3- number of residents in the Strip at the end of 2007 was approximately 1,416,543 million and with an annual growth rate of 3.3% is
expected to be 1,463,289 at the end 2008
According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics ‘Central Census of Population, Housing and Establishments 2007,’ the
4- attacks during Operation Cast Lead ends.
This figure reflects the results of initial documentation. It is expected to rise as the full documentation of the casualties of Israeli
5-Israeli operation codenamed ‘Cast Lead’
Al Mezan is currently preparing a comprehensive survey of human and material loses caused to Gaza’s population during the
5-Israeli actions during its offensive against the Gaza Strip constitute grave and systematic
violations of the rules of international humanitarian law (IHL) and disregard for its obligations
towards Palestinian civilians as an occupying power, according to the Fourth Geneva
Convention. The application of this Convention to the Gaza Strip, which is part of the occupied
Palestinian territories, has been affirmed by an advisory opinion of the International Court of
Justice, the conferences of the High Contracting Parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention and
periodic United Nations reports related to human rights in the oPt.
6-Israeli military operations conducted during Operation Cast Lead, relied on the use of massive
and disproportionate force. Israeli forces failed to distinguish between civilian and non-civilian
objects in their attacks. The targeting of civilians and civilian property, and the killing of
hundreds inside their houses, was systematic and deliberate, in a clear violation of two basic
principles of IHL; particularly the principle of distinction and the principle of proportionality.
The IOF destroyed large parts of Gaza’s infrastructure including: electricity networks, potable
water networks; sewage and sanitation networks; and schools (including those used by
UNWRA as emergency accommodation for IDPs during the offensive). Israeli forces also
targeted UNWRA warehouses located in its Middle East headquarters, media offices and
journalists.
The deliberate targeting of ambulance crews and medical teams is perhaps the most horrifying
of these crimes. The IOF deliberately opened fire on these humanitarian workers, obstructed
their work, and destroyed their premises and equipment, including ambulances. As a result, 17
emergency workers were killed while on duty, 50 were injured and hundreds of injured people
died as a result of Israel’s refusal to allow medical personnel access to the wounded. Medical
teams were targeted as they were attempting to evacuate the wounded and the sick. In
addition, local residents attempting to administer first aid to their injured neighbors were fired
at.
The images of Israeli brutality against the people of the Gaza Strip were transported around
the world, leading to widespread popular condemnation, but silence from many states around
the world. Statements by international officials including the High Commissioner for Human
Rights, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights situation in the oPt, and the General
Secretary of the United Nations have called for investigations into the perpetration of war
crimes, including the deliberate targeting of medical teams and the obstruction of treatment of
the wounded.
Palestinian health institutions were already facing major challenges beyond their capacities
during the Israeli invasion. Al Mezan Center for Human Rights pays tribute to the exceptional
performance and dedication of both governmental and non-governmental medical
organizations. Ambulance and emergency teams, medical teams, civil defense teams, and
hospital emergency departments remained on a state of permanent alert, working around the
clock to deal with the immensity of the humanitarian crisis created by the Israeli military
machine.
In spite of the humanitarian nature of their work and their protected status under IHL – and
especially the Fourth Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection of Civilians in Times of
War and the Additional Protocol to the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 and relating to the
Protection of Victims of International Armed Conflict (Protocol I)- humanitarian personnel were
6-Occupied Palestinian Territory:
Duggard, former Special Rapporteur on human rights in the occupied Palestinian territories and his successor Richard Falk, on
the website of the Office for the High Commission for Human Rights
See the advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice on the Legality Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in thehttp://www.icj-cij.org/docket/files/131/1671.pdf . See also the reports and statements of John:www.ohchr.org
6 injured and killed in the line of duty. Hospitals, medical centers, ambulances, emergency
teams and civil defense teams were also attacked by Israeli forces.
