AMNESTY
INTERNATIONAL PRESS RELEASE
1 August
2001
Occupied Territories: Israel shows reckless disregard for human life By killing eight
Palestinians in Nablus, Israel showed once again an utter disregard for human life in the
Occupied Territories, Amnesty International said today. The Israeli Air Force killed
yesterday eight people, including two children and two journalists, and wounded 15 others,
including a human rights defender, as they shot two missiles from an Apache helicopter
against the Nablus-based Palestinian Centre for Information, run by a Hamas leader, Jamal
Mansur. Amnesty International reiterated its long-standing calls to Israel to end its
policy of liquidations and other arbitrary killings and urged the international community
to send international observers with a human rights remit to the area. The Israeli
authorities must have known and totally disregarded the fact that the media centre
targeted was likely to be frequented by journalists and others, said Amnesty
International.
"In these state assassinations the Israeli authorities offer no proof of guilt, no
right to defence. Extrajudicial executions are absolutely prohibited by international law.
The call for international observers has received worldwide support, including by the
European Union foreign ministers and US Secretary of State Colin Powell. Up to now it has
been blocked by the Israeli Government. The international community must no longer accept
any excuses or any delay in sending independent observers with a human rights mandate and
sufficient expertise, resources and powers to monitor, investigate and make public
reports, Amnesty International stressed.
On 30 July six Fatah activists, reportedly wanted by Israel, were killed by an explosion
in a shack near the West Bank village of Fara. The Palestinian Authority said they were
targeted by Israel; Israel said they died when their own bomb exploded. Independent
monitors with military expertise are vital to rule on the claims and counterclaims and
clarify the circumstances of each killing, said the human rights organization. Amnesty
International expressed grave concern at Hamas statements threatening that Israel would
pay a heavy price for the killings. Hamas attacks, including suicide bombs in public
places in Israel, have killed many civilians, including children. Whatever human rights
violations are committed by a government, nothing can justify attacks targeting civilians,
said Amnesty International. Nor can any killings by opposition groups justify this
shocking disregard for basic human rights principles by a government. Background The two
Hamas leaders targeted, Jamal Mansur and Jamal Salim, had both been held in administrative
detention by Israel. Jamal Mansur's case had been taken up again by Amnesty International
when he spent more than three years in detention without charge or trial under the
Palestinian Authority between 1997 and 2000.
A leader of the political wing of Hamas, he was a journalist and publicist. Ahmad Abu
Shallal, a human rights defender, critically injured and now in intensive care, works for
the International Solidarity organization, based in Washington. He works for political
detainees, both in Israel and in the areas administered by the Palestinian Authority. He
was reportedly visiting the office of the Palestinian Centre for Information in order to
collect material for a report he was writing for the London-based journal The Return
Review (al-Awdeh). Muhammad Beshawi and 'Uthman Qatanan were both journalists apparently
interviewing Jamal Mansur at the time of the attack. Two children, Ashraf Khader, aged
six, and Bilal Khader, aged 11, were killed as they played outside, while their mother
visited a clinic in the same building.
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