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Without Distinction
Amnesty’s Legal Obscurantism
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By Azizuddin El-Kaissouni
Staff Writer – IslamOnline
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25/07/2002
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| Palestinian civilian deaths continue to rise. A scene from the recent attack on Gaza, July 23, 2002 |
Amnesty
International recently published a report that has been the subject
of much controversy in Arab and Islamic quarters. Entitled
“Without Distinction – Attacks on Civilians by Palestinian Armed
Groups,” the report cites several alleged violations of
international humanitarian law perpetrated by armed Palestinian
factions in the ongoing Intifada. While Amnesty has often been an
outspoken critic of Israel’s campaign in the Occupied Territories,
this report is the first of its kind in that it carefully documents
the “suicide-bombing” phenomenon, (the controversy surrounding
the term, for conveniences’ sake, will be disregarded throughout
this article) drawing on interviews with families of the victims and
leading figures in the Palestinian resistance, as well as public
statements made by the various Palestinian factions.
Criticism
of Palestinian suicide bombings is not new; indeed, one could be
forgiven for believing that the only crimes occurring in
Israel
and
Palestine
during the past few months are the killings of hapless Israeli
civilians by marauding bands of Palestinian fanatics. Disregarding
the obvious failings of international media coverage in the
Occupied
Territories
,
however, very little has been said about the phenomenon in terms of
international law.
The
credibility of Amnesty International’s reports is generally (with
few notable exceptions) beyond question; therefore, the facts, as
presented by the report, will be used as a basis throughout this
article.
Background
While
much of the legal reasoning contained within the report is
indisputable, a number of statements were made and rapidly glossed
over without pause, and without reflecting ongoing and crucial legal
debates over the constraints on the waging of war. It is these
lapses that prompted the writing of this article, in the hope of
briefly detailing some of the more controversial legal aspects of
the conflict.
To
begin, it is necessary to note, as does the report, that
Israel
is not a signatory of either of the Protocols Additional to the
Geneva Convention of 1977.1
These are the protocols that laid the foundation for much of what is
understood of the rights of protected persons (e.g. civilians,
prisoners of war, the sick and wounded) during times of war; be it
international, or non-international.
Palestine
is also not a signatory; their attempt to sign onto the Protocols
was diplomatically rebuffed by the Swiss
“due
to the uncertainty within the international community as to the
existence or non-existence of a State of Palestine.”2
However, the Palestinian Authority has expressed its intention to be
bound by Protocol I.
In
light of the fact that there has, as of yet, been no conclusive
evidence directly linking the Palestinian Authority to the acts of
violence perpetrated by Palestinian factions (Sharon’s
protestations notwithstanding), we will therefore focus on the
statements and actions of the Palestinian armed factions,
specifically Hamas, due to its preeminent role in the suicide
bombings.
While
there is some confusion as to the legal status of the various
Palestinian factions, it must be noted that international law allows
for the existence of national liberation movements. Amnesty
International notes that “The United Nations General Assembly has
recognized the legitimacy of the struggle of peoples against
colonial and alien domination or foreign occupation in the exercise
of their right to self-determination and independence.”3
While
the language in the resolution in question was relatively more
explicit (reference to “racist regimes,” among others), the
point remains that people under occupation have a right to use force
to attempt the expulsion of said occupation. Questions are therefore
raised as to the conduct of Hamas, as a national liberation
movement, and their adherence or lack thereof to the laws of war,
specifically with regard to the killing of Israeli civilians.
Legal
Obfuscation
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| Of the 15 civilian deaths of the recent Gaza attack, July 23, 2002, 12 were women and children |
That
the targeting of civilians is illegal as per the laws of armed
conflict is beyond doubt. This is crucial to the debate over the
legality of “suicide bombings” and whether they can be justified
as a form of “belligerent reprisal,” to which we will return
shortly.
Early
on in the report, Amnesty makes the statement that “Targeting
civilians and being reckless as to their fate are contrary to
fundamental principles of humanity which should apply in all
circumstances at all times. These principles are reflected in
international treaty law and in customary law.”4
The principles of customary law, it should be noted, would bind even
non-signatories, having been generally accepted as reflecting
universal norms. It also adds that “The obligation to protect
civilians is absolute and cannot be set aside because
Israel
has failed to respect its obligations.”5
The above statements
are used as a basis for many of the legal arguments subsequently put
forward by the author(s). However, the statements are, by their very
nature and their implicit reference to the 1977 Protocols Additional
to the Geneva Convention, highly debatable.
