29 dec 1999
Western Bekaa villages Massacre
(Lebanon): The Israeli warplanes dropped bombs on he children who were celebrating the “eid” festival, killing eight children and wounding 11 others.
Western Bekaa villages Massacre
(Lebanon): The Israeli warplanes dropped bombs on he children who were celebrating the “eid” festival, killing eight children and wounding 11 others.
15 dec 1999
Inquiry Urged In Israeli Killings
Human Rights Watch called for an independent inquiry into Monday night's killings of two Palestinian men, `Iyad al-Battat and Nadir al-Massalmah.
On Tuesday Israeli Deputy Defense Minister Efraim Sneh described the deaths as the result of a "contract" by the Israeli Defense Force (IDF), implying that the killings were extrajudicial executions and that there was no effort to detain the suspects for prosecution. Israeli officials suspected that al-Battat was an Islamic Resistance Movement (HAMAS) activist involved in a January 1999 attack that killed an Israeli border policeman.
"Killings such as these are abhorrent," said Hanny Megally, executive director of Human Rights Watch's Middle East and North Africa Division. "Israeli officials should condemn these acts, not brag about them."
According to the Associated Press, Deputy Minister Sneh told Israeli radio that "there is an automatic contract on anyone from Hamas who commits murderous attacks....I had said that within a year those attackers would die and see, it took less than a year."
Human Rights Watch has in the past documented a pattern of unlawful use of lethal force by Israeli security forces against "wanted" Palestinian activists, including a book-length study of twenty killings during 1992 and the first two months of 1993.
More recently, Human Rights Watch questioned Israel's use of force in the September 10, 1998 killing of suspected HAMAS activists `Adel and `Imad `Awadallah. Israeli Major General Moshe Yaalon responded to allegations that the `Awadallah killings had been political assassinations by saying "They tried to shoot the [police] dogs and our men killed them." The details of the killings have never been made public. Israel destroyed the house where the killings took place and has refused to return the bodies to the family. These are acts of collective punishment illegal under international law.
Human Rights Watch called on Israel to appoint an independent commission of inquiry to investigate the circumstances of both the al-Battat and al-Massalmah killings and the earlier `Awadallah killings, and to make public its findings. The commission's mandate should include the power to recommend prosecution of individuals who ordered assassinations or otherwise contributed to wrongful deaths.
"The architects of extrajudicial executions, and those who pull the triggers, must be investigated and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law," said Megally.
Human Rights also urged that the bodies of these and twenty-two other so called "enemy dead" be returned to their families.
Inquiry Urged In Israeli Killings
Human Rights Watch called for an independent inquiry into Monday night's killings of two Palestinian men, `Iyad al-Battat and Nadir al-Massalmah.
On Tuesday Israeli Deputy Defense Minister Efraim Sneh described the deaths as the result of a "contract" by the Israeli Defense Force (IDF), implying that the killings were extrajudicial executions and that there was no effort to detain the suspects for prosecution. Israeli officials suspected that al-Battat was an Islamic Resistance Movement (HAMAS) activist involved in a January 1999 attack that killed an Israeli border policeman.
"Killings such as these are abhorrent," said Hanny Megally, executive director of Human Rights Watch's Middle East and North Africa Division. "Israeli officials should condemn these acts, not brag about them."
According to the Associated Press, Deputy Minister Sneh told Israeli radio that "there is an automatic contract on anyone from Hamas who commits murderous attacks....I had said that within a year those attackers would die and see, it took less than a year."
Human Rights Watch has in the past documented a pattern of unlawful use of lethal force by Israeli security forces against "wanted" Palestinian activists, including a book-length study of twenty killings during 1992 and the first two months of 1993.
More recently, Human Rights Watch questioned Israel's use of force in the September 10, 1998 killing of suspected HAMAS activists `Adel and `Imad `Awadallah. Israeli Major General Moshe Yaalon responded to allegations that the `Awadallah killings had been political assassinations by saying "They tried to shoot the [police] dogs and our men killed them." The details of the killings have never been made public. Israel destroyed the house where the killings took place and has refused to return the bodies to the family. These are acts of collective punishment illegal under international law.
