THE HANDSTAND |
LATE AUTUMN2008
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And so it
continues: 26 years after the massacre
Laurie King, The Electronic Intifada, 17 September
2008
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Shatila camp, Beirut, 20
September 1982. (UNRWA/Beirut) |
This week marks the 26th anniversary of the Sabra and
Shatila massacre, one of the bloodiest events of the
second half of the twentieth century. A Google search for
recent news reports on this year's commemoration of the
atrocity, however, brought up very little. Yes, there
were some emotional blog posts, as well as a link to the
BBC's "On this Day" page, featuring quick facts
and figures about the massacre, alongside an archival,
and iconic, photograph of twisted corpses lying in a heap
next to a cinderblock wall, the victims of an execution-style
killing.
It has been more than a quarter of a century since more
than 1,000 unarmed men, women, and children were raped,
maimed and slaughtered. The massacre occurred at the
dividing point of the 1975-1990 Lebanese war. Some might
say that the killings were the marker or the catalyst of
the war's horrible turning point. Before the Israeli
invasion of Lebanon and siege of Beirut in the summer of
1982, the Lebanese civil war had taken many lives and
introduced new images and phrases into the Arabic and
English languages. The Lebanese war involved many players
and funders, not all of them local. But with the entry of
the Israeli army and air force, Lebanon witnessed more
death and destruction in three months than it had
suffered during the previous seven years. Sabra and
Shatila, a Palestinian refugee camp on the outskirts of
Beirut, marked the site of the Israeli-Palestinian and
the internal Lebanese conflicts' intersection. The front
lines of these conflicts slashed through the refugee
camps for three dark days and three eerily bright nights
illuminated by flares that the surrounding Israeli army
fired over the camps to assist their Lebanese client
militia, the Phalange, in their gruesome tasks.
This is the fifth year since the Belgian cour de
cassation, the nation's highest court, ruled that
Israeli and Lebanese individuals who bore "command
responsibility" for the massacres could be tried,
under the principle of universal jurisdiction, for war
crimes and crimes against humanity in Belgium.
Palestinian and Lebanese survivors of the massacre had
filed a case against the Israeli invasion architects,
Generals Ariel Sharon and Amos Yaron, as well as Phalange
militia commander Elie Hobeika, among others, in the
Belgian courts in June 2001. [1]
The legal case made headlines and stirred controversy. It
also gave the survivors a new role and identity on the
world stage: engaged actors, not just passive victims
subjected to the ancient calculus of war, aptly described
by Thucydides: "In war, the strong do as they will,
and the weak suffer as they must." Retelling the
nightmarish events of the massacre was trying. Taking the
risk of lodging a legal complaint against very powerful
and influential people was brave. Placing faith in
international justice and universal human rights was
noble, inspiring -- and ultimately naive.
In the summer of 2003, former United States Secretary of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld gave the Belgian government an
ultimatum: either they rescind their universal
jurisdiction law (termed the "anti-atrocity law"
in Belgium), or the US would see to it that NATO
headquarters was moved elsewhere. Rumsfeld was keen to
protect US military personnel and political leaders from
future prosecution for war crimes in Iraq. There is no
statute of limitations on war crimes, and since universal
jurisdiction holds that it is not just the right, but
also the duty, of every state to bring war criminals to
justice, regardless of their nationality, any state that
attempted to put "teeth" into the principles of
international humanitarian law clearly had to be brought
back into line.
It is no exaggeration to say that the death of Belgium's
universal jurisdiction law was another massacre, this
time of ideals, hopes and principles. By removing a venue
for the pursuit of truth, accountability and justice, the
US administration (which, it must be noted, enjoyed the
tacit and not-so-tacit support of other states fearful of
being brought to account for past or current crimes)
ended a promising chapter in the history of international
justice as practice, not just theory.
The legal proceedings in Belgium brought press coverage
and international expressions of solidarity and empathy
to Sabra and Shatila -- no small feat in the immediate
aftermath of the 11 September 2001 attacks when Arabs,
Muslims and Palestinians were being demonized as subhuman
evil-doers unworthy of basic legal protection. Perhaps
legal activism on behalf of the victims and their
surviving families also spurred new responses to the
massacres and their meaning in the camp itself. The mass
grave site, for years an unkempt area that served as both
a garbage dump and a soccer field, was cleaned up and
planted with trees and roses.
Survivors-turned-plaintiffs had a chance to experience a
sense of dignity and agency on the world stage. Lawyers
and activists who worked on the case had a valuable
opportunity to talk to audiences large and small
throughout the world about the importance of
international law and accountability for, and perhaps
prevention of, heinous crimes.
The guilty got nervous; some of them, like Elie Hobeika
and his former associate, the Phalangist leader Michael
Nassar, got assassinated. The ultimate planner of the
massacres, former Israeli general and then-Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon, had to retain legal counsel in Belgium.