This report documents grave violations that were perpetrated against ambulance and medical
teams by Israeli forces during the military offensive on Gaza and calls on the international
community to take immediate and effective action to bring those responsible for perpetrating
war crimes to justice and to prevent further abuses.
7-HumanitarianLaw
The West Bank (including East Jerusalem) and the Gaza Strip constitute the occupied
Palestinian territories. According to international law and the Oslo Agreements signed between
Israel and the PLO (Palestine Liberation Organization), these lands constitute one political
entity. The legal status of the Gaza Strip did not alter subsequent to the implementation of
Israel’s unilateral disengagement plan in 2005 which involved the dismantling of Israeli
settlements and the withdrawal of Israeli forces from inside the Strip. Not only do the West
Bank and the Gaza Strip constitute one geo-political entity, but despite the disengagement
plan, Israeli forces retain effective control over the Gaza Strip. They control all crossings to the
outside world, the movement of people in and out of the Strip, air and sea space, the civil
registry and the nearly all other aspects of life for Palestinians. Further, the United Nations
Security Council did not note a change in the legal status of the Gaza Strip following
disengagement. Therefore, the ‘law of occupation,’ including the Fourth Geneva Convention
1949 (ratified by Israel) constitutes the legal framework for all Israeli actions inside the Gaza
Strip and determines the duties of Israel towards Gaza’s civilian population.
The Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time
of War affords special attention and care to the state of health in an occupied region and with
the situation of the sick and injured in particular. This Convention accords special protection to
operations to transport injured and sick civilians. The Convention also attempted to organize
medical care services and the work of hospitals as illustrated in the following articles: 15, 16,
17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 38 and 63. The Protocol Additional to the Fourth Geneva Conventions of 12
August 1949 and relating to the Protection of Victims of International Armed Conflicts (Protocol
I), 8 June 1977, expands the detail of protection accorded to civilians and determines the
situations in which these legal rules apply. These situations include armed conflicts in which
peoples are fighting against colonial domination and alien occupation and against racist
regimes in the exercise of the right of self determination, as enshrined in the United Nations
Charter and the Declaration on Principles of International Law concerning Friendly Relations
and Co-operation among States in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations.
8-Article 16 of the Fourth Geneva Convention states: ‘The wounded and sick, as well as the
infirm, and expectant mothers, shall be the object of particular protection and respect. As far
as military considerations allow, each Party to the conflict shall facilitate the steps taken to
search for the killed and wounded…’ Article 17 states that ‘The Parties to the conflict shall
endeavor to conclude local agreements for the removal from besieged or encircled areas, of
wounded, sick, infirm, and aged persons, children and maternity cases, and for the passage of
ministers of all religions, medical personnel and medical equipment on their way to such
areas.’ The Convention emphasizes in the first paragraph of Article 18 that ‘Civilian hospitals
organized to give care to the wounded and sick, the infirm and maternity cases, may in no
circumstances be the object of attack, but shall at all times be respected and protected by the
Parties to the conflict.” Article 19 states “The protection to which civilian hospitals are entitled
shall not cease unless they are used to commit, outside their humanitarian duties, acts harmful
to the enemy. Protection may, however, cease only after due warning has been given, naming,
in all appropriate cases, a reasonable time limit, and after such warning has remained
unheeded. The fact that sick or wounded members of the armed forces are nursed in these
9-Victims of International Armed Conflicts (Protocol I), 8 June 1977.
See Article 4 in the Protocol Additional to Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, and relating to the Protection of
The Israeli military offensive against the Gaza Strip – lasting for 23 days – created a
catastrophic humanitarian disaster. It was also a time in which the resilience of the local
population came to the fore. In spite of the death and destruction all around them, the
Palestinians in Gaza struggled to maintain life sustaining services. In the face of grave danger
and continued attacks on civilian infrastructure, Palestinian workers continued to operate
electricity networks, water and sanitation systems and communications systems. Hospitals,
medical services and civil defense teams continued to function and fulfill their humanitarian
duties even under direct fire to which they were not spared despite their status as protected
persons under international humanitarian law. These humanitarian groups were targeted by
the IOF on numerous occasions during the offensive and a number were injured or killed as a
result. In addition, hospitals, clinics, medical equipment and emergency services’ vehicles
were damaged or totally destroyed.
