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Politics : WAR on Terror. Will it engulf the Entire Middle East? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Thomas M. who wrote (2622)4/15/2002 5:31:53 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
Amid the ruins of Jenin, the grisly evidence of a war crime

Phil Reeves in Jenin
Independent.co.uk
16 April 2002

A monstrous war crime that Israel has tried to cover up for a fortnight has finally been exposed. Its troops have caused devastation in the centre of the Jenin refugee camp, reached yesterday by The Independent, where thousands of people are still living amid the ruins.

A residential area roughly 160,000 square yards about a third of a mile wide has been reduced to dust. Rubble has been shovelled by bulldozers into 30ft piles. The sweet and ghastly reek of rotting human bodies is everywhere, evidence that it is a human tomb. The people, who spent days hiding in basements crowded into single rooms as the rockets pounded in, say there are hundreds of corpses, entombed beneath the dust, under a field of debris, criss-crossed with tank and bulldozer treadmarks.

In one nearby half-wrecked building, gutted by fire, lies the fly-blown corpse of a man covered by a tartan rug. In another we found the remains of 23-year-old Ashraf Abu Hejar beneath the ruins of a fire-blackened room that collapsed on him after being hit by a rocket. His head is shrunken and blackened. In a third, five long-dead men lay under blankets.

A quiet. sad-looking young man called Kamal Anis led us across the wasteland, littered now with detritus of what were once households, foam rubber, torn clothes, shoes, tin cans, children's toys. He suddenly stopped. This was a mass grave, he said, pointing.

We stared at a mound of debris. Here, he said, he saw the Israeli soldiers pile 30 bodies beneath a half-wrecked house. When the pile was complete, they bulldozed the building, bringing its ruins down on the corpses. Then they flattened the area with a tank. We could not see the bodies. But we could smell them.

A few days ago, we might not have believed Kamal Anis. But the descriptions given by the many other refugees who escaped from Jenin camp were understated, not, as many feared and Israel encouraged us to believe, exaggerations. Their stories had not prepared me for what I saw yesterday. I believe them now.

Until two weeks ago, there were several hundred tightly-packed homes in this neighbourhood called Hanat al-Hawashim. They no longer exist.

Around the central ruins, there are many hundreds of half-wrecked homes. Much of the camp – once home to 15,000 Palestinian refugees from the 1948 war – is falling down. Every wall is speckled and torn with bullet holes and shrapnel, testimony of the awesome, random firepower of Cobra and Apache helicopters that hovered over the camp.

Building after building has been torn apart, their contents of cheap fake furnishings, mattresses, white plastic chairs spewed out into the road. Every other building bears the giant, charred, impact mark of a helicopter missile. Last night there were still many families and weeping children still living amid the ruins, cut off from the humanitarian aid. Ominously, we found no wounded, although there was a report of a man being rescued from beneath ruins only an hour before we arrived.

Those who did not flee the camp, or not detained by the army, have spent the bombardment in basements, enduring day after day of terror. Some were forced into rooms by the soldiers, who smashed their way into houses through the walls. The UN says half of the camp's 15,000 residents were under 18. As the evening hush fell over these killing fields, we could suddenly hear the children chattering. The mosques, once so noisy at prayer time, were silent.

Israel was still trying to conceal these scenes yesterday. It had refused entry to Red Cross ambulances for nearly a week, in violation of the Geneva Convention. Yesterday it continued to try to keep us out.

Jenin, in the northern end of the occupied West Bank, remained "a closed military zone", was ringed Merkava tanks, army Jeep patrols, and armoured personnel carriers. Reporters caught trying to get in were escorted out. A day earlier the Israeli armed forces took in a few selected journalists to see sanitised parts of the camp. We simply walked across the fields, flitted through an olive orchard overlooked by two Israeli tanks, and into the camp itself.

We were led in by hands gesturing at windows. Hidden, whispering people directed us through narrow alleys they thought were clear. When there were soldiers about, a finger would raise in warning, or a hand waved us back. We were welcomed by people desperate to tell what had occurred. They spoke of executions, and bulldozers wrecking homes with people inside. "This is mass murder committed by Ariel Sharon," Jamel Saleh, 43, said. "We feel more hate for Israel now than ever. Look at this boy." He placed his hand on the tousled head of a little boy, Mohammed, the eight-year-old son of a friend. "He saw all this evil. He will remember it all." So will everyone else who saw the horror of Jenin refugee camp. Palestinians who entered the camp yesterday were almost speechless.