Legal proceedings in Belgium would have decisively
ascertained who was personally responsible for the
massacres. One result of the compilation of the
testimonies and legal arguments was the discovery of new
dimensions of the massacre, most notably the fact that
over 1,000 men and boys were trucked away from the nearby
sports stadium (then under the complete control of the
Israeli army and intelligence officers) in the hours
after the massacre ended. They have never come back, and
no one knows to this day exactly where they are buried. A
court case could have answered a lot of questions and
brought some form of closure to the bereaved.
A court case might also have clarified how and why it is
that Palestinians can be killed, then as now, with
impunity. The case in Belgium was dismissed in many
quarters, even before Rumsfeld dealt the Belgian
universal jurisdiction a coup de grace, as an
"anti-Semitic" initiative, or a "politicized
stunt." Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz
derided the case as "foolishness on stilts." In
the first months of the case, well-meaning people asked,
"Why Sharon? Why not Saddam? Certainly he has
committed more crimes against humanity." Yes.
Certainly there should be one yardstick for human rights,
and grave violations of human rights continue to destroy
lives daily in places like the Sudan and Burma. Although
Saddam Hussein was soon toppled (in an illegal invasion)
and eventually hanged in a Baghdad prison, no one ever
said "Well, now that Saddam has been dealt with, I
guess it would be okay to prosecute people responsible
for the Sabra and Shatila massacre."
The US and "coalition forces" have now killed
more Iraqis in a few years than Saddam slaughtered in
decades. It is doubtful that anyone will ever be held
accountable. The legal framework for doing so has
virtually disappeared, and with it, the political will
and emotional stamina to pursue justice. That is probably
the whole point, though: to render apathy preferable to
outrage, and resignation easier than hope.
In the years since the Belgian court case was filed and
then quashed, Palestinians were subjected to "Operation
Defensive Shield" in 2002. Gaza has been brutalized
by numerous and multifarious Israeli army punishments.
Indeed, Gaza is now the world's largest open-air prison
and a laboratory for testing new ways to break people's
spirits. Lebanon got to re-experience the ferocity of the
Israeli air force again in the summer of 2006.
By and large, the international press, world leaders and
even the United Nations remained mute and unconcerned in
the face of these and other crimes. Even Israel's killing
of American and British activists and journalists failed
to curb the daily crimes committed in Palestine.
Apparently, there is no bottom, no limit, and thus, no
hope. No surprise, since there is clearly no
accountability.
Despite the growth of alternative news sources and new
media initiatives, such as The Electronic Intifada, which
render the excuse "We did not know!" ridiculous,
the killing and crushing continues. Paradoxically, the
more that is known about human rights violations in
Palestine, the less that seems to be done. Perhaps the
immediacy and intensity of Internet communications lulls
us into thinking we are doing something simply by reading
or forwarding an article.
In her landmark book, On the Origins of
Totalitarianism, the German philosopher Hannah Arendt
pithily summed up why law is so important: "All that
is necessary to achieve total domination is to kill the
juridical in Man." The history of the Palestinian
people offers a textbook study in the dangers of
massacring law and justice. And not only Palestinians are
affected. The denial of justice is a denial of humanity,
a form of soul murder. There are worse things than dying.
Ask anyone in Gaza, where the entire population is daily
subjected to genocide on the installment plan.
These atrocities can be and are being committed, because
the Sabra and Shatila massacre (among other crimes) was
committed, and international justice, or at least the
hope of it, was undone. Consequently, it is no
exaggeration to say that the Sabra and Shatila massacre
did not end 26 years ago today. It's still going on, and
all of us are accountable.
Laurie King, a co-founder of The Electronic Intifada,
was the North American Coordinator of International
Campaign for Justice for the Victims of Sabra and Shatila
(http://indictsharon.net)
from 2001 until 2003. She is now the managing editor of The
Journal of Palestine Studies in Washington, DC.
Endnotes
[1] The case lodged in Belgium on 18 June 2001 by 23
survivors of the 1982 Sabra and Shatila massacres charged
Ariel Sharon, former Israeli defense minister and prime
minister, retired Israeli Defense Forces Gens. Amos Yaron
and Rafael Eitan, as well as other Israelis and Lebanese,
with war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide
related to the massacres committed between 16-18
September 1982 in two refugee camps in Beirut. The
central argument of the case hinges upon Ariel Sharon's
and other Israelis' Command Responsibility as General and
high officers of the Israeli Defense Forces, which were
in full control of Beirut when the massacres took place
in the contiguous refugee camps of Sabra and Shatila.
Although the killings of between 1,000-2,000 unarmed
Lebanese and Palestinian civilians were carried out by
Lebanese militia units directly or indirectly affiliated
with the Israeli-allied Christian Lebanese Forces (the
Phalange), the legal, military, and decision-making
responsibility for the massacre ultimately rests with
Ariel Sharon under established and recognized principles
of international law, most notably the Fourth Geneva
Convention.
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