29 dec 2008
Israel Accused Of Massive War Crime Atrocities

UN Professor Falk cites targeting of civilians, disproportionate military response as Obama and Pelosi express terse approval
Paul Joseph Watson Prison Planet.com
A new IAF cockpit video shows an air strike targeted against an alleged rocket launching site located between two civilian homes, as UN Professor Richard Falk accused Israel of massive violations of international humanitarian law.
Falk, United Nations Special Investigator for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories, listed numerous actions by Israel that clearly break the rules of engagement codified in the Geneva Conventions.
These include; collective punishment of the 1.5 million inhabitants of the Gaza Strip for the actions of relatively few militants; the indiscriminate targeting of civilians including school children and university students during air strikes, with hundreds now dead or injured; a disproportionate military response which has destroyed every police and security office of Gaza’s elected government.
Israel has also sealed off entry and exit points to the Gaza Strip, causing severe shortages of medicine, food and fuel and hampering efforts to treat victims of the bombing raids.
Paul Joseph Watson Prison Planet.com
A new IAF cockpit video shows an air strike targeted against an alleged rocket launching site located between two civilian homes, as UN Professor Richard Falk accused Israel of massive violations of international humanitarian law.
Falk, United Nations Special Investigator for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories, listed numerous actions by Israel that clearly break the rules of engagement codified in the Geneva Conventions.
These include; collective punishment of the 1.5 million inhabitants of the Gaza Strip for the actions of relatively few militants; the indiscriminate targeting of civilians including school children and university students during air strikes, with hundreds now dead or injured; a disproportionate military response which has destroyed every police and security office of Gaza’s elected government.
Israel has also sealed off entry and exit points to the Gaza Strip, causing severe shortages of medicine, food and fuel and hampering efforts to treat victims of the bombing raids.
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“Certainly the rocket attacks against civilian targets in Israel are unlawful. But that illegality does not give Israel any right, neither as the occupying power nor as a sovereign state, to violate international humanitarian law and commit war crimes or crimes against humanity in its response.
I note that Israel’s escalating military assaults have not made Israeli civilians safer; on the contrary, the one Israeli killed today after the upsurge of Israeli violence is the first in over a year,” writes Falk. Reports of civilians being targeted on both sides continue to emerge. Hamas TV broadcast a video showing injured Israeli citizens being evacuated with the words “Let them taste violent death” superimposed over skulls dripping with blood. But the majority of war crimes have obviously been committed by the might of the Israeli military, with one report accusing the Israelis of targeting school children who were making their way home with air strikes. |
Meanwhile, President elect Barack Obama’s reaction to Israel’s biggest military assault on Gaza in 20 years was a nonchalant “no comment,” while Democratic leader of the House Nancy Pelosi expressed her support for the carnage by stating “When Israel is attacked, the United States must continue to stand strongly with its friend and democratic ally.”
With at least 285 dead and over 800 injured so far, Obama and Pelosi’s terse approval for the indiscriminate slaughter of innocents reminds us that 2009 is unlikely to offer “change” of any kind but is likely to guarantee more war and bloodshed.
With at least 285 dead and over 800 injured so far, Obama and Pelosi’s terse approval for the indiscriminate slaughter of innocents reminds us that 2009 is unlikely to offer “change” of any kind but is likely to guarantee more war and bloodshed.
7 oct 2008

Ami Ayalon (R)
Israeli Minister Ami Ayalon has been declared a persona non grata in the Netherlands, after having a case filed against him in the Dutch courts accusing him of torturing Palestinian Khalid Al-Shami during his time as head of Israel's Shin Bet.
It was revealed on Tuesday that "secret negotiations" had taken place during Ayalon's visit to the Netherlands in May 2008. Just prior to his arrival in the country, the Palestinian Center for Human Rights (PCHR) alongside the Amsterdam law office of Böhler Franken Koppe Wijngaarden approached the courts asking for an arrest warrant for Ayalon.
According to PCHR Director Raji Sourani the evidence presented to the Dutch attorney-general was sound and satisfied all legal requirements. The group initially received a positive response from Dutch court officials but no arrest warrant was ever issued. In fact, Ayalon only learned about the matter after returning to Israel.
The Israeli press reported that Dutch officials had contacted the Israeli Ministry of Foreign affairs in advance. Israel requested that no legal action be taken and that "due to Holland's speedy and positive response to Israel's plea, the possibility of spiriting Ayalon out of the country immediately, as was the case with Minister Shaul Mofaz's visit to London, was not considered."