During the air and ground offensive against Gaza, IOF killed 23 emergency workers – medics,
firefighters and sea rescue workers – working in Palestinian medical institutions and the civil
defense, 17 of whom were on duty at the time.
9 Further, 50 emergency workers were injured.
Medical, Emergency and Civil Defense Services in the Gaza Strip
There are five main institutions which provide medical, emergency or civil defense services in
the Gaza Strip:
The Ministry of Health (MoH)
The Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS)
The military medical services
The Civil Defense
All of these services, without exception, came under fire by the Israeli forces during their
offensive against the Gaza Strip. The following section presents human and material losses
inflicted on this sector during the offensive.
Civil Society (non-governmental) medical organizations
3.1. The Palestinian Ministry of Health
The Israeli offensive on the Gaza Strip put the Palestinian Ministry of Health to a formidable
test as to the preparedness of its hospitals and medical personnel to deal with the immense
impact of such intense attacks. Not only were medical institutions faced with a scarcity of
equipment and insufficient personnel, but they were directly targeted by Israeli military forces,
especially the ministry’s ambulance and emergency teams.
and emergency teams were fired upon and shelled on a number of occasions. Three
individuals from ambulance and emergency teams were injured whilst on the line of
duty and eight ambulances were partly damaged by Israeli forces.
Ministry of Health ambulance
Based on Al Mezan field research
2009.
Interview with Hani Al Ja’farawi, Director of the Ambulance Department in the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Gaza, 24 January
3.2 Civil Defense
The Civil Defense is one of the services run by the Palestinian Ministry of Interior. The Civil
Defense responds to fires and undertakes sea rescues and rescues following accidents and
disasters. Israeli forces inflicted severe damage on the Civil Defense which sustained heavy
human and material losses including damage to its vehicles, equipment and premises.
Israeli forces killed 13 people from the civil defense during the offensive, ten of whom
were killed in the line of duty whilst undertaking humanitarian work. The remaining
three were killed off duty by Israeli shelling. Twenty-five individuals were injured, 17
seriously.
Al-Balah district (Az-Zahra Town Center, Deir Al-Balah Center and Al-Bureij Center); one in
Khan Younis district (Abasaan Center) and one in Gaza district (The Sea Rescue Center by
the Fisherman’s port West of Gaza City). Four vehicles were destroyed: two fire engines, a
rescue car and an ambulance. Initial estimated losses of the Civil Defense are USD $2.5
million.
TheIn terms of material losses, five civil defense buildings were damaged: three in Deir
3.3 The Palestinian Red Crescent Society
The Palestinian Red Crescent Society provides medical services at all levels. It runs Al- Quds
Hospital, and a number of health centers and ambulance and emergency centers. The PRCS
is officially assigned to provide ambulance services for Palestinian hospitals according to an
agreement between the PRCS and the MoH. The PRCS was heavily targeted by Israeli forces.
During the Israeli offensive, five ambulance and emergency personnel were injured and heavy
material losses were sustained. Israeli forces damaged 14 of its ambulances, including which
were totally destroyed, and two administrative vehicles. Serious damage was inflicted on the
following PRCS premises:
building, comprised of five floors, was bombed and as a result set on fire and burned
entirely. This included administrative offices, a music venue, a theatre, a nursery and a
kindergarten.
The administrative building in Tel Al-Hawa neighborhood, southwest of Gaza City: This
The floor housing the restaurant and breaks room was entirely burned, along with a
part of the medical treatment department, a heritage exhibit, a fitness room, the mental
health office, and the center for PRCS community volunteers.