Human Rights Watch called on Israel to appoint an independent commission of inquiry to investigate the circumstances of both the al-Battat and al-Massalmah killings and the earlier `Awadallah killings, and to make public its findings. The commission's mandate should include the power to recommend prosecution of individuals who ordered assassinations or otherwise contributed to wrongful deaths.
"The architects of extrajudicial executions, and those who pull the triggers, must be investigated and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law," said Megally.
Human Rights also urged that the bodies of these and twenty-two other so called "enemy dead" be returned to their families.
24 june 1999
24 Of June 1999 Massacre
Martyrs: 8
Injures: 84
Target: Under Building in Beirut
(Lebanon) In an interview with the “kolhaer” magazine, five Israeli soldiers said that the artillery commander had said to his soldiers “We are skilled marksmen. Anyhow, there are millions of Arabs… It’s their problem. Whether Arabs become one more or less is just the same…We have accomplished our duty.
The whole issue is not about more than a group of “Arabosheem” (a racist term hostile to Arabs used by the Israelis). We should have launched more shells to kill more Arabs.
24 Of June 1999 Massacre
Martyrs: 8
Injures: 84
Target: Under Building in Beirut
(Lebanon) In an interview with the “kolhaer” magazine, five Israeli soldiers said that the artillery commander had said to his soldiers “We are skilled marksmen. Anyhow, there are millions of Arabs… It’s their problem. Whether Arabs become one more or less is just the same…We have accomplished our duty.
The whole issue is not about more than a group of “Arabosheem” (a racist term hostile to Arabs used by the Israelis). We should have launched more shells to kill more Arabs.
4 june1999
Ala Abu Sharkh
Israeli troops shot dead a Palestinian in the occupied West Bank yesterday during demonstrations against Jewish settlements in which up to 21 others were injured. Israel said the dead man, Ala Abu Sharkh, a labourer from Dhahiriya near Hebron, was shot as he "tried to run over a soldier" at a checkpoint. He died of his wounds in an Israeli hospital.
But Palestinian officials said the man had tried to avoid the checkpoint by using a nearby dirt road and was 300 metres from Israeli forces when they opened fire. A second man was slightly wounded. Both were in their early 20s.
The self-rule administration of the Palestinian leader, Yasser Arafat, had called for the "day of anger", the first of three, with mass protests against Jewish settlements on occupied land as an expression of impatience at the incoming Israeli leader, Ehud Barak.
About 4,800 demonstrators took part in a total of nine protests near most big West Bank settlements and along the main north-south road in the Gaza Strip.
Outside the Netzarim settlement in Gaza, hundreds of stone-throwing protesters converged on a small Israeli army outpost. At one point, a firebomb was thrown, sending an army tent up in flames. A heavy cloud of tear gas hung over the scene.
Four teenagers, a Palestinian policeman and two Palestinian journalists were slightly hurt.
In similar disturbances elsewhere, three demonstrators were injured in Hebron and four Palestinian youths were injured near Tapuah settlement in the central West Bank when Israeli troops fired rubber bullets to disperse stone-throwers.
But the protests, which included a general strike by Palestinian merchants in annexed east Jerusalem, were generally peaceful and small.
Demonstrators chanted "Barak, listen, the Palestinian people will not kneel", and carried Palestinian flags and banners which read: "Barak, choose between peace and settlements."
Mr Barak has angered Palestinians by not moving more swiftly to resume peace negotiations.
Yesterday the former chief of staff was still trying to woo the defeated rightwing Likud party, and religious parties which support settlement construction, into joining his broad coalition.
Faisal Husseini, the Palestine Liberation Organisation official responsible for Jerusalem affairs, said yesterday's protests were "a warning to Mr Barak that he must do something to stop these [settlement] activities, otherwise the whole atmosphere will be a poisoned one".
"No peace with settlements," chanted demonstrators as they marched towards an Israeli military position on the outskirts of Bethlehem.