Lawyers for Mr Al-Shami filed a case in the Dutch court of appeal at The Hague on Monday, requesting an order for Dutch prosecution to begin criminal investigations into Ayalon and an extradition order to ensure that he would be present during any trial.
While it is unclear whether the criminal case against Ayalon will move forward or not, Sourani noted that Dutch officials have indicated that the Israeli minister is not persona non grata in the country.
Al-Shami was left permanently injured after being tortured by Israeli soldiers following his December 1999 arrest in Gaza City. He was taken to Ashkelon prison and interrogated for 20 days in sessions that ranged, according to PCHR, between 20 and 40 hours each. Al-Shami was kept confined in a 2x2 meter cell between interrogation sessions, and repeatedly subjected to nearly freezing temperatures without adequate clothing, handcuffed and shackled to a chair for hours and "stretched" before he was ever brought before a judge.
Following his first 20 days of interrogation and torture, Al-Shami was brought before a military court without representation and sentenced to an additional thirty days, seven of which were spent in solitary confinement. He says that "collaborators" forced him to sign a confession for crimes he did not commit, and that he is permanently injured as a result of his torture.
Al-Shami's case is the third example of recent actions being brought against Israeli officials, and in one case a construction company building settlements in the West Bank. In Spain seven Israeli officials are being charged with using disproportionate force for a 2002 extrajudicial killing, during which 15 civilians (mostly women and children) were killed in Gaza during the assassination of a factional leader.
In Canadian courts, suits have been filed against Green Park International Inc. and Green Mount International, both registered in the Canadian province of Quebec, for acting as agents of Israel in the commission of war crimes. The two companies are illegally constructing residential and other buildings on lands under the municipal jurisdiction of the village of Bil'in.
Israeli Minister Ami Ayalon has been declared a persona non grata in the Netherlands, after having a case filed against him in the Dutch courts accusing him of torturing Palestinian Khalid Al-Shami during his time as head of Israel's Shin Bet.
It was revealed on Tuesday that "secret negotiations" had taken place during Ayalon's visit to the Netherlands in May 2008. Just prior to his arrival in the country, the Palestinian Center for Human Rights (PCHR) alongside the Amsterdam law office of Böhler Franken Koppe Wijngaarden approached the courts asking for an arrest warrant for Ayalon.
According to PCHR Director Raji Sourani the evidence presented to the Dutch attorney-general was sound and satisfied all legal requirements. The group initially received a positive response from Dutch court officials but no arrest warrant was ever issued. In fact, Ayalon only learned about the matter after returning to Israel.
The Israeli press reported that Dutch officials had contacted the Israeli Ministry of Foreign affairs in advance. Israel requested that no legal action be taken and that "due to Holland's speedy and positive response to Israel's plea, the possibility of spiriting Ayalon out of the country immediately, as was the case with Minister Shaul Mofaz's visit to London, was not considered."
Lawyers for Mr Al-Shami filed a case in the Dutch court of appeal at The Hague on Monday, requesting an order for Dutch prosecution to begin criminal investigations into Ayalon and an extradition order to ensure that he would be present during any trial.
While it is unclear whether the criminal case against Ayalon will move forward or not, Sourani noted that Dutch officials have indicated that the Israeli minister is not persona non grata in the country.
Al-Shami was left permanently injured after being tortured by Israeli soldiers following his December 1999 arrest in Gaza City. He was taken to Ashkelon prison and interrogated for 20 days in sessions that ranged, according to PCHR, between 20 and 40 hours each. Al-Shami was kept confined in a 2x2 meter cell between interrogation sessions, and repeatedly subjected to nearly freezing temperatures without adequate clothing, handcuffed and shackled to a chair for hours and "stretched" before he was ever brought before a judge.
Following his first 20 days of interrogation and torture, Al-Shami was brought before a military court without representation and sentenced to an additional thirty days, seven of which were spent in solitary confinement. He says that "collaborators" forced him to sign a confession for crimes he did not commit, and that he is permanently injured as a result of his torture.
Al-Shami's case is the third example of recent actions being brought against Israeli officials, and in one case a construction company building settlements in the West Bank. In Spain seven Israeli officials are being charged with using disproportionate force for a 2002 extrajudicial killing, during which 15 civilians (mostly women and children) were killed in Gaza during the assassination of a factional leader.
In Canadian courts, suits have been filed against Green Park International Inc. and Green Mount International, both registered in the Canadian province of Quebec, for acting as agents of Israel in the commission of war crimes. The two companies are illegally constructing residential and other buildings on lands under the municipal jurisdiction of the village of Bil'in.