The
Rebuttal
The reference to “fundamental principles of
humanity” seems to be a reference to the Martens Clause, an
article in the Preamble to The Hague Convention of 1899 proposed by
the Russian delegate, which states that
Until a more complete code of the laws of war is
issued, the High Contracting Parties think it right to declare that
in cases not included in the Regulations adopted by them,
populations and belligerents remain under the protection and empire
of the principles of international law, as they result from the
usages established between civilized nations, from the laws of
humanity and the requirements of the public conscience.6
This is where the first of several problems arises.
Professor Kalshoven tells us “It should be pointed out that, in
spite of occasional suggestions to the contrary, the [Martens]
clause does not have the effect of elevating in particular the
‘principles of humanity’ and ‘dictates of the public
conscience’ to the rank of direct, independent sources of
international obligation…”7
In fact, the obligation to protect civilians is far from absolute, as
Amnesty International would hold, and is not as firmly entrenched in
international customary law as they would have the reader believe.
In fact, it remains subject to much debate, as
the
alleged right of reprisal against the civilian population or
civilian objects in unoccupied enemy territory has remained a highly
controversial issue even after the introduction of a series of
express prohibitions on recourse to such reprisals in the section of
Protocol I of 1977 devoted to the general protection of the civilian
population against the effects of hostilities.8
Contrast the above, from an acknowledged expert in the
field,9 with Amnesty International’s claim that “While
neither
Israel
and the Palestinian Authority are parties to
Additional Protocol I, its provisions regarding the protection of
the civilian population are regarded as norms of customary
international law.”10
Professor Kalshoven’s argument is further buttressed
by Professor Yoram Dinstein, President of the Tel Aviv University,
who adds that “The controversial strictures of Protocol I preclude
any chance of it achieving universal acceptance… the Protocol per
se… remains virtually irrelevant to any armed conflict in which
one or more of the belligerents is not a contracting state.”11 As stated above, neither belligerent is a contracting
state.
Additionally, with regards to the specific prohibitions
in the Protocol, “the negotiating history of Protocol I makes
abundantly clear the paragraph cannot with any degree of certainty
be said to reflect customary law…”12
Given the fact that the laws in question have not
acquired the status of customary international law (contrary to
Amnesty International’s assertions), it may therefore be concluded
that belligerents in this case are not explicitly bound by the
prohibition on subjecting a civilian population to reprisal attacks,
as delineated in the Protocols Additional to the Geneva Convention.
Belligerent Reprisals
It now behooves us to return to the aforementioned
concept of belligerent reprisals. Reprisals, according to
international law “are acts which are in themselves illegal and
have been adopted by one state in retaliation for the commission of
an earlier illegal act by another state.”13
A further clarification that serves our purpose is
provided by Professor Lagoni of the University of Hamburg, stating:
“A reprisal is by definition a countermeasure against a violation
of international law which in itself would be illegal if it were not
employed in order to compel the lawbreaking party to obey the law.
In short, it is an illegal means turned legal, because it serves a
legal end.”14
And crucially, reprisals “involving armed force may
be lawful if resorted to in conformity with the right of
self-defence.”15 In fact, the doctrine of “belligerent reprisals”
is “an
old rule of customary international law that provides that a nation
attacked by another state in a manner that is in violation of
international law has the right to suspend any international
commitments as between itself and the offending party.”16
The statement is, of course, subject to some qualification, as there
are some international commitments that are simply non-derogable by
definition, but it clarifies our point.
In demonstrating the sheer impracticability of
attempting to legally prohibit
belligerent reprisals against civilians, Professor Dinstein
helpfully cites the following example:
Take,
by way of illustration, the Protocol’s comprehensive prohibition
of attacks against civilians by way of reprisals (Article 51, para.
