There is a quiet revolution happening in human rights. Just ask Laurie King-Irani.
King-Irani is the North American coordinator of an international effort to
indict Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and other Israelis and Lebanese
for a massacre committed nearly two decades ago in Lebanon. Some of the
survivors filed a complaint last June in a Belgian court against the Israeli
leader.
The survivors allege that the September 16-18, 1982 massacre in Beirut’s
Sabra and Shatila refugee camps by Lebanese Phalangist fighters and the
Israeli military was planned, enabled and directed by Sharon, then Israel’s
defense minister and the commander of the Israeli Defense Forces. Israel
had invaded Lebanon on June 4, 1982 after an attack on an Israeli official
in London.
At the beginning of the onslaught against the refugees three months later,
Israeli forces sealed off and surrounded both camps. Those trapped inside
were defenseless Palestinian and Lebanese civilians.
Then, Israeli officials claimed that they were pursuing terrorists. Recently, Israeli officials made a similar claim before attacking the Jenin
refugee camp in the occupied West Bank, where evidence of another atrocity
by Israeli forces is emerging, according to the April 25 London Independent.
In 1982, Mrs. Sana Mahmoud Sersawi lived in the Sabra camp. According to
her statement in the complaint against Sharon: “The Israelis submitted the
young people to an interrogation, and the Phalangists delivered 200 people
to them. And that’s how neither my husband nor my sister’s husband ever
came back.”
Mrs. Amal Hussein is another plaintiff who survived but lost family members,
including her brother and two sisters. She stated that: “All of a sudden,
the armed Phalangists invaded the area. No one could leave the house. All
we could hear was the screaming of babies and women screaming. They started
killing people.”
The complaint against Sharon includes the crime of genocide, crimes against
humanity and war crimes (http://www.mallat.com/articles/comp.htm).
According to Chilbi Mallat, counsel for the plaintiffs, “In international
law, command responsibility—also known as indirect responsibility—is more
severe than the responsibility of those who actually do the killing.”
Such principles of universal justice were applied to German Nazi officials.
They crafted policies of genocide against Jews and others during World War
II.
Violations of civilians' human rights during armed conflicts or in
situations of military occupation are, by definition, crimes of war.
However, King-Irani noted that this principle of international justice has
not been equally enforced.
“Nobody has been punished or tried for these crimes in Lebanon,” said King-Irani during a recent speaking tour in Northern California. “This is
an indication that the public has little knowledge of this.”
In particular, the American people are under-informed about such history.
Their scant knowledge fits with the Israeli version of the past and present
echoed by compliant U.S. corporate news media, reliant on official sources
and dismissive of others.
Nevertheless, the case against Sharon is revolutionizing the world’s notion
of universal justice, said King-Irani. The plaintiffs in the Sharon
complaint are proof of that: regular people bringing charges of war crimes
against the head of a legal state.
By contrast, during the Cold War, nation-states were sole arbiters of international law, a process rarely exercised. But that was then.
Now, activists around the world are complementing the efforts of the Sharon
plaintiffs.
Peter Tatchell is a human rights activist who has sought the arrest of Henry
Kissinger, the former U.S. Secretary of State, for the "killing, injuring
and displacement" of 3 million people in Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam during
America’s Vietnam War, a violation of the Geneva Conventions Act 1957.
Activists have also been the driving force behind the indictment of Augusto
Pinochet, Chile's former leader who was indicted in Spain in Oct. 1998.
Pinochet led the U.S.-backed military overthrow of the nation’s
democratically elected President Salvador Allende in 1973, resulting in the
deaths of thousands, Chileans and Americans.
King-Irani said that a final pre-trial hearing in the complaint against Sharon is set for May 15, with lawyers for the plaintiffs making their final
arguments. By this July, the Belgian court will rule if the complaint can
proceed.
The legal immunity of the world’s tyrants is being tested by people who share a common belief in the virtue of human rights. The complaint against
Sharon is part of that silent revolution, indeed.
Seth Sandronsky is an editor with Because People Matter, Sacramentos progressive newspaper ssandron@hotmail.com
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