Liberation Theology proponent and Nobel Peace Laureate Desmond Tutu
Thursday departed the Gaza Strip after a two-day "fact-finding"
mission, as a result of which he reportedly plans to condemn Israel for
a 2006 "massacre" of Arabs by the IDF.
A South African national who holds the rank of archbishop in the
Anglican Church, and who has for years nurtured a pro-Arab position,
Tutu was invited by the "Palestinians" to investigate the alleged
Israeli shelling of a Beit Hanoun home in which 18 members of a family
were killed.
Israel's refusal to grant him a "transit" visa forced the cleric to
enter Gaza via the Egyptian border into the Strip.
Speaking at a news conference, the self-proclaimed judge said he would
be presenting a report on Israel's behavior to the United Nations
so-called Human Rights Council in Geneva come September.
"We are at the stage of shock... by what we subsequently heard from the
survivors of the November (2006) Beit Hanoun massacre," Tutu said,
according to Ynetnews.
He intended to "make recommendations to protect Palestinian civilians
from further Israeli assaults [sic]."
Israel maintains that, while firing in response to unrelenting rocket
attacks on its civilians in the Negev, a number of its shells fell
short of their intended targets due to technical faults.
Following the tragedy, the IDF immediately suspended the use of
artillery against rocket launching sites, and has since resorted to
airstrikes to try and stop the terrorism.
Gaza's Arabs have launched more than 5000 rockets at Israeli towns and
farms in recent years in a daily bid to deliberately kill and maim
civilian men, women and children.
The rockets are purposely fired from Arab population centers like Beit
Hanoun in order to provide cover for Hamas and other terrorists or
bring about civilian casualties whose deaths are effectively used to
keep international opinion harshly against Israel.
While in Gaza, Tutu held meetings with Hamas terror chief Ismail
Haniyeh.
The South African said afterwards he had told Haniyeh that the
launching of rockets against Israel was "a gross violation of human
rights."
But Tutu made no mention of any plans to report to the UN on the
numerous atrocities perpetrated by Haniyeh's men.
Original
Source
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