalouf said. “After what happened with my sons, I hate all the people; I even hate myself.”
Mr. Shalouf’s mother stayed in the house, five simple rooms off a concrete courtyard adorned with a poster of Yasir Arafat. She was the last to visit him in prison, four days before the airstrikes began raining down; next time, he had asked, bring peanut stew.
The men could not bear to tell her of the handcuffed execution in the streets, so they said the prison had been hit by an Israeli bomb. “Like he’s a martyr,” her husband explained.

Strangelove wrote:Mr. Shalouf’s mother stayed in the house, five simple rooms off a concrete courtyard adorned with a poster of Yasir Arafat.
Nice folk those Hamas, yeah let's give them their own country, I mean it's not like they're anti-human-rights blood-thirsty savages who are bent on destroying the sovereign state next door, it's not like they've ever supported the bombing of school-buses and cafes amirite?
Strangelove wrote:Hey Per, Israel finally announces plans to encroach upon the taboo E1 territory.
I notice they are receiving a darn good finger-wagging for dat-dere from the civilized world.
I don't notice many cries of "war crime" from the civilized world however.![]()
PEACE
The last para. of Article 49 of the Geneva Civilian Convention states: “The Occupying Power shall not … transfer parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies.” Further, “unlawful deportation or transfer” is listed in Article 147 as a “grave breach” of the Convention. Article 148 adds: “No High Contracting Party shall be allowed to absolve itself or any other … of any liability incurred by itself or by another High Contracting Party in respect of breaches refered to in the preceeding article.”
), which Israel has signed, but not ratified.Article 8(2)(b)(viii) of the Rome Statute prohibits “[t]he transfer, directly or indirectly, by the Occupying Power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies.” There are some difficult interpretive issues involved in the war crime, particularly concerning whether the settlers themselves violate the provision by settling in occupied territory. But the idea that (many of) the settlements constitute war crimes is anything but frivolous. Indeed, scholars agree that the inclusion of that part of Article 8(2)(b)(viii) in the Rome Statute was one of the primary reasons Israel refused (and still refuses) to ratify the treaty.
The breach in question might indeed amount to a grave breach.
Israel is of course not bound by the Rome Statute. However, the Rome State can be considered in many aspects as codifying customary law, which in turn is binding on Israel and the whole of the international community. Whether this specific provision of the Rome Statute is indeed codification of custom is open to debate.
Per wrote:ukcanuck wrote:
Besides what would you call building settlements and encouraging immigration into occupied territory ?
A gross violation of the Geneva convention and a war crime.
Strangelove wrote:Per it's been nice to watch you back off from your original stance in this thread which was:Per wrote:ukcanuck wrote:Besides what would you call building settlements and encouraging immigration into occupied territory ?
A gross violation of the Geneva convention and a war crime.
You've gone from "gross violation" to "violation" and from "war crime" to "illegal". :thumbs:
As I said earlier, civilized folk tend to reserve the former terms for such things as executing POWs and targeting civilians.
Per wrote:So, basically, to sum it up;
1) violation of Geneva Convention? - check
2) war crime as defined by the Rome Statute? – check
3) Is Israel bound by the Rome Statute - open to debate
They are, however, bound by the Geneva convention, which is of course why Israeli courts on a fairly regular basis declare settlements illegal.
Strangelove wrote:Still the West Bank situation is a murky area international-law-wise due to the unusual fact these territories were not previously a legal part of a sovereign nation. The West bank was previously OCCUPIED by the nation of Jordan for 20 years (1948 - 67). If one views Israel's occupation of the West Bank illegal today, then one must also view Jordan's previous occupation as illegal.
Israel was not looking to take the West Bank from Jordan back in the day. As a matter of fact, Israel begged Jordan to stay out of the Six Day War, but Jordan obliged her arab neighbors and attacked West Jerusalem. The result was that Israel won the war and took control of the West Bank. Now what?? Give it back to Jordan? I don't think so! Let the "palestinians" govern themselves? No, the PLO was in control of the "palestinians" at the time and they were a terrorist group AT THE TIME. The PLO was bent on the destruction of Israel.
Art. 33. No protected person may be punished for an offence he or she has not personally committed. Collective penalties and likewise all measures of intimidation or of terrorism are prohibited.
…
Reprisals against protected persons and their property are prohibited.
eg: http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-E ... -West-BankArt. 49. Individual or mass forcible transfers, as well as deportations of protected persons from occupied territory to the territory of the Occupying Power or to that of any other country, occupied or not, are prohibited, regardless of their motive.
…
The Occupying Power shall not deport or transfer parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies.
Art. 53. Any destruction by the Occupying Power of real or personal property belonging individually or collectively to private persons, or to the State, or to other public authorities, or to social or cooperative organizations, is prohibited, except where such destruction is rendered absolutely necessary by military operations.
Strangelove wrote:Give a terrorist group their own nation and that nation is automatically a "rogue nation" amirite?
Strangelove wrote:As for Gaza, she's not occupied (no settlements) and Israel would gladly give her back to Egypt if Egypt would take her....
Per wrote:Strangelove wrote:Per it's been nice to watch you back off from your original stance in this thread which was:
"A gross violation of the Geneva convention and a war crime."
You've gone from "gross violation" to "violation" and from "war crime" to "illegal". :thumbs:
Let’s not muddy the waters, shall we? Did you even read my last post?![]()
*quotes previous post*
... I still maintain that it checks out as a war crime.
Per wrote:Strangelove wrote:Still the West Bank situation is a murky area international-law-wise due to the unusual fact these territories were not previously a legal part of a sovereign nation. The West bank was previously OCCUPIED by the nation of Jordan for 20 years (1948 - 67). If one views Israel's occupation of the West Bank illegal today, then one must also view Jordan's previous occupation as illegal.
Israel was not looking to take the West Bank from Jordan back in the day. As a matter of fact, Israel begged Jordan to stay out of the Six Day War, but Jordan obliged her arab neighbors and attacked West Jerusalem. The result was that Israel won the war and took control of the West Bank. Now what?? Give it back to Jordan? I don't think so! Let the "palestinians" govern themselves? No, the PLO was in control of the "palestinians" at the time and they were a terrorist group AT THE TIME. The PLO was bent on the destruction of Israel.
Let’s not muddy the waters, shall we?
Who claimed that an occupation is illegal?![]()
Per wrote:Some have suggested that Gaza is neither autonomous nor occupied, but rather a gigantic prison camp.
rats19 wrote:Doc can argue good
rats19 wrote:Doc can argue good

Strangelove wrote:.
HEIL BETTMAN!!!
EDIT: sorry, I thought you said Der Fuhrer!![]()
EDIT: I mean...... noooooo....
Strangelove wrote:rats19 wrote:Doc can argue good
This? This isn't an argument!

Strangelove wrote:rats19 wrote:Doc can argue good
This? This isn't an argument!
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