"We want to let Ehud Barak know that he must prove his peace intentions quickly by prohibiting all settlement expansion," said Hanna Nasser, the Christian mayor of Palestinian-ruled Bethlehem.
Israeli troops shot dead a Palestinian in the occupied West Bank yesterday during demonstrations against Jewish settlements in which up to 21 others were injured. Israel said the dead man, Ala Abu Sharkh, a labourer from Dhahiriya near Hebron, was shot as he "tried to run over a soldier" at a checkpoint. He died of his wounds in an Israeli hospital.
But Palestinian officials said the man had tried to avoid the checkpoint by using a nearby dirt road and was 300 metres from Israeli forces when they opened fire. A second man was slightly wounded. Both were in their early 20s.
The self-rule administration of the Palestinian leader, Yasser Arafat, had called for the "day of anger", the first of three, with mass protests against Jewish settlements on occupied land as an expression of impatience at the incoming Israeli leader, Ehud Barak.
About 4,800 demonstrators took part in a total of nine protests near most big West Bank settlements and along the main north-south road in the Gaza Strip.
Outside the Netzarim settlement in Gaza, hundreds of stone-throwing protesters converged on a small Israeli army outpost. At one point, a firebomb was thrown, sending an army tent up in flames. A heavy cloud of tear gas hung over the scene.
Four teenagers, a Palestinian policeman and two Palestinian journalists were slightly hurt.
In similar disturbances elsewhere, three demonstrators were injured in Hebron and four Palestinian youths were injured near Tapuah settlement in the central West Bank when Israeli troops fired rubber bullets to disperse stone-throwers.
But the protests, which included a general strike by Palestinian merchants in annexed east Jerusalem, were generally peaceful and small.
Demonstrators chanted "Barak, listen, the Palestinian people will not kneel", and carried Palestinian flags and banners which read: "Barak, choose between peace and settlements."
Mr Barak has angered Palestinians by not moving more swiftly to resume peace negotiations.
Yesterday the former chief of staff was still trying to woo the defeated rightwing Likud party, and religious parties which support settlement construction, into joining his broad coalition.
Faisal Husseini, the Palestine Liberation Organisation official responsible for Jerusalem affairs, said yesterday's protests were "a warning to Mr Barak that he must do something to stop these [settlement] activities, otherwise the whole atmosphere will be a poisoned one".
"No peace with settlements," chanted demonstrators as they marched towards an Israeli military position on the outskirts of Bethlehem.
"We want to let Ehud Barak know that he must prove his peace intentions quickly by prohibiting all settlement expansion," said Hanna Nasser, the Christian mayor of Palestinian-ruled Bethlehem.
22 dec 1998
Janta Massacre
(Lebanon): Israeli warplanes waited for the children to come home from the field to embrace their mother when they carried out this savage attack. A mother and her 6 children were killed
Janta Massacre
(Lebanon): Israeli warplanes waited for the children to come home from the field to embrace their mother when they carried out this savage attack. A mother and her 6 children were killed
26 oct 1998
10 sept 1998
Emad Ahmed Isma'eel Awadallah
Until today, there has been ambiguity in the way Emad and Adel Awadallah were murdered by the Israeli Authorities.
There is an alluding possibility that these Authorities were able to detain them while they were still alive, conducted a series of dangerous experiments on them, and exercised their right to torture them severely, leading them to their deaths.
The family adds, in the hope that their bodies do not become a scandal if they are recovered, are buried in the Refedeem Cemetery of Numbers, which the Israeli Authorities have informed them.
The family continues to follow up in recovering their bodies through Israeli courts, knowing that the Israeli Supreme Court issued a decision in recovering the bodies, yet the commandment of the army refused to execute the Israeli Supreme Court's order.
Until today, there has been ambiguity in the way Emad and Adel Awadallah were murdered by the Israeli Authorities.
There is an alluding possibility that these Authorities were able to detain them while they were still alive, conducted a series of dangerous experiments on them, and exercised their right to torture them severely, leading them to their deaths.
The family adds, in the hope that their bodies do not become a scandal if they are recovered, are buried in the Refedeem Cemetery of Numbers, which the Israeli Authorities have informed them.