4 oct 2008

Israel tells Spain to "find a solution" to the suit filed against seven high-ranking army officials including former Defense Minister Benjamin Ben Eliezer in Spanish courts this June.
The suit accuses the officers of using excessive force during the assassination of Hamas leader Salah Shehadeh. In the 2002 attack a one-tone bomb was used to destroy the home of Shehadeh, which caused the death of 15 of his neighbors, 11 of them women and children.
The suit asks Spanish courts to issue arrest warrants against Israeli Defense Minister (2001-2001) Benjamin Ben Eliezer, and six individuals who were acting under his orders at the time: former military advisor to Ben Eleizer, Michael Herzog, former Israeli Army Chief of Staff Moshe Ya'alon and Dan Halutz, former Commander of the Israeli Air Force.
While no arrest warrants have been issued, the Israeli press has published reports of a secret Spanish communiqué sent to the Israeli government, which enquires as to the actions taken against those named in the human rights suit. The document also asks whether any of those responsible for the attack still hold state positions which might grant them diplomatic immunity.
Israel is expected to claim that the matter has been dealt with by the Supreme Court, which formed a "special committee" to look into minimizing collateral damages during military actions in Palestinian areas.
According to the Palestine Center for Human Rights (PCHR), which is a partner in the suit, similar suits have been attempted against the perpetrators of the 2002 assassination in Israeli courts, but none have been successful.
If the suit goes forward, any of the accused men would be arrested if they set foot on Spanish soil.
According to the Israeli daily newspaper Haaretz, "Israel expects the Spanish government to quash the petition, as the UK before it." The courts of Switzerland, the Netherlands, the United States and New Zealand have all previously accepted cases against the Israeli military.
In the meantime the Israeli foreign ministry has issued an advisory to the men accused, saying they should refrain from travel to Spain until the matter is resolved.
As a member of the International Criminal Court, Spain has the right to try individuals for War Crimes that did not occur on Spanish soil. As the Israeli papers pointed out, "the Hague considers Israel's control on the territories a "crime of war.""
The suit was filed by a Spanish Human Rights institution in cooperation with PCHR on behalf of six Palestinians who survived the massive explosion launched by Israeli forces. Spanish lawyers Antonio Segura, Gonzalo Boye, Raul Maillo, and Juan Moreno, will try the case. They are known best for their involvement in the case against Augusto Pinochet for Crimes Against Humanity in Great Britain, where the group represented the victims of torture from Guatemala. PCHR has been working with the four Lawyers for more than two years.
The Spanish court accepted the case in June and has been pressing forward steadily. The first hearing was held in late July. The case marks the first time the survivors of an Israeli military attack have filed a lawsuit in Spain against members of the Israeli military, it asks that there be justice and moral compensation given to the victims, and that those responsible for the attack be held accountable.
Since the start of the case the Spanish courts and PCHR have been supplying the Israeli foreign ministry with the documentation from the proceedings.
The extra judicial killing for which the seven officers are accused of using excessive force occurred on 22 July 2002. An Israeli Air Force jet dropped a 2000 lb. bomb on the house of Salah Shehada, a commander of the El-Quassam Brigades, the armed wing of Fatah. The explosion destroyed the man's home and several surrounding buildings, killing 15.
At the time Israeli intelligence told [former] Israeli Army Chief of Staff, General Moshe Ya'alon, that Shehada's wife and daughter "Were close to him during the implementation of the assassination . and there was no way out of conducting the operation despite their presence."
Israeli media are calling the situation "diplomatically-volatile" and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni was quoted as telling Spanish Minister of Foreign Affairs Miguel Moratinos that Israeli military "officers must not be harmed by anyone filing a political, anti-Israeli lawsuit."
The suit accuses the officers of using excessive force during the assassination of Hamas leader Salah Shehadeh. In the 2002 attack a one-tone bomb was used to destroy the home of Shehadeh, which caused the death of 15 of his neighbors, 11 of them women and children.
The suit asks Spanish courts to issue arrest warrants against Israeli Defense Minister (2001-2001) Benjamin Ben Eliezer, and six individuals who were acting under his orders at the time: former military advisor to Ben Eleizer, Michael Herzog, former Israeli Army Chief of Staff Moshe Ya'alon and Dan Halutz, former Commander of the Israeli Air Force.
