• @kromem@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    What’s misleading is that they are only referring to some of the alleged behavior not qualifying, not all of the alleged behavior.

    Using an inhabited hospital as a military HQ where you are conducting interrogations and launching missiles from absolutely meets “using the presence of civilians or protected persons to render certain points or areas immune from military operations.”

    Firing rockets a block away from an apartment building or storing munitions in an abandoned school doesn’t. And those are the kind of allegations that the report explicitly called out before the part you are quoting (storing munitions in civilian buildings or firing from the vicinity of).

    Hamas does not use human shields, according to Amnesty International.

    Hahaha, that’s not at all what the report says anywhere. It’s only saying that some of the behavior that was alleged as using human shields doesn’t qualify as that designation.

    Literally taking hostages and having them nearby military operations is the textbook definition as I mentioned previously. Are you saying Hamas didn’t do that recently?

    • @TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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      01 year ago

      This is circular. That’s not what their investigation found. Am I to take the opinion of kromem on Lemmy, or Amnesty International? Sorry, I’m gonna take the opinion of Amnesty every time.

      • @kromem@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        Then you might want to actually read the whole thing and not only the parts you mistakenly think agree with you.

        • @TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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          01 year ago

          I did read the whole thing. I agree Hamas has committed multiple war crimes,

          But they do not necessarily amount to the specific violation of using “human shields” under international humanitarian law, which entails “using the presence (or movements) of civilians or other protected persons to render certain points or areas (or military forces) immune from military operations.”

          Just because you don’t like their findings doesn’t make their findings mistaken. You lost, you’ll get over it.

          • @kromem@lemmy.world
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            01 year ago

            using the presence of civilians or other protected persons to render certain points or areas immune from military operations

            Exactly. Read it again.

            Now tell me how using an inhabited hospital as a military base and to launch attacks from doesn’t meet that criteria?

            Or how taking hostages and co-locating them with military operations doesn’t.

            • @TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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              01 year ago

              Ah, a fan of circular logic I see. Contact Amnesty International and tell them they’re wrong:

              If you believe your human rights have been violated and you need referrals for assistance or want to share your story, contact our research team report@aiusa.org

              • @kromem@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Yet again you ignore that they were only talking about some of the allegations.

                If Amnesty International published a report that said some of the world’s population has XY chromosomes, would you think it appropriate to claim that they’ve said that all of the world’s population has XY chromosomes?

                Because you seem to keep not understanding that what you are referring to explicitly called out that only several of the allegations don’t constitute the use of human shields and deferred to the cited litmus test to determine.

                You seem to be very uncomfortable with answering how that cited litmus test doesn’t apply to several of the allegations towards Hamas, instead pretending that Amnesty International claimed all of the alleged behavior in 2014 wouldn’t constitute the use of human shields (and that this somehow carries forward to other behavior in the current conflict which definitely does meet the criteria).

                In particular, they seem to be paraphrasing the legal findings section of the UN’s Goldstone report (items 493-497) regarding the distinction, which further specified the aspect of intentionality:

                As the words of article 57 (1) show (“shall not be used to render”, “in order to attempt to shield”), an intention to use the civilian population in order to shield an area from military attack is required.

                • HUMAN RIGHTS IN PALESTINE AND OTHER OCCUPIED ARAB TERRITORIES Report of the United Nations Fact-Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict (2009) p. 123

                So as I said, the dismissal of incidental attacks from the vicinity of civilian infrastructure as using human shields is different from the intentional staging of attacks from a hospital to prevent retaliation.

                • @TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  Yet again you ignore that they were only talking about some of the allegations.

                  That’s what they investigated.

                  If Amnesty International published a report that said some of the world’s population has XY chromosomes, would you think it appropriate to claim that they’ve said that all of the world’s population has XY chromosomes?

                  Red Herring.

                  Because you seem to keep not understanding that what you are referring to explicitly called out that only several of the allegations don’t constitute the use of human shields and deferred to the cited litmus test to determine.

                  The ones they investigated.

                  You seem to be very uncomfortable with answering how that cited litmus test doesn’t apply to several of the allegations towards Hamas, instead pretending that Amnesty International claimed all of the alleged behavior in 2014 wouldn’t constitute the use of human shields.

                  Perfectly comfortable. Never said all. I can only cite what they investigated.

                  In particular, they seem to be paraphrasing the legal findings section of the UN’s Goldstone report (items 493-497) regarding the distinction, which further specified the aspect of intentionality:

                  Irrelevant.

                  As the words of article 57 (1) show (“shall not be used to render”, “in order to attempt to shield”), an intention to use the civilian population in order to shield an area from military attack is required.

                  • HUMAN RIGHTS IN PALESTINE AND OTHER OCCUPIED ARAB TERRITORIES Report of the United Nations Fact-Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict (2009) p. 123

                  Still irrelevant. From their limited investigation, they determined that Hamas had not used human shields. You still never countered the accusation that Israel used Palestinians as “human shields,” by B’Tselem. I wonder why?

                  • @kromem@lemmy.world
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                    1 year ago

                    You still never countered the accusation that Israel used Palestinians as “human shields,” by B’Tselem. I wonder why?

                    Because that wasn’t the thing being debated? That’s in keeping with most of the investigations into Israeli forces, including the previously cited UN report.

                    What was being debated was whether Hamas had used or is using human shields.

                    The ones they investigated.

                    You are continuing to misrepresent the Amnesty International report, which did not say that all of the allegations it investigated did not meet the Geneva convention definition of using human shields, but only specified that “Several of these actions which have been discussed above” (from a list of various IDF claims at the top of p.48) did not meet the criteria, further getting into the nuance of the legality of the issue as I’ve discussed extensively by now with you, and you’ve ignored.

                    In fact, they instead said:

                    Specific assertions of the use of civilians as “human shields” by Palestinian armed groups in the Gaza Strip should be independently investigated.