The death of justice [Rachel Corrie]
By JAMAL KANJ
Thursday, September 06, 2012
http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=337297
LAST week an Israeli court ruled the state of Israel was not
at fault for the death of US activist Rachel Corrie, who was crushed to death
by an Israeli military bulldozer on March 16, 2003.
The 23-year-old college student from Olympia, Washington,
was killed as she stood with a bullhorn over an earth mound in a bright orange vest,
attempting to stop a US-made D9 Caterpillar from demolishing a Palestinian home
in the border town of Rafah, Gaza.
Within days, Prime Minister Areil Sharon promised then US
president George W Bush a "through, credible and transparent"
investigation into her death.
Thirty days later, the military issued a summary report,
exonerating the army and ordering the case closed.
Meeting her parents, US Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro
slammed the investigation for not being "thorough, credible and transparent".
In 2010, the case was reopened after Corrie's parents filed
a lawsuit demanding a symbolic $1 and court fees.
The family spent more than $200,000 on legal fees hoping to
get justice and peace for her soul.
But in his 62-page ruling, Israeli judge Oded Gershon blamed
Corrie for being "in a dangerous situation" and allegedly not moving
away "as any reasonable person would have done".
Human Rights Watch condemned the verdict, accusing Israel of
using the court system to "legally" absolve the army of its
"obligations to spare civilians from harm... and to credibly investigate
and punish violations by its forces".
During a Press conference, Corrie's mother attributed the
ruling to a "well-heeled" judicial system designed to protect
soldiers. The family's lawyer said "impunity has prevailed over
accountability".
In fact, there have been umpteen documented cases were the
army has deliberately lied or covered up the rogue killing of innocent
civilians by active military personnel.
In one case, 11-year-old Khalil Al Mughrabi was shot dead in
2001 as he was playing football in Rafah.
Israeli Human Rights organisation B'Tselem filed a
complaint, demanding a formal inquiry. The army's investigation concluded that
the soldier who killed the boy had acted with "restraint and control"
during riots in the area.
However, the army's judge advocate's office made a mistake
releasing inadvertently, along with the response to the human rights
organisation, an internal "confidential investigation" revealing that
there were no riots when Al Mughrabi was killed.
The verdict in the Corrie case is not surprising.
In other similar incidents, internal army investigators
reached the same conclusion such as in the killing of British UN worker Iain
Hook, British film-maker James Miller and photographer Tom Hurndall.
Even worse is the case of an Israeli army officer who in
2004 emptied 17 bullets into the body of Iman Al Hums, a 13-year-old
Palestinian girl.
The judge found him blameless and paid him more than $20,000
in compensation and legal fees even after the officer asserted in court he
would have done the same even if she was three years old.
This is Israel, using its legal system shamelessly to
legitimise military criminal acts.
Absolving the army in the killing of Corrie was just another
outward manifestation of a nation infatuated with protecting the guardians of
the professed Zionist ideals, not human justice.
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