The family continues to follow up in recovering their bodies through Israeli courts, knowing that the Israeli Supreme Court issued a decision in recovering the bodies, yet the commandment of the army refused to execute the Israeli Supreme Court's order.
Adel Ahmed Ismaeel Awadallah
Until today, there has been some ambiguity in the way Emad and Adel Awadallah were murdered by the Israeli Authorities. There is an alluding possibility that these Authorities were able to detain them while they were still alive, conducted a series of dangerous experiments on them, and exercised their right to torture them severely, leading them to their deaths.
The family adds, in the hope that their bodies do not become a scandal if they are recovered, are buried in the Refedeem Cemetery of Numbers, which the Israeli Authorities have informed them.
The family continues to follow up in recovering their bodies through Israeli courts, where that the Israeli Supreme Court issued a decision in recovering the bodies, yet the commandment of the army refused to execute the Israeli Supreme Court's order.
Place of martyrdom/ disappearance: Al Teebah area near from the Village of Taqoumia – Hebron
Adel was married
Until today, there has been some ambiguity in the way Emad and Adel Awadallah were murdered by the Israeli Authorities. There is an alluding possibility that these Authorities were able to detain them while they were still alive, conducted a series of dangerous experiments on them, and exercised their right to torture them severely, leading them to their deaths.
The family adds, in the hope that their bodies do not become a scandal if they are recovered, are buried in the Refedeem Cemetery of Numbers, which the Israeli Authorities have informed them.
The family continues to follow up in recovering their bodies through Israeli courts, where that the Israeli Supreme Court issued a decision in recovering the bodies, yet the commandment of the army refused to execute the Israeli Supreme Court's order.
Place of martyrdom/ disappearance: Al Teebah area near from the Village of Taqoumia – Hebron
Adel was married
11 may 1998
Yousef Zoughair
10 mar 1998
Trqumia Massacre
Israeli Occupied West Bank, March 10–Israeli soldiers opened fire with automatic weapons on a van full of unarmed Palestinian workers, killing Adnan Abu Zneid, 34, and two other Palestinians. Two more laborers were wounded as the group returned from helping to construct a building near Tel Aviv. Eyewitnesses described the Israeli gunfire as “indiscriminate.”
Israeli Army Maj. Uzi Dayan said that the soldiers acted “according to regulations” in opening fire on the van with automatic weapons at a checkpoint outside Hebron.
Ali Abu Zneid, 37, a cousin of the deceased, was in the van and fell uninjured under the others’ bodies. He said that the Jewish soldiers, “shot to kill.”
Israeli Defense Minister Yitzhak Mordechai described the killings as an “accident”
Trqumia Massacre
Israeli Occupied West Bank, March 10–Israeli soldiers opened fire with automatic weapons on a van full of unarmed Palestinian workers, killing Adnan Abu Zneid, 34, and two other Palestinians. Two more laborers were wounded as the group returned from helping to construct a building near Tel Aviv. Eyewitnesses described the Israeli gunfire as “indiscriminate.”
Israeli Army Maj. Uzi Dayan said that the soldiers acted “according to regulations” in opening fire on the van with automatic weapons at a checkpoint outside Hebron.
Ali Abu Zneid, 37, a cousin of the deceased, was in the van and fell uninjured under the others’ bodies. He said that the Jewish soldiers, “shot to kill.”
Israeli Defense Minister Yitzhak Mordechai described the killings as an “accident”
1 jan 1998
Taher Shehda Qafisha
3 july 1997
HRW Calls on the Government of Israel to Withdraw a Draft Law
In a report issued today, Human Rights today calls on the Government of Israel to withdraw a draft law that would exempt the State and its security forces from liability for the wrongful injury and killing of Palestinians during the intifada. The law, if adopted by the Knesset, would prevent Palestinians from seeking damages in Israeli courts, and instead direct them, in a limited number of cases, to seek compensation from a government committee.
Until now, West Bank and Gaza Strip Palestinians have been able to sue for damages in Israeli courts and have, in a fair number of cases, been successful in collecting monetary damages from the State of Israel.
