BoniO wrote: ↑Tue Dec 12, 2023 1:46 pm
Dunners wrote: ↑Tue Dec 12, 2023 12:44 pm
ComeOnYouOs wrote: ↑Tue Dec 12, 2023 11:34 am
EDIT: I have researched this, and it appears White Phosporus isnt banned, as I thought, so its quite alright now, for Israel to continue to reign it down on Palestinian civilians
If this is true then it's terrible and needs to be condemned and consequences felt. Can you confirm the source for Israel using it on Palestinian
civilians?
Well they appear to be using it on Lebanese civilians so it doesn’t seem unreasonable to think they’re using it on Palestinians as well.
https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/ ... s%20spread
Thanks. That article is dated 31 October, and it states (with my edits):
"
The Israeli army fired artillery shells containing white phosphorus... in military operations... between 10 and 16 October 2023... One attack... on 16 October must be investigated as a war crime because it was an indiscriminate attack that injured at least nine civilians and damaged civilian objects, and was therefore unlawful..."
The scarring caused by White Phosphorous is distinctive. It's proper horrible stuff. I cannot seem to find anything independent published since this Amnesty article that corroborates that nine civilians were confirmed with these injuries. I can find a few online articles, but they all seems to be just regurgitating the Amnesty article (i.e. The Washington Post one).
We're almost two months on now from the alleged incident, so I'd have expected there to be something as it would be quite a big deal. Even if you go full-on Zionist-conspiracy loon and claim that the mainstream media wouldn't dare cover it, there's plenty of media outlets around the world that would be only too eager to pounce on it.
The article is also a tad contradictory. In one breath it states "
in military operations" and in another "
an indiscriminate attack". Which is it, as it cannot be both? It's entirely possible that civilians were injured in a military operation (collateral damage). I'm not defending that but,
if that is the case, then I could foresee that being used as justification for how the alleged incident was still compliant with international law.
Amnesty can call for the incident to be investigated as a war crime. That's fair enough. But the article then goes on to state that whatever happened "
was therefore unlawful". It's not for Amnesty to determine whether or not something is unlawful as that require the investigation (which they themselves have called for) to have been carried out and a determination issued by an appropriate international court (which Amnesty is not). Making statements like this without due process just undermines their credibility.
This is the thing with Amnesty. They cannot be completely relied upon. I still recall when they blamed Ukraine for using weapons to defend its own populated areas. This whole situation is bad enough without unconfirmed reports becoming fact, as uncorroborated or misleading information could even end up being used to cast doubt over more legitimate claims.