6). This injunction means that if
Contracting
State A commits atrocities against the civilian population of Contracting
State B, the latter is not allowed to retaliate in kind against the
civilian population of State A. But what do the framers of the
Protocol expect State B to do? Turn the other cheek? That is a
religious tenet rather than a serious military or political
proposition. Since the Protocol does not provide State B with any
practical alternative response, what is likely to happen is that
Article 51, para. 6 will remain a dead letter and —
notwithstanding the paragraphs’s lucid language — State B will
resort to belligerent reprisals against the civilians of State A.17
The
example is an apt one, given the situation at hand: a largely
unarmed civilian populace, facing a rising civilian death toll
inflicted by a powerful belligerent, in flagrant violation of
international humanitarian law.
Legal
Constraints
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| Sheikh Ahmad Yassin |
The
right of reprisal, however, is not unlimited. On the most basic
level, reprisals are governed by a set of fundamental legal
constraints. Specifically, belligerent reprisals can only be
construed as legal if the following conditions are met: “…
recourse only after due warning and as a last resort,
proportionality to the wrong retaliated against, termination as soon
as the cause no longer obtains.”18
It
is therefore necessary to determine whether suicide bombings, as a
form of belligerent reprisal, directed against Israelis meet the
above conditions before conclusions as to their legality or lack
thereof can be reached.
The
statements of the Palestinian armed factions constitute, at the very
least, a statement of intent to inflict reprisal attacks on the
Israelis. Specifically, the statement by Sheikh Ahmed Yassin of
Hamas, that Hamas is opposed to killing civilians,
except where it occurred due to “mistake or to implement an eye
for an eye, a nose for a nose.”19
Within the above context, let us examine a number of
statements by Amnesty International. First and foremost,
Sheikh Ahmed Yassin has told
Amnesty International that Hamas is willing to stop attacks
on Israeli civilians if
Israel
stops targeting Palestinian civilians. He has also
reportedly suggested an internationally sponsored agreement similar
to that between
Israel
and Hizbullah, in which the parties committed
themselves not to attack civilians.” Hamas official ‘Abd
al-’Aziz al-Rantisi has also described attacks on civilians as
reprisals, stating in May 2002 for example that “as long as Jews
continue to slaughter Palestinians we will hit
Haifa
,
Tel Aviv and Afula. If a Palestinian child is hit, we
will hit back, this is the formula.”20
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| ‘Abd al-’Aziz al-Rantisi of Hamas |
If the above is indeed factual, (and one finds no
reason to question the authenticity of the report), then it is clear
that, to Hamas, the suicide bombings against civilians are reprisal
attacks. Hamas has expressed a willingness to cease any and all such
attacks once
Israel
ceases killing Palestinian civilians. Hamas has thusly
expressed its commitment to respect the aforementioned principle,
“termination as soon as the cause no longer obtains.”
Let us therefore examine the aspect of proportionality. We will make no
reference to any events occurring after the issuance of the report,
allowing the date of publication (
July
11, 2002
)
to act as the critical stage. Therefore, the figures on hand,
according to Amnesty, are as follows:
Over
1400 Palestinians and nearly 500 Israelis – including more than
350 civilians – have been killed…21 [Italics added]
Given the above estimate, one could tentatively put forth the proposition
that 350 Israeli civilian deaths are well within the bounds of
“proportionality to the wrong retaliated against.”
As to due warning, the media is rife with examples of
repeated and insistent warnings from spokesmen of the armed
factions, directed to the Israeli military, along with threats that
reprisals will be inflicted if Palestinian civilians continue to
die.The statement by ‘Abd al-’Aziz al-Rantisi quoted above
could be construed as due warning. Another example is provided by
Khaled Meshaal, also of Hamas: “Every time
Sharon
commits a
massacre, the response will come in Jerusalem,
in
Haifa
and throughout
the territory
of Palestine.”22
The Last Resort?
And while it might be construed as a partially subjective question, one
would have a hard time convincing observers that suicide bombings
are not a last resort, given the simple fact that, by definition,
they take the life of the perpetrator,
and logic dictates that organizations and movements do not
needlessly whittle down their own ranks.
Furthermore,
suicide bombings suffer from a not insignificant rate of failure,
due to the very real risks of capture, premature detonation, and
more often than not, inefficiency due to the bomb’s crude
construction. Those factors alone would suggest that the potential
risks and costs of suicide bombings outweigh the potential benefits.
It stands to reason that, had the armed factions had recourse to a
method of fighting Israel
that did not entail a steady attrition rate of their own numbers,
the groups in question would make use of them, rather then send out
numerically-limited members to die.