Some 1,000 Palestinians were killed and approximately 18,000 were injured during the intifada, according to Israeli army records; human rights organizations state that the numbers are higher, especially with regard to injuries.
In its report, Legislating Impunity, Human Rights Watch charges that the draft law at once blatantly discriminates against Palestinians and seeks to deprive them of their internationally recognized right to seek fair compensation for human rights violations committed against them.
"This law should be simply abandoned because, however you amend its provisions, its very essence is to deprive persons who were wrongfully injured of their right to seek compensation," said Eric Goldstein, Acting Director of Human Rights Watch/Middle East. "If Israeli civil courts are stripped of jurisdiction over these complaints, it will weaken one of the few existing mechanisms for holding Israeli security forces accountable for their treatment of Palestinians, and remove a deterrent against the commission of abuses in the future."
In issuing this report, Human Rights Watch endorses the call by a coalition of leading Israeli human rights organizations to withdraw the draft law.
HRW Calls on the Government of Israel to Withdraw a Draft Law
In a report issued today, Human Rights today calls on the Government of Israel to withdraw a draft law that would exempt the State and its security forces from liability for the wrongful injury and killing of Palestinians during the intifada. The law, if adopted by the Knesset, would prevent Palestinians from seeking damages in Israeli courts, and instead direct them, in a limited number of cases, to seek compensation from a government committee.
Until now, West Bank and Gaza Strip Palestinians have been able to sue for damages in Israeli courts and have, in a fair number of cases, been successful in collecting monetary damages from the State of Israel.
Some 1,000 Palestinians were killed and approximately 18,000 were injured during the intifada, according to Israeli army records; human rights organizations state that the numbers are higher, especially with regard to injuries.
In its report, Legislating Impunity, Human Rights Watch charges that the draft law at once blatantly discriminates against Palestinians and seeks to deprive them of their internationally recognized right to seek fair compensation for human rights violations committed against them.
"This law should be simply abandoned because, however you amend its provisions, its very essence is to deprive persons who were wrongfully injured of their right to seek compensation," said Eric Goldstein, Acting Director of Human Rights Watch/Middle East. "If Israeli civil courts are stripped of jurisdiction over these complaints, it will weaken one of the few existing mechanisms for holding Israeli security forces accountable for their treatment of Palestinians, and remove a deterrent against the commission of abuses in the future."
In issuing this report, Human Rights Watch endorses the call by a coalition of leading Israeli human rights organizations to withdraw the draft law.
oct 1996
Hilmi Shusha 11
9 sept 1996
Alaa Ali Osama
Killed during a demonstration at the Al Aqsa Mosque against the jewish tunnel
Killed during a demonstration at the Al Aqsa Mosque against the jewish tunnel
18 apr 1996
Nabatyaih Massacre
Eleven persons were killed and ten injured in an IDF air attack on a house in Nabatiyya al-Faqwah, some three kilometers north of Nabatiyya, in South Lebanon.
Eight of those killed were from one family: a mother and her seven children, including a four-day-old baby.
Around 6:30 a.m., IDF helicopters fired rockets at three buildings in the village, demolishing one totally and severely damaging the other two. Lebanese families were living in the buildings. The IDF Spokesperson claimed that the helicopters fired at the building in which the eleven were killed because Hizbullah was hiding there after firing the mortars.
Investigations conducted by Amnesty and HRW did not confirm this contention The IDF’s statement ignored the fact that the IDF fired at two other buildings during the same attack.
Eleven persons were killed and ten injured in an IDF air attack on a house in Nabatiyya al-Faqwah, some three kilometers north of Nabatiyya, in South Lebanon.
Eight of those killed were from one family: a mother and her seven children, including a four-day-old baby.
Around 6:30 a.m., IDF helicopters fired rockets at three buildings in the village, demolishing one totally and severely damaging the other two. Lebanese families were living in the buildings. The IDF Spokesperson claimed that the helicopters fired at the building in which the eleven were killed because Hizbullah was hiding there after firing the mortars.
