BRIEF: Israel’s AG suspends Gaza sanctions

BRIEF: Israel’s AG suspends Gaza sanctions

JERUSALEM, Israel – On October 28, Israel confirmed that it began to restrict delivery of fuel to Gaza, pursuant to sanctions recently approved by Barak.  However, ten human rights groups have petitioned Israel’s High Court of Justice to order Israel to freeze implementation of the sanctions.  The court rejected the petitioners’ demand for a freeze, but instead required the government to justify its decision by November 2.  According to the petitioners, the sanctions are a collective punishment that would cause “irreversible damage to the health and welfare of the residents of Gaza.”  While the court ordered Israel to justify the sanctions, they refrained from banning the sanctions completely.  In response to the court order, Israel’s Attorney General, Menachem Mazouz, suspended plans to restrict delivery of fuel and electricity to Gaza.  He stated that more research is required to implement the plan without causing a humanitarian crisis.

The European Union and United Nations criticized Israel’s decision to impose economic sanctions.  The European Union called the measures “collective punishment” and while noting the distressed caused by rocket attacks, stated that collective punishment is never the answer.  Also, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon repeated his call to militants to halt their rocket attacks but called Israel’s planned response to be “unacceptable.”

For more information, please see:

Associated Press – Israeli AG halts electricity cut to Gaza – 30 October 2007

BBC – Gaza electricity cuts suspended – 30 October 2007

Ha’aretz – Mazuz prohibits punitive power cuts in Gaza Strip – 30 October 2007

Forbes – Court orders Israel to justify Gaza sanctions – 29 October 2007

Yedioth – Petition: Prevent reduction of Gaza fuel, electricity supply – 28 October 2007

BRIEF: Heightened Fear of Another War

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia – On Saturday, Eritrea made allegations that Ethiopia planned to invade the nation in November. According to intelligence agencies in Asmara, the plot was expected to take place in the first week of November. Ethiopia however has denied the allegation, referring to the plot as “absurd fabrication.”

After nearly nine years, Eritrea and Ethiopia continue to feud over the small village of Badme. From 1998 to 2000, the two neighboring nations were involved in a border war that left nearly 70,000 dead. The war concluded with a 2002 ruling awarding the village to Eritrea. However, Ethiopia has not accepted the terms of the agreement. Instead Ethiopia has made several requests to the border commission concerning their decision.

In the meantime, on Monday the International Committee of the Red Cross announced that 885 people were repatriated back to their homes. During the war, thousands were expelled as national enemies.

For more information, please see:

Reuters: Africa- Ethiopia Denies Plot to Attack Eritrea – 29 October 2007

Yahoo (AFP) – Red Cross Repatriates 885 from Ethiopia and Eritrea – 29 October 2007

Migrant Construction Workers Strike in Dubai

By Laura Zuber
Impunity Watch Reporter, Middle East

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – Thousands of foreign construction workers protested over low wages and poor working and living conditions.  Early October 27, workers, mostly of south Asian origin, took to the street to demand a pay rise, better living conditions, and better transportation to work.  The demonstration turned violent when Dubai police tried to remove a road block.  Some protesters threw stones at the police and passing motorist; one motorist sustained minor injuries.

A Jebel Ali (a construction company) representative stated that workers involved in the riot, which resulted in the damage of public property, had been detained and will be deported.  Gulf News reported that a UAE Ministry of Labour official confirmed that some rioters were in custody and that a team of ministry employees were working to cancel the workers’ visas.  In a statement following the protests, Minister of Labour Ali bin Abdullah Al Ka’abi said that the government will take the necessary measures to deport whatever number of workers responsible for the riots.  The Ministry of Labour said that it warned workers to return to work or their visas may be cancelled and they will face a lifetime ban from entering the UAE.

Despite the threat of deportation, many workers went on strike on October 28.  Foreign construction workers have gone on strike several times earlier this year.  Now, like then, the workers demand higher and/or timely wages, and better working conditions.  The demands for higher wages have become more urgent in recent months as a result of the falling US dollar.  The UAE dirham is closely tied to the US dollar.  As a result of the decreasing value and increased cost of living in Dubai, many workers are not able to save money to send to their families.  Most of the workers come from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka.

In response to the strikes, the Minister of Labour labeled the acts as “uncivilized” and that the workers should have registered their complaints peacefully.  However, workers claim that they had no other option since their requests for higher wages and better conditions had been ignored by the construction companies.  Despite visibility of their plight, workers have seen little support from the local and international community.  Some analysts, such as Mohammed al-Shaiba, believe now is the time for the government to set a minimum wage.