The
more cynical would in fact note that suicide bombings are the only
resort, given the relative military balance of power between the
stone-throwing children and the gun-toting “militants” on the
one hand, and the Israeli arsenal of Apache gunboats, F-16 fighter
jets and Merkava tanks on the other. Even rifles are rendered
useless in the face of the Israeli military’s body-armor.
One
may therefore reasonably conclude that at the very least, a number
of the suicide bombings may be deemed to have been legitimate
without the framework of belligerent reprisals.
In
conclusion, Amnesty’s report displayed an either disappointingly
shallow or pointedly vague analysis of the applicable humanitarian
law. The issue is one that deserved much more careful attention,
particularly from a prominent agency such as Amnesty International.
While many have come to expect excessive bias in the media towards
the conflict, it is a troubling portent that such bias could spill
over so blatantly into an Amnesty International report.
The
author encourages your comments. Please e-mail him at azizuddin@islam-online.net
1-
Geneva
Conventions of
12 August 1949
and Additional Protocols of
8 June 1977
: Ratifications, Accessions and
Successions; List of States Party to the Conventions and
Protocols. International
Committee of the Red Cross.
2-
Ibid; Notes. International
Committee of the Red Cross.
3-
Amnesty
International.
Israel
and the Occupied Territories and the Palestinian Authority:
Without Distinction –
Attacks on Civilians by Palestinian Armed Groups. July 2002. 5
p.
4-
Ibid., 2.
5-
Ibid., 5.
6-
Ticehurst, Rupert. The
Martens Clause and the Laws of Armed Conflict. International
Review of the Red Cross 317 (1997): 125-134. (online)
7-
Frits Kalshoven, “Prohibitions or Restrictions on the Use of
Methods and Means of Warfare,” in The Gulf War of
1980-1988: The Iran-Iraq War in International Legal Perspective,
ed. Ige F. Dekker and H.H.G. Post (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff
Publishers, 1992), 100.
8-
Ibid., 105.
9-
Rainer Lagoni, “Comments: Methods or Means of Warfare,
Belligerent Reprisals, and the Principle of Proportionality,”
in The Gulf War of 1980-1988: The Iran-Iraq War in
International Legal Perspective, ed. Ige F. Dekker
and H.H.G. Post (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1992),
121.
10-
Amnesty International. Israel
and the Occupied Territories and the Palestinian Authority:
Without Distinction –
Attacks on Civilians by Palestinian Armed Groups. July 2002. P
22.
11-
Dinstein, Yoram. Comments
on Protocol I. International Review of the Red Cross
320 (1997): 515-519.
12-
Frits Kalshoven, “Prohibitions or Restrictions on the Use of
Methods and Means of Warfare,” in The Gulf War of
1980-1988: The Iran-Iraq War in International Legal Perspective,
ed. Ige F. Dekker and H.H.G. Post (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff
Publishers, 1992), 105.
13-
Shaw, Malcom N. (1997). International Law. Cambridge:
Cambridge
University
Press. P 786.
14-
Rainer Lagoni, “Comments: Methods or Means of Warfare,
Belligerent Reprisals, and the Principle of Proportionality,”
in The Gulf War of 1980-1988: The Iran-Iraq War in
International Legal Perspective, ed. Ige F. Dekker
and H.H.G. Post (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1992),
121.
15-
Shaw, Malcom N. (1997). International Law.
Cambridge:
Cambridge
University
Press. P 786.
16-
Graham, Thomas, Jr. Deterrence and Assurance Strategy: NATO
Nuclear Weapon Use Policy. Project
Ploughshares.
17-
Dinstein, Yoram. Comments
on Protocol I. International Review of the Red Cross
320 (1997): 515-519.
18-
Frits Kalshoven, “Prohibitions or Restrictions on the Use of
Methods and Means of Warfare,” in The Gulf War of
1980-1988: The Iran-Iraq War in International Legal Perspective,
ed. Ige F. Dekker and H.H.G. Post (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff
Publishers, 1992), 105.
19-
Amnesty International.
Israel and the Occupied Territories and the Palestinian Authority:
Without Distinction –
Attacks on Civilians by Palestinian Armed Groups. July 2002. P
13.
20-
Ibid., P 13.
21-
Ibid., P 4.
22-
BBC News, “Hamas Vows Revenge for Deaths,”December
14, 2001.
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