Investigations conducted by Amnesty and HRW did not confirm this contention The IDF’s statement ignored the fact that the IDF fired at two other buildings during the same attack.
Qana Massacre
(Lebanon) The “ethnic cleansing” operations carried out by the Zionist terrorist army have encompassed not only Palestinian civilians, but Lebanese civilians in south Lebanon as well.
In an attempt to break the power of the Lebanese Hizbollah organization, Zionist forces undertook a military operation against south Lebanon. This operation was likewise based upon the Zionist mentality, supportive as it is of blood-letting and terrorism and based upon the belief that “exercising pressure against Lebanese citizens . . . will lead in practical terms to comprehensive, overall pressure on account of which the Hizbollah organization will be obliged to adhere to a ceasefire.”
Given this reasoning, the Zionist forces bombed the shelter which was providing refuge to approximately five hundred Lebanese, most of whom were children, elderly and women who had been forced out of their homes by Israeli raids on their villages, and who had been unable to get to Beirut. This bombing led to the deaths of 109 Lebanese civilians and seriously wounded 116 others.
During the attack, Israeli forces used between 5 and 6 advanced bombs designed to explode above their target in order to cause the largest possible number of casualties. Moreover, international investigations confirmed that the Israeli forces had deliberately targeted the shelter.
Ali, one of those wounded in the attack, says, “I fled in the morning with two friends and went for refuge to the emergency forces in Qana. I had my wife and my four children with me. They led us into a shelter where there were about fifty people. Then suddenly the sound of bombing rang out. A first shell, then a second fell near the shelter, and as we were trying to get out, another shell hit the shelter directly. I don’t know what happened to my wife and children.”
Fadi Jabir weeps as he talks about things he saw after the Israeli bombs fell on those who had left their homes to come to the base for the UN Fayjiya peace-keeping forces. He says, “I heard people shouting ‘Allahu akbar!’, and a woman fell down unconscious. I reached out to get an idea what had happened to her, and her brain fell into my hand.”
As for Sa’d Allah Balhas, who was wounded by a piece of shrapnel in the Zionist massacre, he says, “In one second I lost everything: my children, 14 of my grandchildren, and my wife. I don’t want to live anymore. Tell the doctors to let me die.”
(Lebanon) The “ethnic cleansing” operations carried out by the Zionist terrorist army have encompassed not only Palestinian civilians, but Lebanese civilians in south Lebanon as well.
In an attempt to break the power of the Lebanese Hizbollah organization, Zionist forces undertook a military operation against south Lebanon. This operation was likewise based upon the Zionist mentality, supportive as it is of blood-letting and terrorism and based upon the belief that “exercising pressure against Lebanese citizens . . . will lead in practical terms to comprehensive, overall pressure on account of which the Hizbollah organization will be obliged to adhere to a ceasefire.”
Given this reasoning, the Zionist forces bombed the shelter which was providing refuge to approximately five hundred Lebanese, most of whom were children, elderly and women who had been forced out of their homes by Israeli raids on their villages, and who had been unable to get to Beirut. This bombing led to the deaths of 109 Lebanese civilians and seriously wounded 116 others.
During the attack, Israeli forces used between 5 and 6 advanced bombs designed to explode above their target in order to cause the largest possible number of casualties. Moreover, international investigations confirmed that the Israeli forces had deliberately targeted the shelter.
Ali, one of those wounded in the attack, says, “I fled in the morning with two friends and went for refuge to the emergency forces in Qana. I had my wife and my four children with me. They led us into a shelter where there were about fifty people. Then suddenly the sound of bombing rang out. A first shell, then a second fell near the shelter, and as we were trying to get out, another shell hit the shelter directly. I don’t know what happened to my wife and children.”
Fadi Jabir weeps as he talks about things he saw after the Israeli bombs fell on those who had left their homes to come to the base for the UN Fayjiya peace-keeping forces. He says, “I heard people shouting ‘Allahu akbar!’, and a woman fell down unconscious. I reached out to get an idea what had happened to her, and her brain fell into my hand.”