While no arrest warrants have been issued, the Israeli press has published reports of a secret Spanish communiqué sent to the Israeli government, which enquires as to the actions taken against those named in the human rights suit. The document also asks whether any of those responsible for the attack still hold state positions which might grant them diplomatic immunity.
Israel is expected to claim that the matter has been dealt with by the Supreme Court, which formed a "special committee" to look into minimizing collateral damages during military actions in Palestinian areas.
According to the Palestine Center for Human Rights (PCHR), which is a partner in the suit, similar suits have been attempted against the perpetrators of the 2002 assassination in Israeli courts, but none have been successful.
If the suit goes forward, any of the accused men would be arrested if they set foot on Spanish soil.
According to the Israeli daily newspaper Haaretz, "Israel expects the Spanish government to quash the petition, as the UK before it." The courts of Switzerland, the Netherlands, the United States and New Zealand have all previously accepted cases against the Israeli military.
In the meantime the Israeli foreign ministry has issued an advisory to the men accused, saying they should refrain from travel to Spain until the matter is resolved.
As a member of the International Criminal Court, Spain has the right to try individuals for War Crimes that did not occur on Spanish soil. As the Israeli papers pointed out, "the Hague considers Israel's control on the territories a "crime of war.""
The suit was filed by a Spanish Human Rights institution in cooperation with PCHR on behalf of six Palestinians who survived the massive explosion launched by Israeli forces. Spanish lawyers Antonio Segura, Gonzalo Boye, Raul Maillo, and Juan Moreno, will try the case. They are known best for their involvement in the case against Augusto Pinochet for Crimes Against Humanity in Great Britain, where the group represented the victims of torture from Guatemala. PCHR has been working with the four Lawyers for more than two years.
The Spanish court accepted the case in June and has been pressing forward steadily. The first hearing was held in late July. The case marks the first time the survivors of an Israeli military attack have filed a lawsuit in Spain against members of the Israeli military, it asks that there be justice and moral compensation given to the victims, and that those responsible for the attack be held accountable.
Since the start of the case the Spanish courts and PCHR have been supplying the Israeli foreign ministry with the documentation from the proceedings.
The extra judicial killing for which the seven officers are accused of using excessive force occurred on 22 July 2002. An Israeli Air Force jet dropped a 2000 lb. bomb on the house of Salah Shehada, a commander of the El-Quassam Brigades, the armed wing of Fatah. The explosion destroyed the man's home and several surrounding buildings, killing 15.
At the time Israeli intelligence told [former] Israeli Army Chief of Staff, General Moshe Ya'alon, that Shehada's wife and daughter "Were close to him during the implementation of the assassination . and there was no way out of conducting the operation despite their presence."
Israeli media are calling the situation "diplomatically-volatile" and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni was quoted as telling Spanish Minister of Foreign Affairs Miguel Moratinos that Israeli military "officers must not be harmed by anyone filing a political, anti-Israeli lawsuit."
3 sept 2008
A War Criminal From Gaza to Hebron

Some days ago I called some Palestinians to ask about the name of the Israeli military commanders who issued the military orders for raiding, destroying, vandalizing, ransacking, and shutting down three radio stations in the city of Hebron last week, and 40 more shops in Hebron this week.
One of the people who I asked was Abu Al-Nur, a well known friend of the Israeli occupation officers in Hebron who heads one of the most powerful organizations in the city. Abu Al-Nur claimed that he did not know the names of his friends, the people who he meet regularly, once or twice each week. Abu Al-Nur told me to call the major of Hebron, as he was supposedly the only one who would be able to identify the Israeli commanders.
I asked a PA “DCL” officer who has an Israeli counterpart at the Israeli “DCL” military office in Jabal Manouh in Hebron. The officer claimed that the Israelis never introduce themselves with their full names to the Palestinian counterparts, only being known by their first names. I called Abu Zuheir, the major of Hebron, while he was in Turkey on a business trip. He told me that the first name of the new Israeli military commander was Udi, and that the first name of the Israeli military governor from the DCL is Aviv. He claimed to not know the second name of both of them, and I believed the major.
I asked somebody one of the International observers in Hebron. He told me that “Alex Rosenberg” was the name of the Israeli military commander in Hebron. The name which this observer gave me was not true. “Alex Rosenberg” is a wrong name. The correct name is Lt. Col. “Alex Rozensweig” (or Rosenzveig), a former DCL military officer in 2006 in the city of Hebron, who also headed, or heads, a spying unit which compiles lists of people to be murdered.