The cultural building in Tel Al-Hawa: The Israeli forces partly damaged this building.
The warehouse in Tel Al-Hawa: This was totally destroyed.
damage on the ambulance and emergency building in Gaza City in addition to the
ambulance and emergency premises, a carpentry workshop, an aluminum workshop
for the maintenance of facilities and PRCS furniture.
The ambulance and emergency building in Tel Al-Hawa: The IOF inflicted heavy
accommodation section of Al-Quds Hospital in Tel Al-Hawa after leaving it to burn from
shelling. Israeli forces also inflicted partial damage to the hospital pharmacy after
shelling it directly.
Al-Quds Hospital in Tel Al-Hawa: Israeli forces fully destroyed the doctors’
mosque was shelled.
The PRCS Khalil Al-Wazeer Mosque Clinic: This clinic was partly damaged when th
27 January 2009.
Source: Dr Mohammed al Ataar, Director of Ambulance and Emergency for the Civil Defense Apparatus in the Gaza Strip 24 –
Palestinian Red Crescent Society 25 January 2009.
Interview with Mohammed Abu Mesbeh, Volunteers Director and Coordinator of the Disaster Management Unit in the
Initial estimates for material damage inflicted on the Palestinian Red Crescent during the
Israeli invasion are around USD $15 million.
Al Quds Hospital Following the Shelling by Tank and White Phosphorus Shells
3.4 Military Medical Service
The military medical services are run by the Palestinian Ministry of Interior of the Government
in Gaza. Its primary function is to provide health services to the Ministry’s security forces.
Personnel, premises and vehicles of this apparatus were subjected to Israeli attacks during the
military offensive. Nine individuals were killed, and five injured. All of them died on the line of
duty. In addition, four ambulances run by the medical military services were damaged.
3.5 Civil Society (Non-Governmental) Health Organizations
Civil health organizations make a significant contribution to the provision of primary health care
in the Gaza Strip. A number of organizations, such as the Union of Health Work Committees,
which runs Al-Awda Hospital in the north of the Gaza Strip, also provide secondary health
care. This section briefly presents damage sustained by civil organizations working in the field
of healthcare, during the Israeli military offensive against the Gaza Strip.
a. Al-Awda Hospital Run by the Union of Health Work Committees
Al-Awda Hospital played a major role in dealing with large numbers of wounded people during
the Israeli military offensive. Its ambulances evacuated injured and sick people located in
areas which were being invaded and shelled. The hospital and its ambulance teams were fired
upon by IOF on numerous occasions during the offensive. Arafah Abdul-Dayim, a 32-year-old
medic volunteering at Al Awda Hospital and the PRCS was killed on 4 January 2009 when the
ambulance he was working in came under direct shelling by Israeli tanks. A further five
ambulance drivers and medics from Al Awda Hospital were injured whilst trying to evacuate
January 2009.
Meeting with Dr Abd Al Qadir Al Arbeed, Director of Military Medical Services in the Gaza Strip, the wounded and retrieve the bodies of victims. Two of the hospital’s ambulances were partly damaged and the car park of the Al Awda Hospital was bombed by IOF targeting a civil police car parked there. The shelling shattered the windows of the hospital, injuring those working there and terrifying the patients
b. The Union of Health Care Committees
Israeli war aircraft directly shelled the Union of Health Care Committees clinic located west of
Gaza City. This clinic was a healthcare center primarily serving the residents of Beach
Refugee Camp. The building also housed administrative offices. Further, the shelling damaged
three mobile clinics (ambulances equipped as field clinics).
c. Al-Wafa Hospital for Medical Rehabilitation and Special Injuries
This hospital is the only hospital which provides rehabilitation for complex cases including
severe disabilities which require long-term hospital stays. This hospital, which is located northeast
of Gaza City, was directly and deliberately shelled. Despite communications between the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the hospital administration in which the
ICRC affirmed that the hospital and its buildings would not be fired at by the IOF, the shelling
hit overnight rooms directly, from which patients had been evacuated from to another safer
location in the hospital a few hours before the shelling. The hospital also sustained serious
damanage to its equipment and buildings as a result of later repeated shelling.