As for Sa’d Allah Balhas, who was wounded by a piece of shrapnel in the Zionist massacre, he says, “In one second I lost everything: my children, 14 of my grandchildren, and my wife. I don’t want to live anymore. Tell the doctors to let me die.”
13 apr 1996
Mnsuriah Massacre
At about 1:30 P.M., an IDF helicopter fired rockets at a vehicle carrying thirteen civilians fleeing the village of al-Mansuri, killing two women and four young girls. The vehicle was a Volvo station wagon with a blue flooding light, a red crescent painted on the hood and the word “ambulance” written in Arabic. Reporters at the scene filmed the incident.
The film footage shows, and testimony of UN soldiers who arrived immediately after the car was hit corroborate, that there were no weapons or any other type of military equipment in the car, only some food and clothes. Amnesty’s investigation revealed that none of the passengers were connected to Hizbullah.
Mnsuriah Massacre
At about 1:30 P.M., an IDF helicopter fired rockets at a vehicle carrying thirteen civilians fleeing the village of al-Mansuri, killing two women and four young girls. The vehicle was a Volvo station wagon with a blue flooding light, a red crescent painted on the hood and the word “ambulance” written in Arabic. Reporters at the scene filmed the incident.
The film footage shows, and testimony of UN soldiers who arrived immediately after the car was hit corroborate, that there were no weapons or any other type of military equipment in the car, only some food and clothes. Amnesty’s investigation revealed that none of the passengers were connected to Hizbullah.
2 apr 1996
The Sohmor Second Massacre
(Lebanon): The Israeli artillery targeted a civilian car carrying eight passengers, killing all of them .
The Sohmor Second Massacre
(Lebanon): The Israeli artillery targeted a civilian car carrying eight passengers, killing all of them .
25 feb 1996
6 feb 1996
Shadi Misleh Mohammed Esa
27 jan 1996
Ahmed Suleiman Abu Saif
19 jan 1996
1 dec 1995
Bassam Younis
4 sept 1995
Imad Mahmoud Abu Amouna
Returned to his family juni 1 2012
Born in Shati refugee camp in the Gaza Strip in M. .. 2/6/1971 Do Martyr its operation on Sunday, 04.09.1995 m against an Israeli convoy north barrier of Netzarim in central Gaza Strip, in retaliation for the martyrs, "the massacre of Sheikh Radwan," which claimed the lives of four martyrs of Al Qassam Brigades are the "Kamal Kahil, Hatem Hassan, Saeed, and Bilal Shibl , "admitted the occupation soldiers killed one and injured dozens and declared al-Qassam Brigades claimed responsibility for the operation.
Returned to his family juni 1 2012
Born in Shati refugee camp in the Gaza Strip in M. .. 2/6/1971 Do Martyr its operation on Sunday, 04.09.1995 m against an Israeli convoy north barrier of Netzarim in central Gaza Strip, in retaliation for the martyrs, "the massacre of Sheikh Radwan," which claimed the lives of four martyrs of Al Qassam Brigades are the "Kamal Kahil, Hatem Hassan, Saeed, and Bilal Shibl , "admitted the occupation soldiers killed one and injured dozens and declared al-Qassam Brigades claimed responsibility for the operation.
25 aug 1995
25 apr 1995
Abdul Samad Harizat
18 apr 1995
Hatem Hassan Hassan
16 apr 1995
5 apr 1995
Mazuz Dalal
2 apr 1995
Nidal Jihad Debabeche
8 nov 1994
Salim Mohammed Abu Sabih
9 oct 1994
Issam Mehanna
2 sept 1994
24 aug 1994
Mohammed Mustafa Abu
5 aug 1994
Deir Al-Zahrani Massacre
(Lebanon): The Israeli warplanes fired a “vacuum” missile at a two- story building in Deir Al-Zahranee, which was destroyed over the heads of the inhabitants. 8 people were killed , 17 were injured.
Deir Al-Zahrani Massacre
(Lebanon): The Israeli warplanes fired a “vacuum” missile at a two- story building in Deir Al-Zahranee, which was destroyed over the heads of the inhabitants. 8 people were killed , 17 were injured.