For more information, please see:

Al Jazeera – Dubai construction workers strike – 29 October 2007

BBC – Dubai construction workers strike – 29 October 2007

ArabianBusiness.com – UAE threatens deportation after violent protest -28 October 2007

Guardian – Dubai strike threatens building boom – 28 October 2007

Gulf News – Workers to be deported after violent demonstration – 28 October 2007

For more information about the condition of migrant workers in the UAE, please see:

Al Jazeera – Blood, Sweat, and Tears – 15 August 2007

Human Rights Watch – Building Towers, Cheating Workers: Exploitation of Migrant Construction Workers – 12 November 2006

Continuing Violence in Somalia

By Elizabeth Costner
Impunity Watch Senior Desk Officer, Africa

MOGADISHU, Somalia – The streets of Mogadishu are experiencing the worst violence in months, in the second day of protests against government-allied Ethiopian troops.  Several hundred Somalis have taken to the streets, many of them women and children, shouting anti-Ethiopian slogans, erecting burning barricades, and tossing rocks. Several people have been killed in gun battles.

The latest protests began after Ethiopia moved reinforcements and a convoy of 20 tanks and armored cars into the city on Friday. One of the vehicles struck a landmine and exploded.  On Saturday Ethiopian troops fanned out across the city, causing the recent protests by civilians.  BBC correspondents say the civilians are angry with the Ethiopian forces because of the use of artillery in the fighting, which has caused civilian casualties.

Mogadishu has faced growing violence since government troops and Ethiopian allies chased out the Council of Islamic Courts in December.   The Islamic group had controlled much of southern Somalia for six months, and remnants have vowed to fight an Iraq-style insurgency.

Meanwhile, Amnesty International has repeatedly condemned the recurrent killing of journalists and harassment of media within the country.  On 19 October the acting chairman of Radio Shadelle, Bahsir Nur Gedi, was murdered in his home.  Gedi’s killing was the latest in a recent surge of attacks against the media, and brings the number of journalists killed since August of last year to nine.  Due to the rising violence, few international journalists are willing to travel to Mogadishu.

The rising insecurity in Somalia is not limited to journalists, and has effected employees of international humanitarian organizations such as the World Food Programme.

Somalia has not had a functioning government since 1991 when rival warlords overthrew dictator Mohamed Siad Barre and subsequently turned on each other.  The UN states that 400,000 people have fled the violence in Mogadishu in the past four months.

For more information, please see:

International Herald Tribune (AP) – Somali protestors burn tires, throw rocks to demand departure of Ethiopian troops – 27 October 2007

BBC News – Mogadishu hit by fresh fighting – 28 October 2007

AllAfrica.com – Somalia: Country More Dangerous Than Ever for Journalists – 28 October 2007

Amnesty International – Amnesty International Calls for Probe in Killings of Somali Journalists – 26 October 2007

For more information on Somalia, please see the following Impunity Watch reports: Gunned Down Journalist; WFP Officer Released in Somalia; Piracy and Kidnapping Deepens Food Crisis; Bombing Kills Two During Quest for New Government; The ‘Forgotten’ Somalia

Tunisia Sends Former Guantanamo Detainee to Prison for Three Years

By Kevin Kim
Impunity Watch Reporter, Middle East

TUNIS, Tunisia – A Tunisian court convicted a former Guantanamo Bay prisoner for three years on terrorism charges Wednesday. Lotfi Lagha, a Tunisian national, had been charged with criminal association with the aim of harming or causing damage in Tunisia. Lagha plans to appeal the guilty verdict, but his lawyers allege that the Tunisian authorities had beaten him during detention.

Earlier this month, a federal judge in Washington made an unprecedented decision in blocking US military’s plans to transfer a Guantanamo Bay detainee to Tunisia because the detainee may be tortured in his home country. Judge Kessler of the US District court for the District of Columbia said sending the detainee to Tunisia would be “profound miscarriage of justice” that would amount to a death sentence. Two former Tunisian detainees sent home had already reported having been abused and tortured. Human rights group report that the Tunisian security forces use sleep deprivation, electric shocks, submersion of the head in water, beatings and cigarette burns.

Yet US authorities repatriated Lagha in June after he spent five years in the detention center at the U.S. Navy base in Guantanamo, Cuba. Abdullah al Hajji Ben Amor, another former detainee who faces trial at the end of October, was returned home at the same time as Lagha. Both Lagha and Hajji alleged that they were mistreated by the Tunisian authorities while in detention.

Lagha was arrested in 2002 on the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan but it remains unclear why he was there. Lagha also alleged mistreatment while in US custodies. He told his lawyers that US medics cut his frostbitten finger unnecessarily and against his will while in the center.

Currently, ten Tunisian detainees remain in Guantanamo Bay and at least eight of them have been convicted of crime in Tunisia even though they were not present at their trials.

Tunisia denies all allegations on human rights abuses.

For more information, please see:

Reuters – Tunisia jails ex-Guantanamo prisoner for three years – 24 October 2007

Guardian Limited – Ex-Gitmo detainee convicted in Tunisia – 24 October 2007

Arab News – US judge blocks Guantanamo detainee transfer to Tunisia – 11 October 2007

BBC News – US judge blocks Guantanamo move – 10 October 2007

AFP – US judge blocks repatriation to Tunisia of Guantanamo detainee – 10 October 2007