The fact that the Palestinian officials were not able to identify their Israeli “counterparts” by name reflects the deteriorated level of the relations between the PA and the Israelis, it shows the malice and disdain of the Israeli officials towards their Palestinian counterparts, and it is a sign of worry on side of the Israelis of legal consequences of their actions.
Who is the Israeli brigade commander in Hebron who the Palestinians are not able to identify?
Lt. Col. Udi ben Muha, or “Udi ben Moha” is the new Israeli brigade commander for Hebron. Ben Muha is a war criminal with a long history of committing crimes against humanity. He contributed to the ethnic cleansing of the north of Gaza and along the Palestinian-Egyptian border, and he implemented other measures which correspond to the definition of genocide and crimes against humanity in the Geneva conventions.
Ben Muha is responsible for many murders of Palestinians and the reckless destruction of their property. He commanded the death squad IDF “Shimshon” Unit in Gaza under another IDF war criminal, Col. Avi Levy. He headed the IDF death squad unit “Sagi” at the Gaza-Egypt border in 2007 under the IDF war criminal head of the Southern Command, Major General Yoav Galant.
Lt. Col. Udi ben Muha, razed and damaged thousands dunums of Palestinian agriculture land. He also illegally confiscated thousands more of dunums of agricultural land. Ben Muha razed to the ground hundreds of Palestinian houses in Gaza, he murdered hundreds of Palestinian civilians and arrested hundreds more.
On 28 January 2004, Ben Muha or personnel under his command razed the agricultural area of Al-Zaytun in Gaza. During this event he or personnel under his command murdered 11 Palestinians among, them Sami Badawi, a child of 13 years, and injured 35 Palestinian civilian.
Some victims of 28 January 2004 of the war criminal Lt. Col. Udi Ben Moha:
According to Dr. Muawiya Hussein, head of emergency services at Shifa Hospital in Gaza, all the Palestinians who were killed on 28 January 2004 were civilians. The victims of this incident are
Another 17 Palestinian house were “confiscated” by Udi Ben Muha, these were the houses belonging to Sadi Zanin, Omer Kafarne, Mustafa Thabet, Atef Zanin, Ahmad Al-Ashkar, Naser Al-Zanin, Ranadan, Taiser and Maher Al-Basubi, Nahed and Saed Shabat, Subhi Naser, Asad Salah, Fakhri and Kahlil Al-Masri, Amin Abu Udeh, and Rushdi Al-Zanin.
15 Palestinians were murdered by him or personnel under his command during this operation commanded by Ben Muha operation, and 90 more Palestinians were injured, among them 54 child. The murdered people were:
One of the people who I asked was Abu Al-Nur, a well known friend of the Israeli occupation officers in Hebron who heads one of the most powerful organizations in the city. Abu Al-Nur claimed that he did not know the names of his friends, the people who he meet regularly, once or twice each week. Abu Al-Nur told me to call the major of Hebron, as he was supposedly the only one who would be able to identify the Israeli commanders.
I asked a PA “DCL” officer who has an Israeli counterpart at the Israeli “DCL” military office in Jabal Manouh in Hebron. The officer claimed that the Israelis never introduce themselves with their full names to the Palestinian counterparts, only being known by their first names. I called Abu Zuheir, the major of Hebron, while he was in Turkey on a business trip. He told me that the first name of the new Israeli military commander was Udi, and that the first name of the Israeli military governor from the DCL is Aviv. He claimed to not know the second name of both of them, and I believed the major.
I asked somebody one of the International observers in Hebron. He told me that “Alex Rosenberg” was the name of the Israeli military commander in Hebron. The name which this observer gave me was not true. “Alex Rosenberg” is a wrong name. The correct name is Lt. Col. “Alex Rozensweig” (or Rosenzveig), a former DCL military officer in 2006 in the city of Hebron, who also headed, or heads, a spying unit which compiles lists of people to be murdered.
The fact that the Palestinian officials were not able to identify their Israeli “counterparts” by name reflects the deteriorated level of the relations between the PA and the Israelis, it shows the malice and disdain of the Israeli officials towards their Palestinian counterparts, and it is a sign of worry on side of the Israelis of legal consequences of their actions.
Who is the Israeli brigade commander in Hebron who the Palestinians are not able to identify?
Lt. Col. Udi ben Muha, or “Udi ben Moha” is the new Israeli brigade commander for Hebron. Ben Muha is a war criminal with a long history of committing crimes against humanity. He contributed to the ethnic cleansing of the north of Gaza and along the Palestinian-Egyptian border, and he implemented other measures which correspond to the definition of genocide and crimes against humanity in the Geneva conventions.