Injured women brought to Shifa hospital by truck as a result of obstruction of ambulances, many
of which were fired at and destroyed during the Israeli offensive.
Health Work Committees, 27 January 2009
Meeting with Marwan Abu Naser, Administrative Director of the Al Awda Hospital of the Union of
According to field research conducted by Al Mezan
4.CoordinationtoEvacuatetheSickandWounded,and
RetrievetheBodiesofVictims
“The shooting went on for around five minutes…So I reversed in the ambulance
and we all withdrew together from the area…. I found out later that the person we
were trying to retrieve was found dead a few days later. Medical teams were not
able to reach him until the Israeli forces had with -drawn….. I heard that the
family of the victim had been ordered to leave the house by the Israeli army and
that the victim had been alive when they left.”
Amer Mohammed Khalil Matar, Ministry of Health ambulance driver
In Article 17, the Fourth Geneva Convention states that, “The Parties to the conflict shall
endeavour to conclude local agreements for the removal from besieged or encircled areas, of
wounded, sick, infirm, and aged persons, children and maternity cases, and for the passage of
ministers of all religions, medical personnel and medical equipment on their way to such
areas.”
These agreements were not respected during the Israeli offensive against the Gaza Strip.
Coordination for the evacuation of the injured and sick was limited to mechanisms utilized
between the Coordination and Liaison Department in the Palestinian Ministry of Health and
Israeli authorities in ordinary times. The ICRC also assisted by coordinating with Israeli
officials in areas of active hostilities.
Coordination mechanisms during the Israeli invasion:
presence of injured or sick people, or the bodies of victims in a particular place.
The Palestinian Department of Coordination and Liaison is informed about the
Israeli authorities to allow relevant medical teams to reach the place of the incident
The Palestinian Department of Coordination and Liaison submits a request to the
was not received for over 24 hours.
The Israeli authorities reject or approve the request. On many occasions the response
about the presence of injured or sick people, or the bodies of casualties in a particular
area and requested that medical teams go to that place.
On some occasions, the Israeli Liaison authorities informed Palestinian counterparts16
Coordination was extremely slow. Often, it took long periods of time of up to one day to secure
coordination, regardless of the urgency of the incident, and the killing and injuring of large
numbers of people on an hourly basis. As a result, many injured and sick people died, or
suffered a serious deterioration in their condition as a result of continuous bleeding. For
example, Israeli delays in coordinating the evacuation of injured members of the Shurab family
led to the death of two of them. Three members of this family had been injured after they had
been shot at by Israeli forces while on route to their home east of Khan Younis City on 16
January 2009. The father, 64-years-old Mohammed Shurab was with his two sons – 28-yearsold
Kasab and 18-year-old Ibrahim. Ibrahim was wounded in the leg and left to bleed from
12.30 in the afternoon of the day he was injured to 10.00 the following morning. Kasab died
shortly after being shot in the chest. The Israeli forces refused to coordinate to allow the entr
Health, 27 January 2009
Meeting with Rafat Muheisin, Director of Coordination and Liaison in the Palestinian Ministry
of ambulances into the area arguing that the fighting in the area which would expose them to
danger.
Al Mezan field investigations and the director of Coordination and Liaison at the Palestinian
Ministry of Health confirmed that medical teams were obstructed from their work, and fired at
despite having secured coordinated to go to a specific place and evacuate injured or sick
people, or the bodies of victims. Israeli forces justified themselves to the relevant authorities by
arguing that coordination in the field is difficult under conditions of fighting and hostilities.
