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Written by Rory McCarthy in Gaza City Rory McCarthy in Gaza City
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Category: News News
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Published: 29 June 2009 29 June 2009
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Last Updated: 29 June 2009 29 June 2009
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Created: 29 June 2009 29 June 2009
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UN public hearing in Gaza broadcasts accounts of war victims
• Inquiry held by Jewish South African judge
• Israeli witnesses to attend next round in Geneva
Gaza conflict
Up to 13 Israelis and 1,400 Palestinians were killed in the three-week
war, which saw rocket strikes on a UN school. Photograph: Mohammed
Abed/AFP/Getty Images
The UN has held an unprecedented public hearing in Gaza to broadcast
live witness accounts from Palestinians who described seeing their
relatives killed and injured during Israel's January war.
One after another, they detailed Israeli rocket strikes and artillery
shelling near a mosque, a UN school and on several homes across Gaza
during the three-week war. The two-day hearing is part of an inquiry by
the UN human rights council into the war led by the respected South
African judge, Richard Goldstone.
Israel has refused entry for the inquiry team, accusing the UN council
of an anti-Israel bias even though Goldstone himself is Jewish. But
another round of hearings will be held in Geneva next week, for which
some Israeli witnesses are expected to be flown in. They may include
residents of Sderot, near Gaza, which has suffered repeated Palestinian
rocket attacks.
"The purpose of the public hearings in Gaza and Geneva is to show the
faces and broadcast the voices of victims – all of the victims,"
Goldstone said last week. He had sat on South Africa's constitutional
court after the fall of apartheid and was a chief prosecutor on the UN
criminal tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda.
Yesterday's public hearing was the first in a UN fact-finding mission,
though there is little chance it will lead to prosecutions. Up to 1,400
Palestinians and 13 Israelis were killed during the war.
Mousa Silawi, 91, described an explosion at the entrance to a mosque in
the Jabaliya refugee camp late on 3 January, which killed 17 people,
including three of his sons and two grandchildren.
"After evening prayer a huge shell hit the mosque," he said. "It was
absolutely incredible. We starting screaming and calling for God."
Silawi, who is blind, was led away to safety and was then told that his
sons had died. "Where is law? Where is justice? I have lived 91 years.
I have seen everything, but nothing of this sort. It was such a
catastrophe," he said. His son, Moteeh, the mosque's sheikh, said there
had been no warning before the missile struck. "People came to the
mosque for safety and we saw bloodshed," he said. "I was leading my
father out when my own foot stepped on the head of a small child," he
said. "I saw people carrying decapitated heads and parts of bodies. I
cannot describe what I saw … What crime did the children commit?"
In another case Ziad al-Deeb, a university student, described how an
Israeli shell struck in the courtyard of his family home in Jabaliya on
6 January. The blast killed 11 of his relatives and sliced off both his
legs. First he heard an explosion just outside the wall of the house
and then moments later a second shell landed in their yard.
"In a single instant we had all of our joys replaced with blood," he
said. "There was a severe whistling in my ears and a pillar of smoke
and dust and that obliterated what happened. When I looked up I found I
had lost both my legs. I was sprawled over the body of my own brother.
I looked for my father and others, and I found them motionless. Most of
them were dead."
He lost his father, grandfather, two brothers and a sister in the
blast, which was one of several mortar shells that fell in quick
succession that afternoon near a UN prep school being used as a shelter
for those fleeing the fighting. Between 30 and 40 Palestinians were
killed near the school. An earlier UN inquiry has already found Israel
responsible for the shelling.
After hearing his evidence, Goldstone said: "We extend our deep
condolences to you and your family for your terrible loss and it makes
your coming here all the more painful for you."
Yesterday's hearing was held at a UN office in Gaza City and then
broadcast live to a hall at a nearby cultural centre, deserted save for
a handful of journalists. However, the hearing was broadcast on some
television stations, including one al-Jazeera channel. The UN inquiry
team will issue a final report in August.