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54676


Date: June 11, 2024 at 12:12:56
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Like Sri Lanka did, Israel has turned ‘safe zones’ into killing fields

URL: https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2024/6/11/like-sri-lanka-once-did-israel-has-turned-safe-zones-into-killing-fields


Smoke rises from an Israeli airstrike in Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, Friday,
May 31, 2024 AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana]

Like Sri Lanka once did, Israel has turned ‘safe zones’ into killing fields

But there is one important difference between the two cases: The genocide
in Gaza is not taking place in the dark.

By Neve Gordon and Nicola Perugini
Published On 11 Jun 2024

While our eyes were on Rafah’s “Block 2371” – the small area in south Gaza
which the Israeli military designated as a “safe humanitarian zone” on May 22
but went on to bomb just four days later, massacring at least 45 civilians
sheltering in tents – we were reminded of a 15-year-old confidential cable
intercepted by WikiLeaks describing the plight of civilians in the final days of
the Sri Lankan civil war.

Dispatched in May 2009 from the United States embassy in Colombo to the
US Department of State in Washington, DC, the cable recounts how the
bishop of Mannar had called to ask the embassy to intervene on behalf of
seven Catholic priests caught in a so-called “No Fire Zone” which had been
set up as a safe space by the Sri Lankan military.

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The bishop estimated that there were still 60,000 to 75,000 civilians
confined within that particular zone, located on a small sliver of coastal land
about twice the size of Manhattan’s Central Park. Following the bishop’s
phone call, the US ambassador spoke with Sri Lanka’s foreign minister,
asking him to alert the military that most of the people remaining in the “No
Fire Zone” were civilian. He was, it seems, afraid that due to intense artillery
shelling the coastal strip had become a death trap.

Not unlike the Israeli military’s efforts to push Palestinian civilians from across
the Gaza Strip into the so-called “safe humanitarian zone” in Rafah, at one
point, the Sri Lankan military had urged the civilian population to gather in
areas it designated as “No Fire Zones” by dropping leaflets from planes and
making announcements on loudspeakers.

As an estimated 330,000 internally displaced people assembled in these
zones, the United Nations erected makeshift camps and, together with
several humanitarian organisations, began to provide food and medical
assistance to the desperate population.

The Tamil Tigers, the armed group fighting the Sri Lankan military, however,
also appeared to have retreated into these “No Fire Zones”. The fighters had
prepared in advance a complex network of bunkers and fortifications in these
areas and went on to mount their final stand against the military there.

While the Sri Lankan military claimed that it was engaged in “humanitarian
operations” aimed at “liberating the civilians”, an analysis of satellite images
as well as numerous testimonies reveal that the military continuously
pounded the enclosed “No Fire Zones” with mortar and artillery fire,
transforming these designated safe spaces into killing fields.

Anywhere between 10,000 to 40,000 caged-in civilians perished in the so-
called safe zones while thousands and thousands more were severely injured
often laying for hours and days on the ground without receiving medical
attention because virtually every hospital – whether permanent or makeshift
– had been hit by artillery.

The parallels between Sri Lanka 2009 and Gaza 2024 are uncanny.

In both cases, the military displaced hundreds of thousands of civilians,
instructing them to gather in “safe zones” where they would not be harmed.

In both cases, the militaries proceeded to bomb the designated “safe zones,”
indiscriminately killing and injuring a large number of civilians.

In both cases, the militaries also bombed medical units responsible for saving
the lives of the civilians.

In both cases, military spokespeople justified the strikes, admitting that they
had bombed the safe zones, but claiming that the Tamil Tigers and Hamas
were responsible for the civilian deaths since they had hidden among the
civilian population, using them as shields.

In both cases, Western countries criticised the killing of innocents, but
continued supplying the militaries with weapons. In Sri Lanka’s case, Israel
was among the main suppliers of weapons.

In both cases, the UN claimed that the warring parties were carrying out war
crimes and crimes against humanity.

In both cases, the governments mobilised a cadre of experts who used legal
acrobatics to justify the massacres. Their interpretation of the rules of
engagement and of the application of fundamental concepts of international
humanitarian law including distinction, proportionality, necessity and the very
notions of safe zones and warnings were put in the service of eliminatory
violence.

But there is also one important difference between the two cases.

The genocide in Gaza is not taking place in the dark.

Whereas in Sri Lanka it took time to gather evidence of violations and carry
out independent investigations, the global attention on Gaza – and the live-
streamed images of beheaded babies and charcoaled bodies in “Block 2371”
– can prevent the repetition of the Sri Lankan horror.

Media outlets have already shown how the “safe area” south of Wadi Gaza
has been pummelled by 2,000-pound bombs, killing thousands of
Palestinians.

The International Criminal Court (ICC) has collected evidence and is now
seeking arrest warrants against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
and Defence Minister Yoav Galant for their alleged war crimes and crimes
against humanity.

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) has observed Israel’s deployment of
relentless violence against civilians and ordered the government to
“immediately halt” its offensive in Rafah, specifying that its actions have not
been sufficient “to alleviate the immense risk [including the risk of not being
protected by the Genocide Convention] to which the Palestinian population is
exposed as a result of the military offensive in Rafah”.

Israel responded to the ruling of the highest court of the land by continuing
its bombing of safe zones. The Block 2371 massacre came only 48 hours
after the ICJ order. Less than a fortnight later, another Israeli air attack on a
UN-run school in the Nuseirat camp, which had also been designated as a
“safe zone”, killed at least 40 people, mainly women and children. On June 9,
an Israeli operation to free four Israeli captives at the same camp claimed the
lives of 274 Palestinians and injured hundreds of others.

All eyes are on Rafah, and the rest of the devastated Gaza Strip, yet Israel is
undeterred, carrying out its crimes under the limelight, while the US, the
United Kingdom, France and Germany continue to supply it with weapons.

The ICJ and ICC have had their say, as have South Africa, Spain, Ireland,
Slovenia and Norway. The university encampments and the global solidarity
movement are calling on their governments to apply an arms embargo and
demand a ceasefire as they witness how Israel has transformed the safe
zones it has created into killing fields.

Like in other situations of extreme colonial violence, Israel’s acceleration of
its extermination practices in Gaza and its clumsy attempt to portray it as
abiding by the law are symptoms of the twilight of its dispossession project.
Former colonial powers like the UK, France and Germany should know that.
The US should know that. All eyes are on Gaza. All eyes are on them, too.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not
necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.


Neve Gordon is Professor of International Law at Queen Mary University of
London. He is also the author of Israel's Occupation and co-author of The
Human Right to Dominate.

Nicola Perugini
Senior Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Edinburgh
Nicola Perugini is Senior Lecturer in International Relations at the University
of Edinburgh. He is the co-author of The Human Right to Dominate (OUP
2015) and Human Shields. A History of People in the Line of Fire (2020).


Responses:
[54678] [54685]


54678


Date: June 11, 2024 at 13:09:10
From: mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Like Sri Lanka did, ????? Israel has turned ‘safe zones’ into



Wow. Sri Lanka. Stretching much?

Not the more recent Chinese/Uighars, or even
Russia/Ukrainian war, Darfur?.

Don't have to wonder which side you are on.

Do bots have sides?






Responses:
[54685]


54685


Date: June 11, 2024 at 18:34:26
From: chaskuchar@stcharlesmo, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Like Sri Lanka did, ????? Israel has turned ‘safe zones’ into


satan has his finger in all pots.


Responses:
None


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