Testimony 1: Ambulance teams with prior coordination
Name: Kayed Abd al Hadi Abd al Qadir abu Owkal
Position: Ambulance driver
I work as an ambulance driver at the Ministry of Health. Since the beginning of the
Israeli military campaign against the Gaza Strip, known as Operation Cast Lead, I was
stationed at Kamal Udwan Hospital located in Beit Lahiya to rescue and evacuate the
people killed and injured. At around 14.30 on the afternoon of Wednesday 7 January
2009, I went in the ambulance by myself to Beit Hanoun (Erez) crossing with prior
coordination. A message reached me from Rafat Muheisin, head of coordination at the
Ministry of Health who received coordination instructions with the necessity of my
attendance in the area of the crossing (Erez) at 15.00 to receive a body from the
Israelis at the crossing itself. I went to the place. But, when I arrived by ambulance at
Al Jamarek area, which is around 1000 meters away from the crossing, I noticed there
was a large bulldozer in the area and that there were high mounds of sandy earth
preventing the ambulance from reaching the crossing. So I called the coordination
official in the Ministry of Health and told him what I had seen. He told me to wait in the
area until he informed me of new instructions. At around 18.00 in the evening of the
same day, the Israeli liaison officer called me and spoke to me in Arabic. He told me
that the ambulance could not reach the crossing and that I had to walk slowly towards
the crossing until I reached it from the northern direction. So I did. I walked until I
arrived at the area of the crossing where the Liaison and Coordination Office for Civil
Affairs is, known as 5/5. The office was empty and I saw the Israeli military vehicles
spreading out east and west from far away. I stopped there. The Israeli officer called
me through the wireless system and said to me: “stay there and don’t move until we
give you the body.” After ten minutes I saw an old man pulling a cart with a body on it
with the help of two Arab porters who work at the crossing. So I said to the officer that
they had arrived. He said to me, “you may take the body.” So I carried the victim’s
body on my shoulders and I began to return towards the ambulance. By chance I saw
some carts for carrying bags by the side of the road. So I put the body of the victim on
it. The porters returned and the old man accompanied me. While walking with the
body towards the ambulance, the old man who was accompanying me told me that
the victim was Ahmed Jaber Abu Huweij, from At-Tuffah area east of Gaza and that
he was a child of 8-years-old, and that the old man accompanying him was his uncle.
He told me that the child was hit by Israeli shelling in the At-Tuffah area a few days
17 Ibid
18 strongly condemns the abandoning of injured people to suffer alone and unable to reach the hospital and the obstruction of
ambulances and health care professionals from reaching them. Some injured people died because ambulances were not given
the necessary permission to reach them in time. We appeal to all parties in the conflict, and especially Israel, to lift restrictions on
medical teams so they can save life. We reaffirms that international humanitarian law applies to all relevant parties and imposes a
duty to move the injured, care for them and evacuate them without delay or distinction. See ICRC:
See joint ICRC and Red Crescent Statement on the Crisis in Gaza (13 January 2009). Al Mezan Center for Human Rights
I NEVER HEARD OF THIS SO WHAT YOU ARE SAYING MR RACIST NO ONE SAY WE HATE JEWISH WE HATE ZIONIST BECAUSE THEY ARE NAZI’S. SO WHAT YOU ARE SAYING. DID GOOD TOLD YOU HE HATE MUSLIMS MR RACIST.
SHAME ON YOU AND ON ALL RACIST LIKE YOU.
SAM
2 thoughts on “REPORT: ZIO=NAZI WAR CRIME'S IN GAZA”
Allah loves the Jews and hates Muslims!
I NEVER HEARD OF THIS SO WHAT YOU ARE SAYING MR RACIST NO ONE SAY WE HATE JEWISH WE HATE ZIONIST BECAUSE THEY ARE NAZI’S. SO WHAT YOU ARE SAYING. DID GOOD TOLD YOU HE HATE MUSLIMS MR RACIST.
SHAME ON YOU AND ON ALL RACIST LIKE YOU.
SAM