The respected Middle East reporter, Robert Fisk, attempts to
wipe the media gloss from a war-criminal.
In 1996, Peres, standing for election as Israel’s prime decided
to increase his military credentials before polling day by assaulting Lebanon. The
joint Nobel Peace Prize holder used as an excuse the firing of Katyusha rockets
over the Lebanese border by the Hezbollah. In fact, their rockets were
retaliation for the killing of a small Lebanese boy by a booby-trap bomb they
suspected had been left by an Israeli patrol. It mattered not. A few days
later, Israeli troops inside Lebanon came under attack close to Qana and
retaliated by opening fire into the village. Their first shells hit a cemetery
used by Hezbollah; the rest flew directly into the UN Fijian army camp where
hundreds of civilians were sheltering. 106 bodies – half of them children – now
lie beneath the UN camp where they were torn to pieces by Israeli shells.
“When I reached the UN gates, blood was pouring through them
in torrents. I could smell it. It washed over our shoes and stuck to them like
glue. There were legs and arms, babies without heads, old men’s heads without
bodies. A man’s body was hanging in two pieces in a burning tree. What was left
of him was on fire. On the steps of the barracks, a girl sat holding a man with
grey hair, her arm round his shoulder, rocking the corpse back and forth in her
arms. His eyes were staring at her. She was keening and weeping and crying,
over and over: “My father, my father.” If she is still alive – and there was to
be another Qana massacre in the years to come, this time from the Israeli air
force – I doubt if the word “peacemaker” will be crossing her lips.”
A UN enquiry which stated in its bland way that it did not
believe the slaughter was an accident. The UN report was accused of being
anti-Semitic. Much later, a brave Israeli magazine published an interview with
the artillery soldiers who fired at Qana. An officer had referred to the villagers
as “just a bunch of Arabs”. “A few Arabushim die, there is no harm in that,” he
was quoted as saying.
They also claimed that Ariel Sharon – whose soldiers watched
the massacre at Sabra and Chatila camps in 1982 by their Lebanese Christian
allies – was also a “peacemaker” when he died.
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