Ben Muha is responsible for many murders of Palestinians and the reckless destruction of their property. He commanded the death squad IDF “Shimshon” Unit in Gaza under another IDF war criminal, Col. Avi Levy. He headed the IDF death squad unit “Sagi” at the Gaza-Egypt border in 2007 under the IDF war criminal head of the Southern Command, Major General Yoav Galant.
Lt. Col. Udi ben Muha, razed and damaged thousands dunums of Palestinian agriculture land. He also illegally confiscated thousands more of dunums of agricultural land. Ben Muha razed to the ground hundreds of Palestinian houses in Gaza, he murdered hundreds of Palestinian civilians and arrested hundreds more.
On 28 January 2004, Ben Muha or personnel under his command razed the agricultural area of Al-Zaytun in Gaza. During this event he or personnel under his command murdered 11 Palestinians among, them Sami Badawi, a child of 13 years, and injured 35 Palestinian civilian.
Some victims of 28 January 2004 of the war criminal Lt. Col. Udi Ben Moha:
According to Dr. Muawiya Hussein, head of emergency services at Shifa Hospital in Gaza, all the Palestinians who were killed on 28 January 2004 were civilians. The victims of this incident are
- Sameh Totah, age 17, a mechanic in a car repair shop, killed when he fled from the shooting
- Akram Abu Ajami, killed, age 19
- Musa Dalul, 33, was killed, and his brother Kamal Dalul, 34, was wounded in legs and arms
- Uthman Jundia, killed, age 19
- Iiad Mahmoud al-Ra’e, killed, age 19
- Musa Suliman Dalul, killed, age 30
- Ahmad Ali abu Rkab, killed age 20
- Ayman Hamdan Al-Dahduh, killed , age 42
- Tariq Al-Susi, killed, age 12
- Hasan Ali Rizka, killed, age 17
- Abed Al-Naser Abu Shoka, killed, age 42
- Bashir Abu Urmane, age 14
- Ibrahim Zurob, age 15
- Muhammad Al-Hayek, age 25
- Muhammad Abu Urmaneh, age 22
- Muhammad Al-Hamaide, age 22
- Zahran Al-Tantawi, age 19
- Muhammad Aiash Al-Ajle, age 34
- Haitham Abed, age 28
- Hani Abu Skhele, age 25
- Ismael Abu Al-Ata, age 22
- Ashraf Faruk Hasanen, age 23
- Abed Al-Hamid Khattab, 21, was killed on 27.02.2004
- Ashraf Zakot, 25, was killed on 26.02.2004
- Abed Al-Salam Abu Musa, 32, was killed on 26.02.2004
- Ayman Swehel, 25, was killed on 26.02.2004
- Usama Josef Al-Mgazi, 33, was killed on 21. 02. 2004
- Rifat Al-Shaer, 32, was killed on 18.02.2004
- Muen Nafez Abu Sharkh, 18, was killed on 17.02.2004
- Jamal Muhammad Al-Afifi, 45, was killed on 16.02.2004
- Muhammad Al-Shiekh, 14, was killed on 16.02.2004
Another 17 Palestinian house were “confiscated” by Udi Ben Muha, these were the houses belonging to Sadi Zanin, Omer Kafarne, Mustafa Thabet, Atef Zanin, Ahmad Al-Ashkar, Naser Al-Zanin, Ranadan, Taiser and Maher Al-Basubi, Nahed and Saed Shabat, Subhi Naser, Asad Salah, Fakhri and Kahlil Al-Masri, Amin Abu Udeh, and Rushdi Al-Zanin.
15 Palestinians were murdered by him or personnel under his command during this operation commanded by Ben Muha operation, and 90 more Palestinians were injured, among them 54 child. The murdered people were:
- Rasem Kahlil Udwan, age 29
- Ateiah Muhammad Al-Ajrami, age 19
- Hamzeh Nahed Hbush, age 15
- Musen Al-Ajrami, age 19
- Ismael Ahmad Nabhan, age 26
- Ishaq Maen Abu Talib, age 15
- Muhammad Def Allah, age 21
- Ihab Abed Al-Karim Shatat, age 9
- Adnan Mansur, age 19
- Nahed abu Udeh, age 44
- Zaher Abu Hardid, age 33
- Naser Abu Hardid, age 39
- Naem Kafarneh, age 40
- Musa Zanin, age 52
- Jamil Abed Rabuh Hamad, age 45
- Hamed Ahmad Udeh, age 28
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