Rajib Ahmed, from the Palestinian Energy Authority, came to try to repair the power lines. He was trembling with fury and shock. "This is mass murder. I have come here to help but I have found nothing but devastation. Just look for yourself." All had the same message: tell the world.

news.independent.co.uk

________________

Maybe Sharon and his Defense Minister would like to be baracaded and held hostage (like Arafat) until we figure out what really happened in Jenin...The truth will come out one way or another.



To: Thomas M. who wrote (2622)4/15/2002 6:54:55 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 32591
 
Israel arrests most wanted man in suicide campaign

By Justin Huggler in Jerusalem
Independent.co.uk
16 April 2002

Israeli soldiers captured one of the most significant leaders of the Palestinian intifada yesterday. Marwan Barghouti, a close aide of Yasser Arafat and one of Israel's most wanted men, was detained at a house in Ramallah.

Mr Barghouti is the head of Mr Arafat's Fatah organisation in the West Bank, and is believed to be behind several shooting attacks on Israelis and suicide bombings.

It has long been thought the Israeli authorities wanted to assassinate Mr Barghouti. An Israeli missile attack on his convoy narrowly missed him in August last year and recently he has been in hiding. Yesterday he appeared to have been taken into custody unharmed from the house of a Fatah official, Ziad Abu Ain, who was also picked up in Ramallah.

Raanan Gissin, a spokesman for the Israeli Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon, confirmed the detention of Mr Barghouti along with his aide and relative Ahmed Barghouti. The Israeli army said a force of infantry, armour and elite commandos surrounded the house and ordered those inside to come out. After most of the occupants left, the commandos went in and arrested Mr Barghouti. Israel Radio claimed Mr Barghouti initially told the soldiers in Hebrew: "I know you've come for me." But he refused to come out.

Jibril Rajoub, the Palestinian security chief in the West Bank, warned Israel yesterday not to harm Mr Barghouti. "Killing him or humiliating him will bring catastrophes for Israel and will expand the circle of violence," he said. Mr Barghouti once said: "I hope they don't assassinate me because I would be sorry for the tens of Israelis who will be killed in reaction to that."

This man of war, who some consider to be a symbol of Palestine resistance to occupation, was once one of the leading Palestinian exponents of peace with Israel and a key figure in winning Palestinian support for the Oslo accords.

In the past he was seen by the Israeli left wing as a Palestinian to do business with. At one time, some Israelis were even talking of him as an alternative to Yasser Arafat. He has spoken out against the dismal human rights record of Mr Arafat's Palestinian Authority, and attacked the way it is riddled with corruption. But being set up as an alternative leader to the 74-year-old Mr Arafat is an idea Mr Barghouti, 41, has avoided, in public at least.

Mr Barghouti speaks fluent Hebrew, a legacy of six years in Israeli prisons. He became involved in Middle Eastern politics as a student, later becoming a militant. He is one of few figures from the original Palestinian intifada who survived as political players, after Mr Arafat moved in his cronies from his days in exile in Tunis.

Mr Barghouti spent the first intifada in his own exile, in Jordan, but was heavily involved in organising Palestinian resistance. He pushed hard for the dialogue with Israel that led to the Oslo accords but has said he believes the peace process died with Yitzhak Rabin, the Israeli prime minister who was assassinated for the deal he made with the Palestinians.

He was present when Ariel Sharon made his ill-omened visit to the al-Aqsa mosque, which ignited the present intifada, and quickly rose to become one of the most public leaders of the uprising. Israel has accused him of inciting violence against them and of having blood on his hands.

He had spoken dismissively of Israel's onslaught on the West Bank. "Sharon has no plan," he said. "He just pulled out his last card: he entered and recaptured the Palestinian cities. And what happened? Did the tanks in Bethlehem stop the attacks in French Hill? Did the tanks in Nablus stop the attackers in Hadera? We have decided Sharon will not bring you security, and we have succeeded. It's been 274 days since he was elected, and what has happened? Is there security?"

Mr Barghouti's power base lies not so much in his relation with Mr Arafat's elite as in his popular grassroots support. That means his threats of what may happen if he were to be assassinated may not be idle. Israel will welcome his capture to divert the world's attention from the horror of Jenin now being uncovered. What remains to be seen is what Israel intends to do with a man many Israelis once regarded as a partner for peace, but who has become one of the faces of war.

news.independent.co.uk